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Author: Elias Kifle

Woyanne court rules against Tedy Afro

The kangaroo court in Ethiopia today sent popular singer Tedy Afro back to prison after ignoring the forged hospital record that was produced by the prosecutor.

The original hospital record shows that the victim of the car accident, for which Tedy is charged with hit-and-run and manslaughter, had died one day before on the accident occurred.

Instead of dismissing the case, Judge Leul Gebremariam has decided to accept the prosecutor’s version of the document that is signed by a physician who did not even perform the autopsy the accident victim.

Judge Leul Gebremariam ruled that there is enough evidence against Tedy and ordered him to come back to court in October to start defending himself against the charges. Tedy was then hauled back to the filthy, disease-infested jail.

Tedy’s lawyer, Ato Million Assefa, continues to poorly represent the singer, causing the client some times to speak up for himself in the court room. Many of Tedy’s supporters are puzzled as to why Ato Million, a well-known Woyanne sympathizer, is hired as a defense lawyer. Family members who were asked about the defense lawyer said that he was retained by Teddy eight years ago.

At today’s court appearance five women who cried after hearing the judge’s decision to send Tedy back to jail were taken to jail by Federal Police.

The court room was full and that many have been turned away.

Judge Luel is one of the three judged who tried Kinijit leaders.

U.N. seeks $222 million to avert a major food crisis in Ethiopia

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LONDON (Reuters) – The U.N. food agency urgently needs $222 million to avert a major food crisis in Ethiopia, where millions are struggling to cope with drought and high prices, it said on Monday.

The Ethiopian government and aid agencies estimate that 4.6 million people in the Horn of Africa country need emergency food aid to tide them through to the next harvest in November.

Another 5.7 million who receive food and cash under a regular welfare programme live in areas where drought is biting and need extra help.

“Already for some kids … it’s too late, but it’s not too late for many, many other children who need assistance until the next harvest comes in,” said Sonali Wickrema, who designs programmes in Ethiopia for the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP).

“We want rapid assistance now in order to prevent large-scale and long-term damage,” she said.

The Ethiopian government says 75,000 children are already suffering from the most severe form of malnutrition.

The government and aid agencies put out a call in mid-June for $325 million to deal with the failure of the shorter of two rainy seasons combined with soaring food and fuel costs.

WFP country director Mohamed Diab said donors had only agreed to provide half of that so far, and urged them to give the rest without waiting for the emergency to become more acute.

“Given the fragile and critical nutritional situation in the country, if such resources don’t come on time … we will see the situation worsening beyond the current level,” Diab warned.

He said food aid would take two to three months to arrive in the country. Due to dwindling stocks, WFP has already cut cereal rations for July by a third.

High prices and a lack of food supplies in Ethiopia are forcing WFP to bring in food aid from outside the country, from places such as South Africa and the Black Sea region.

The agency says the cost of white maize, the staple food for most poor Ethiopians, has risen more than 150 percent on Ethiopian markets in the past year, and grain has become so scarce that prices for most domestically produced cereals are higher than imported supplies.

Aid agencies have warned about similar problems in nearby countries dealing with the overlap of drought and high global food prices — Somalia, Kenya, Djibouti and parts of Uganda.

In addition, Ethiopia has used most of its emergency food reserves to feed around 3 million poor people in urban areas over the past 18 months, according to WFP.

Wickrema said the failure of the March-May rains had begun to cost lives in Ethiopia. She said WFP did not have an accurate death toll, but it had probably not yet reached the hundreds.

The longer of the country’s two rainy seasons has now started in some areas, but some aid agencies fear it will not be enough for a good harvest.

African Union asks UN to delay Sudan war crimes charges

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ADDIS ABABA (AFP) — The African Union on Monday asked the UN Security Council to delay a decision by the International Criminal Court on whether to indict Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir on war crimes charges.

“The African Union requests the UN Security Council to defer the process initiated by the ICC, taking into account the need to ensure that the ongoing peace process is not jeopardised,” Nigerian Foreign Minister Ojo Maduekwe told reporters.

