Monday, March 25, 2013

TPLF: The departure of the bigwigs

By YONAS ABIYE

Arkebe Equbay
The four member organizations of the ruling party, the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF,) the Tigrean People’s Liberation Front (TPLF,) the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM,) the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO) and the Southern Ethiopia Peoples’ Democratic Movement (SEPDM) on Friday concluded their regular meeting by electing their central committees and executive committee members at their respective regional towns. The meeting will be followed by the 9th Organization Congress of the EPRDF, which starts in Bahir Dar today.
As usual, the parties held their sessions behind closed doors, which usually lasts until midnight.
Just like the 8th Organizational Congress, which was held in Adama in 2010, this year has also witnessed the introduction of new committee members and the departure of some old guards especially from the TPLF and OPDO.
During the TPLF’s assembly, which was held in Mekele, long-serving top officials in the political strata were replaced by new committee members. Among them, Tsegaye Berhe and Abadi Zemo left their seats in the executive committee while Seyoum Mesfin, Arkebe Okubay, Berhane Gebrekirstos and Zeray Asgedom are out of TPLF’s central committee.
Alem Gebrewahid, Gebremeskel Tarekegn and Tirfu Kidanemariam became the new members of the TPLF’s executive committee.
Meanwhile, in an unprecedented move, Kuma Demeksa, Girma Birru and Abadula Gemeda left OPDO’s executive committee. These three senior officials have been bold figures ever since the OPDO was established. The bigwigs were replaced by other influential figures, Workineh Gebeyehu, the director general of the Federal Police and Aster Mamo. Alemayehu Atomsa and Muktar Kedir resumed their positions of chair and deputy of OPDO, respectively.
OPDO also increased the number of seats of the central committee to 81, from 65 previously.
Similarly, ANDM made a couple of changes in its executive committee. The Berhan Hailu, Minister of Justice and Kassa Tekleberhan, speaker of the House of Federation, were replaced by Dr. Ambachew Mekonnen and Ahmed Abtew. Ambachew used to be member of ANDM a few years ago before he left abroad to study for his (Ph.D.) upon returning to his homeland, he rejoined the party once again.
Similarly, SEPDM made no major changes and the meeting ended by reelecting its executive committee and central committee members. Hailemariam Desalegn and Shiferaw Shigute were reelected as chairman and deputy chairman of their Party.
For the first time in the 24-year history of the party, three women were elected to become members of the executive committee.
Aster Mamo of OPDO was sole committee after the 2008 congress, later Azeb Mesfin of TPLF joined the ranks in 2010.
Now the TPLF elected its second woman member, Tirfu Kidanemariam (the spouse of TPLF chairman and veteran politician Abay Woldu.)

UN Human Rights Council Adopted a Resolution on Human Rights Defenders

  by Betre Yacob
As the authoritarian government in Ethiopia continues its violence against journalists and human right defenders, the United Nation Human Rights Council (UNHRC) adopted a new resolution on 21 March 2013 calling an end to the impunity and the protection of dissent.
In a statement issued on 21 March 2013, the council says that the resolution on “protecting human rights defenders (A/HRC/22/L.13)” is successfully adopted at its 22nd Session in Geneva having received the support of 62 states across 6 continents.
“We welcome the resolution as a significant statement by the UNHRC reaffirming the positive obligation upon States to facilitate the work of HRDs, and remove obstacles to their work, including legislation that illegitimately criminalises the exercise of the right to freedom of expression and information”, the statement explains.
The statement says that the new resolution can be seen as a timely response to the increasing challenges faced by human right defenders, and it strongly calls on States to ensure that it translates to real action on the ground.
“We call on all states to review their domestic laws and practices to ensure that they comply with the new resolution and with other international human rights standards in this area”, the statement adds.
According to the statement, the resolution supports the obligation upon governments (including the Ethiopian Tyrannical Regime) to: create a safe and enabling environment in which HRDs can operate free from hindrance and insecurity; ensure laws to protect national security are not misused to target HRDs and that counter-terrorism measures comply with international human rights standards; ensure HRDs can perform their important role in the context of peaceful protests; ensure that reporting requirements for civil society do not inhibit functional autonomy, and that no law criminalises or places discriminatory restrictions on funding sources; and protect the expression of dissenting views.

Fingers Crossed for Kenya, our Second Home

by Teklemichael Abebe
Ever since I left Kenya for Canada, I hardly missed a single day not following Kenyan politics online. Ever since I left Kenya for Canada, I hardly missed a single day not following Kenyan politics online. It is the humour and flexibility in Kenyan politics that give me a break from the rigidity and bitterness in Ethiopian politics. Many things fascinate and puzzle me about Kenyan politics. One of the things that puzzle me is the role ethnicity plays in their politics. When I was in Kenya, their law did not allow forming political party along ethnic lines. There was no such thing called the Kikuyu Democratic Party or the Kalenjin Liberation Front or the Luo People Democratic Organization; no OPDO, TPLF or OLF in Kenyan politics.
Although Kenyan law does not allow forming political parties along ethnic lines, Kenyan politics is highly ethnicity-charged. The voting patterns in the last election and the vitriolic social media exchanges among members of different ethnic groups over the last couple of weeks demonstrate that. The voting patterns tell you that voters’ decision is determined by the ethnic background of their favourite candidate. In the last election, you can easily discern that Uhuru Kenyatta obtained 98 % votes in Kikuyu areas whereas Raila Odinga got only less than 2% in those areas. The reverse is true at Raila’s strongholds. Voters follow their ethnic candidate.
I was fortunate to observe the 2002 election before president Daniel Arap Moi left power. The then amateur Uhuru Kenyatta was defeated by the veteran politician Mwai Kibaki at that time. Raila ganged up with Kibaki in the famous Rainbow Coalition, a CUD like coalition formed by various political parties to defeat Moi’s hand-picked candidate, Uhuru Kenyatta. Raila endorsed Kibaki for president in 2002. Raila was given a heroes’ welcome when he went to Kikuyu area after the victory. The coalition did not last long and after winning the presidency, Kibaki and Raila parted their ways.
At the 2007 election, Raila and Kibaki came out being rivals. The election commission declared Kibaki a winner of the election, but Raila refused to accept the result. Serious ethnic clashes broke out following the announcement of the result and over 1000 people were killed. Although Kibaki was declared president, he had to share power with Raila in a grand coalition formed after Kofi Annan’s brokered peace deal. The last five years were full of tension, bickering and infightings between the two principals and their followers.
The March 4, 2013 reminded me of the second fascinating thing about Kenyan politics. Kenyan politicians do not hold grudges. They are flexible. A few months before the March 4 election, I read on one of Kenya’s newspaper that the current vice-president, Kalonzo Musyoka and Raila Odinga formed a coalition. I was puzzled by what I read. Kalonzo was Raila’s arch enemy in the 2007 election and over the following four years. Kalonzo ganged up with Kibaki after the 2007 election and mounted a surmountable challenge to Raila’s political powers. They remained rivals for four years and all of a sudden they emerged as allies for the March 2013 election. The coalition between Kalonzo and Raila is a marker of the degree of flexibility pragmatisms in Kenyan politics. We Ethiopians need the flexibility, pragmatism and forgiveness of Kenyan politics.
Be that as it may, after a week of counting and recounting of the votes, the Independent Election and Boundary Commission of Kenya (IEBC), the Kenyan counterpart of Ethiopian National Election Commission, declared Uhuru Kenyatta, the son of the first president of Kenya, the winner of the election. Raila Odinga, the son of the other famous freedom-fighter and politician, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, did not concede defeat. He lodged his petition to the Supreme Court of Kenya (SCK) last Saturday.

