By Simon Tisdall
The Guardian
Rising tensions in the Ogaden region of eastern Ethiopia, combined with chronic instability in neighbouring Somalia, Eritrean enmity, and human rights concerns, are testing US support for the Addis Ababa government led by Clinton-era good governance pin-up Meles Zenawi.
The Bush administration welcomed the recent release of 38 opposition politicians detained after violent protests over the conduct of elections in 2005. But it has kept quiet over Ethiopia’s subsequent expulsion of International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) workers from Ogaden’s Somali regional state, following claims they were aiding Ogaden National Liberation Front separatists (ONLF).
The ICRC condemned Ethiopia’s action, warning it would have “an inevitable, negative impact” on an already impoverished, largely nomadic population. The ONLF claimed the expulsions, and a ban on foreign media, were an attempt to prevent the international community witnessing “the war crimes taking place against the civilians of Ogaden at the hands of the Ethiopian regime”.
The rebels also blamed Ethiopian government forces for the killing in a roadside attack on July 29 of two leaders of the main indigenous relief organisation, the Ogaden Welfare and Development Association. Despite Ethiopian denials, the ONLF says the government continues to enforce “a virtual blockade against aid and commercial goods in Ogaden”. It has repeatedly called for UN intervention.
Congress’s Africa committee endorsed legislation last month that could oblige President Bush to withhold US financial and military assistance to Ethiopia’s government unless all political prisoners are freed, freedom of speech and information are respected, and human rights groups can operate unhindered.
“Ethiopia’s authoritarian prime minister Meles Zenawi was once a darling of the Clinton administration and has forged close ties the Bush administration. With Washington’s blessing, Meles sent troops to Somalia in December to expel the radical Islamic Courts movement linked to al-Qaida,” a Washington Post editorial noted. But the paper said the “preposterous” charges against opposition activists, abuses in Somalia and reported atrocities in the “internal war” in Ogaden meant ties might have to be reviewed.
A recent report for the international watchdog Human Rights Watch quoted witnesses describing how Ethiopian troops burned homes and in some cases, killed fleeing civilians.
Human Rights Watch said the separatists were also guilty of serious abuses, a refrain vigorously pursued by the Ethiopian government. “The ONLF, a terrorist group acting in collaboration with the defunct Islamic Courts (in Somalia) and the Eritrean government, has been committing atrocities and human rights violations, including indiscriminate murder of innocent civilians,” the foreign ministry said.
Wider US interests in the Horn of Africa suggest Washington will be minded to continue to accept Addis Ababa’s side of the story, unless the situation grows egregious and the international community becomes more involved. Those US interests include Ethiopia’s role in supporting the enfeebled transitional government in Somalia and opposing the spread of Islamist extremism across the region.
Keeping a firm hand on ethnically Somali, Muslim Ogaden, the scene of a cold war-era proxy conflict, is a long-standing US objective. The US has also sought Ethiopia’s support in peacemaking in southern Sudan and Darfur.
But region-wide instability seems to be increasing. Nearly 30,000 Somalis were displaced from Mogadishu in July. Political reconciliation efforts have made no headway so far. Despite their political differences, many if not most Somalis regard the Ethiopian troops as a hostile occupation force.
Eritrea, its bitter border dispute with Ethiopia still simmering, is shipping “huge quantities of arms” to insurgents in Somalia, according to a UN report. Concerns about a spreading humanitarian and refugee emergency grow, even as international aid targets undershoot. And now, far from being “defunct”, Somalia’s Islamist movement may be gaining friends and influence in an increasingly isolated, radicalised Ogaden.