“We are asking for a delay within the rules of the Rome Statute,” he said at the end of AU’s Peace and Security Council meeting in Addis Ababa.

The UN Security Council can pass a resolution to defer for a period of 12 months any investigation or prosecution by the ICC and the delay may be renewed by the council under the same conditions.

“The AU invites the (AU) commission to take all necessary steps for the establishment, within the period of 30 days of this meeting, for a high-level panel made up of distinguished Africans to examine the situation,” Maduekwe added.

“We urge the Sudanese government to take immediate steps in investigating human rights violations in Darfur,” he said.

ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo accuses Beshir of personally instructing his forces to annihilate three non-Arab ethnic groups in Darfur, masterminding murder, torture, pillaging and the use of rape to commit genocide.

Last week, Moreno-Ocampo asked ICC judges to issue a warrant for Beshir’s arrest. If granted, which could take several months, it would be the first issued by The Hague-based court against a sitting head of state.

Arab League ministers have rejected the court’s move and on Sunday the group’s Secretary-General, Amr Mussa, held talks with Beshir in an attempt to stall possible war crimes charges.

In Nairobi, Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki warned any bid to put Beshir on trial would prove counter-productive.

Kibaki said international efforts would be better expended on seeking a lasting solution to the violence in Darfur, rather than bringing Beshir before courts “that may not have an understanding of the conflict.”

“Any isolationist policy against the sitting government of Sudan will be counter-productive,” Kibaki said in a statement released after talks here with Beshir’s special envoy, Bonal Malual.

Sudan Justice Minister Abdel Basit Sabdarat welcomed the AU position adding that Khartoum will never be intimidated and was capable of prosecuting crimes itself.

“Sudan does condone impunity and we would prosecute crimes of all sorts. Sudan is not governed by the law of the jungle, it is a responsible state with an independent judicial system,” he told the council.

The United Nations says that up to 300,000 people have died and more than 2.2 million have fled their homes since the conflict erupted in February 2003. Sudan says 10,000 have been killed.

It began when African ethnic minority rebels took up arms against the Arab-dominated Khartoum regime and state-backed Arab militias, fighting for resources and power in one of the most remote and deprived places on earth.

According to the ICC statute, if credible trials of alleged war criminals are held domestically the court’s own charges are dropped.

Sudan’s two other ICC indictees, current cabinet minister Ahmed Harun and Arab militia leader Ali Kosheib, had both been set to face trial in Sudanese courts on charges of crimes against humanity and war crimes.

Kosheib’s trial was indefinitely suspended in March 2007. Harun was briefly detained and released last October for lack of evidence.

Sudanese diplomatic efforts now focus on persuading the UN Security Council to freeze any prosecution of Beshir for 12 months, renewable, warning that peace prospects would be severely undermined.

Somali insurgents attack Woyanne army convoy

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(AFP) — Mogadishu – At least seven civilians were killed when Somali insurgents attacked a joint convoy of Ethiopian Woyanne and Somali troops, sparking deadly clashes, witnesses said on Monday.

Fifteen others were wounded in the clashes that erupted on Sunday in northern Mogadishu’s Towfiq district and spread to others residential zones in the volatile coastal capital, they said.

“Five civilians, including four children, were killed in Gupta neighbourhood when they were hit by an artillery shell. Four of them died in the spot while the fifth one passed away later,” said Abdifatah Mohamed Nur, a resident.

Another resident Muktar Bile said stray bullets killed two other civilians in Sinay area, bringing the death toll to seven.

“Two young men died after they were hit by stray bullets in our neighbourhood. I know one of them, he was a footballer,” added Colonel Hassan Artan Warsame, a police official.

Another police official confirmed the clashes but declined to give details on the civilian casualty.

“The terrorists attacked our forces, but we repelled them. They fired heavy rockets and we responded, but I can’t tell the casualties,” added the official, who requested to remain unnamed.

Insurgents spokesman Sheikh Abdirahin Ise Ado said they killed nine Somali forces and Ethiopian allies in the fighting. “We killed nine of them in Towfiq junction.”

