Video: Tamrat Layne repents
Ethiopia’s ex-prime minister Tamrat Layne repents at a church in Addis Ababa.

Ethiopia’s ex-prime minister Tamrat Layne repents at a church in Addis Ababa.
By SCOTT GOLDSTEIN | The Dallas Morning News
DALLAS, TEXAS – Behind the cash register at Don’s Food store, a heavy-set 60-year-old convicted felon named James minded the shop on a recent afternoon, his mere presence capturing what slain shopkeeper Alemu “Alex” Abebe, an immigrant from Ethiopia, represented to this long-neglected neighborhood in Old East Dallas.
James served time for cheating and stealing. He sipped Thunderbird wine and smoked dope while living on the streets.
Yet Abebe and his brother, Daniel Takele, thought enough of the man to give him food, money, work and trust when no one else would.
“You see, I love these guys, I really do,” said James, who asked that his last name be withheld. “To have gotten the chance I got with all the marks against me ….”
It’s been more than four years since Abebe was fatally shot during a robbery at the store, and the case remains unsolved. With some help from James and others, Takele continues to run the store and, along with Abebe’s widow and two teenage sons, still yearns for justice. The family’s $10,000 reward for information in the case still stands.
“One of the things that made me stay here is I might … be able to help in the closure of the case,” said Takele, who emigrated from Ethiopia with his brother. “Because we’ve been in the neighborhood and we know different people, I was hoping some day, someone would say something if they know something or heard anything.”
So far, that critical tip has not come for Dallas police homicide Detective Mark Ahearn.
Shots heard on phone
Ahearn believes the events that led to Abebe’s killing happened quickly and involved three men.
About 11:15 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 17, 2004, two of the men walked into the store at 825 S. Carroll Ave., while one remained outside as a lookout. When the only customer in the store at the time left, the robbery began.
A store employee mopping in the back kitchen felt a gun in his back and heard someone say, “Don’t move” repeatedly, before being forced to the floor.
Confronted by the other robber, Abebe probably tried to defend himself, Ahearn said. Investigators found the shopkeeper behind the front counter wearing an empty gun holster.
“Once [Abebe] made a decision that he’s going to defend himself, that’s when the suspect” panicked, he said. “There’s a lot of gunfire.”
Abebe was on the phone with his wife, who heard the gunshots. She has said she heard no argument beforehand.
The two robbers from inside the store were seen running away afterward by witnesses who could provide only vague descriptions: The shooter was a black man in his 20s, about 5 feet 5 inches tall, medium weight, medium complexion, with short hair and a small black gun. The one in the back of the store was described as a tall black man in his 20s, stocky and dark-skinned with a medium Afro hairstyle.
Community members turned out to express their affection for the friendly store owner they knew as Alex in the days and weeks after his death, adorning the store with cards, flowers and handwritten messages.
For Ahearn, who still hopes to find someone with key information about the killing, this case has taken a personal toll.
“Every person that’s murdered in Dallas is a victim,” said the 24-year veteran detective. “But this guy was truly an innocent victim doing his job at his business that he’s owned for 18 years.”
“This is a good man who has a family, who’s got two children who are growing up without a dad. It’s incredibly frustrating.”
Brothers fled Ethiopia
Abebe and his brother overcame long odds before becoming American business owners in 1987.
They were born in Ethiopia and joined the Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Party, a group critical of the government. The men fled and ultimately ended up in the U.S. in the early 1980s after successfully seeking political asylum.
The brothers generally worked opposite shifts so that they could each maximize their time with their families during their off-hours. Still, they remained close.
“It’s very difficult,” Takele said. “You really don’t know how close you are until people are no longer there.”
As Takele took time to gather himself before returning to the store after his brother’s death, James helped get things in order.
He cleaned Abebe’s blood from the floor and did various chores in the store. He also eventually installed a thick Plexiglas fortress that now surrounds the cashier area, which faces a monitor displaying security camera images.
He helped then and he continues to help now, he says, because of what Abebe and Takele have done for him.
“No matter how much determination you have, you need a helping hand,” he said. “That’s what this store represents, a helping hand.”
