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Author: Elias Kifle

Signifying the new Ethiopian Millennium

By Selam Beyene, Ph.D.

The dawn of the new Ethiopian Millennium, which will be observed by Ethiopians at home and those in the Diaspora with immense pride and well-founded hope for the future, will bear different significances to different groups.

For Zenawi and his oppressive machinery, it will be a smokescreen to divert attention from the critical issues of the day:

  • the agonizing economic conditions of the vast majority of the people[1],
  • the return of power to the legitimate winners of the elections of May 15, 2005[2], and
  • the prosecution of those responsible for crimes against humanity, including the massacre of unarmed civilians in the aftermath of the May 15, 2005 elections[3, 4].

It will be a welcome opportunity for Zenawi to attract Ethiopians in the Diaspora, who are eager to celebrate the special occasion with their loved ones, and who will come with much-needed hard currency. The Ethiopian Airlines, one of the most valued cash cows of the TPLF money launderers[5], and the various TPLF owned hotels, restaurants and other tourist-oriented facilities in the country are expected to generate hundreds of millions of dollars to fatten the foreign bank accounts of the dictator and his cronies that have been hit hard by the negative reactions of donors toward the brutal actions of the tyrannical regime following the elections.

Zenawi will spitefully view and use the moment as a chance to repair his damaged image as an enemy of Ethiopia. As a disgraced and traitorous leader, he has repeatedly denigrated the proud history of the country and desecrated the national flag that Ethiopians and much of Africa so affectionately cherish. He has violated the territorial integrity of the ancient land by advocating the secession of one of its legitimate provinces and carving and handing out fertile lands to other countries[6]. He has compromised the long-term interest of the country by invading a neighboring country that posed no tangible threat to Ethiopia’s security. He has wickedly and venomously interjected ethnic discord among the various groups who have lived in harmony for centuries.

With inapposite and out-of-place extravaganza that can rival a Hollywood event, the new Ethiopian millennium will also be exploited by the corrupt and inept regime to mask the immeasurably excruciating economic hardship experienced by the vast majority of the people. As inflation sky-rockets to an all-time high and more and more people fail to make ends meet, the members of the minority government launder money in foreign bank accounts [5] and squander the meager resources on expensive lobbying[7]. As a wicked and segregated educational system condemns the vast majority of the vulnerable youth to a life of perpetual servitude and hopelessness[8], an elite class of the minority regime is rapidly forming, with their sons and daughters crowding premier schools and universities at home and abroad. According to a recent report, “[O]nly about 60 per cent of students in Ethiopia survive to Grade 5, see, e.g.,[8]. As widespread diseases decimate the population through a subtle agenda of ethnic cleansing, the dictator will spend millions of dollars on millennium festivities to hoodwink the unsuspecting outside world into believing the existence of a state of normalcy and prosperity. Based on a 2006 Human Development Report, Ethiopia is ranked 170th out of 177 countries with respect to a composite measure of life-expectancy, education and standard of living[9].

To a handful of sycophants, the occasion will have significance of a more sinister nature. It will serve to curry favor with a vicious dictator, under the guise of observing a historic moment. These are individuals who work hard to derail the passage of a bill in the US Congress − a bill whose only aim is to protect the democratic rights of the people of Ethiopia. In the name of organizing the millennium festivities, they make themselves frequent visitors of Zenawi’s office, and help to disguise the illegitimacy of the regime, and the crimes the leaders have committed against humanity, by feeding lobbying firms and Congressional members fabricated information about the sorry state of the nation. Shrouded in the subtleties of the customs of the ancient land, they have become deadly tools of an iniquitous regime in the purge of opposition leaders, who are coerced into assuming responsibility for the crimes of the dictator[11].

And, what is the true significance of this special moment to the veritable sons and daughters of Ethiopia?

The occasion will mark the end of a turbulent century, in the final chapter of a remarkable millennium, when the sovereignty of a dignified people was challenged by Fascism, their freedom trampled upon by a military dictatorship, and their unity and aspiration for democracy crushed by a brutal and ethno-centric dictator.

Most importantly, it will be a time for the vast majority of Ethiopians to reflect on their achievements of the May 15, 2005 elections, in which they stunned the dictator and the outside world with their determination and resoluteness to exercise their rights to choose a government through the ballot box.
It will also be an occasion to renew their fortitude to take back what has unfairly been stolen by the vicious despot, to remember the 193 unarmed civilians brutally massacred by the Agazi and other killing machinery of the minority government, and to persevere with their call for justice against the criminals.