They have launched attacks almost daily since then, in which many government fighters – and civilians – have been killed.

The latest clash came days after a July 9 deadline for the implementation of a truce, which in June was initialled by the federal government and top leaders from the main Islamist-dominated opposition movement in Djibouti.

St Louis medical team removes facial tumor from Ethiopian man

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By Kay Quinn, STLtoday.com

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI — Imagine watching helplessly as a facial tumor begins to form on the right side of your jaw and eventually takes over most of the right side of your face. You have trouble swallowing, the tumor is painful and every doctor and surgeon who has examined you has been unable to offer you relief or hope of removing it.

That was the case for Beyene Tadesse, 30, a farmer who lives in a small village near Addis Ababa in Ethiopia.

For the past 10 years, Tadesse could only watch as his condition worsened. The mass formed from enamel cells that usually produce teeth. Instead, these cells produced a tumor the size of a tennis ball.

Doctors in Ethiopia and surgeons visiting from other countries had examined Tadesse. Some had even attempted surgery only to discover they couldn’t remove the tumor.

That’s when Dr. Rick Hodes, an American-born doctor who has practiced medicine in a Catholic health facility in Ethiopia for 20 years, contacted a St. Louis dentist, Dr. Ethan Schuman, to see if anyone in Missouri could help.

Thanks to Schuman and Dr. Michael Noble and his medical team at St. John’s Mercy Medical Center, Tadesse arrived in St. Louis in early May for an operation to remove the tumor and reconstruct his jaw.

Hodes, who accompanied Tadesse on the three-day, 8,000-mile journey to St. Louis, recalled how desperate his patient was getting as his tumor began to threaten his health. The mass was taking over vital structures in Tadesse’s neck.

“It’s getting worse every week. It’s getting bigger, its getting more difficult to chew,” Hodes said.

Finally, after weeks of tests and pre-op exams, Noble and his team removed Tadesse’s tumor at St. John’s on June 17.

The tumor was invasive, and the surgery complicated. The most difficult part involved replacing Tadesse’s lower jaw bone or mandible.

“The lower joint has a hinge on each side,” Noble said. “So we’re going to actually carry the dissection up to the hinge that’s on his right side and we’ll actually replace the lower part of the hinge.”

In a nine-hour operation, Tadesse’s mandible was replaced with one that came from a cadaver.

Tadesse doesn’t speak English, but Hodes says he is grateful for all the medical care that he has received.

“He feels like he’s won the Powerball lottery. I’m serious,” Hodes said.

Schuman says the operation wouldn’t have been possible without the generosity of Noble, Dr. Makepeace Charles, St. John’s Mercy Medical Center and many other individuals and companies that donated their services to Tadesse.

“The biggest thanks for us is that he goes out and leads a relatively normal life, and I would love to be able to be there when he goes back to his family,” Schuman said.

For now, Tadesse will spend two months recovering from his surgery. He hopes to return to Ethiopia later this year.

Kay Quinn is a reporter and anchorwoman at KSDK (Channel 5).

VIDEO: Ethiopian hero honored in DC

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Ethiopian War Hero General Legesse Honored in DC

Thousands of Ethiopians have descended on Washington DC for an annual Ethiopian Soccer Tournament organized by ESFNA. The entire week greater Washington has been buzzing with scores of events and activities organized by various groups for social, political and cultural purposes. On Wednesday the 2nd of July, 2008 around 8:30 pm, a unique occasion was unfolding in a more dignified and magnificent way.

The occasion was aimed at honoring an extraordinary Ethiopian war hero of the modern era. Several hundred Ethiopians have over packed the hall of Trinity Church located at 6000 Georgia Ave, NW Washington DC. They were anxiously waiting for the arrival of General Legesse Teferra, the honoree of the special event, one of the most outstanding war heroes of Ethiopia and recipient of the highest order of Medal for heroism, (Ye Hibretsebawit Ethiopia Woder Yelelew Jegna).