REWARD
A $10,000 reward has been offered by Alemu Abebe’s family for information in this case. Call Detective Mark Ahearn at 214-671-3682 or e-mail homicide@dpd. dallascityhall.com.
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An Ethiopian Boeing 757 airliner made an emergency landing at Malta International Airport this morning after one of its two engines failed, sources said.
The Boeing 757 was on a flight from Addis Ababa to Rome Fiumicino when it declared an emergency and diverted to Malta.
The Health Department was immediately informed and an emergency plan was put in place. Two ambulances were sent on site and all the doctors and nurses at the Emergency Department at Mater Dei Hospital as well as those at the four main health centres and at St Vincent De Paul, were prepared to handle any possible injuries.
The plane landed safely at 4.30 a.m.
EDITOR’S NOTE: U.S. investors don’t need to tell us that. The plan to break up Ethiopia into 9 small countries has been in the works for a while. It is clearly stated in TPLF’s manifesto that calls for the creation of Greater Tigray. To prevent that from happening, every Ethiopian must rally around resistance groups that stand for united Ethiopia, such as EPPF and Ginbot 7.
By Javier Blas and William Wallis | Financial Times
A U.S. businessman backed by former CIA and state department officials says he has secured a vast tract of fertile land in south Sudan from the family of a notorious warlord, in post-colonial Africa’s biggest private land deal.
Philippe Heilberg, a former Wall Street banker and chairman of New York-based Jarch Capital, told the Financial Times he had gained leasehold rights to 400,000 hectares of land – an area the size of Dubai – by taking a majority stake in a company controlled by the son of Paulino Matip.
Mr Matip fought on both sides in Sudan’s lengthy civil war but became deputy commander of the army in the autonomous southern region after a 2005 peace agreement.
The deal, between Mr Heilberg’s affiliate company in the Virgin Islands and Gabriel Matip, is a striking example of how the recent spike in global commodity food prices has encouraged foreign investors and governments to scramble for control of arable land in Africa, even in its remotest parts.
In contrast to land deals between foreign investors and governments, Mr Heilberg is gambling on a warlord’s continuing control of a region where his militia operated in the civil war between Khartoum and south Sudan.
“You have to go to the guns, this is Africa,” Mr Heilberg said by phone from New York. He refused to disclose how much he had paid for the lease.
Jarch Management Group is linked to Jarch Capital, a US investment company that counts on its board former US state department and intelligence officials, including Joseph Wilson, a former ambassador and expert on Africa, who acts as vice-chairman; and Gwyneth Todd, who was an adviser on Middle Eastern and North African affairs at the Pentagon and under former president Bill Clinton at the White House.
Laws on land ownership in south Sudan remain vague, and have yet to be clarified in a planned land act. For this reason, some foreign experts on Sudan as well as officials in the regional government, speaking on condition of anonymity, doubted Mr Heilberg could assert legal rights over such a vast tract of land. The deal is second only in size to the recent lease of 1.3m hectares by South Korea’s Daewoo from the government of Madagascar.
Mr Heilberg is unconcerned. He believes that several African states, Sudan included, but possibly also Nigeria, Ethiopia and Somalia, are likely to break apart in the next few years, and that the political and legal risks he is taking will be amply rewarded.
“If you bet right on the shifting of sovereignty then you are on the ground floor. I am constantly looking at the map and looking if there is any value,” he said, adding that he was also in contact with rebels in Sudan’s western region of Darfur, dissidents in Ethiopia and the government of the breakaway state of Somaliland, among others.
The company was embroiled in a dispute with the south Sudan government over its claims to exploration rights for oil.
Mr Heilberg said Jarch had no expertise in agricultural development but would be seeking joint venture partners to cultivate the land, which is in one of the remotest parts of Sudan, in a region bordering the Nile river but with no tarred roads.