For thousands of Ethiopians who will be making pilgrimage to their motherland to share the precious occasion with their loved ones, the moment will be a time to witness first-hand the sufferings of millions of their fellow citizens, who are experiencing unimaginable economic hardship and political oppression under the iron rule of Zenawi and his minority regime. Unhindered by the façade of blitz and glitz and the luxurious lifestyles of the few urbanites and TPLF lackeys, they will see the true hardship befalling the 70 million plus Ethiopians, who are struggling to eke out a precarious existence that pales in comparison the condition under the discredited and brutal regime of Mengistu Haile Mariam. As noted by economic analysts, the number of people earning less than one dollar a day has tripled since Zenawi’s dictatorship replaced that of Mengistu’s [12]. A recent report of the World Economic Forum ranks Ethiopia 123rd out of 128 countries in economic competitiveness [13]. According to a 2007 study on Ethiopia, issued by the UK Department for International Development (DFID), a cause of the poverty is poor governance, particularly when the government does not “… allow participation in political life, provide access to justice, deliver adequate public services or control corruption.”[1]

The beginning of the new millennium will be a moment for all ethnic groups across the land to renew the bond that has held them together for generations, to re-affirm their unity as Ethiopians, and to join hands in the fight against tyranny.

  • To our Oromo brothers and sisters, it will be an instance to cherish our shared heritage and to celebrate the lives of our great heroes − the patriotism of Gobena , the sacrifice of Teferi Banti, the excellence of Bikila and the immeasurable contributions by the common Oromo man and woman in building modern day Ethiopia. It will be a time to shed off the ugly mask of ethnicity that Zenawi and Afewerki have imposed on us and to work toward the common goal of building a free and just Ethiopia. It will be a moment to assert that dictators, like Zenawi and Afewerki, who have denied basic human rights to the people they govern with iron fists, cannot have good wills toward seeing us free and united. It will be a historic juncture for the people of Oromo, as one of the largest ethnic groups of the country, to exercise their natural role to be in the forefront of the fight for democracy and unity of their motherland.
  • To the people of Tigray, this will be an extraordinary event to celebrate the glorious contributions of their forefathers over the centuries in the making of a country that became the pride and beacon of hope for the entire African continent and other oppressed people the world over. This will be a momentous occasion for all Tigreans to make a vow to dissociate themselves from a brutal dictator, who has been riding on their backs to destroy the very civilization their ancestors built − the land Alula defended and the way of life that Emperor Yohannes paid for with his life. No people in history, with such a glorious past as that of the sons and daughters of Tigray, have been subjected to be an instrument of repression for a wicked dictator, whose stated mission is to vilify, destroy and erase the civilization their ancestors heroically built. This will mark a turning point for the people of Tigray to join Gebru Asrat[14] and Seye Abraha in the fight against despotism and for the preservation of the Ethiopian nationhood.
  • To the Amharas, the Gurages, the Afars, the Somalis, the Anuaks and the other proud people of Ethiopia, this is a moment to renew their pride in their common legacy, to revitalize their resolve to abolish totalitarianism once and for all, and to build a new Ethiopia, where equality, liberty and fraternity will prevail, democracy will flourish, and no individual, group or organization will oppress any other.

For opposition groups, whose agenda is the establishment of democracy and social justice and the protection of Ethiopian unity, this will be a time to set aside paltry differences and to work in unison to free the people from the oppressive rule of Zenawi and his minority regime. Faced with a depraved enemy, whose goal is to destroy the Ethiopian nationhood and to enslave the people through brutal force, economic deprivation and ignorance, there should be no place for petty personal agenda. There can be no better time to harness the immense resources that are yet to be tapped toward the realization of the struggle for the formation of a free, just and united Ethiopia. Conditions have never been more favorable to free the people from the yolk of Zenawi’s oppression:

  • Major newspapers in the West have generously given unprecedented coverage to the atrocities being committed by Zenwai against the people of Ethiopia [15, 16, 17].
  • Prominent lawmakers in the US and elsewhere have recognized the true nature of Zenawi’s regime, and have condemned him as a “vicious” dictator[18, 19]
  • The chance of the passage of HR2003 in Congress is as strong as ever, and the sponsors of the bill and its promoters are determined to bring it to a viable conclusion.
  • Despite the draconian measures that Zenawi took to emasculate the opposition, the people are reinvigorated to rally behind their freed leaders and to press for the return of power to the legitimate winners of the May 2005 elections.
  • The case for crimes against humanity is getting stronger by the day, despite Zenawi’s feeble attempts to hide under the cover of “fighting terrorism” or to pass accountability to opposition leaders using “shimagles” as a Trojan Horse[21].
  • The extreme economic conditions at home are too harsh for Zenawi to perpetuate his iron rule through brutish force against the people and generous handouts to a handful of greedy followers.
  • The unjust and unprovoked war he declared on Somalia has become a drain on his meager sources, and is eroding his principal instrument of oppression at each passing day[22].