Inside the hall, at the top of the stage hangs a ten feet banner. It reads: Ye Jegnoch Mishit, (An Evening of Ethiopian Heroes). Poster-size photos of the hero, General Legesse, are placed on both sides of the banner. At the entrance, a very large poster is also placed on a tripod. The writing is in Gold on a black background: a tribute to and representative list of Ethiopian heroes who gave the ablest leadership to the former armed forces, those who died while heroically fighting, and all those heroes who fell in line of duty for Ethiopia and their honor in the eastern, southern, and northern fronts in the 70s and 80s. Among those listed, there are names of those members of the armed forces who are still alive. These are representative names from the Army, Air force, Navy, and the Police forces.
Also at the front entrance area, Maj. Kassaye Mazengia and other members of the former armed forces and members of the organizing committee dressed in jet black suits, white shirts and a tie were greeting and sitting Ethiopians coming to attend the event. Ato Samson Kebede, Capt. Fikru Debebe and other members of the committee were displaying on a table all kinds of items prepared for the occasion. A special issue magazine prepared by members of the AMFEA that has Gen. Legesse’s colorful picture on its front cover and a book about Gen Legesse Teferra, entitled The Tiger of the Sky (Ye Ayer layie Nebir) were few of the publications and items for display and sale at the back of the hall near the entrance.

At the front raw tables, the invited guest of honors of evening: Honorable Ambassador Imiru Zeleke, Honorable Ambassador Ayalew Mandefro, Col Brehanu Wubneh of the Airforce have taken their seat. While another one, Col. Tsegaye Yimer, a person who gave a distinguished service to the Ethiopian Ground Forces for several decades, was unable to make it due to illness. Other invited and distinguished guests who have taken their seats include: Brig. General Ashenafi Gebre Tsadik, an Air force pilot and another war hero on his own right; Brig. General Tsegaye Habtie Yimer, a prominent Air force officer who served in various high positions including as a commander of its Flight Training Academy; Ato Gebreyes Begna, a prominent businessman; Dr. Aklilu Habte, the former president of Addis Ababa University; Ato Mulugeta Lule, the prominent veteran journalist; Ato Solomon Kifle, distinguished veteran journalist now working for the VOA, Dr. Gebreye Wolde Rufael, a prominent physician known also for his contributions for democracy and Unity, Ato Abraha Belai, Editor-in-Chief of Ethiomedia, Ato Obang Metho, renowned human rights activist and many other distinguished guests have taken their seats.

Around 9: 15 P.M, Gen. Legesse accompanied by his wife, two daughters, and other members of his family arrived. When General Legesse entered the Hall, three members of the former military in Army, Navy, and Air force uniform greeted the General with formal military salute with military marsh music at the background. Hundreds of those who were present stood up while members of the former military formed a straight line both at the right and left side of the hall way to give proper honor for the arriving hero. Gen Legesse Teffera, walking in front along his close friend Capt. Bezu and his family members were followed by the uniformed men before he took his sit at the special table reserved for him and members of his family.

Artist Tamagne Beyene, the lead person of the stage for the event, formally announced the arrival of Gen. Legesse and Artist Shambel Belayneh took over to play a patriotic tune while the attendees sang, with ululation, rounds and rounds of applause to welcome the hero. Soon after dinner was served, Artist Tamagne Beyene invited Ato Hailu Balcha, a member of the organizing committee, who spoke briefly about purpose of the special event of the evening and gave background information how the committee was organized. The committee that consists of representatives from Association of the former Ethiopian Air force, The Harar Military Academy Alumni Association, The Ethiopian Ground Force Veterans Association, patriotic Ethiopians, and Artists, members of Gen. Legesse’s family managed to execute a special and colorful event to honor Gen. Legesse Teffera due to a team work that took more than four months of hard work, he told the audience.

Ato Hailu expressed his appreciation to all members of the committee who worked very hard and the able leadership provided by Ato Brehanu Wolde Selassie, the chairman of the Association of the former Ethiopian Air force (AMFEA) and the chairman of the organizing committee of the special event, Ye Jegnoch Mishit. Then Ato Neamin Zeleke, a member of the organizing committee and program coordinator for the event, read brief biographies of the guests of honor for the evening and invited Birg Gen. Tsegaye Habtieh Yimer to the stage.