ነብር ዥንጉርጉርነቱን “ግራ ዘመም” ኢትዮጲያዊ ክሽፈቱን

በክፍሉ ሁሴን
Professor Mesfin Woldemariam is one of Ethiopia's well-known intellectualsታምራት ነገራ በፕሮፌሰር መስፍን ወልደማሪያም “መክሸፍ እንደኢትዮጵያ ታሪክ”መጽሃፍ ላይ የሰጠውን አስተያዬት ካነበብኩት በኋላ የመጣብኝ ሃሳብ ሰውዬው የሚለውን ያውቀዋልን? የሚል ነው። እንደምፀት ሆኖ አሁን በማላስታውሰው ምክንያት ግን በወቅቱ በወደድኩለት አንድ የፌስቡክ አስተያዬቱ ብዙም በአንባቢነትና አለማቀፍ ነገሮችን በመተንተን ችሎታው የማላማው ይልቁንም የእሱን አይነት ሃይማኖት ያላቸውን ሰዎች “የአዲስ ኪዳን በግ ቅዱስ ካህን፤ የፅድቅ ንጉስ የአለም መድህን” እያልኩ የምመሰጥበት ሌላ ጓደኛዬ በዚያው እኔ የታምራትን አስተያዬት “ላይክ” ማድረግ ብቻ ሳይሆን ለሌሎችም የፌስቡክ ባልንጀሮቼ ባቃመስኩበት ወቅት “ይህ ታምራት የሚለውን ያውቀዋልን?”ሲል የጠየቀውን አስታወሰኝ። ምናልባት ጌታን በተቀበለና ባልተቀበለ መካከል ያለ ልዩነት ይሆን?
ጌታን እስከዛሬ ባልቀበልም (ጌታ ነው ከሚሉትም ጋር ጌታ አይደለም ብዬ ጠብ እንደማላበቅልም ልብ ይባልልኝ) ባንዳች ምክንያት ወልይ ሆኜ ነው መሰለኝ ታምራት “ነብር ዥንጉርጉርነቱን፤ ኢትዮጲያዊ ክሽፈቱን” በሚል ርዕስ በሰጠው አስተያዬት ልክ እንደ ዳግም ልደቱ ክርስቲያን ወዳጄ እኔም በተራዬ “የሚለውን ያውቀዋልን?” እንድል አስገድዶኛል። ታምራት የፕሮፌሰር መስፍን “መክሸፍ እንደኢትዮጵያ ታሪክ” ከመውጣቱ በፊት “The Ethiopian mind” በሚል ሊፅፍ እንዳሰበ ከነገረን በኋላ የፕሮፌሰርን መፅሃፍ ሲያነብ አንድ ላይ አጠቃሎ አስተያዬቱን እንደሚያቀርብ አሳወቀን፤ በዚያው በፌስቡክ ላይ። አከታትሎም “አርታኢዎቹ” ማስረሻ ማሞ እና ዳኝነት… እንዳሹበት አሳወቀን። ከጥቂት ቀናት በኋላም አስተያዬቱን በአዲስ ነገር የፌስቡክ ገጽ ላይ ለበደው። የእኔም በታምራት አስተያዬት እና አጻጻፍ ላይ መደናገር ከዚህ ይጀምራል።
ፕሮፌሰርን ፅሁፋቸውን ወደአንባቢ ከማድረሳቸው በፊት “ለአንድ ሁለት ዙር” ትችት ለአርታኢ የመስጠት ትህትና የላቸውም የሚለው ታምራት የእሱን ፅሁፍ ሳነብ ከአርታኢ ምንም የተጠቀመ አልመሰለኝም። ብዙ ነው ባይባልም እንኳ እሱ ፕሮፌሰር መስፍን ለአርታኢ አይሰጡም ብሎ ከተቸበት አኳያ ሲታይ ቀላል የማይባሉ የፊደል ግድፈቶች በጽሁፉ ላይ እዚህም እዚያም ይታያሉ። ለምሳሌ በአንቀጽ 3 ላይ “መናጡ እንደቀረልኝ” ሊል ፈልጎ “እየደቀረልኝ”ይላል። እንዲሁም ፕሮፌሰርን “ኢትዮጵያን ከመውደዳቸው የተነሳ ለማቀፍ ሲንደረደሩ ሊያንቋት ከሚዳዳቸው የቀኞች ወገን “ፓትያርክም” እያለ ይገድፋል። እንዴት በአርታኢ የሚያምን እና አርታኢን የተጠቀመ ጸሃፊ ፅሁፍ ውስጥ እንዲህ ያለ ግድፈት ሊኖር እንደቻለ አልገባኝም። ከሁሉም በላይ ታምራት በፕሮፌሰር መስፍን መፅሃፍ በተነሱት ቁምነገሮች መመሰጡን እየነገረን 238 ገጽ ከያዘው የፕሮፌሰር መስፍን መፅሃፍ ውስጥ ቁምነገር ያገኘው እና እንዲጽፍበት የጎነተለው በ 46 ገጾች ውስጥ ብቻ ያሉት “ቁምነገሮች” እንደሆኑ ይነግረናል። እንደታምራትም ባይሆን በትንሿ የአንባቢነት ዘመኔ ከያዘው ዳጎስ ያለ ገጽ ውስጥ ከ 80 ከመቶው በላይ ጅል ከሆነ ሃያ ፐርሰንቱ “ቁምነገር” ጋር ለመድረስ ተካልቦ በሚያካልበው የዛሬ ጊዜ ላይ ትዕግስት እንደማይኖር ጠንቅቄ ተረድቻለሁ። እና ታምራት ከሰማንያ ፐርሰንት በላይ በ “አላስፈላጊ ሐሳቦች” እና “አርቲ ቡርቲ” ተጥለቅልቋል የሚለው መጽሃፍ ላይ እንዴት ጊዜውን ወስዶ “ትችት” እስከመጻፍ እንደተጎነተለ አልገባኝም። አርታኢዎቹ በዚህ በኩል እንዲህ ያለ ሞጋች ጥያቄ ቢመጣብህ እንዴት ትከላከለዋለህ ሳይሉት ቀሩ ወይስ ያሉትን ሳይሰማቸው ቀረ? ወይስ ደግሞ “ዴሞክራት” አርታኢ የቋንቋ ግድፈት ከማሳደድ በቀር እንዲህ ያለ ጉዳይ ውስጥ አይገባም? ቋንቋን በማረምም ሆነ ሃሳብን በማጥራት በኩል ለታምራት ያልጠቀሙ አርታኢዎች ለፕሮፌሰር መስፍን ምን ይፈይዳሉ?
የ “ቀኝ ዘመም” ፖለቲካ እንዲህ ከሆነ
በደርግ ዘመን ነፍስ እንደማወቄ ኢሕአፓ የሚባለው ቡድን የእሱን አላማ የሚጠይቁትንና የሚቃወሙትን በተለይም መኢሶን የተባለውን የባላንጣውን ቡድን “ቀኝ መንገደኛ” እያለ ስም በማጥፋት ብቻ ሳይመለስ በጥይትም እንካ ቅመስ ይል እንደነበር አስታውሳለሁ። በንባብ ላይ ንባብ እየጨመርኩ እንዳቅሚቲ ለመንቃት በማደርገውም ጥረት በውጪው አለም ፖለቲካም የ”ቀኝ” የ”ግራ” የሚባል ፍረጃ እንዳለ ተረዳሁ። ያም ሆኖ በግሌ ገና ሳየው ጠረኑ ልክ (Just) የሆነ እና ልክ ያልሆነን (Unjust) ፖለቲካን የማፈነፍንበት ግን ስም ያልሰጠሁት የራሴን መስፈርት ስለቀየስኩ የቱ የ”ቀኝ” የቱ የ”ግራ” በሚለው እሰጥ አገባ ውስጥ ጊዜዬን አባክኜ አላውቅም። ሆኖም ታምራት የፕሮፌሰር መስፍንን መጽሃፍ “ባዘለው መልካም መልዕክት ከመሳብ ይልቅ” ከ”ቀኝ ዘመም ፖለቲካ ጠላ ጋር ተደባልቆ “ስለቀረበ “በጠረኑ ብቻ ብዙ ሰው ሊገፈተር ይችላል” የሚል የተምታታ ነገር ስላቀረበ የ”ቀኝ” የ”ግራ” የሚሉት ፖለቲካ ፈሊጥ ከየት እንደመጣ እና ማን በቀኝ ማን በግራ እንሚፈረጅ ማወቂያው ጊዜ አሁን ነው ብዬ ተነሳሁ። እናም ኮሌጅ መበጠስ ሳያስፈለግኝ እድሜ ለዊኪፔዲያ ፈሊጡ ከፈረንሳይ አብዮት የመጣ መሆኑን አጫወተኝ። እጅግ የሚገርመው እንደዊኪፔዲያ ትንተና ከሆነ የፕሮፌሰር አመለካከትም ሆነ የፖለቲካ አቋም የግራ የሚባል እንጂ ከቀኝ ዘመም የሚሰለፍ አይደለም። ፕሮፌሰሩ ያልተገራ ስልጣንን አደብ እንዲገዛ እና እንዲገራ እውነትን ለስልጣን እየነገሩ (speak truth to power) እንዲል ፈረንጅ በሶስት አገዛዝ እድሜ ልካቸውን እንዳልባጁ በጥራዝ ነጠቅነትና በጀሌነት ራሱን “ግራ ዘመም” አድርጎ ሲግበሰበስ የነበረው እና

