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Author: Elias Kifle

Yemen police detain 191 refugees from Ethiopia

ABYAN — Yemeni police have arrested 191 Ethiopians who are suspected of entering the country illegally, the Interior Ministry has reported.

Police in Abyan Province have arrested nearly 150 Ethiopians, including 5 women, who arrived at Ahwar Coast by a smuggling boat.

In Marib Province, Yemeni police said they have arrested 41 Ethiopians who were trying to cross into Saudi Arabia.

All the arrested Ethiopians have been sent to the Immigration and Passports Authority in the Yemen capital Sana’a.

Ethiopia is sliding deeper into authoritarian controls

By Geoffrey York | The Globe And Mail

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia — Six months before a crucial election, one of Ethiopia’s small band of opposition MPs has a simple question: How can he campaign for votes when he cannot even hold a public meeting or meet voters freely?

Negaso Gidada, a former president of Ethiopia and now an independent MP, tried to visit his constituents in southern Ethiopia recently. It was an arduous journey.

He was not permitted to hold any meetings in public places. He was kept under surveillance, and his hosts were interrogated. Those who met him were questioned by police. He was given no coverage in the media.

“People are so intimidated that they are afraid even to speak to me on the phone,” he says. “Campaigning is totally impossible. How can it be a fair election?”

Four years ago, foreign election observers concluded that the last Ethiopian election had been rigged. Opposition supporters took to the streets, and an estimated 30,000 people were arrested in a crackdown on dissent. Nearly 200 people were killed when Ethiopia’s police opened fire on the protesters. Dozens of opposition leaders and activists were jailed.

This time, with an election scheduled for May, the ruling party is taking no chances. Ethiopia is sliding deeper into authoritarian controls. Police agents and informers are keeping a close eye on the population, with harsh restrictions imposed on opposition leaders and civil society groups.

The election matters because Ethiopia is strategically important. It is the second most populous country in sub-Saharan African, and a key U.S. ally in the Horn of Africa, where Ethiopian troops have repeatedly intervened in Somalia. And it is one of the biggest recipients of Canadian foreign aid, with $90-million donated by Canada in 2007 alone.

Mr. Negaso, who was president of Ethiopia from 1995 to 2001 but later split from the ruling party of autocratic Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, has managed to hold only a few public meetings as he travelled around the country in the past year.

One meeting in August was broken up by dozens of thugs, including some whom he recognized from the ranks of the ruling party. They shouted, whistled, grabbed the microphone and prevented people from speaking. “We were chased out,” Mr. Negaso said.

In another district, he said, the police told opposition leaders that they needed a special permit if they wanted to use a megaphone.

Even his e-mail messages and phone calls are monitored, he said. But he refuses to be intimidated. “If you are afraid,” he says, “you can’t do anything.”

Another opposition leader, Seye Abraha, is a former close ally of Mr. Meles from the early 1970s when they were both young revolutionaries fighting the military junta known as the Derg, which they finally overthrew in 1991. He became the defence minister but was jailed for six years on corruption allegations after a falling out with Mr. Meles. Now he says he is under constant surveillance, his phones and e-mails monitored, his movements constantly followed by security agents.

“In restaurants, spies sit close to me, and you can’t ask them to leave,” he says. “There is no private life, no private property. And there is nowhere you can complain. You can go to the police, but they will do nothing.”

In a desperate effort to communicate with voters, the opposition sometimes tries to distribute cellphones to its supporters. If it sends campaign letters to voters, the letters must be kept hidden from security agents. “Families are afraid to pass the letters from one to another,” said Bulcha Demeksa, an MP who heads an opposition party.

Earlier this year, eight of Ethiopia’s opposition parties formed a coalition with Mr. Negaso and Mr. Seeye in a bid to defeat the ruling party, but the move has been little help. “If tomorrow I go to my constituency and speak to people under a tree, the police will disrupt it,” Mr. Bulcha said.

The International Crisis Group, an independent think tank based in Brussels, says the Ethiopian government is controlling its population with neighbourhood committees, informers, media controls and high-tech surveillance.

“Thanks to Chinese electronic monitoring-and-control software, the government is able to block most opposition electronic communications when it desires,” the group said in a recent report.

“Few journalists, academics, human-rights advocates and intellectuals dare to publicly criticize the government. While self-censorship existed before the 2005 elections, it has now become widespread.”