Brig. General Tsegaye is among those who served the former Ethiopian Former Ethiopain Airforce in various capacities, including as commander of the Air Force Academy and Commander of the Debre Zeit Air force base. He attended the Harar Military Academy seventh course for cadets with Gen Legesse Teffera and others. As a friend and colleague of Gen Legesse for more than four decades, Gen. Tsegaye spoke at length his memories, far and near, about Gen Legesse, his contributions, the General’s heroic deeds, and his professional achievements.

After Gen, Tsegaye concluded his speech, Artist Tamagne Beyene announced the special gift presentation ceremony. Ato Yohannes Demissie and Ato Ayalneh Ejigou, members of the organizing committee carried the special gift and handed it to Col Berhanu Wubineh, one of the guests of honor and one of the ablest and distinguished members among pilots and members of the Air force. He was one of those who educated Birg General Legesse while he was a cadet. During the Ethio-Somali War of the ’70s, Col Brehanu also contributed much as a pilot and commander of the F-5 E Interceptor squadron, a squadron that made tremendous contribution and sacrifice in defeating the Air force of the invading Somali forces.

When Col Brehanu, accompanied by other the guests of honor and members of the organizing committee, presented the special gift to Gen Legesse , there was a another round of heavy applause, ululation, and emotional cries heard from among the large crowd of attendees. The special gift was a model F-5 E Fighter jet with the same serial number that was flown by Gen. Legesse to execute many of his heroic deeds during the war against the invading Somali forces and the very one shot down before he was taken as a prisoner of war (POW) in Somalia for eleven years.

Artist Tamagne also announced that Dr. Assefa Negash who came from Holland has prepared a special gift to present it to Gen Legesse. Dr. Assefa gave a copy of O Minilik in frame, a newspaper named after Emperor Minilik and printed in Brazil by Black Brazilians who were struggling against racism and servitude to gain their freedom in Brazil several decades ago and the Sons of Sheba’s Race, a book by Prof Scot. He then made a brief remark how the African Diaspora or the black world in general back then looked up to Ethiopia for inspiration, and in this day and age where Ethiopia and Ethiopaiwinet have been under assault and negation from various forces, it is yet another testimony what and how much Ethiopia meant for the African people around the world, Dr. Assefa reminded those present. Ato Kebede Hale Mariam who came from Vancouver, Canada disturbed chest pins of the Ethiopian Flag to Gen Legesse, the guests of honor, and to the hundreds of Ethiopians present for the occasion.
After receiving these gifts, Gen. Legesse made a brief speech tanking all Ethiopians who were present for giving recognition for his contribution as citizen of Ethiopia and discharging his duties as professional officer and pilot during the most trying times for Ethiopia and her people in the late 1970s. Moving poems conjuring the danger that was faced by Ethiopia back then and dedicated to Gen Legesse and other heroes were read by Maj. Kifle Abocher, the famous man of letters of the former ground force, and the renowned Artist Alemtsehay Wodajo. It was indeed a very sober and emotional moment for many who were present.

Then Ambassador Ayalew Mandefro, one of the guests of honor, also spoke about the political and historical context of the Ethio-Somalia war of the seventies and shared his intimate knowledge of the events and incidents during that time in his former capacities as Ethiopia’s Ambassador to Somali and a former Minister of Defense. He said that During the Ethio-Somali war of 1977, the performance of the Ethiopian Air force pilots from their F5E cockpit against the more advanced Mig 21 & 23’s flown by the Somalis was just brilliant even if measured by the highest standard of an air to air battle. Indeed the heroic flight maneuvering skills displayed by pilots such as Brig. General Legesse Tefera and his colleagues epitomize succinctly the military adage – “what counts most in warfare is the human element behind the weapon and not the caliber of the weapon itself.” A second shinning and crucial performance the EAF recorded during the war was their execution in breaking the logistic line of the advancing enemy which saved the fall of Dire Dawa and perhaps beyond, Ambassador Ayalew reminded the audience.