Egypt and Ethiopia Heading Toward a War Over Water

By Mustafa al-Labbad Translated from As-Safir (Lebanon).
In the coming years, Egypt and Ethiopia may be forced to fight a “water war” because Ethiopia’s ambitions contradict Egypt’s historical and legal rights in the Nile waters. Ethiopia can only be deterred by the regional and international balance of powers, which in recent years has favored Ethiopia.
For any Egyptian government, Egypt’s water share and securing the Nile’s headwaters are the top national security priorities, irrespective of the Egyptian government’s ideology or domestic policies. This fact is dictated by geography. For thousands of years, Egyptian rulers have been aware how important water is for Egypt. Water is the lifeline of Egypt (97.5% of Egypt is barren desert). Egyptian rulers have always used any means to defend their country’s historic rights to the Nile waters. As Greek historian Herodotus said, “Egypt is the gift of the Nile.” Egyptian civilization, which is one of history’s greatest civilizations, depends on the Nile. To illustrate the Nile’s importance, we should remember that Egypt is the largest desert oasis in the world. Life in Egypt is concentrated on the river banks where 90 million people live. In short, any Egyptian government should have one eye on the Horn of Africa — on Ethiopia, where the source of the Nile lies — and another eye on the Sinai Peninsula and the Levant, and the balance of power there. History has shown that most of Egypt’s invaders entered through that door.
Egypt’s sentries against the country’s internal and external foes have been sleeping on the job. Their first eye failed to notice the developments at the Blue Nile’s source in Ethiopia (the Blue Nile constitutes 86% and the White Nile 14% of the Nile water volume. The two tributaries meet in Sudan before flowing to Egypt). Their second eye had lost the ability to distinguish friend from foe. Now, with the worsening economic crisis and the political deterioration between the ruling Muslim Brotherhood and the opposition, the balance of power is more and more tilting toward Ethiopia, which may unilaterally increase its water usage. That will affect Egypt’s historic rights of the Nile water and cause a serious threat.
In the report below, we will try to shed light on the Nile conflict and on why Ethiopia’s negotiating position toward Egypt has improved. We will end with a recommendation.
The conflict over the Nile waters
The two groups fighting over the right waters are as follows: the first group are the downstream countries, it includes Egypt and Sudan. The other group are the upstream countries which includes Ethiopia, Eritrea, Uganda, Congo, Burundi, Tanzania, Southern Sudan, Rwanda and Kenya.
Egypt depends on the Nile River for 95% of its water needs for drinking, agriculture and electricity generation. The growing Egyptian population is increasingly dependent on Nile water. Egypt has historical rights to these waters under the Nile Water Agreement signed with Britain in 1929. It gave Egypt the right to veto any project in upstream countries affecting Egypt’s share of water flowing to it. It is worth mentioning that the 1929 agreement is binding for the three upstream countries — Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda — on the grounds that Britain, which colonized these countries, was their legal representative and could sign binding international agreements on their behalf.
Egypt codified its legal status in an agreement with Sudan in 1959. The agreement gave Cairo 55.5 billion cubic meters of water (or 66% of the total water flow), which would go to the Aswan Dam, and Sudan received 18.5 billion cubic meters (22%). The remainder, 12%, is lost to evaporation.
The downstream countries argue that they were not a party to those agreements at the time, and therefore do not recognize their legitimacy. The upstream countries want to modify the water-sharing agreement and keep more of the water by building dams, which will directly affect the water share of the downstream states, Egypt and Sudan.
The problem is compounded by the projected large population increase in the Nile basin. The UN projects that the population in the 11 basin states will reach 860 million people by 2050. This is pressuring both sides to try to improve their positions in the conflict over the Nile waters.
In May 2010, Ethiopia drafted the Entebbe Agreement to modify the historical and legal basis for the sharing of water. Most upstream countries supported the agreement but Egypt and Sudan refused it. It is true that the Entebbe Agreement is not legally binding for Egypt and Sudan, but it does show that Ethiopia is aware of the balance of power and its ambition to impose facts on the ground regarding the construction of dams, which will necessarily affect Egypt’s share in the Nile waters and thus represent an existential threat to Egypt. It is true that Ethiopia cannot force Cairo to sign, but the Entebbe Agreement shows that a major crisis between Cairo and Addis Ababa is on the way. What follows is an explanation of the Ethiopian diplomatic attack on Egypt and Sudan.
The geopolitical framework strengthens Ethiopia’s position
In recent years, the geopolitical framework has clearly shifted in Ethiopia’s favor, and it shifted the balance of power between Ethiopia and Egypt. The geopolitical changes that favor Ethiopia can be seen in six key indicators:
First, the disintegration of Somalia, Ethiopia’s traditional rival with which it fought a tough war over the Ogaden region, removed the geopolitical balance facing Ethiopia’s political ambitions in the region. Ethiopia exploited Somalia’s disintegration to strengthen its regional presence in the Horn of Africa. For years, Ethiopia has been “fighting terrorism” emerging from Somalia. Ethiopia has been doing that under an American umbrella from 2006 to 2009 and then again since 2011 until now.
The second indicator is represented by the partition of Sudan into two states: Sudan and South Sudan. That development has weakened Sudan (and thus Egypt) in the Horn of Africa and allowed Ethiopia to participate, since 2012, in the UN peacekeeping forces in the Abyei region, which is disputed between Sudan and South Sudan.
The third indicator is the following: the weakening of Sudan has shifted the balance of power in Ethiopia’s favor. The crisis in Darfur and the international isolation of the Sudanese president (an international arrest warrant was issued against him by the International Court of Justice in The Hague in 2009) has significantly limited Khartoum’s ability to maneuver in the Nile conflict.
The fourth indicator is the improved relationship between Ethiopia and the West in general, and between Ethiopia and the US in particular, after Addis Ababa emerged as a reliable partner in the Horn of Africa. Every year, Ethiopia gets $4 billion in military, development and food assistance. But the matter is not limited to direct aid. The West has started looking at Ethiopia differently in regard to development projects, such as the construction of dams in Ethiopia. The West had opposed such projects for decades because they were considered a threat to regional security.
The fifth indicator is about China. China is Ethiopia’s primary trade partner and Beijing has expressed willingness to finance a dam construction in Ethiopia and offered Chinese expertise in building large dams. China wishes to have a foothold in the region. There is oil in South Sudan and the Congo has mineral resources.
The sixth indicator is the weakening of Egypt’s political weight in the Horn of Africa. Egypt has no role in Somalia and was not even a key party in the negotiations between Sudan and South Sudan. Egypt’s preoccupation with internal matters is weakening its ability to confront regional and international players, such as China. Even though Egypt is the biggest market for Chinese goods among the 11 basin countries, China has favored other considerations over Egyptian priorities and Egypt’s rights in the Nile waters. So much so that China has offered its technological expertise in constructing dams, which is a complete disregard to Egyptian rights. What will Egypt do about all that? Only God knows.
A recommendation
In the coming years, Egypt and Ethiopia may be forced to fight a “water war” because Ethiopia’s ambitions contradict Egypt’s historical and legal rights in river waters. Ethiopia can only be deterred by the regional and international balance of powers, which in recent years has favored Ethiopia.
The government of Hisham Qandil (an irrigation expert, not a diplomat, legal expert or strategist) seems unable to manage such a complex issue with legal, political, economic, military and international aspects. His government is unable to solve everyday problems that are less complex, such as security, traffic, and fuel and food supplies. This portends dire consequences for Egypt.
What is needed is a way to manage the crisis and use Egyptian soft power toward Ethiopia, especially the Coptic Orthodox Church, which is the Ethiopian Church’s mother church. It is necessary to form a fixed Egyptian team to manage this highly sensitive issue. The team should go beyond party affiliation and include leading Egyptian Nile specialists. Ideological or religious affiliation should not be a factor in choosing that Egyptian crisis team. What is important should be the capabilities and competencies of the team members, who will come from the “clay” of the country, not from a particular group, party or political current. Clay, to those who don’t know, is what Egyptians call their country’s soil, which is a fertile soil resulting from the mixing with the Nile water.
Will Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi realize the seriousness of the situation and deal with that issue as a major national matter and quickly implement the required policies and procedures, or will he hesitate, as usual, and go down in history as someone who squandered the historic rights of Egypt and its future generations?

