Tuesday, November 4, 2014

የ24 ሰዓት (አዳር) ተቃውሞ ሰልፍ። ‹‹ነጻነት በሌለበት ፍትሃዊ ምርጫ የማይታሰብ በመሆኑ የተዘጋውን በር ለመክፈት የ‹ነጻነት ለፍትሃዊ ምርጫ› በሚል የፕሮግራም መርሃ ግብር ለመክፈት ወስኖአል።


የ9ኙ ፓርቲዎች ትብብር የመጀመሪያ ዙር ህዝባዊ ትግል ፕሮግራሙን ይፋ አደረገ
• የ24 ሰዓት (የአዳር) የተቃውሞ ሰልፍ ተጠርቷል
በነገረ ኢትዮጵያ ሪፖርተር
ጥቅምት 12 ቀን 2007 ዓ.ም 9 ተቃዋሚ ፓርቲዎች የመሰረቱት ትብብር ‹‹ነጻነት ለፍትሃዊ ምርጫ›› በሚል ለአንድ ወር የሚቆይ የመጀመሪያ ዙር የህዝባዊ ትግል ፕሮግራሙን ዛሬ ጥቅምት 25/2007 ዓ.ም በሰማያዊ ፓርቲ ጽ/ቤት ይፋ አደረገ፡፡

‹‹ነጻነት በሌለበት ፍትሃዊ ምርጫ የማይታሰብ በመሆኑ የተዘጋውን በር ለመክፈት የ‹ነጻነት ለፍትሃዊ ምርጫ› በሚል የፕሮግራም መርሃ ግብር ለመክፈት ወስኖ የመጀመሪያው ዙር እንቅስቃሴ በአዲስ አበባ ከተማ ለማድረግ›› እንዳዘጋጀ ያሳወቀው ትብብሩ የትግሉ ዓላማ ፍትሃዊ ምርጫ እንዲኖር የሚያስችል መሆኑን ገልጾአል፡፡
‹‹ምርጫ ቦርድ ለገዥው ፓርቲ ያለውን ወገናዊነትና ጉዳይ አስፈጻሚነት ፍንትው አድርጎ አሳይቷል›› ያለው መግለጫው በመጀመሪያ ዙር የአንድ ወር ፕሮግራሙ 6 ዋና ዋና ተግባራትን ለመፈጸም ዝርዝር እቅዶችን አውጥቶ ዝግጅቱን ማጠናቀቁን አስታውቋል፡፡ በህዳር ወር የሚያከናውናቸው ተግባራትም፡-
1. በቤተ እምነት ጸሎት እንዲደረግና ጥሪ ማቅረብና አማኞች እንደየ እምነታቸው ተሳትፎ እንዲያደርጉ ማድረግ
2. የአደባባይ ህዝባዊ ስብሰባዎችን ማድረግ
3. የተቃውሞ ድምጽ ማሰማት (ሰላማዊ ሰልፍ)
4. ለመንግስት ተቋማት ደብዳቤ ማስገባት
5. በምርጫ ዙሪያ የፓናል ውይይቶችን ማድረግና
6. የህዝብን ተሳትፎ ማበረታታትና ድጋፍ ማሰባሰብ እንደሆኑ በመግለጫው አሳውቋል፡፡
ከእቅዶቹ መካከልም በሶስት ተከታታይ እሁዶች በተለያዩ የአዲስ አበባ ክፍሎች 3 የአደባባይ ስብሰባዎች እንደሚኖሩ፣ በመጨረሻው መርሃ ግብርም ህዳር 27ና 28 በፕሮግራሙ ማጠቃለያነት የ24 ሰዓት (የውሎና የአዳር) የተቃውሞ ሰልፍ እንደሚደረግ የትብብሩ ሊቀመንበር ኢንጅነር ይልቃል ጌትነት ገልጸዋል፡፡
በገዥው ፓርቲና በምርጫ ቦርድ ጥምረት ይፈጸማል ያለውን ህገ ወጥ ተግባር በመታገል ለሰላማዊ ትግሉ አወንታዊ አስተዋጽኦ ለማበርከት እስከመጨረሻው በፅናት ለመቆም መዘጋጀቱን የገለጸው ትብብሩ በአገር ቤትና በውጭ የሚገኙ ኢትዮጵያውያን፣ በትብብሩ ሂደት ቆይተው እስካሁን ያልፈረሙና ሌሎች ፓርቲዎች እና የዓለም አቀፉ የዲፕሎማቲክ ማህበረሰብ ከጎኑ እንዲቆሙ ጥሪ አቅርቧል፡፡

5 agreements signed between Egypt and Ethiopia.


