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Author: Elias Kifle

Ethiopian protest rally in New York – Thursday, Sep 15

New York protest rally – Thursday, Sep 15
Purpose: To confront Meles Zenawi who will give a speech at the UN General Assembly’s World Summit on September 15
Place: The rally will be held at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza in front of the UN Headquarters.
Time: Starting at 10 AM
Organizer: Supporters of CUD/UEDF and the Ethiopian community in the New York area, email [email protected], tel: 718 658 1136

UPDATE 9/15/05 – 1:30 AM
Washington DC – We are ready, the marchers are ready, the busses are ready… in a few hours we’ll be on our way to New York. We’ll post a report and photos when we return from New York tonight.

UPDATE 9/13/05
Meles, Seyoum and gang have arrived in New York today… ENA

The NY rally organizers will hold a teleconference tonight at 9 PM to finalize preparations. Coordinators from Washington DC, Atlanta, Boston, Michigan, and Ohio will participate in the meeting. Tensae Radio lead lawyer will brief the participants about the latest development in the legal case.

UPDATE 9/12/05
Those of you who cannot go to New York but wish to make financial contribution to help us pay bus rental, please call: Washington DC 202 369 9543; Boston 617 293 1562; Atlanta 678 437 5597

UPDATE 9/12/05
Contact info for those who travel from outside New York
Washington DC:
Ethiopian Review 202 369 9543
Ene Lehagere 301 613 9157
Voice of Ethiopian Unity 301 905 2328

The meeting point is St. Mary’s Church in Washington DC (13th and Buchanan) at 5 AM, Thursday, September 15. PLEASE BE ON TIME. The bus departs Washington DC at 6 AM. Must reserve seats in advance. Call us now (202 369 9543 or 301 613 9157) and register.

Atlanta:
678 437 5597, 404 414 4113

Boston:
CUD-Boston: 617 293 1562 or 617 785 4795

Deadline for reserving seats is Tuesday at 11 PM. Please make your reservations as soon as you can.

Where are Ethiopians in Philadelphia?

Final teleconference for organizers of the New York rally will be held tomorrow (Tuesday) at 8 PM. At Sunday’s teleconference, organizers from Atlanta, Ohio, Washington DC, Boston, New York and North Carolina were present.

UPDATE 9/11/05
Ethiopians and friends of Ethiopia in Boston who wish to participate in the New York rally, please call: 617-293-1562 or 617-785-4795

Washington DC, please call: 202 369 9543, 301 905 2328, or 301 613 9157

UPDATE 9/10/05
The New York Rally Coordinating Committee held a teleconference tonight. Representatives from Washington DC, Boston, and Atlanta were present. The meeting discussed how to publicize the rally and provide transportation for those who wish to come from outside the New York area. The organizers in Boston and Atlanta will give out their contact info shortly for those who wish to reserve seats. Those in the Washington DC area can call 202 369 9543 to reserve seats. For for updates and more information, please continue to visit this site, and also listen to the VOE Radio in Washington DC tomorrow (Sunday) from 2:00-2:30 PM, and Negat Radio on Monday and Wednesday from 10 PM – 12 Midnight. Negat Radio can also be heard online at www.negatradio.com.

There will be another teleconference tomorrow (Sunday) night at 8 PM. The Coordinating Committee invites Ethiopians in Philadelphia, North and South Carolina, and other states in the east coast to participate and help organize the New York rally on Sep 15. To participate in the teleconference, please call 202 369 9543.

We have reserved vans for those who wish to travel to New York from Washington DC. If you wish to go to New York with us, please call 202 369 9543. We’ll ask a $25 contribution from each traveler for paying van rental and gas expenses.

Please continue to visit this page for further updates.

EDUP to hold its general assembly ahead of the CUD merger

September 2, 2005
Ethiopian Review

The Ethiopian Democratic Unity Party (EDUP-Medhin) central committee met all day and night yesterday to come to an agreement on whether to hold the party’s general assembly that is scheduled for Sep 17, ahead of the CUD merger on September 24.