The Dragon Eating the Eagle’s Lunch in Africa?

by Alemayehu G. Mariam
Flight of the Eagle and pursuit of the Dragon
 China's unprincipled opportunism in Africa.authoritarian stateIn June 2011, during her visit to Zambia U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton pulled the alarm bell on a creeping “new colonialism” in Africa. While dismissing “China’s Model” of authoritarian state capitalism as a governance model for Africa, she took a swipe at China for its unprincipled opportunism in Africa. “In the long-run, medium-run, even short-run, no I don’t [think China is a good model of governance in Africa]…We saw that during colonial times, it is easy to come in, take out natural resources, pay off leaders and leave, …And when you leave, you don’t leave much behind for the people who are there. We don’t want to see a new colonialism in Africa…”
It seems the Eagle has finally taken a good look at the sidewinding Dragon eating its lunch in Africa. The U.S. is in stiff competition not only in Africa but also in the “world’s least explored” country. Clinton minced no words in telling the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “We are in a competition for influence with China; let’s put aside the moral, humanitarian, do-good side of what we believe in, and let’s just talk straight realpolitik… Take Papua New Guinea: huge energy find … ExxonMobil is producing it. China is in there every day in every way, trying to figure out how it’s going to come in behind us, come under us.”
For the past decade, the U.S. has been nonchalant and complacent about China’s “invasion” and lightning-fast penetration of Africa. It was a complacency born of a combination of underestimation, miscalculation, hubris and dismissive thinking that often comes with being a superpower. But the U.S. is finally reading the memo.
Meanwhile, China is zooming along the African highway of “opportunism” with steely resolve and an iron fist sheathed in velvet gloves lined with loans, aid and expensive gifts. In July 2012, Chinese President Hu Jintao at the Opening Ceremony of the Fifth Ministerial Conference of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation proudly proclaimed his country’s economic prowess in Africa. “China’s trade with and investment in Africa have been expanding. In 2011, our two-way trade reached 166.3 billion U.S. dollars, three times the figure in 2006. Cumulative Chinese direct investment in Africa has exceeded 15 billion U.S. dollars, with investment projects covering 50 countries.” He added, “China and Africa have set up 29 Confucius Institutes or Classrooms in 22 African countries. Twenty pairs of leading Chinese and African universities have entered into cooperation under the 20+20 Cooperation Plan for Chinese and African Institutions of Higher Education.”
In 1980, China’s total economic investment in Africa hovered around $USD1 billion; and 20 years later rose only to $USD10 billion. In 2010, China and Ghana signed infrastructure-related loans, credits and made other arrangements valued at about $15 billion. In 2009, China signed a $6 billion loan agreement with the Democratic Republic of the Congo for infrastructure projects. In 2010, Chinese banks extended nearly $9 billion in loans and other types of financing to Angola for various projects. The Angolan government in turn used its oil credit line to commission the State-owned China International Trust and Investment Corporation to build a ghost town outside of the capital at a cost of $USD3.5 billion. (To see the video of the Angolan ghost town click here.) In 2011, Chinese firms accounted for 40% of the corporate contracts in Africa compared to only 2 percent for U.S. firms. According to a report issued by the South African Institute of International Affairs, between 2003-2009, there were between 583,050–820,050 Chinese living, working and doing business in 43 African countries. Today China is Africa’s largest trading partner as the U.S. recedes fast in the rear view mirror.
If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, is it a duck?
China’s official policy statement on its trade and aid relationship with Africa derives from the first of the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence. China “respects African countries’ choice in political system and development path suited to their own national conditions, does not interfere in internal affairs of African countries, and supports them in their just struggles for safeguarding their independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity.” China rejects accusations of neocolonial ambitions in Africa. President Hu Jintao explained that Africa and China are building a “new type of China-Africa strategic partnership… China and Africa have deepened practical economic cooperation featuring mutual benefit.”
But many critics are quick to point out that China’s assertion of a “strategic partnership” cleverly camouflages its calculated strategic ambition to suck out African natural resources on a long-term basis, cultivate African markets as dumping grounds for its cheap manufactured goods and gradually impose its hegemony over the continent. The policy of “noninterference” is said to be an elaborate and shameless ploy used by China to pacify and anesthetize witless African dictators and secure lucrative long-term contracts for raw materials.
Kwame Nkrumah coined the term “neo-colonialism”, the eponymous title to his book, to describe the socio-economic and political control exercised by the old colonial countries and others to perpetuate their economic dominance in the former colonies through their multinational corporations and other cultural institutions. He wrote, “Neo-colonialism is also the worst form of imperialism. For those who practise it, it means power without responsibility and for those who suffer from it, it means exploitation without redress. In the days of old-fashioned colonialism, the imperial power had at least to explain and justify at home the actions it was taking abroad. In the colony those who served the ruling imperial power could at least look to its protection against any violent move by their opponents. With neo-colonialism neither is the case...”