Ethiopia’s regime tries to cover up a new famine

By Francis Elliot | Times Online

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA — It wasn’t famine that killed Jamal Ali’s mother. She died in a cholera outbreak that swept through their Ethiopian village when at last the rains came. Twenty-five years later Jamal, now a parent himself, is lining up for handouts in a food distribution centre in Harbu, Amhara, His prematurely aged face, hollow with hunger, creases further when asked about this unwelcome return. “It is a very bitter feeling. No one likes this begging. I am ashamed,” he said.

Up a steep, dusty track from Harbu to Chorisa village the tiny, duncoloured terraced fields bare witness to the third poor harvest in a row. This village is supposed to be an aid showpiece but even here fields of failed cereal crops are being turned over to lean-looking cattle.

A villager strips an ear of the cereal crop tef and cups the inedible seed in her hand for a moment before casting into a relentlessly sky. It’s not that the rains didn’t come, she said — they came just at the wrong time. The field was supposed to yield 500 kilograms of cash crop; now it might just save a few cows from starvation.

The UN warns that 6.2 million Ethiopians will need some sort of food aid in the coming months. The Government also seems highly sensitive to the idea that it needs help. Meles Zenawi, the Prime Minister, would rather the world took notice of his position representing Africa in the climate change negotiations next month than his country’s never-ending dependency on food aid.

In Addis Ababa Ethiopian and Western officials voice disapproval of doom-laden reports that fail to acknowledge the progress being made, or the differences in scale between the famine of 1984, which killed a million people, and the situation today.

In private they acknowledge that Mr Meles and his Government are deliberately frustrating and delaying official assessments of the scale of the country’s humanitarian needs and blocking access to some areas where the situation is worst.

The latest UN estimate, to be released this Friday, is due to revise its figure upwards to nine million for those who will need help. Arguing that the definition of those in need is too broad — it includes those who are in a position to sell assets to buy food — the Government wants to change the way the figures are calculated to reduce that figure to 5 million.

Donor countries and the UN fear that counting only the truly desperate is a ploy that risks understating the true scale of the crisis. There are also allegations that food aid is being withheld from the regime’s opponents.

Criticism of Ethiopia has been muted by its success in improving local healthcare and expanding education, alongside its strategic importance in the fight against Islamic extremism in the Horn of Africa. Britain, which gives the country £200 million a year, and is Ethiopia’s second-largest bilateral donor, is stepping up the pressure on what was once regarded as its showpiece partner in Africa, amid growing concerns about what could happen in the coming months.

“The Government has just got to embrace the crisis and not be frightened of the statistics,” Gareth Thomas, a minister with the Department for International Development, said yesterday. “It is different from 1984 but there’s still huge need. There’s got to be a recognition that if we are going to stop children from being malnourished and keep people alive we have got to have accurate information and we’ve got to have it in a timely manner.”

Speaking before a meeting with Mr Meles, Mr Thomas said that he also intended to raise credible reports that aid was being withheld from opponents, but insisted he was satisfied that British aid was getting through. His main message, however, was that the Government had not yet grasped the urgent need for reform. The population, about 35 million in 1984, is now about 80 million and will have doubled again by 2050. At the same time, according to some estimates, most Ethiopian agriculture is still less productive than that of medieval England.

Mr Meles blames climate change for the erratic rainfall that has led to three successive poor harvests. The state’s ownership of land and its failure to provide seeds and fertiliser is at least as a big a factor, according to observers.

Similarly, the Government has overseen the building of an impressive road network — but in the absence of a thriving private sector and a more liberalised economy the traffic, other than convoys of aid vehicles, is light.

Two million Ethiopians a year are moving into cities as pressure on the land and education increase, a movement that threatens to overwhelm the state’s efforts to provide housing and jobs.

More than half of Britain’s annual aid budget of £117 million goes on helping to fund work schemes that keep 7.5 million Ethiopians out of the food distribution centres. With less than 5 per cent of the population becoming fully self-reliant in most areas each year, the dependency on foreign aid threatens to increase not diminish.

Hailu Shawel dines with Woyannes after surrender

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA (Addis Fortune) — For a change, and after several months of political doldrums, the landscape has begun to churn. Not surprisingly, the recent deal signed at the Sheraton Addis in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa between leaders of the four political parties, including the incumbent’s, has struck up the debate at the various gossip corridors across the city.

However, none of the political leaders is facing the sizzle of frying pan more so than Hailu Shawel. It is fast becoming a trying task just to find defenders of his, these days.

It seems apparent that the coming national election will hardly be harvest time for Hailu and party. The situation makes it painfully obvious that he will need to employ an abundance of damage control exercises in the few months ahead – all the while paying a huge price, much more so than any of the parties in the deal.

Negotiators from his party, the All Ethiopian Unity Party (AEUP), did not surrender easily after what was an exhaustive, two-month long inter-party dialogue.