Five agreements and memorandum of understandings (MoU) were signed between Egypt and Ethiopia on Monday, encouraging diplomatic, trade and health cooperation.
Egyptian-Ethiopian-Economic-Fourm
A trade agreement was signed between the Minister of Industry and Foreign Trade Mounir Fakhry Abdel Nour and his Ethiopian counterpart. One of the signed MoUs outlines diplomatic cooperation between the two countries.
The remaining MoUs were signed between the Egyptian and Ethiopian ministers of health and ministers of education. The two countries have also agreed to cooperate on women affairs.
On Sunday, Abdel Nour said that a potential Egyptian-Ethiopian industrial zone is being studied.
The minister pointed out that the targeted trade volume between both countries is over $5bn, a relatively low figure considering the capabilities of both countries. Between 2004 and 2013, the volume of trade increased by 21%, edging up from $41m to $165m. He added that Egypt’s share of the trade is around 77.5%.

Crackdown on dissent intensified as journalists convicted – Joint Statement

31 October 2014. Ethiopia’s already limited space for civil society and human rights defenders is undergoing further contraction, warns CIVICUS, The East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project, and the Ethiopia Human Rights Project (EHRP). Throughout 2014, Ethiopian authorities have orchestrated an unprecedented legislative assault on journalists, and independent voices within civil society, undermining fundamental human rights and restricting the operating environment for civil society and human rights defenders.
On 27 October 2014, prominent newspaper editor Temesgen Desalegn was sentenced to three years imprisonment on politically motivated charges of provoking incitement against the state. Temesgen and his now defunct newspaper, Feteh, were targeted under Ethiopian Criminal Code provisions.  The charges, which are widely viewed as an attempt to silence independent reporting on sensitive issues, stem from articles published byFeteh on demonstrations organised by Muslim groups and youth activists in 2012.
Earlier this month, three magazine owners were sentenced to sentences ranging from three years and three months to three years and eleven months in absentia. They are Endalkachew Tesfaye of the Addis Gudaymagazine, Fatuma Nuriya of Fact, and Gizaw Taye of Lomi. The charges levelled against them included “inciting violent revolts, printing and distributing unfounded rumours and conspiring to unlawfully abolish the constitutional system of the country.” In August 2014, the Ministry of Justice accused six weekly papers of committing unsubstantiated crimes against the state. There are concerns that the three other newspapers listed in the communique, including Afro-Times, Enqu and Jano, will also be targeted.
“The recent convictions are indicative of the intolerance of the Ethiopian state towards any kind of dissent. It is a widely held view that the current government is becoming particularly sensitive to public scrutiny as it readies for national elections in May 2015,” said Mandeep Tiwana, Head of Policy and Research at CIVICUS. “With at least 17 journalists and bloggers currently imprisoned in Ethiopia, the country is believed to be the second largest imprisoner of journalists in Sub -Saharan Africa after Eritrea.”
In addition to the wilful misapplication of the Criminal Code, sweeping provisions of Ethiopia’s 2009 Anti-Terrorism Proclamation continue to be invoked to silence journalists and human rights defenders. On 17 July 2014, six members of the blogger’s collective, Zone 9, and three independent journalists, were charged with planning terrorist acts and committing outrages against the Constitution under the Anti-Terrorism proclamation and Ethiopian Criminal Code.
In addition, a seventh member of Zone 9, Soliyana Gebremicheal, who also coordinates the Ethiopian Human Rights Project, was charged in absentia with leading the group. As justification for the charges, the public prosecutor pointed to Soliyana’s recent involvement in a digital security training organised by international human rights groups.
“In the run up to national elections, the increasing trend of arbitrary arrest and detention, politically motivated prosecutions, and intimidation of independent voices within civil society is deeply concerning,” said Soleyana Gebremichael, of the Ethiopia Human Rights Project. “Similar trends were notable in the run-up to the 2010 national election, in which the ruling EPRDF party won 99.6% of parliamentary seats.”
The escalating crackdown in the country comes at a time of growing concern among the international community over Ethiopia’s disregard for its national and international human rights obligations. In September this year, six independent UN experts urged the government to cease misusing the Anti-Terrorism proclamation to curb the rights to freedom of expression and association. In May 2014, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights alsoraised concern about the climate of intimidation of human rights defenders in Ethiopia.
“In Ethiopia over the last five years, we have seen the wholesale disappearance of the human rights community, with countless human rights defenders forced into exile due to heavy-handed and manifestly unlawful state tactics aimed at undermining their work,” said Hassan Shire, Executive Director of the East and Horn of African Human Rights Defenders Project. “Throughout 2014, the risks facing journalists and independent human rights voices have reached unprecedented new heights.”
The Ethiopian government continues to ignore calls from the international community to institute substantive reforms to rectify the human rights situation in the country. In September 2014, during the adoption of its UN Universal Period Review Report, Ethiopian authorities refused to accept a number of recommendations to release imprisoned journalists and activists in the country or revise the Anti-Terrorism proclamation, despite calls from civil society organisations and a number of governments.
CIVICUS, the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project, and the Ethiopia Human Rights Project urge Ethiopia’s trade and development partners to engage with the Ethiopian government with a view to ending the on-going crackdown on human rights defenders and civil society.
Source: CIVICUS