Is there Chinese “neocolonialism” in Africa? Is China exercising “power without responsibility” in Africa “causing exploitation without redress” for Africans?
China is in Africa in full force with traders, investors, lenders, builders, developers, laborers and others. But gnawing questions linger. For instance, is China’s “gift” of the $USD200 million African Union (AU) building in Addis Ababa in 2011 a public demonstration of its good faith, good will and good works in Africa or a subtle hint of its neocolonial ambitions and hegemonic designs? Is China’s aid for the construction of roads, rail lines, bridges, dams and other public works projects evidence of an altruistic commitment to improve communication and commerce within Africa or a calculated strategy to further facilitate China’s deep penetration into the African hinterlands for raw materials (not unlike the European colonialists who built rail lines and ports to export Africa’s mineral wealth)? Is China fully supporting corrupt-to-the-core African dictators because it does not want to “interfere” in local politics or is “noninterference” its way of maintaining a chokehold on African dictators to protect its long-term interests in Africa? Does China want to do business in Africa in the short term and control its destiny in the long term?
In my column, “The Dragon’s Dance with Hyenas”, I suggested that Africa’s dictators could not be more happy with their “new strategic partnership” with China. They claim that China is not only a good friend but also the great rescuer of Africa from the ravenous and crushing jaws of neocolonialists, imperialists, neoliberals and other such nasty creatures. AU president in 2011, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, the ruthless and corrupt dictator of Equatorial Guinea since 1979, even saw “a reflection of the new Africa, and the future we want for Africa” in the Chinese-built 20-story AU glass tower. The late Meles Zenawi saw China leading Africa on a long march out of the winter of despair and desperation in to the spring of hope and renaissance. He proclaimed China brings to Africa a “message of optimism, a message that is out of the decades of hopelessness and imprisonment a new era of hope is dawning, and that Africa is being unshackled and freed…”
I disagreed with Meles Zenawi when he said he saw the “rise of Africa” and an “African Renaissance” reflected in the glass tower. I peeked behind the façade of that shiny edifice and saw standing “a giggling gang of beggars with cupped palms, outstretched hands, forlorn eyes and shuffling legs looking simultaneously cute and hungry and begging” and unable to pony up the chump change needed to put up a building that is to become their world stage.
The “China Model” and China as an ideal(less) partner for African dictators
African dictators talk about the “China Model” as a solution to Africa’s economic problems in much the same way as African sorcerers invoke voodoo incantations to heal those possessed by evil spirits. But the Chinese reject the notion of a “China Model”. Liu Guijin, China’s special representative on African affairs offered an official disclaimer. “What we are doing is sharing our experiences. Believe me, China doesn’t want to export our ideology, our governance, our model. We don’t regard it as a mature model.”
No African dictator has gone beyond phrase mongering to explain how the “China Model” applies to Africa. But the general idea in championing the “China Model” (“Beijing Consensus”) is that Africa can be successful without following the “Washington Consensus” (a set of ten policies supported by the U.S. and the international lending institutions including “fiscal discipline (limiting budget deficits), increasing foreign direct investments, privatization, deregulation, diminished role for the state, etc.). China presumably became a global economic power in just a few decades by pursuing state controlled capitalism instead of free market capitalism, avoiding political liberalization, giving a commanding role for the ruling political party in the economy and society, heavily investing in infrastructure projects, engaging in trial and error economic experimentation, etc.
African dictators believe they can achieve a comparable level of economic development by copycatting China. For Meles Zenawi and his disciples, the “China Model” is the magic carpet that will transport Ethiopia from abysmal underdevelopment and poverty to stratospheric economic growth and industrialization. African dictators are particularly enamored with the “China Model” because China achieved its economic “miracles” in a one-party system that has a chokehold on all state institutions including the civil service and the armed and security forces and by instituting a vast system of controls and censorship that keeps the people from challenging the government or learning about alternatives.
In reality, the “China Model” for African dictators demonstrates not so much the success of authoritarian state capitalism but the triumph of praetorian klepto-capitalism – a form of militarized kleptocratic capitalism in which African dictators and their cronies control the state apparatus and the economy using the military and security forces. African dictators in Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Equatorial Guinea, etc. rule by coercion and their coercive power derives almost exclusively from their control and manipulation of the military, police, and security forces, party apparatuses and bloated bureaucracies which they use for political patronage. They have successfully eliminated rival political parties, civil society institutions and the independent press.
The “China Model” is the ultimate smokescreen for African Dictators, Inc. It provides a plausible justification for avoiding transparent and accountable governance, competitive, free and fair elections and suppression of free speech and the press. Simply stated, the “China Model” in Africa is a huge hoax perpetrated on the people with the aim of imposing absolute control and exacting total political obedience while justifying brutal suppression of all dissent and maximizing the ruling class’ kleptocratic monopoly over the economy.
Could the “China Model” work in Africa?
Stripped off its hype, the “China Model” in Africa is the same old one-man, one-party pony that has