Negotiators from the ruling party [in large part] and those from the other opposition parties [to a certain extent] have demonstrated unusual patience in keeping AEUP’s negotiators at the roundtable held inside Parliament. The latter were proven to be extremely wooly, with all the list of questions they would bring the following day, purportedly from Hailu.

The chief negotiator for AEUP was Yacob Leekie, brother of Senay Leekie, a Soviet trained Marxist. He was killed in the mid-1970s inside Menelik’s Palace, during a shoot-out between those who had supported Mengistu Hailemariam and others stood against him. Senay was a prominent personality in the early years of bloody political struggle within the junior military officers and the leftist politicians around them.

Yacob is also known to have been raised with the family of Kassa WoldeMariam, president of the Addis Abeba University, during the Emperor’s rule. His daughter, Yeshi, also a great granddaughter of the Emperor’s, is married to Hailu Shawel’s son, Shawel Hailu.

Nevertheless, none of the four negotiators of AEUP were as forceful and close to Hailu as Mamushet Amare. Once a captain in the Derg army, he was calling the shots during the negotiations.

Revealing the identities of those on the negotiating front on behalf of the ruling EPRDF is proved especially relevant: Bereket Simon, Hailemariam Desalegn, Sekuture Getachew and Muktar Kedir.

The Ethiopian Democratic Party (EDP) had been represented by its president, Lidetu Ayalew, as well as Mushie Semu and Mesfin.

There was a huge uncertainty, down to the very last day, as to whether or not Hailu’s party would actually sign the deal. They had threatened to drop out of the deal on several occasions. Reason being that they had wanted to talk about broader issues, they had felt would affect the coming election, and not simply the code of conduct. It came as a surprise to all when Yacob Leekie came around to agreeing to the signing at the end.

The final point of concern among negotiators was the supposed unpredictability of Hailu fearing he would go for a microphone in the presence of Meles Zenawi. Negotiators from the ruling party had gambled, too. They were not to be disappointed as they watched Hailu say what has earned him onslaught from his supporters and appreciation from his opponents across the aisle.

Praised, he was, at a dinner party which the ruling party, Woyanne, hosted. The party was hosted inside the Addis Top View Hotel, near Ras Amba Hotel at Arat Kilo. It was held to celebrate the deal on the electoral code of conduct the very night it was signed. Several political leaders from all the four parties were seated mingled at tables which looked designed to let them feel one another out.

ONLF killed 626 Woyanne troops in lastest fighting

The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), an Ethiopian rebel group operating in eastern Ethiopia, said today that its fighters have killed 626 Woyanne regime troops in latest fighting since Nov. 10, 2009. ONLF sent the following military communique to Ethiopian Review:

The Ogaden National Liberation Front’s latest multi-front offensive, which began on 10 November 2009, has resulted in a total of 626 Woyanne regime troops killed thus far. Among the killed are twelve field officers.

The ONLF has captured sensitive intelligence gathering material including communications monitoring equipment.

ONLF casualties were minimal given that our forces had the element of surprise on all fronts.

A significant amount of military hardware has been captured or destroyed including small
arms, ammunition, and communications equipment. Military grade maps have also been captured. A total of 4 large military transport vehicles have been destroyed.

ONLF field commanders are encouraging scattered regime troops still in the vicinity to surrender. They will be treated humanely and those wishing to be transferred to our allies the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) will receive safe passage to OLF units.

A significant number of civilians are now receiving medical care from ONLF units. Our forces have also freed Somali civilians which were detained in several of the regimes barracks taken by our forces during this operation. Many of those civilians show signs of torture.

The bodies of the regimes troops are still scattered on the battlefield in places such as Obolka where they present a health hazard to the local Somali community. Military operations are still ongoing.

Detainees accused of plotting coup brutally tortured by police

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA — The 46 detainees who are currently on trial after being accused by the tribal junta in Ethiopia of trying to overthrow the regime have told the court on Friday that they are being savagely beaten up by security personnel.

One of the accused, Ato Asaminew Tsige, told the court that he has lost sight in one eye from the beatings.

Upon hearing Ato Asaminew’s claim, family members started to cry loudly, prompting the judges to remove every one from the court room except the accused, the prosecutors, the defense lawyers, the police, and some journalists.

Ato Asaminew asked the court to appoint an independent physician to give the detainees medical treatment and investigate the tortures.

An official representing the prison denied the torture charge. The judges hearing the case told the detainees to file their complaints in writing.