The new millennium thus signals the dawn of democracy and social justice, and the beginning of the end of dictatorship, ethnic politics and minority rule. All genuine Ethiopians, wherever they may be at that moment, shall be celebrating it as such, without regard to, or distracted by, the diversionary pomp and glitz that the dictator and his lackeys have mischievously designed as smokescreen to obscure the misery and oppression of the people.

_____
Selam Beyene, Ph.D., can be reached at [email protected]

Can we have political civility when dealing with liars?

By Yared Nerayo

Having been inundated by the political civility, ‘shimgelena’, ‘mechachal’, etc. propaganda in the last few weeks, I was grudgingly looking for positive things to appreciate about the minority regime in Addis. My search has accidentally revealed a discouraging lie or propaganda by the Millenium committee in Addis. For those who are trying to be as tolerant as I am trying to be and read Ben’s page, Ethiopia first, you may have come across this news.

This group claims that they have succeeded in planting 470, 000, 000 tree seedlings over the last two months in Ethiopia. I was so exited by this news that I did some arithmetic and found that if you allow for one square meter per tree, you would cover 40% of Ethiopia’s 1,104,300,000 meters square area. If you are optimistic about the future size of these seedlings and allow for two square meters per tree seedling you would cover almost the entire country’s area including the lakes and rivers. It would be very helpful for our civility to give us an idea of the miraculous logistical work that went behind this monumental achievement.

Until then, as the saying goes ‘Yemaymesel werae le mistih atingerat.’ Is there anyone that is taking pride with the real figures that the minority regime has accummulated.
___
Yared Nerayo can be reached at [email protected]

U.S. orders Eritrea to close its consulate in California

WASHINGTON (AP) – The U.S. State Department said Monday it had ordered Eritrea to close its consulate in Oakland, California, the latest salvo in an escalating diplomatic conflict with the impoverished Red Sea state.
The department informed Eritrea last week that the consulate must be shut down by Nov. 8, citing restrictions imposed on diplomats at the U.S. Embassy in Asmara, including travel curbs, the refusal to grant visas to U.S. officials, and the non-delivery of diplomatic pouches, which is in violation of international protocols.

«Together, these actions by Eritrea significantly interfere with the ability of the U.S. Embassy to provide consular services to U.S. citizens and others in Eritrea,» said Karl Duckworth, a State Department spokesman.

Under the terms of the order, which was delivered on August 8, Eritrea has 90 days «to close the consulate and terminate the functions of all consulate personnel working there,» he said.

Officials with Eritrea’s Embassy in Washington could not immediately be reached for comment.

Eritrea, which fought a bloody 1998-2000 border war with its arch-rival neighbor and key U.S. ally Ethiopia that is still unresolved, has been a source of growing concern for the United States in recent years.
Tensions between Ethiopia and Eritrea remain high and Washington has accused Asmara of playing a negative role in Somalia, where U.N. experts have said Eritrean authorities of supplying weapons to Islamic militants.

At the same time, Eritrea’s increasingly authoritarian leadership is accused of clamping down on internal dissent and hindering the work of aid workers, including those affiliated with foreign governments.
The U.S. Agency for International Development was forced to close its Eritrea operations in December 2005 because the government objected to its presence.

More from Reuters >>>

ASMARA, Aug 13 (Reuters) – The United States said on Monday it had ordered closed an Eritrean consulate, which Asmara called the latest “unjust and unfriendly” U.S. action in a worsening diplomatic relationship.

Eritrea routinely denounces the United States for its support of Ethiopia, with whom Asmara is locked in a bitter dispute over the Horn of African nations’ shared border.

The United States and the United Nations accuse Eritrea of funnelling weapons to Islamist insurgents in Mogadishu fighting the Ethiopian-backed Somali interim government.

A U.S. embassy official in Asmara who spoke on condition of anonymity said the Eritrean consulate in Oakland, California, last week was given 90 days to close down, in response to restrictions placed on the embassy in Eritrea.

“For the past year the U.S. has been trying to work with the government of Eritrea to address these restrictions that have impeded our ability to operate,” the official said.

“Since they have been unwilling to engage with us, we have taken these actions in response to these restrictions.”

The U.S. official said the constraints included interference with diplomatic pouches, travel restrictions for embassy personnel and the refusal to grant visas.

Already, the U.S. embassy in Asmara closed its visa section in February for what it said were similar difficulties.

But Eritrea dismissed the U.S. allegations and said it had respected its diplomatic treaty obligations.

“I have no explanation for this. If you look at U.S. policy in the last two years, we have seen a pattern of unfriendly and unjust acts against Eritrea,” Yemane Ghebremeskel, a senior government official, told Reuters.

He did not say whether Asmara would take reciprocal action.

Eritrea’s diaspora community is an important source of revenue for the cash-strapped Red Sea state. Economists estimate remittances total from 30 percent to 70 percent of the nation’s annual gross domestic product.

Eritrean government editorials routinely decry the United States for supporting Ethiopia, calling Washington “despicable.”