By Messay Kebede
In sharing my reflections and comments on Seye’s article, posted on to the website Ethiomedia, my main purpose is to open up a debate on the course of action that opposition forces need to take in the face of the increasingly repressive methods of the {www:Woyanne} regime. The glaring evidence that the regime is nowhere near to accepting the verdict of elections any time soon is pushing a growing number of people toward the conviction that Ethiopians and Ethiopia have no other choice than to overthrow the regime by means of armed struggle. Since the political setback following the 2005 rigged election, many people are now saying that the resolution of the Woyanne regime to stay in power by all means, even if the cost is a generalized war between ethnic groups, has made irrelevant the reasons that previously led them to oppose armed struggle. The stubborn and immensely shortsighted resolution by Woyanne to cling to power by all means has shifted the political struggle from the quest for a democratic future to the mere necessity of self-defense and national survival.
Seye’s article originates from the clear perception of the impending danger and suggests ideas as to the best way to avert the danger and map out a better future. The danger of national disintegration with its inevitable ethnic clashes clearly shows that national survival is the common good, which survival should, therefore, become the overriding concern of opposition parties. And the only way to ward off the threat is to unite to defeat those who put the country in danger by their stubbornness to remain the sole ruling body. Seye proposes various means and ideas liable to give a firm and lasting unity to opposition forces, convinced as he is that the continuous failure to unite in a lasting manner is what allows the Woyanne regime to stay in power.
His explanation of why the opposition fails to unite puts the blame on the practice of creating unity before an understanding is reached on major policy issues related to the ethnic question, the constitution, and economic policy. Because opposition forces attempt to unite only to get rid of the EPRDF, the lack of agreement on what should be the post-Woyanne society feeds on mistrusts and divisions.
Since neither democracy nor economic prosperity is possible without national existence, the first principle of unity should be the defense of national integrity. Once agreement is reached on this primordial issue, then a series of measures must be adopted to cement the unity. (1) Opposition forces must create mutual confidence, and they do so if, going against the prevailing culture of polarization, they respect each other’s views and adopt a policy of rapprochement. (2) They must come together around common and agreed goals instead of highlighting their differences. (3) They must learn to see their differences as complementary rather than as causes for hostility, a good example being the conflict over the primacy of group or individual rights when in reality the two are complementary. (4) They must avoid extreme positions so as to target the center, thereby creating a win-win situation to the detriment of exclusion and one-sided victory. (5) They must acquire the quality of farsightedness so as to be able to resolve the numerous and deep problems of Ethiopia. (6) They must drop the habit of creating parties around personalities, just as they must avoid personalizing issues, obvious as it is that the primacy giving to personalities ends up fueling divisive positions.
I want to express my admiration for the sincerity of Seye’s conversion from a war hero to an advocate of democracy and peaceful form of struggle. No less admirable is his denunciation of Woyanne policy after having been one of the top promoters and executors of that policy. However, my purpose is not to examine the reasons for his conversion as they are immaterial to the issue at hand. What matters is the genuineness and feasibility of his proposal to unite the opposition forces. His proposal contains valuable and practical suggestions and reveals the temperament of a man destined for a position of leadership.
What particularly attracted me in his article was his attempt to explain the origin of the culture of confrontation characteristic of Ethiopia’s modernized elites. With total confidence, he traces the culture of confrontation back to the 60s. According to him, our present inability to solve peacefully and democratically our differences emanates from the cultural habits and ideological beliefs developed during the 60s. Indeed, the Cold War has taught us to conceive of politics in terms of polarization and confrontation. What is more, the Marxist-Leninist idea of class struggle has taught us to think of social life in terms of irreconcilable interests leading to violent confrontations that must end with the total defeat of opponents, not to mention the adoption of undemocratic principles of organization, such as democratic centralism and the one-party system.
I fully concur with Seye’s analysis, all the more so as I recently wrote a whole book (Radicalism and Cultural Dislocation in Ethiopia, 1960-1974) depicting the harmful impacts of the events and characteristics of the 60s on the Ethiopian educated elite. One might question the use and validity of dwelling on the past when what we need is to solve our pressing problems of today. For Seye and myself, it is abundantly clear that opposition forces cannot achieve unity unless they get rid of the influence of past conceptions and forms of struggle. The liberation from the power of acquired habits and beliefs begins with awareness. So long as people ignore the hidden forces that condition them, they are unable to change. Just as Sigmund Freud shows that going back into childhood traumas explains misconducts in adult life, thereby offering the possibility of deliverance, so too in becoming aware of bad habits and beliefs developed in the past Ethiopian political elites initiate the healing process.