EDUP-Medhin is one of the four parties that make up the Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD), which was created in February 2005.

After a long, heated debate, the EDUP central committee decided with a 16-13 vote to hold the general assembly.

The debate started when the leadership proposed that the scheduled EDUP general assembly be canceled since the party will no longer exist after September 24, when the CUD becomes a unitary party.

Previously, it was expected that the current EDUP top leaders will continue in the CUD-central committee, but lately, there is a growing frustration among the rank and file members who are saying that the EDUP top leaders are not representing the majority’s view in the CUD council.

There is also a widespread resentment toward the top leaders who agreed to the proposal that EDUP would send only 18 representatives to the 60-member CUD central council, while the much smaller parties, Kestedemena and EDL, who have a handful of members and were created just a few months ago, can send 12 representatives each. They are concerned that the new CUD leadership will be filled by new comers whose stands are not well known to the public, while those who have been at the forefront of the struggle for several years will be sidelined. Many are also puzzled by the rush towards merger, while the public’s focus is on getting back their stolen votes.

Artists are considering cancelling performance at the scandalous Yara Award for Meles Zenawi

(Article written by Anders Sundnes Loevlie , translated by Anti Yara Award Committee).

Source Dagsavisen, Norway)

August 28, 2005

Mari Boine og Sissel Kyrkjeboe may decide to cancel their performances in the Oslo Concert Hall when Hydro (Yara) intends to award a prize to the prime minister of Ethiopia next week. That prime minister is associated with political violence, serious breaches of human rights, and corruption.

Today, Hydro is celebrating itself with a magnificent peoples’ festival in the Frogner Park in Oslo. Among the artists, who are to perform before ten thousands of those present we find Sissel Kyrkjeboe. According to plan, she is also expected to perform when Hydro’s daughter company Yara awards the prize named “African Green Revolution Yara Prize” in the Oslo Concert Hall next weekend, together with Mari Boine, among others.

But it may now happen that the two artists will decline to do so after all. The reason is that exile Ethiopians have requested that the two well known artists not to attend the award ceremony. Indeed, the award is to be given to the Ethiopian Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi, who is suspected of seriously violating human rights. He has also been accused of election frauds which were held May 2005, and during which around forty people were killed when the prime minister’s private army attacked demonstrators.

Mari Boine is considering cancelling her appearance, but she refuses to comment the case before the final decision has been taken, according to her manager Paal Gjersum.

Sissel Kyrkjeboe’s manager Arne Svare also hesitates to comment this issue.

-We have not yet made any final decision. There is no information yet that ought to make Sissel drop the concert. But we are aware of the criticism against Mr. Zenawi, and we are now working to obtain information from all of those involved, according to Arne Svare.

Making Fools of Them.

One of those, who are involved in this issue, is Mr. Petter Eide, the Director for Amnesty in Norway.

– Yara has made a giant blunder by giving this award to Mr. Zenawi. They have made themselves looking like fools, he says.

Eide was himself invited to the award ceremony, but he will not attend. He is also of the opinion that Sissel Kyrkjeboe and Mari Boine ought to do the same.

It is his opinion that they ought to inform Yara that they do not feel comfortable, and ideally they should not participate.

Mulu Alem Adam, the leader for the Ethiopian Association in Norway, is of the same opinion.

-This award ceremony is a shame. Both artists and politicians ought to distance themselves from this award. This is no time to sing before the Ethiopian prime minister. How is it possible for him to sit there listening to concerts, while the Ethiopian people are dying? Mr. Adam asks.

According to Yara, this award is given to Mr. Zenawi for him showing great leadership, and for having strengthened agriculture in Ethiopia. But experts are still raising questions regarding Mr. Zenawi’s agricultural policies. Many people do not wish to have their names known; for fear that they may be denied visas to Ethiopia in the future. They point out that there have never been so many people who lack food in Ethiopia as there are today.