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የቅድመ ሰው ቅሪተ አካል « ሉሲ» ወይም ድንቅነሽ ለዓለም አቀፍ ትርዒት ወደ ዩኤስ አሜሪካ ተወሰደች። እንዳትፈራርስ በጥንቃቄ ልትያዝ ድንቅነሽ ይህንኑ አከራካሪ ጉዞዋን የጀመረችው ትናንት መሆኑን የኢትዮጵያ ብሄራዊ የታሪክ ቤተ መዘክር ሰራተኞች አስታውቀዋል። ድንቅነሽ በዚህ ወር ወደ ዩኤስ አሜሪካ እንደምትጓዝ ቀደም ብሎ ብትታወቅም፣ የትናንቱ ጉዞዋ ይፋ ሳይደረግ የተከናወነበት ድርጊት ብዙዎችን አስገርሞዋል፤ አጠያይቆዋልም።
Source: DW
የቀድሞውን የኢትዮጵያ የሀገር ውስጥ ሚንስትር አቶ ክንፈ ገብረመድህንን በጥይት የገደሉት ሻለቃ ጸሀየ ወልደስላሴ በጠቅላይ ፍርድ የተበየነባቸው የሞት ቅጣት ዛሬ መፈጸሙን የኢትዮጵያ ማረሚያ ቤቶች አስተዳደር አስታወቀ። ሻለቃ ጸሀየ ወልደስላሴ የሞቱ ቅጣት እንዴት እንደተፈጸመባቸው ግን አስተዳደሩ አእገለጸም። የቀድሞውን የኢትዮጵያ የሀገር ውስጥ ሚንስትር የተገደሉት የኢትዮጵያ ዋነኛ ገዢ የፖለቲካ ፓርቲ ሕዝባዊ ሀርነት ትግራይ ህወሀት አመራር በተከፋፈለበት ወቅት ከስድስት ዓመታት በፊት ነበር።
በምስራቅ ኢትዮጵያ በኦጋዴን ሁለት ቦምቦች በፈነዱበት ጥቃት አንድ ሲቭል መገደሉንና ሌሎች ስምንት መቁሰላቸውን ዜና ምንጭ ሮይተርስ አስታወቀ። የኢትዮጵያ መንግስትና የኦጋዴን ብሄራዊ ነጻ አውጪ ግንባር ለፍንዳታው ጥቃት እርስበርስ ተወቃቅሰዋል። አንድ ስማቸው እንዲጠቀስ ያልፈለጉ የኢትዮጵያ ማስታወቂያ ሚንስቴር ቃል አቀባይን ጠቅሶ እንደዘገበው፡ በኦጋዴን ርዕሰ ከተማ ጂጂጋ ትናንት አንድ የገበያ ቦታና አንድ ቤተክርስትያንን ዒላማ ባደረገው ጥቃት የተጠረጠሩ ሁለት ግለሰቦች ታስረዋል። ጥቃቱን የጣለው የኢትዮጵያን መንግስት ለማሳጣት የሚፈልገው የኦጋዴን ብሄራዊ ነጻ አውጪ ግንባር ነው በሚል የጠቅላይ ሚንስትር መለስ ዜናዊ ከፍተኛ አማካሪ አቶ በረከት ስምዖን ወቀሳ አሰምተዋል።
Source: DW
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (Reuters) — The Woyanne regime in Ethiopia executed a military officer convicted of killing the country’s former head of security and immigration, the federal prison service said.
Major Tsehai Wolde Selassie was convicted of shooting dead Kinfe Gebremedhin, a close ally of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, outside an officers’ club in 2001.
“Major Tsehai was executed after his appeal for clemency to the Supreme Court was turned down and his death sentence was approved by President Girma Wolde Giorgise,” the Federal Prison Administration said in a statement.
The FPA did not say how Tsehai was executed but soldiers are supposed to face a firing squad, according to Ethiopian law.
The Ethiopian Airlines CEO last Friday announced that the airline has made an annual profit of 129 million birr (see below). When that amount is converted to U.S. dollar, it amounts to only $14 million. EAL (referred to by some as the Purse of Ethiopia’s Dictators) is reported to be the largest and most profitable air carrier in Africa with annual passenger traffic of over 1.5 million. It has very few competators in Ethiopia and other countries. But the profit it is reporting is smaller than one SafeWay store in Washington DC. The Sheraton Hotel in Addis Ababa makes more profit than that. So the question arises, what is the real profit the airline made?
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Ethiopian Airlines Makes 129 Million Birr Profit
The Reporter (Addis Ababa), August 4, 2007
Ethiopian Airlines made a net profit of 129 million birr during the 2006/2007 budget year ending June 2007, it was learnt.
The management of Ethiopian disclosed the profit to its employees at a meeting held last Friday at the Addis Ababa Conference Center in Sidist Kilo. The chief executive officer, Girma Wake, said the company’s profit target for the 2006/2007 budget year was 307 million birr.
According to Girma, the main reasons for the lower profit than the amount forecast were increased rates on leased aircraft, escalating fuel price and cost increase on over-flying, navigation and ground handling charges.
During the 2005/2006 budget year, Ethiopian made a net profit of 134 million birr, a fall by 60 percent compared to that of the 2004/2005. The fuel price hike in the global oil market cost Ethiopian dearly. During the 2005/2006 fiscal year, the airline spent 1.86 billion birr (210 million dollars) on fuel, a sharp increase of 46 percent compared to that of 2004/2005. Girma said the escalating cost of fuel had slashed the company’s profitability.
However, Girma seems to be happy with the overall performance of the company. He commended the management and all the employees of Ethiopian for their “hard work and commitments” to the company. He said Ethiopian has won two international awards in the past one year.
The management decided to pay a half-month salary as bonus to all the employees. The management also made a six percent annual salary increment to all the employees, in accordance with the collective agreement signed with the Labor Union in March 2005.
Ethiopian has about 4,700 employees. The national flag carrier which started its service with a maiden flight to Cairo in 1946 with a DC 3 aircraft serves 50 destinations across the globe – 28 of them in Africa.
The company’s annual passenger traffic is over 1.5 million. At present Ethiopian owns 28 commercial aircraft. It is the first airline in Africa to order Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft. The first two of the ten B787 aircraft will come to Addis Ababa in 2008. Last month the airline signed an agreement with Boeing Capital Corporation for the purchase of one MD-11 freighter aircraft. Girma told the employees that despite the growing competition coming from foreign carriers Ethiopian has a bright future.