Poor Ethiopia amid global village in crises By Robele Ababya

Pope Francis on global youth unemployment & loneliness of the old
Pope Francis – Holy Father of 1.2 billion Catholics in the world – vividly, precisely, and powerfully addressed the epic contemporary issue on the captioned subject about which there is global consensus. In His interview with atheist Scalfari dated 01/10/2014, the Pope said that:-
Quote: The most serious of the evils that afflict the world these days are youth unemployment and the loneliness of the old. The old need care and companionship; the young need work and hope but have neither one nor the other, and the problem is they don’t even look for them anymore. They have been crushed by the present. You tell me: can you live crashed under the weight of the present without a memory of the past and without the desire to look ahead to the future by building something, a future, and a family? Can you go on like this? This, to me, is the most urgent problem that the Church is facing. Unquote
When Scalfari suggested that the above issues are largely political and economic problems for states, the Pope noted that “these problems affect both bodies and souls. It is not the only problem that we face, but it is the most urgent and the most dramatic.”
It is not in the interest of dictatorial rulers to formulate and implement solutions to problems affecting bodies and souls because tyrants like the thugs on the top echelon of the EPRDF regime are intolerant to political pluralism and civilized open dialogue on issues relating to social justice.
Corruption as a major problem in Communist China and Ethiopia 
The General Secretary (GS) of the Communist Party of China (CPC), which is friendly to EPRDF party, had to say the following at the opening of its 18thCongress:-
Quote The GS in his speech to leading officials underlined the unprecedented stride in economic growth achieved in the last decade but asking them “to exercise strict self-discipline and strengthen supervision over their families and staff.” He said “Leading officials at all levels, especially high-ranking officials, must readily observe the code of conduct on clean governance and report all important matters” adding that “If we fail to handle this issue well, it could prove fatal to the Party, and even cause the collapse of the Party and the fall of the state”. He made a passionate plea that “the CPC must make unremitting efforts to combat corruption, promote integrity and stay vigilant against degeneration.” He singled out corruption as a major problem in his closing speech also. Unquote
And the incoming General Secretary Xi Jinping strongly underscored the same thing in condemning the rampant corruption. But corruption is still rampant and the quest for full democracy is gathering momentum as exemplified by the current mammoth public protest feared to spread to main land China.
The lesson for Ethiopia is therefore not to emulate the economic growth model of the CPC.
Any serious combating to uproot corruption must start with the arrest of the Mother of corruption in Ethiopia.  To that end, one should follow the recent two examples:-
  • Spain: fifty-one “high-people” detained and hundreds of bank accounts frozen; citizens expect more action from the corrupt political class;
  • India: “Black Money” activity afflicting India is so rife; Prime Minister Modi’s Administration listed more than 600 wealthy citizens for freezing their accounts in foreign banks.
The arrest and freezing of the accounts of the Mother of corruption including her inner circles shall be a deadly blow to the person being groomed for the post of premiership by foreign powers.
Infringement on freedom of Ethiopians by the ruling party
I am nostalgic of those days in the first half 1960s when travelling by airplanes to the U.S.A., making intermediate stops at airports in Europe where carriers used to unload and upload passengers and cargos. Transit passengers used their 45 minutes ground time to rush to the terminal building for shopping or taking refreshments after which they returned to their seats by showing their boarding card without undergoing any physical search at all. That freedom began vanishing gradually with increasing number of high jacking of airplanes – the Israeli national carriers and the Ethiopian Airlines being the first victims in the second half of the 1960s.
People with evil minds saw the vulnerability of passenger airplanes to their brutal political and ransom-seeking objectives; a stream of high-jacking and destroying of airplanes in the air became a matter of worrying concern to the international community to this date.  A new entirely unexpected and horrifying occurrence of 9/11 of using civilian passenger airplanes as a weapon of mass destruction shocked the global community. The Aviation Security Annex to the International Civil Aviation Organization had to be revised substantially with a view to preempting the menace.