Oil attack on Ethiopian maid

Sharjah: A female employer of an Ethiopian housemaid who works illegally in the UAE has been summoned by the Sharjah police for
A female employer of an Ethiopian housemaid
The victim suffered first and second-degree burns on her head and back.
questioning in connection with allegations that an assailant poured hot cooking oil on the maid’s head and back, causing serious burns across the victim’s body.
The housemaid is scheduled to undergo skin grafting surgery on Monday, more than a month after being hospitalised following the incident in her sponsor’s Mirdif villa in early February.
The employer could not be reached on her telephone by Gulf News by press time on Sunday.
Al Qassimi Hospital officials said the maid has been fighting for her life in the intensive care unit (ICU) after suffering first- and second-degree burns. The victim has been heavily medicated as the ICU team helps nurse her back to health.
Source: golfnews.com

29 Ethiopian commando soldiers defect to Eritrea

      Durame.com
A total of 29 Ethiopian commando forces, who were trained in Blaten Special Force Institute, have defected to neighboring Eritrea.March 24, 2013 — A total of 29 Ethiopian commando forces, who were trained in Blaten Special Force Institute, have defected to neighboring Eritrea.
The soldiers vowed they will liberate Ethiopia from what they say is an oppressive and ruthless dictatorship, according to their communiqué released on Saturday.
Ethiopia is no stranger to high profile military defections. in 2005, eight Ethiopian air force pilots, who were training in Israel, defected and claimed asylum at an Eritrean embassy in Israel.
Similarly, In 2006, over 300 Ethiopian troops, including Brigadier General Kemal Gelchu, who along with his trusted colonels, defected to Eritrea.

