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Ethiopia

Is a Woyane invasion of Eritrea imminent?

By F. Hager

Now that the Millennium celebrations are over, Ethiopia’s regime (Woyanne) appears ready to attack Eritrea with tacit US backing.

Over 100,000 people were slaughtered the last time these two countries fought a war in 1998 – 2000. This time, the death and destruction as well as the long term dislocation and suffering could be worse.

U.S. takes sides

Incomprehensibly, the Bush administration is fanning the flames and taking sides in a tribal war between two dictators. Current U.S. policy in Africa appears to be dictated more by the force of personalities than strategic principles.

Africa is rarely high on the U.S. agenda. So, important decisions are relegated to low-level political appointees. Inexperienced diplomats such as Jendayi Frazer are easily manipulated by fast-talking African dictators such as Meles Zenawi. Frazer’s singular legacy so far is the debacle in Somalia.

Meles Zenawi – the Ahmed Challabi of the Horn of Africa

Just as in Iraq, the U.S.-backed invasion of Somalia was based on false intelligence and assumptions. Now it’s about to be repeated in Eritrea. Just as Ahmed Challabi fed US lies about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, Meles Zenawi fabricated stories about Somalia being a haven for terrorists.

The invasion of Somalia was waged to capture or kill three terrorists Meles claimed were hiding in Mogadishu. The three fugitives were wanted for the 1998 U.S. embassy bombing in Nairobi. None of these terrorists were captured or killed. Yet, some 5,000 Somalis have been killed, thousands wounded and some 400,000 made homeless.

Zenawi and his generals got paid handsomely. His Woyanne (Tigrean People’s Liberation Front) regime has one simple over-arching agenda: to ensure their minority rule over 70 million Ethiopians. They have managed to impose their rule through mass arrests, disappearances and killings that amount to war crimes. In return for their services in the so-called war against terror, the Bush administration has condoned the murderous activities of Woyanne’s rulers.

Can Eritrea be a breeding ground for Islamic extremists?

It will be the ultimate folly and ignorance to construe the fight among Eritreans and Tigreans as one between supporters and opponents of Islamic extremism.

Isaias Afewerki’s government is a secular, nationalist/leftist government. The Eritrean population is roughly half Moslem and half Christian. But political leadership has traditionally been dominated by the Christians. If anything, a Moslem upheaval is a threat to Eritrea’s current government. It is therefore absurd to believe that Eritrea will want to be a breeding ground for Islamic terrorists, as some ill-informed American officials assert.

Clearly, Eritrea is supporting Somali opposition forces opposed to Ethiopia’s dictatorship that happen to be Moslems. Eritrea is also supporting Ethiopian opposition forces that are secular and fighting Tigrean domination.

The Woyane leadership [Ethiopia’s regime], on the other hand, has a vested interest in presenting the fight as one between good and evil – just the simplistic way the Bush administration likes it. Zenawi has masterfully manipulated U.S. obsession with Islamic extremism to present their clan war with Eritrea as a fight against terrorism and those harboring terrorists. In truth, the Tigrian leadership could care less about the fight against terrorism. In the 1970s and 80s the Tigrai Liberation Front (TPLF) group regularly engaged in terrorist activities such as kidnapping and murder.1 So the only permanent interest the group has is staying in power.

U.S. verbal attack against Eritrea

Jendayi Frazer, the US diplomat in charge of Africa, is labeling Eritrea a terrorist haven, creating the psychological climate for what appears to be a justification for the invasion of Eritrea.2

Frazer’s coddling of Ethiopia’s Zenawi while blasting Eritrea’s Afewerki is reminiscent of Donald Rumsfiled’s embrace of Saddam Hussein 3 and his endorsement of Hussein’s invasion of Iran. Yet another senseless U.S. strategic blunder is about to be played out in the Horn of Africa.

Other US diplomats are busy flattering Ethiopia’s ruler while attacking Asmara.