Our freedom of movement has since been curtailed to unacceptable degree due to pervasive intrusion on our daily lives. The TPLF regime has gone further in organizing the entire Ethiopian people into “one boss to every five” cells for eavesdropping, surveillance and controlling of citizens.
Crisis-ridden global village
Our global village is awash with unprecedented number of crises  of all sorts generated by, inter alia :- regional wars such as in the Middle East, the Horn of Africa and Ukraine; proliferation of nuclear weapons; climate change; fear of  economic recession; mistrust; ethnic cleansing; abuse of fundamental human rights; ideological and religious conflicts; the Ebola nightmare spreading from its epicenter in West Africa; tax evasion by the rich stashing their loots in foreign banks; pervasive corruption in India, China and most African countries including Ethiopia; intolerable youth unemployment especially in Africa; abject poverty with Ethiopia ranked last but one in the world.
The pervasive curtailments of freedom are symptoms of malignant ailment attributable to social injustice, in terms of denial of liberty and utterly unfair sharing of resources, that human civilization in its history has been unable to cure in spite of the French Revolution (1789 -1799) which was meant to address it significantly. The present world is unsafe, social injustice in the developing world is rampant and the world is beset by endemic corruption. Therefore, the prospect of a major war is hanging over our heads. This generation has to work hard to avert it.
The renowned intellectual, Jean-Jack Rousseau, recommended punishment by death to those who violate the “Social Contract” justifying his recommendation as follows:-
Quote “man is born free, but he is everywhere in chains.” Rousseau asserts that modern states repress the physical freedom that is our birthright, and do nothing to secure the civil freedom for the sake of which we enter into civil society. Legitimate political authority, he suggests, comes only from a social contract agreed upon by all citizens for their mutual preservation.
Rousseau calls the collective grouping of all citizens the “sovereign,” and claims that it should be considered in many ways to be like an individual person. While each individual has a particular will that aims for his own best interest, the sovereign expresses the general will that aims for the common good. The sovereign only has authority over matters that are of public concern, but in this domain its authority is absolute: Rousseau recommends the death penalty for those who violate the social contract.” Unquote – Source: google
TPLF warlords breach even their own constitution imposed on the Ethiopian people as frequently as they please. Therefore they deserve a harsh punishment – political death at the polls.
Youth unemployment & “loneliness of the old” in Ethiopia
Overwhelming majority of skinny peasants living in Ethiopia in serfdom, employ primitive mechanical farming tools, mostly made of wood, pulled by a pair of oxen or other animals such as donkeys or horses. The poor peasant farmers guide the animals from the rear cracking their whips to control the direction and speed of the animals in the arduous process of ploughing the government-owned land leased to tenants.  There is no way that this method of farming can make Ethiopia food sufficient to feed 93 million citizens growing at worrying rate. It stands to reason to query the EPRDF regime why it is in the process of importing 200, 000 metric tons of grain in addition to borrowing US$ 600 million to cover for shortfalls, in spite of boasting self-sufficiency.
I recall that the former USSR was showcasing grandiose farmlands stretching tens of kilometers with buddying crops on the sides of highways. But at the same time it (USSR) was importing thousands of metric tons of wheat from the Western world, especially Canada. The Kremlin authorities were telling half-truths to their people just as the copycat EPRDF regime is now doing. The Russian Republic of today is exporting wheat.
The young have migrated to cities in search of greener pastures are disappointed to find that manual jobs such as laying cobble stones are reserved for university graduates; they are loitering the streets with hungry stomachs as victims of substance abuse and exposed to all kinds of indignities. The old are living a miserable life because their once able-bodied children are now jobless and unable to supplement the minuscule income of their parents that is prone to erosion owing to rising cost of living.
So, abject poverty and youth unemployment are not going to end unless democracy and private-sector participation including private land ownership take the center-stage in Ethiopia’s development policy.
Glimmer of hope for unemployed youth in EAC