በቆብ ላይ ሚዶ ትምህርትና ተማሪ ቤት

(ክፍል አንድ)
ፕ/ር መስፍን ወልደማርያም
ጥር 2005
Professor Mesfin Woldemariam is one of Ethiopia's well-known intellectualsበአለፉት አርባ ዓመታት ውስጥ አንድ ልብ ያላልነው መሠረታዊ ለውጥ አለ፤ እንዲያውም የመከራችን ሁሉ ምንጭ ነው ለማለት ይቻላል፤ የመሪዎቻችን አለመማር ብቻ ሳይሆን ትምህርትን መናቅ ወይም ጭራሹኑ መጥላት ዋና ባሕርያቸው ሆነ፤ እስከደርግ ዘመን የነበሩት የአገር መሪዎች ቢያንስ የአንደኛ ደረጃውን (ዳዊት መድገም) የአገሩን ባህላዊ ትምህርት ያከናወኑ ነበሩ፤ ከዚያ በኋላ ለጨዋ ቤተሰብ ልጆች ትምህርት ማለት በቤተ መንግሥት በመዋል የሚገኝ ልምድ ነበር፤ ተፈሪ መኮንን በአሥራ ሦስት ዓመቱ ደጃዝማች የሆነውና ሥልጣን ላይ የወጣው በመወለድ ያገኘውን ዕድል በልምድ እንዲያዳብረው ነበር፤ ተክለ ሐዋርያት ከአሥር ዓመታት በላይ ሩስያ ተምሮ ሲመለስ ተፈሪ ያገኘውን አላገኘም።
በአጼ ኃይለ ሥላሴ ዘመን ትውልድ ለሥልጣን መነሻ አይሆንም ነበር ባይባልም፣ ለእድገት ትምህርት አስፈላጊ መሆኑ በመታመኑ የዓየር ኃይል እጩ መኮንኖችም ሆኑ መኮንኖቹ ከደብረ ዘይት እየተመላለሱ ይማሩ ነበር፤ በማታው ትምህርት ብዙ የፖሊስና የጦር ሠራዊት መኮንኖች (ኮሎኔል ሚካኤል አንዶም ጭምር) ይማሩ ነበር፤ ማታ ከተማሩት የፖሊስ መኮንኖች ውስጥ ሁለቱ አምባሳደሮችም ሚኒስትሮችም ሆነው ነበር፤ ከሐረር አካደሚ የወጣ መኮንንም አምባሳደር ሆኖ ነበር፤ በቀዳማዊ ኃይለ ሥላሴ አገዛዝ የደሀ ልጆች ወደሥልጣን ወንበሩ አልተጠጉም የሚሉ ካሉ የማያውቁ ናቸው፤ ትምህርታቸውን በታማኝነት ከፍነው ቀብረው ሚኒስትርና ሌላም ሹመት ያገኙ የደሀ ልጆች ብዙዎች ናቸው።
ከዚያ ወዲህ ከጨዋ በመወለድ ሥልጣንን ከማግኘት በባለጌ ጡንቻ ሥልጣን ወደማግኘት ተዘዋውረናል፤ ትውልድን ወደእኩልነት የሚገፋ አስተሳሰብ ስንቀበል ብልግናንንና ጡንቻን ወይም ሕገ አራዊትን፣ ተሳዳቢነትንና ዘራፊነትን፣ድንቁርናንና ሚዛነ-ቢስነትን የእኩልነትና የነጻነት አካል አድርገን የተቀበልን ይመስላል፤ በስድነትና በነጻነት መሀከል ያለውን ገደል ባለጌ አያየውም፤ የጨዋ ልጅ ዳዊት ከደገመ በኋላ እንደበቅሎ እየተገራ ያድጋል፤ ከጃፓን እስከእንግልጣር ተመሳሳይ ሁኔታ የነበረ ይመስላል፤ ነገር ግን ወደአውሮፓውያን ሥልጣኔ ስንንደረደር በጃፓናውያንና በእኛ መሀከል የታየው ልዩነት እነሱ ጨዋነታቸውን እንደያዙ እኛ ደግሞ ጨዋነታችንን ትተን መነሣታችን ነው።
አብዮት ወይም ወያኔ ማለት ትምህርትም ሆነ ጨዋነት ለሥልጣን አስፈላጊ እንዳልሆኑ በአደባባይ ማሳየት ሆነ፤ (አብዮትን ከማየቴ በፊት አብዮተኛ ነበርሁ ለማለት የምችል ይመስለኛል፤ አብዮትን ካየሁ በኋላ ግን ወዲያው ጠላሁት፤) አብዮተኛ ማለት አእምሮ የሌለው፣ ኅሊና የሌለው፣ እግዜአብሔር የሌለው፣ ሚዛን የሌለው ከጡንቻ በቀር ሌላ ኃይል የማያውቅ ማለት ሆነ፤ በጡንቻ የማይሠራ ነገር ከሌለ ትምህርት ለምን ያስልጋል? ከሁሉም ይበልጥ የሚያስደንቀውና የሚያስደነግጠው ትምህርትን በሥልጣን የመለወጡ ሙከራ በዩኒቨርሲቲ ተማሪዎች መጀመሩ ነው፤ በዚህ ጉዳይ ላይ ላዩን በግልቢያ የተደረጉ ጥናቶች ብዙ ቢሆኑም ጠለቅ ያለና የውስጡን መነሻ እየመዘዘ የሚያወጣ አንድም የለም።