The process is arduous since it implies self-examination and criticism and, most of all, the courage to reject beliefs that were once cherished and hailed as false and detrimental. I measure the difficult in the very fact that Seye himself, despite his genuine effort, is not successful in liberating himself from the 60s. Take for instance what he says about the “national” question in Ethiopia. He considers the EPRDF’s recognition of the “national” question and the subsequent implementation of a form of political organization designed to assert the rights of nationalities as a positive contribution. Yet his article rejects the idea of class and class struggle inherited from Marxism-Leninism on the ground that it is a divisive and polarizing ideology.
The contradiction is but obvious: just as Seye has discarded class struggle as a divisive and wrong ideology, so too should he reject ethnicization as a fallout of that same mistaken ideology. Unfortunately, he does not; worse yet, he hides the contradiction to himself by engaging in a sophism defending the complementarity between group rights and individual rights, as though it were possible to create a nation out of disparate groups that owe their primary allegiance to sectarian identities.
If Seye had remained faithful to his primary methodological principle according to which our present impediments originate from wrong habits inherited in the 60s, he would have come to the conclusion that the so-called national question is another invention designed to create exclusive constituencies to competing elites in the face of the hegemony of Amhara ruling elite. While democratic and liberal means existed to knock down the Amhara hegemony, rising educated elites adopted the polarizing ideology of class struggle and national question.
Why did these rising elites prefer a divisive ideology to the path of consensus to promote their cause? We find the answer if we notice that, like the idea of class struggle, the national question enables the educated elite to emerge as liberators of oppressed groups and to speak in their name. Not only this messianic positioning crafts them as exclusive representatives of these groups, thereby excluding other competing elites, but it also grants them absolute control over their own constituents. In another word, the national question is none other than an expression of elite conflicts: it is not about oppressed people; it is about elites assembled around ethnic criteria fighting to create reserved and docile constituencies.
This does not mean that I reject ethnicity and sponsor the return to the structure and culture of imperial Ethiopia. The latter is gone for good and we have no reason to wish its resurrection. To try to revive it is to ignore the present reality and force on people an idea of national existence that they are not willing to accept, thereby driving the country into even greater conflicts. It is also to overlook that, like any other human concerns relating to identity, ethnicity craves to be recognized so that the lack of recognition turns into a fanatical attachment.
Let it be added that the path to a democratic and prosperous future is impracticable without the consent and participation of elites parading ethnic identities. I agree with Seye in saying that a consensus reconciling ethnic identity with Ethiopianness must be found. But one condition for reaching a consensus is the demystification of ethnicity: once its political purpose is revealed and accepted, it loses much of its primordialism. Its magnetism dissipates if we indeed show that it is a construct of elite rivalries rather than a natural determination.
In his attempt to explain the metamorphoses of the TPLF, Seyes gives a decisive importance to world events, such as the collapse of the Soviet Union and the socialist camp, which he says instituted the global hegemony of capitalism and its ideology of free market economy. These events have impacted on the TPLF, forcing it to drop its communist ideology and convert to liberalism and free market economy. However, since in Ethiopia and other third world countries neither liberal democracy nor the free market really prevails, Seye has no means to explain how a decisive factor failed to be decisive. It is inconsistent to say that the TPLF converted to liberalism even as it was dividing Ethiopia along ethnic lines. A sincere conversion to capitalist ideology would have divided Ethiopia on the basis of either economic or administrative feasibility, and not on ethnic criteria resulting in the formation of Bantustans.
The fake conversion of the TPLF to the free market economy and democratic ideals is a crucial issue that should shape the strategic choices of opposition forces in their struggle to remove the regime. Indeed, our major question should be the following: How can one expect the implementation of a genuine ethnic federalism and the respect of democratic electoral process and outcomes under an undemocratic regime? Unfortunately, Seye’s paper dodges the issue and assumes that a fair democratic process can be expected to be in place.