More by Tamiru Tsige, a correspondent for The Reporter:

መንግሥትን በሃይልና በአመፅ ለመጣል ሲንቀሳቀሱ ደርሸባቸዋለሁ በሚል የፌዴራል ዐቃቤ ሕግ ክስ ከመሠረተባቸው ተከሳሾች መካከል አንዳንዶቹ በማረሚያ ቤት ውስጥ ድብደባ እንደደረሰባቸው ለፌዴራል ከፍተኛ ሁለተኛ ደረጃ ፍርድ ቤት ሁለተኛ ወንጀል ችሎት ኅዳር 4 ቀን 2002 ዓ.ም. አቤቱታ አቀረቡ፡፡ ማረሚያ ቤቱ የቀረበበትን አቤቱታ “የተቋሙን ሥም ለማጥፋት የተደረገ ነው” ሲል አስተባብሏል፡፡

በእነ ብርጋዴር ጀነራል ተፈራ ማሞ የክስ መዝገብ በተከሰሱት 46 ተከሳሾች ላይ የተደመጡትን የመከላከያ ምስክሮች ቃል (880 ገጽ) ከህግ አግባብ ጋር በማገናዘብ ውሳኔ ለመስጠት ለኅዳር 4 ቀን 2002 ዓ.ም. ቀጥሮ የነበረው የፌዴራል ከፍተኛ ፍርድ ቤት ሁለተኛ ወንጀል ችሎት “የ8ኛ፣ 19ኛ፣ 21ኛና የ32ኛ ተከሳሾች ያሰሟቸው ምስክሮች ቃል ባለ መድረሱ ሁሉንም አጠቃለን ኅዳር 8 ቀን 2002 ዓ.ም. የመጨረሻ ውሳኔ እንሰጣለን” ሲል፤ የ28ቱ ተከሳሾች ጠበቃ ተነስተው ደንበኞቻቸው ለፍርድ ቤቱ የሚያመላክቱት አቤቱታ እንዳላቸው ተናገሩ፡፡

ፍርድ ቤቱ “አሁን ምንም አንቀበልም” ሲል፤ 2ኛ ተከሳሽ የሆኑት አቶ አሳምነው ጽጌ በመሀል ተነስተው “በጌታ ስም፣ በምታመልኩት ሥም አዳምጡን እኔ ዓይኔ ጠፍቷል” ሲሉ ችሎቱን የታደሙት ዘመድ አዝማድ የፍርድ ቤቱን አዳራሽ በጩኸት አናወጡት፡፡

ለተወሰነ ደቂቃ ጩኸት በተቀላቀለበት ለቅሶ ተናውጦ የነበረው የፍርድ ቤቱ አዳራሽ ሲረጋጋ፣ “ፍርድ ቤቱ በጩኸትና በሁካታ ሊሰራ ስለማይችልና አቤቱታ አቅራቢዎቹም በተረጋጋና በተስተካከለ መልኩ መናገር ስለማይችሉ ፀጥታ ወሳኝ ነው፡፡ አሁንም ተከሳሾቹ የሚያቀርቡትን አቤቱታ በጥሞና መስማት እንዲቻል፣ ከፖሊስ፣ ጠበቃና ዐቃቤ ሕግ ውጭ ችሎቱን የታደማችሁ ትወጡና በዝግ እንሰማለን” በማለቱ ጋዜጠኞችን ጨምሮ ሁሉም የችሎቱ ታዳሚዎች ወጡ፡፡

ጋዜጠኞች ለዳኞች አመልክተን እንድንገባ ከተፈቀደ በኋላ ተቋርጦ የነበረው “ተደበደብን” ያሉት ተከሳሾች አቤቱታ መደመጥ ጀመረ፡፡

ጥቅምት 27 ቀን 2002 ዓ.ም. ከምሽቱ 12፡10 ሰዓት ሲሆን ለብቻቸው ከታሰሩበት “ትፈለጋለህ” ተብለው ሲጠሩ “የመተኛ ሰዓቴ ነው ለምን” ቢሉም እንደሚፈለጉ በድጋሚ ተነግሯቸው ወደ ሌላ ክፍል ከተወሰዱ በኋላ ግንባራቸውንና ዓይናቸውን ተመትተው ጉዳት እንደደረሰባቸው ለፍርድ ቤቱ በመጀመሪያ አቤቱታቸውን ያሰሙት ሁለተኛ ተከሳሹ አቶ አሳምነው ጽጌ ናቸው፡፡