– It is totally absurd to give this award to Mr. Zenawi. A number of well documented abuses and breaches of human rights have been demonstrated – ranging from imprisonment without lawful court decisions to torture, murder, and disappearances. In addition, there are serious questions regarding the purely qualified considerations for this award, according to Kjetil Tronvoll, associate professor at the Center for Human Rights in the University of Oslo.

http://www.dagsavisen.no/kultur/article1713130.ece?service=print Aug. 28, 2005.

The Government of Norway rejects Yara award for Ethiopia’s dictator Meles Zenawi

Aftenposten, Aug 27 2005

The government, headed by Prime Minister Bondevik, says ”no thanks” to the invitation, now that the giant fertilizer Yara (previously Hydro) celebrates itself by awarding a prize to the dictator of Ethiopia. The artists Sissel Kyrkjeboe and Mari Boine are considering the same.

(Article by Gunnar Magnus, translated by – Anti Yara-Award Committee).

He is one of the most hated persons in Ethiopia.

This is stated about Meles Zenawi, prime minister of Ethiopia, by associate professor Kjetil Tronvoll at the Norwegian Center for Human Rights. As the boss of the government owned agricultural association, the same man is an important customer for the artificial fertilizer products from Yara (previously the firm of Hydro).

As a part of the anniversary celebration the intent of Yara is to award the newly established Yara-Prize of more than one million Norwegian Crowns (about U.S.Dollar 150,000.-) to Zenawi. This is to take place in a spectacular arrangement in the Oslo Concert Hall. The justification for this prize is that Zenawi has taken “decisive steps in the direction of increased food production and to reduce poverty in one of the poorest developing countries of the world”. It will also be emphasized that he has brought political changes to Ethiopia, and he is praised for his engagement and inspiring leadership.

There are between 10,000 and 30,000 political prisoners in the country, according to Kjetil Tronvoll. He reports that there is torture in the prisons, that there are political murders, and an inadequate system of justice. Around 4,000 members of the opposition parties were arrested and their leaders placed under house arrest after the elections.

Other African countries have human rights problems as well. But Tronvoll makes it clear: This is one of the worst in its class. Here there are documented abuses on a large scale.

Yara has invited the Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik and the political leadership in the Department of Foreign Affairs (UD), the Department of Agriculture, and the Department of Trade to the award ceremony. But neither the prime minister nor any of the other ministers intend to be present. This is confirmed by the Oslo newspaper Aftenposten in an inquiry by phone to the respective departments.

Leiv Lunde from the Department of Foreign Affairs will probably be the only political leader of a department who is going to be present. Lunde confirms that there have been several discussions in his department whether or not to attend.

Is this a signal that the official Norway is going to be represented by only one governmental secretary?

Jan Peterson is pre-occupied, and Hilde Frafjord Johnson is visiting Tanzania at present, according to Lunde. And the Aftenposten newspaper is informed by the prime minister’s office that it is not appropriate for any of the other ministers to accept now that Mr. Bondevik himself says “no”.

A Mixed Reception.

Arne Cartridge, the director of communication in Yara, confirms that the invitations that have been sent out have received a mixed reception.

He states: “I do not wish to go into detail regarding the invitations, but they are given to representatives of the official Norway, voluntary organizations, and a broad spectrum of Norwegian society. Some do not wish to be present, some are pre-occupied with elections, but a number have accepted. We believe that there will be around 800 persons present in the Oslo Concert Hall”.

Sissel Kyrkjeboe and Mari Boine are two of the best known artists, who according to plan are to entertain during the award ceremony in the Oslo Concert Hall next Saturday. According to their managers Arne Svare and Paal Gjersum the two artists intend to use the weekend to decide whether or not to attend, since they have been informed – among other from exiled Ethiopians – about Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s disputed position in Ethiopia.