Dressed in Air Force flight uniform, Artist Tamagne Beyene took the stage again, announcing to an applauding and amused audience the following program of the event: a presentation of a special documentary produced for this special occasion. Tamagne pulled an amazing feat by taking many historical videos and a well researched narration to produce a documentary that lasted 30 minutes. The documentary film depicted the Somalia invasion of Ethiopia in the seventies and the heroic role played by the Ethiopian Air force. Among those mentioned in the film are General Legesse Teffera and other air force pilots, including Brig. General Ashenafi Gebere Tsadik, Col Brehanu, both were present at the occasion. Gen Ashenafi , another war hero present at the occasion, flew fighter jets side by side with Gen Legesse and many others, contributing much to reverse the grave danger posed to Ethiopia’s’ sovereignty and unity by the Somali invading force. When the jet fighter flown by Ethiopian pilots were seen blowing the Somalia Mig jets to pieces, there were heavy applause from the over exicted and emotional audience. There were moments were people were heard crying. This was yet one of the most emotional and memorable parts of the eventful evening.

Upon the film’s conclusion, a deafening applause and cheer filled the hall, an expression of approval for work well done as a yet another tribute to Gen Legesse and other Ethiopian heroes by Artist Tamagne. Shambel Belayneh and other artists continued to stir the aroused patriotic feeling of the attendees by singing patriotic songs, shileela and fukera of the traditional war songs.
At last, it was time to read short stories of representative and outstanding leaders of the former Ethiopian military and that of prominent heroes who fell heroically in line of duty in eastern and northern fronts as well as those among those who lost their lives during the failed coup attempt of 1989.
Ato Neamin Zeleke asked the audience to stand up to honor and remember those who have died heroically and salute those who are still alive. Brief stories of those selected for the occasion- Brig General Teshome Tessema, at Massawa, Eritrea; Birg General Legesse Abeje, at Axum , Tigray front, Col. Mamo Temtime, at Nakfa, Eritrea, Col Belay Aschenaki at Masswa, Eritrea, Commodore Belege Belete and Commodore Getachew Siyoum of the Navy at Massawa, Eritera –were read. Also among the ablest military leaders of the modern armed forces that of Maj. General Fanta Belay of Air force, Maj. General Demissie Bultto of the Army, Maj. General Amha Desta of the Former Ethiopian Airforce who died during the failed coup of 1989 were also read.

Families of the armed forces, those who had fallen heroically and those alive were also present on the occasion. Ato Dereje Demissie Bullto the youngest son of the late Maj. General Demissie Bullto, one of the ablest leaders of the former Ethiopian Military, came from Boston for the event; Mimi Legesse, the daughter of Brig General Legesse Abeje, another hero who fell while fighting at Axum , Tigray front was present. The presence of Wro. Elizabeth Abdissa, the daughter of Col. Abdisa Aga, one of the outstanding heroes during the fascist Italian invasion of Ethiopia, made the event even more touching and memorable. Messages of best wishes and congratulations sent from Maj. Dawit Wolde Girogis from West Africa, Prof Getachew Haile in Minnesota, the poet Ato Assefa Gebre Mariam from Las Vegas, and the former Minster of information and later Ambassador, Maj. Girma Yilma, Col. Yonas Liben and the Dallas Area Air force Association in the USA, were relayed to General Legesse Teferra
The special event got coverage by Voice of America, German Radio, and Ethiopian Television Network (ETN), Ethiomedia.com (where Ethiomedia Chief Editor Abraha Belai was one of the Guests of Honor), Ato Muluneh Yohannes of Ethiomedia, Ato Aberra Wogi, Ato Abebe Antallew, Ato Tekelemickael Abebe, and reporting for of the Ethiopian Current Affairs Discussion Room, Ato Abebe Belew of Addis Voice , Videographers and photographers from Addis Culture, and other members of the media came to provide coverage for this special and historic event.