“Ethiopia’s political leaders have committed themselves to a new collaborative relationship for the good of the country,” said James Swan, on August 5, 2007. Mr. swan is the Deputy Assistant Secretary for African Affairs. He made the remark at the 4th International Conference on Ethiopian Development Studies Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan.4

According to Mr. Swan, “Eritrea has chosen to support extremist elements, including the al-Qaida affiliated al Shabaab militia in Somalia, in an effort to undermine the political process. While the rest of the region and the international community have united behind a common strategy for achieving lasting peace and stability in Somalia, Eritrea has opted to support terrorists and spoilers while encouraging continued violence. There is no justification for such actions. The ruling cabal is – to our great regret — leading Eritrea along the path toward increased domestic repression and hardship, and regional and international isolation.“

These are serious charges. Charges that indicate the Bush Administration and the Ethiopian leadership are working closely to overthrow the Eritrean government.

Coup d’etat or war?

Ethiopia’s ruling Tigrai Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) would engage in such risky venture only if it believes it can launch a blitzkrieg similar to the one used in the invasion of Somalia. But Eritrea is no Somalia. And there is no guaranty of a quick, easy victory.

What’s guaranteed, however, is tremendous human slaughter and suffering of an unprecedented scale. Hence the need for people of good will to speak up before yet another war engulfs two of the poorest countries in the world.

Ethiopia’s Tigrai Liberation Front could be entertaining two possible scenarios:

1. Decapitation/ coup d’etat against the Eritrean leadership; or
2. Outright invasion.

The first scenario is what Meles Zenawi and his politburo would prefer. The decapitation can be accomplished with logistical and intelligence support from the Israel and the United States.

The Woyanne leadership has come to the conclusion that Isaias Afewerki is weak and unpopular; hence easily replaceable. Afeworki may be unpopular, but it remains to be seen whether Ethiopia’s Woyanne leadership could easily orchestrate regime change in neighboring Eritrea.

The Woyanne leadership brags that the road to Asmara can be a cakewalk. It has amassed enough troops on three fronts to engage in a pincer movement. In addition, some 5,000 highly trained special forces are said to be on standby to parachute to the environs of Asmara on short notice.

The preparation for regime change appears to be in full throttle. Ethiopia is also training and supporting dissident forces such as the Eritrean Democratic Alliance.

If a coup d’etat or decapitation of the Eritrean leadership is not possible, Zenawi will have to resort to a costly invasion. An invasion will very likely be supported by secret U.S. air strikes and satellite intelligence.

The U.S. will also provide the disinformation, demonizing the Eritreans while legitimizing violence initiated by Woyanne. As a prelude to what is in the pipeline, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer indicated the U.S. readiness to label Eritrea a terrorist state. This could presumably be followed by some UN resolution, which will then provide a legal cover for the invasion of Eritrea.

For the Pentagon and its newly minted Africa Command (AFRICOM) as well as the Department of State, condoning an invasion may be a tempting way to reward Zenawi and his Woyannes for being good boys. Zenawi and company have been both the manipulators and the compliant locals always eager to do any dirty deed and to please the master. The invasion of Somalia was a reflection of the incestuous relationship between the local tyrants and the Bush administration.

The Woyanne regime is in trouble

The war in Somalia is going very badly for the US-backed Woyannes and the Transitional Federal “Government.” In the meantime, international human rights groups are accusing the Woyannes and the Transitional Somali government of war crimes.

So, the question is, will the Woyanne leadership opt for war on two fronts? As unlikely as that may seem, the Zenawi group may opt for war. War, after all, is what the TPLF knows best.

The Woyanne leadership feels a legitimate threat from Eritrea. It has skillfully monopolized political and economic power in Ethiopia for the last 16 years. It managed to do so by ruthlessly holding down the local population while manipulating Western donors into lining its pockets.

Eritrea is now threatening the Tigrean stranglehold on Ethiopia by harboring Ethiopian dissidents and Somali forces opposed to Woyanne and the fragile Somali Transitional Government.

Zenawi has masterfully exploited U.S. fears of Islamic terrorism in the wake of the September 2001 attacks. He has promoted himself as an indispensable American ally in the fight against terrorism. In return, the Bush administration has condoned the many crimes and human rights abuses committed by the Zenawi regime.

Why does the U.S. condemn Eritrea and not Ethiopia’s Woyanne regime? Why the moral double standard?

Zenawi and his organization were once labeled terrorists by the United States. Apparently, if you do this administration’s bidding, it does not matter how heinous your crimes are.