አቶ አሳምነው ለፍርድ ቤቱ ጨምረው ባሰሙት አቤቱታ በተለይ ግራ ዓይናቸው ከፍተኛ ጉዳት እንደደረሰበትና ሰው መለየት እንደማይችሉ፣ አንገታቸው ላይ አድርገውት የነበረ ሀብል ሲበጠስ በመጐዳታቸው ከፈሳሽ በስተቀር ምግብ መውሰድ እንደማይችሉ፣ ጥቅምት 28 እና 29 ቀን 2002 ዓ.ም. ከቤተሰቦቻቸው ጋር እንዳልተገናኙ ተናግረዋል፡፡

ፍርድ ቤቱ ገለልተኛ በሆነ ሐኪም እንዲመረመሩ፣ የሰብዓዊ መብት ተሟጋች አካላት እንዲጐበኛቸው፣ እንደማንኛውም እስረኛ ከሌሎች እስረኞች ጋር ተቀላቅለው እንዲታሰሩ ትዕዛዝ እንዲሰጥላቸውም አመልክተዋል፡፡

“የተደበደበው ፍትሕ ነው” ያሉት አቶ አሳምነው ፍርድ ቤቱ ጥቃት ያደረሱባቸው ለፍርድ እንዲቀርቡ እንዲያደርግላቸው ሲሉ ለፍርድ ቤቱ አመልክተዋል፡፡

የምግብ ማቆም አድማ አድርገዋል በሚል ከታሰሩበት ክፍል ወደ ሌላ ክፍል ተወስደው እጃቸው በካቴና ከታሰረ በኋላ ጆሮአቸው አካባቢ በደረሰባቸው ድብደባ ጉዳት እንደደረሰባቸው ለፍርድ ቤቱ አቤቱታቸውን ያሰሙት 6ኛ ተከሳሽ ሻለቃ መኮንን ወርቁ ሲሆኑ፣ እርሳቸው ግን ምንም ዓይነት የምግብ ማቆም አድማ አለማድረጋቸውን ተናግረዋል፡፡

ፍርድ ቤቱ ከማረሚያ ቤት እስረኞቹን በሀላፊነት ይዘው የመጡትን ኃላፊ ስለ ሁኔታው ጠይቋቸው፤ “ይኸንን ነገር የሰማሁት አሁን ነው፡፡ እንደዚህ ያለ ድርጊት በማረሚያ ቤቱ ውስጥ አልተፈፀመም ይኸ ሆን ተብሎ የማረሚያ ቤቱን ሥም ለማጥፋት ነው” በማለት ምላሽ ሰጥተዋል፡፡

“ይኸ ፊት ለፊት የሚታይ ነገር ነው፡፡ የሆነ ችግር እንዳለ ይታያል፡፡ ተፈጥሮ ነው ወይስ ምንድነው?” በማለት ፍርድ ቤቱ ኃላፊውን ጠይቆ፤ ከሠው ጋር ተጣልተው ከሆነ “ተጣልተዋል”፣ ወይም ታመው ከሆነ “ታመዋል” በማለት መጠቆም እንደሚያስፈልግ ገል”ል፡፡

ማንም መመታት እንደሌለበት፣ ጉዳዩ መጣራት እንዳለበት ፍርድ ቤቱ አሳስቦ፣ “ተደብድበናል” ያሉት ተከሳሾች ሁኔታውን በጽሑፍ ለኅዳር 7 ቀን 2002 ዓ.ም. ይዘው እንዲቀርቡ አዟል፡፡

ፍርድ ቤቱ በተከሳሾቹ ላይ ጉዳቱን ያደረሱትንና ጉዳቱ የደረሰበትን ምክንያት የማረሚያ ቤቱ ዋና አስተዳዳሪ አጣርተው ይዘው እንዲቀርቡ ትዕዛዝ ከሰጠ በኋላ በጉዳዩ ላይ ባለው አቅም አጣርቶ አፋጣኝ ውሳኔ እንደሚሰጥ አስታውቋል፡፡

ጉዳዩ እስከሚጣራና ውሳኔው እስከሚሰጥ ድረስ በገለልተኛ ሀኪም ህክምና እንዲደረግላቸውና ትዕዛዝ እንዲሰጥላቸው የጠየቁት ደግሞ ብርጋዴር ጄኔራል ተፈራ ማሞ ሲሆኑ፤ “የትና ማነው ገለልተኛ ሀኪም? የሚለውን አጣርተን አፋጣኝ ትዕዛዝ እንሰጣለን” በማለት ፍርድ ቤቱ ምላሽ ሰጥቶ ለኅዳር 7 ቀን 2002 ዓ.ም. ተለዋጭ ቀጠሮ በመስጠት ችሎቱ ተጠናቋል፡፡