I am impressed with the bold initiative that the presidents of Uganda, Kenya, and Rwanda are taking to expedite the integration of the East African Community (EAC) for the benefit of, inter alia:- enhancing economy of scale, development of transportation systems connecting their capitals and Juba in South Sudan, enhancing jobs creation projects and youth employment; dropping the requirement for work permit, fostering freedom of movement of their citizens, implementing equal university fees for their citizens, and fostering political collaboration and awareness to have a common voice on issues relating to the AU, UN and other international bodies . It pains me to concur that South Sudan has made a sensible decision to cancel the peace talks in Addis Ababa ruled by an apartheid regime.
In regard to free movement of citizens, travel documents such as identity cards, student IDs would be sufficient obviating the need for a national passport. This is the spirit of Pan Africanism, for which the three Presidents: – Y.K. Museveni, Uhuru Kenyatta, and Paul Kagame have to be applauded!  This praise for the three Presidents is uttered in the spirit of my firm belief that all-inclusive politics is imperative for enduring democracy and prosperity in a free society. Rwanda should be congratulated for becoming the only African country among the top ten countries ranking 7th – according to “The Global Gender Gap Index” that compared 142 states.
The initiative taken by the three Presidents is in sharp contrast to that of the racist divisive Woyane regime. Bravo EAC for seeing the danger posed by Woyane! Adios IGAD dominated by EPRDF!
Ethiopia’s historical foes in political turmoil
Ethiopia’s traditional enemies in the Middle East, Arab states in Africa, and the extremist Islamic states such as Pakistan are victims of crisis of their own making. Iraq, Syria, and Libya are squarely in the category of failed states. Their generous support to Ethiopian separatists is dwindling.
I extend my deep sympathy to the innocent civilian population – children, women, and old citizens of these countries for taking the brunt of the atrocities unleashed by their tyrant leaders.   But the crisis is a propitious event for Ethiopian opposition forces to seize in order to dethrone the EPRDF warlords and put in place a democratic Ethiopian government that will act as an agent of change that will promote regional peace, stability, and prosperity. The support of Western powers, especially the U.S.A. and the U.K., is important in this regard for it will be in their long time interest to be on the side of ancient Ethiopia situated at a very strategic location in the Horn of Africa.
Regarding freedom of expression, the US Ambassador to the UN, Samantha Powers, characterized the guilty verdict in Egypt on Aljazeera journalists as “A chilling and outrageous attack on freedom of the press”. In Ethiopia too, the stalwart journalist Temegen Desalegn has recently joined others in the filthy notorious Kaliti prison to serve a three-year sentence without parole; all pillars of democracy including press freedom are the sole monopoly of the brutal TPLF regime in full view of the Obama Administration paying only leap service to the grim reality. I plead with Ambassador Powers to take this exceedingly important matter of gagging freedom of expression in Ethiopia.
I seize this opportunity to pay my sincere tribute to Ambassador Powers for her audacious visit to the Ebola-ridden West African countries thereby expressing solidarity with the people of that region. This is what I call leadership by example of which her fellow citizens should be proud of and install her in the White House as President.
In closing, I would like to underline that:-
  • Craving for democracy is divine and therefore Ethiopians should emphatically rebuff any political interference of CPC in the internal affairs of Ethiopia and demand it to focus on its appreciable economic development efforts!
  • Poor Ethiopia is in multiple crises pervading the global village; Ethiopians have only God and themselves to overcome these crises. To that end consider what peoples power in Burkina Faso could do in forcing their tyrant President to resign.
  • Religious leaders in Ethiopia should emulate His Holiness Pope Francis in addressing the burning issues of abject poverty, youth unemployment, and endemic corruption.
  • Brain-washing of young Ethiopians by the EPRDF ruling regime must end soonest!
  • Preparation by the brutal regime is underway to steal the coming election and claim 100% ‘win’ unless Western powers withdraw direct budgetary support to the brutal EPRDF regime and exert pressure on it to abide by democratic principles for a free, fair, transparent and credible election.
It is my ardent hope and fervent prayer that all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience in Ethiopia including:- Andualem Aragie, Eskinder Nega, Andargachew Tsige, Abraha Desta,  Bekele Gerba, Reeyot Alemu, Haptamu Ayalew Daniel Shibeshi, Yeshiwas Assefa, Leaders of the Ethiopian Muslims, the 9 bloggers and 3 Journalists, Temesgen Desalegn et al are released immediately and unconditionally!
LONG LIVE ETHIOPIA!!!