The puzzle here is that Seye is absolutely convinced that the present regime is both undemocratic and highly dangerous to national survival. He strongly underlines that it survives by means of generalized corruption and nepotism. But then, how can such an undemocratic and corrupt regime be expected to respect the rules of democracy? In light of the fake conversion of the TPLF, is it honest to maintain that a peaceful form of democratic struggle can bring about changes?
Seye’s inconsistencies result from the strategic choice of peaceful struggle that is forced to believe that victory is possible if the opposition is united enough. In other words, the EPRDF has no other option but to cave in if it faces a united opposition. I absolutely respect this view, but I hasten to add that the regime will not admit defeat so long as the struggle is confined to elections and winning votes. What really undermines dictatorships is not the lack of majority vote, but forms of struggle that make them unable to function.
The bare truth is that Seye has a limited notion of nonviolent struggle, since he reduces it to electioneering. He calls for the respect of the existing constitution and only supports forms of political actions that it sanctions. He thinks that there are only two choices: either one respects the constitution and struggle to change it through legal means or one has recourse to armed struggle to change it. Yet a nonviolent form of struggle offers a third choice, which is to force a government to change by means of noncooperation.
Noncooperation is a peaceful form of struggle in that it never confronts violently the government. Instead, it uses peaceful means, such as strikes, boycotts, mass demonstrations, etc, to force the government to make concessions or even to overthrow it. The purpose is to undermine the proper functioning of the established order through the withdrawal of cooperation and consent.
Seye’s main goal is to defeat the EPRDF electorally by forging a lasting and large unity of opposition forces. But he fails to explain how opposition forces, even so united, can be successful in view of the fact that, as he himself admits, the EPRDF is undermining its own constitution through undemocratic measures. In a word, his analysis does not propose a viable solution. Unity is necessary, but not enough: new forms of nonviolent struggles must be designed to put pressure on the government or even to topple it if necessary.
My contention is that it is high time that opposition leaders who advocate peaceful forms of struggle and the Ethiopian people come to the conclusion that the electoral game cannot provide the expected results unless other forms of peaceful struggle expressing withdrawal of cooperation are added to the repertoire. We must not constrain nonviolent movement by legality to the point of making it powerless when it is an active method of struggle whose goal is to bring about social change through noncooperation. And the longer opposition leaders cling to the hope of bringing change solely through electoral means, the less able they will be to prevail over those who advocate armed struggle as the only solution, with all the unpredictable and dire consequences that an armed conflict would entail in present day Ethiopia.
Wrongly or rightly, I have come to believe that Birtukan’s imprisonment as a result of her refusal to comply and her decision to go on hunger strike announces the need to upgrade the nonviolent movement in Ethiopia with new techniques of resistance. I am not sure whether other opposition leaders have come to the same conclusion. At any rate, Birtukan seems to say that the time has come to transcend electioneering and energize the peaceful struggle by the inclusion of non-cooperative forms of protest.
(Dr Messay Kebede can be reached at [email protected])
By David Landes | TheLocal
Ethiopian-born Swedish chef Marcus Samuelsson, founder of New York’s acclaimed Aquavit restaurant, is among those being tipped as possible candidates to prepare meals for Barack Obama at the White House.
In an interview with the AP news agency, Tim Ryan, who heads the Culinary Institute of America, named the Ethiopian-born Swede as one high-profile chef the incoming president may consider to cook for certain state dinners.
“Chefs are great performers. So to take a page from [former President John F.] Kennedy’s playbook and recognize the artistic performances of the culinary greats, each state dinner could be organized by different high-profile chefs,” Ryan told AP.
He added that including Samuelsson in the line-up of top chefs called in to prepare meals for special occasions would allow president-elect Obama to “capture some of the star power but in a practical and realistic way”.
Samuelsson, who was raised in Gothenburg, traveled to New York in 1991, and within a few years had risen to be Aquavit’s executive chef at the age of 24.
While confirming he was aware of the speculation about a job at the White House, Samuelsson through a spokesperson declined to comment further on the matter to the Metro newspaper.
Other names circulating as possible White House chef candidates include Art Smith, Oprah Winfrey’s personal chef and Rick Bayless, whose Topolobampo restaurant in Chicago is one of Obama’s favourites.