The names of outstanding leaders and heroes, both alive and dead, from the former Army, Navy, Air force, and the police forces, representing unnamed thousands of other heroes from Generals to line officers, from NCOs and privates to militia members of the former armed forces were read.
Capt Dawit Wondifraw, Getachew Degefu, Beyene Debalke, Yesahnew Lemma, and Girma Legesse read the following list:

Maj. General Fanta Belay
Maj. General Merid Negussie
Maj. General Demisse Bultto
Maj. General Amha Desta
Maj. General Abera Abebe
Maj. General Mesfin Gebre Kal
Maj. General Kinfe Michael Dinku
Maj. General Kumlachew Dejene
Maj. General Hailu Gebre Mickael
Brig. General Teshome Tessema
Brig. General Legesse Abeje
Brig. General Yilma Gizaw
Brig. General Temesgen Gemechu
Brig. General Tesfu Desta
Brig. General Tesfaye Terefe
Brig. General Tesfaye Habte Mariam
Brig. General Kassaye Chemeda
Brig. General Behailu Kinde
Commodor Belege Belete
Commodor Getachew Siyoum
Brig. General Araya Zerai
Brig. General Woubetu Tsegaye
Brig. General Merdesa Lelisa
Brig. General Berta Gomoraw
Brig. General Gennanaw Mengistu
Brig. General Desalegn Abebe
Brig. General Taye Balaker
Brig. General Lemesa Bedase
Brig. General Solomon Begashsaw
Brig. General Ashenafi Gebre Tsadiq
Brig. Genreal Kifetew Merine
Brig. General Afework Wolde Michael
Brig. General Negussie Zergaw
Brig. General Kebede Mehari
Brig. Geneal Hailu Kebede
Brig. General Addis Aglachew
Brig. General Hailu Berawork
Brig. General Legese Haile
Brig. General Mesfin Haile
Brig. General Erkyihun Bayyisa
Brig. General Kebede Wolde Tsadiq
Brig. General Yemata Miskir
Brig. General Engda Gebre Amlak
Brig. General Techane Mesfin
Brig. General Tadesse Tesema
Col. Mamo Temtime
Col. Girma Teferi
Col. Tilhaun Bogale
Col. Kassa Gebere Mariam
Col. Belay Ashenaki
Col. Beshu Gebre Tekle
Col. Sereke Brehan
Col. Gethanun Wolde Girogis
Col. Seifu Wolde
Col. Shibabaw Zeleke
Col. Aytenw Belay
Col. Mersha Admassu
Col. Estifanos Gebre Meskel
Col. Luel Seged
Col. Gizaw Tefera
Col. Bezabeh Petros
Col. Reta Menkir
Col. Shimelis
Col. Worku Tefera
Col. Tilahun Nebro
Col. Berhau Wubneh
Col. Getahun Demissie
Captain Hailemickael Kebede
Captain Mersha Girma
Commander Hailu Lemma
Commander Ashalew Jemaneh
Commander Matheos Mekonnen
Commander Assefa Jaleta
Commander Abebe Haile
Lt. Col. Shewataye Alemu Habte
Major Getachew Mihirete
Major Tadesse Mengesha
Major Getahun Demissie
Major Getachew Tessema
Capt. Solomon Mekebib
Capt. Hailu Kebede
Capt. Abraham Sinke
Capt. Afewerk Tariku
Capt. Wondimu Beyene
Lt. Merid Dachew
Lt. Afework Mengesha
Lt. Tilahun Hailu Gebre
Lt. Yekono Tadesse
Lt. Girma Aynalem
Lt. Girma Kebede
Lt. Shibeshi Haile
Senior Technician Ewunetu Genta
Chief Gezagehn Gezmu
Warrant Officer Kassa Merine
Sgt. Woldu Baikedagne
Srg. Abebaw Asfaw
Corporal Andarge Belay
Corporal Adinew Reta
Private Zelelew Dibaba
Private Simeret Ayele
Private Milita Ali Berke
Private Kebede Belda.
Private Iyayu Shegaw

Note: The committee would like to apologize to Ethiopians who may have been offended due to unintended incidents that happened during the occasion.