Tsehai Publishers strives for a better Africa and Ethiopia


by Kaitlin Perata
Tsehai Publishers
“When you think of Africa, what are the first three things that come to mind?” This is the first question I was asked when I began working at Tsehai Publishers at the beginning of the semester. Like I’m sure most of us would, I had trouble coming up with a sufficient answer to the question. It is for precisely this reason that Elias Wondimu, exiled Ethiopian journalist and current CEO of Tsehai Publishers, founded the company.
Finding few books on Ethiopia in the United States, Wondimu sought to fill a hole in the American book market by venturing into previously unchartered waters and creating his own publishing company that would simultaneously print scarcely distributed books and raise the standard of integrity in the publishing industry.
“The lack of positive narratives about my country led me to a path of discovery about the realities of all marginalized societies – including Africa, women and the poor among us. Institutions who control what stories get told controls our true information that we consume, our perceptions and by that our future society,” Wandimu said when discussing his motivation for launching Tsehai.
Tsehai means “the sun” in Amharic, Ethiopia’s official language, but Wondimu also named the publishing company after his late mother. The company was founded in 1998 with the intention of sharing his passion for Ethiopian and African issues, correcting media misinformation and bias about Africa, fostering intercultural dialogue and social justice and providing a platform for African creativity and knowledge to flourish. In 2007, Tsehai joined forces with LMU’s Marymount Institute for Faith, Culture and the Arts and from that partnership the Marymount Institute Press was born, embodying the Institute’s mission statement.
“Unless it is serving a grander financial purpose, our collective stories never get to be presented for what they are,” Wondimu said. Tsehai attempts to rectify this problem by giving a voice to the voiceless and providing a platform where the marginalized are able to share their stories.
Since their inception, both Tsehai Publishers and the Marymount Institute Press have shown special care and concern for women’s issues, a commitment that is especially relevant in Tsehai’s upcoming book “Temsalet: Phenomenal Ethiopian Women.” The book was translated from Amharic into English and features the stories of 64 successful and accomplished Ethiopian women across a wide range of occupations. The purpose of the book, which will be distributed to schools, libraries and girls’ clubs across Ethiopia, is meant to inspire, empower and celebrate young girls and women.
“I think that the progress that women in Ethiopia and Africa have made towards furthering equal opportunity is widely unacknowledged. A book like this kind of lays out that progress in a simple form through personal narratives. It’s really important for women everywhere, and especially in Ethiopia, to have their stories be heard and have their progress be seen,” said junior English major Rachel Miskei, who interns for Tsehai and helped copy edit “Temsalet.”
The book is set to be released in the United States in late December to early January and can be purchased online through the Tsehai website.
Source: The Los Angeles LOYOLAN