Let’s look at the highlights of crimes committed by the Woyanne regime:

* Possible war crimes in Somalia. Indiscriminate shelling of civilians, hospitals, blocking food convoys, and the use of white phosphorous chemical weapons.

* The genocide currently underway in Ethiopia’s Ogaden region.

* The June and November 2005 killings of over 193 people, the arrest of over 40,000 protesting electoral fraud.

* Upwards of 15,000 killed, tens of thousands imprisoned in Oromia region.

* Over 425 ethnic Anuaks massacred by Ethiopian forces in December 2003; some 10,000 made homeless.

Time to speak up

Ethiopia and Eritrea are among the poorest countries in the world. Food and freedom, and not war, are the real issues. Thousands of Eritreans are suffering from food shortages and economic deprivation. Over four million Ethiopians need food assistance.

For the Ethiopian minority regime, this is a preemptive war. The cost of the war may be underwritten by some American counter-insurgency slush fund. How about human lives? The Woyanne group sacrificed over 50,000 lives in Eritrea before. It’s now sacrificing thousands in Somalia. But since this is a regime that does not have to account to its own people, lives don’t matter.

Where is the morality for a big power like the U.S. egging two poor people towards war? Why the haste to sacrifice so many African lives in the name of some ill-conceived, dubious cause.

This is the time for all people of good will to speak up against an impending senseless war.
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The writer can be reached at [email protected]

O.N.L.F Statement On Civilian Displacement & Continuing War Crimes In Ogaden

PRESS RELEASE

The Ethiopian Woyanne regime’s war crimes in Ogaden have resulted in thousands of civilians seeking refuge in parts of neighboring Somalia with limited food, medical aid and financial resources over the last four months. These victims of the regimes war crimes have include victims of rape, torture, gunshot wounds and those fleeing burnt villages. These fleeing civilians provide the best testimony of the policy of collective punishment being pursued by the Ethiopian regime in Ogaden.

The plight of these families shows the world that despite the regimes denials, war crimes continue in Ogaden. It is clear that the Ethiopian regimes policy in Ogaden continues to be a campaign of State sponsored terror that largely avoids engagements with ONLF forces and instead focuses on collectively punishing our civilian population.

We call on donor nations to bear pressure on the Ethiopian Woyanne regime to end its brutal campaign against our civilian population and allow international journalists and humanitarian organizations to travel and operate freely in Ogaden. If this regime has nothing to hide in Ogaden there is no reason why it should continue to ban international journalists and reputable humanitarian organizations such as the ICRC from operating and traveling freely in Ogaden.

We further call on the United Nations in particular to come to the immediate aid of our forcefully displaced people seeking refuge in neighboring Somalia. The United Nations bears a particular responsibility to thoroughly investigate war crimes in Ogaden and halt the unfolding of yet another preventable African genocide. To do this, the United Nations must have access to all parts of Ogaden and not be limited to routes approved by the regime as was the case with the recent UN Fact Finding Mission.

Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)

——————-
See this article for background information

O.N.L.F Statement On Civilian Displacement & Continuing War Crimes In Ogaden

PRESS RELEASE

The Ethiopian Woyanne regime’s war crimes in Ogaden have resulted in thousands of civilians seeking refuge in parts of neighboring Somalia with limited food, medical aid and financial resources over the last four months. These victims of the regimes war crimes have include victims of rape, torture, gunshot wounds and those fleeing burnt villages. These fleeing civilians provide the best testimony of the policy of collective punishment being pursued by the Ethiopian regime in Ogaden.

The plight of these families shows the world that despite the regimes denials, war crimes continue in Ogaden. It is clear that the Ethiopian regimes policy in Ogaden continues to be a campaign of State sponsored terror that largely avoids engagements with ONLF forces and instead focuses on collectively punishing our civilian population.

We call on donor nations to bear pressure on the Ethiopian Woyanne regime to end its brutal campaign against our civilian population and allow international journalists and humanitarian organizations to travel and operate freely in Ogaden. If this regime has nothing to hide in Ogaden there is no reason why it should continue to ban international journalists and reputable humanitarian organizations such as the ICRC from operating and traveling freely in Ogaden.