Source: Aftenposten, updated August 27, 2005.
URL http:/www.aftenposten.no/nyheter/okonomi/article1103955.ece

Ana Gomes is responsible for the June 8 massacre – Bereket Simon

ADDIS ABABA (ENA) – The Ethiopian government says the head of the EU Election Observation Mission (EU-EOM) has contributed its share to the 8 June violence due to two cardinal mistakes it committed before and after the 15 May elections.

In a weekly statement it issued on Friday [26 August], the Ministry of Information says the mission is duty bound to submit and declare the official report to the concerned legal bodies. However, the ministry said the mission, against the regulations of its tasks as an observer, illegally and secretly leaked unfounded information to the opposition which gave them confidence wrongly so as to lead them to violence in the streets. The ministry also said the EU-EOM, against and beyond the scope of its mandate and task, has included in its 25 August report, the issues of human rights, the 8 June incident, the endorsement of bills by the federal parliament and other laws which it has labelled as measures taken to weaken the functions of municipalities in the country.

The ministry said all these issues should not have been part of the report as they have no connections to [the mission’s] task, adding [that] the report also included other publicly known lies that humiliated even members of the opposition parties.

The report has gone further to echo the white lies of the opposition that a witness was assassinated five days after testifying. The ministry added [that] it has to be noted that it is not without reason that the mission has been trying to hide the truth by making wrong judgments and evaluations.

Source: ENA website, Addis Ababa, in English 26 Aug 0

Ethiopia’s national elections failed to meet international standards for democracy in key areas, the European Union’s chief observer said

ADDIS ABABA, 8/25/2005 (IRIN) – Ethiopia’s national elections failed to meet international standards for democracy in key areas, the European Union’s (EU) chief observer said on Thursday.

Ana Gomes said post-polling day irregularities, delays and questionable vote counting, as well as flawed handling of complaints and re-runs of elections in some constituencies had undermined the electoral process.

The ruling party in turn accused Gomes and the EU observer mission of bias.

“The report is basically biased and clearly indicates the partisan position she and her mission have taken,” said Bereket Simon, Ethiopia’s information minister, who regained his seat in a re-run of the election after being narrowly defeated.

“She has betrayed bias despite the facts on the ground,” he added.

The EU’s 10-page election report focused on the massive complaints lodged by all political parties after the 15 May vote, and on re-runs of elections and delayed polls in eastern Ethiopia’s Somali region.

“In several important aspects, international standards for genuine democratic elections were not met,” Gomes told reporters and diplomats at a press conference in the capital, Addis Ababa.

The EU mission, which first arrived in Ethiopia in March, was one of the largest ever, with 160 observers. It is expected to depart at the end of the week and will publish a final election report in September when all the results are known.

Opposition parties, for their part, welcomed the report. The vice chairman of the largest opposition group, the Coalition for Unity and Democracy, Berhanu Nega, said he hoped the findings would pave the way for dialogue with the government to help break the current political impasse.

Officials from the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) declined to make an immediate comment.

“The NEBE is reviewing this report and will officially respond on Friday,” Getahun Amogne, spokesman for the board, said.

The report comes amid increasing tensions between the EU and Prime minister Meles Zenawi’s ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), which won a majority of seats in parliament following a bitter election marred by widespread claims of fraud and vote rigging.

At the weekend, the EU issued a statement defending Gomes after state media accused her of bias towards opposition parties. Gomes told journalists she was considering legal action against parts of the state media for the allegations against her, describing them as “baseless garbage”.

According to local human rights groups, security forces killed some 42 people when hundreds took to the streets to protest alleged election fraud. Security forces also arrested and held thousands of protestors and opposition members.

The EPRDF has so far won 296 seats in the 547-member parliament, while its allied parties won 22 seats. Opposition parties won over 160 seats. Results are still outstanding for 54 seats.
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