ደርግ ሥልጣን እንደተሸከመ በየመሥሪያ ቤቱ አንዳንድ መኮንኖችን ‹‹የለውጥ ሐዋርያ›› በሚል ስያሜ ፈላጭ-ቆራጭ አድርጎ አስቀመጠ፤ ትእዛዙ በወታደራዊ ፍጥነት እንደውሀ ከላይ ወደታች እንዲፈስ ተፈልጎ ነበር፤ ነገር ግን ሥራ ሁሉ ወደመቆም ስለደረሰ ደርግ ቶሎ ብሎ ተለወጠና የለውጥ ሐዋርያት የሚባሉትን አነሣቸው፤ ከዚያ በኋላ ደርግ በሁለት ተቃራኒ ሁኔታዎች ተወጥሮ ተያዘ፤ በአንድ በኩል ከባሕር ኃይልና ከዓየር ኃይል፣ ከሐረር የጦር ትምህርት ቤትና ከአገር ውጭም የተማሩ መኮንኖች ነበሩ፤ በሌላ በኩል ከሆለታ ማሠልጠኛ የወጡ ነበሩ፤ በነዚህ በሁለቱ በተለያየ የትምህርት መሠረት ላይ በቆሙ መኮንኖች መሀከል አጉል ፉክክርና መናናቅ ነበረ፤ በተለይም ጄኔራል አማን በተማሩት መከበቡ የተማሩትን ዓይን እንዲገቡ አደረጋቸው፤ አብዛኛዎቹ የከፍተኛ ትምህርት ምሩቆች የሆኑ መኮንኖች በየሰበቡ የተጠረጉት በዚህ ምክንያት ይመስለኛል፤ በዚህም ምክንያት ደርግ ገለባ ያንሳፈፈበት ድርጅት ሆኖ ነበር ለማለት ቢቻልም ከደርግ ውጭ የተመለመሉት ሎሌዎች (ባለሥልጣኖች) የተማሩና በማናቸውም መመዘኛ የማያሳፍሩ ነበሩ።
የደርግ አባሎችም አለመማር ያስከተለባቸውን ጉድለት ለመሙላት በየሶሺያሊስት አገሩ የይድረስ-ይድረስ ለብ ለብ ትምህርት-ቢጤ በጉርሻ እየተሰጣቸው ተመለሱ፤ (የዛሬ ዘመን ትውልድ ያለጉርሻ ያደገ ነው፤ አሽከር ወይም ልጅ ገበታ ከመቅረቡ በፊት እጅ ያስታጥባል፤ ቆሞ፣ ኩራዝ ይዞ ካበላ በኋላ ጉርሻ ይቀበላል፤ ከዚያም እጅ አስታጥቦ ጉርሻውን ይበላል፤) በአቋራጭ ዲግሪም አገኘን ብለውም ተኩራርተው ነበር፤ በሶሺያሊስት አገሮች ሁሉ እየተሽከረከሩ ትምህርት የተባለውን ቢያርከፈክፉባቸውም ውሀ በስንጥቅ መሬት ውስጥ ሰተት ብሎ እንደሚገባ በእነሱ አንጎል ውስጥ አልገባም፤ ሆኖም በሶሺያሊስት መንግሥቶች ዓለም-አቀፋዊ ፍቅርና ብርቱ ሎሌዎችን የማፍራት ፍላጎት ለስድስት ወራት ያህል በድሎት አቆይተው የፈለጉትን ብራና አስታቅፈው ይልኳቸው ነበር፤ ብዙዎቹ ምንም ቢሆን ኢትዮጵያዊ ይሉኝታ እየያዛቸው ‹‹ዶክተር›› የሚለውን የትምህርት ማዕርግ አልደፈሩትም ነበር፤ ከመሀከላቸው አንዱ ግን እንደተመለሰ በያለበት እየዞረ ‹‹ዶክተር›› መሆኑን ሰዎች ሁሉ እንዳይረሱት እያደረገ አስታወቀ፤ ራሱን ለፌዝ አጋለጠ፤ መሳቂያ ሆነ፤ በመጨረሻም አውነቱና አጉል ፍላጎቱ እየተጋጩ በመቸገሩ ከፎቅ ላይ ተከስክሶ ሁለቱንም ራሱን (ማለት የእውነቱንም የውሸቱንም) አጠፋ፤ ያሳዝናል።
በቆብ ላይ ሚዶ ጥቅም አይሰጥም፤ በቆብ ላይ ሚዶ ለጌጥ አይሆንም፤ ትምህርትን መሣሪያ አድርገው ሊጠቀሙበት የማይችሉ ሰዎች፣ ከዚያም አልፈው ሥልጣንን በትምህርት ማስጌጥ የማይችሉ ሰዎች ሥልጣንን ያዋርዳሉ፤ በኋላ ሥልጣንም ያዋርዳቸዋል።
(ክፍል ሁለት)
የዛሬዎቹ ባለሥልጣኖች በደርግ ጊዜ አልነበሩም፤ የደርግን ስሕተት በማየት አልተማሩም፤ ትምህርታን አቋርጠው ወደጫካ የገቡት ከትምህርት የሚበልጥባቸው ምኞት አጋጥሟቸው ነው፤ የትምህርት ገዜያቸውን በጫካ ባለሥልጣን በመሆን፣ እነሱው ሕግ አውጪና ዳኛ፣ እነሱው የጫካ አስፈጻሚ ሆነው ቀዩ፤ ደርግ በጠራራ ጸሐይ የሚሠራውን እነሱ በጫካ ጭለማ ሲሠሩ ቆዩ፤ በሥልጣን ላይ ከወጡ በኋላም በጣም ቆይተው ትምህርት አስፈላጊ መሆኑን በትንሹ ተገነዘቡ፤ በጣም የተማሩ ሰዎች ጋር ሲገናኙ ማፈር አስጨነቃቸው፤ ስለዚህም ቀላሉ ነገር የተማሩ ሰዎችን አለማቅረብ፣ ትምህርታቸውን በጠባያቸው ካላጠቡ የተማሩ ሰዎች ጋር በቀር አለመገናኘት፣ እንዲያውም የትምህርትን ዋጋና ጥራት በማዋረድ አዲስ የሚመረቁት ሁሉ ለባለሥልጣኖች አንገታቸውን የሚደፉ ዓይነት እንዲሆኑ ማድረግ ዓላማ ሆነ።