We further call on the United Nations in particular to come to the immediate aid of our forcefully displaced people seeking refuge in neighboring Somalia. The United Nations bears a particular responsibility to thoroughly investigate war crimes in Ogaden and halt the unfolding of yet another preventable African genocide. To do this, the United Nations must have access to all parts of Ogaden and not be limited to routes approved by the regime as was the case with the recent UN Fact Finding Mission.

Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)

——————-
See this article for background information

O.N.L.F Statement On Civilian Displacement & Continuing War Crimes In Ogaden

PRESS RELEASE

The Ethiopian Woyanne regime’s war crimes in Ogaden have resulted in thousands of civilians seeking refuge in parts of neighboring Somalia with limited food, medical aid and financial resources over the last four months. These victims of the regimes war crimes have include victims of rape, torture, gunshot wounds and those fleeing burnt villages. These fleeing civilians provide the best testimony of the policy of collective punishment being pursued by the Ethiopian regime in Ogaden.

The plight of these families shows the world that despite the regimes denials, war crimes continue in Ogaden. It is clear that the Ethiopian regimes policy in Ogaden continues to be a campaign of State sponsored terror that largely avoids engagements with ONLF forces and instead focuses on collectively punishing our civilian population.

We call on donor nations to bear pressure on the Ethiopian Woyanne regime to end its brutal campaign against our civilian population and allow international journalists and humanitarian organizations to travel and operate freely in Ogaden. If this regime has nothing to hide in Ogaden there is no reason why it should continue to ban international journalists and reputable humanitarian organizations such as the ICRC from operating and traveling freely in Ogaden.

We further call on the United Nations in particular to come to the immediate aid of our forcefully displaced people seeking refuge in neighboring Somalia. The United Nations bears a particular responsibility to thoroughly investigate war crimes in Ogaden and halt the unfolding of yet another preventable African genocide. To do this, the United Nations must have access to all parts of Ogaden and not be limited to routes approved by the regime as was the case with the recent UN Fact Finding Mission.

Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)

——————-
See this article for background information

Ethiopia’s isolated Ogaden: refugees tell tale of repression

Ethiopia’s isolated Ogaden: refugees tell tale of repression

BOSASO, Somalia (AFP) — Tales of rape and murder from refugees fleeing Ethiopia’s Ogaden region offer a glimpse of the violence wracking the hermetic rebel zone, off limits now even to foreign aid groups.

“It’s worse than hell, what is happening in Ethiopia,” said Fardosa, whose eyes seem to have frozen wide open since her own ordeal.

“A group of Ethiopians [Woyannes] came to my house in early August and four soldiers took me into my bedroom and assaulted me,” said the thin young woman, cradling a nine-month-old baby.

For a dollar a month, she rents a small hut in Tula Absame, a refugee camp in this northern Somali port where increasing numbers of people are flocking after fleeing Ogaden, the triangle of Ethiopia that juts into Somalia.

Even the dire living conditions and scorching heat in Tula Absame are no deterrent for hundreds of Ogaden refugees ready to brave a perilous boat journey across the Gulf of Aden to seek a better life in Yemen or elsewhere.

Ethiopia Woyanne has launched a major crackdown in the vast Ogaden region, whose residents are mainly ethnic Somalis and Muslim.

Ethiopia’s Woyanne’s main target is the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), a rebel group formed two decades ago to seek independence in response to what it says has been systematic marginalisation by Addis Ababa.

“Two of my brothers who were (rebel) ONLF members were hanged from a tree,” said Fardosa.

But both the ONLF and humanitarian organisations have raised fears that widespread collective punishment and reprisals against civilians are underway in Ogaden, a region under tight army lockdown.

“What is happening… is a form of genocide, it’s a systematic destruction of crops and livestock. There is a total closure of economic development in Ogaden,” said Osman Hassan Ahmed, a 27-year-old from the eastern Ogaden town of Werder who arrived in Bosaso on September 1.

“My tea shop was closed (by the army) in February and I was accused of funding the ONLF… In early July I was arrested with two friends and managed to escape thanks to relatives in the army… but my two friends were hanged.”

The haggard-looking young man expects more suffering ahead on the gruelling crossing to Yemen on boats where smugglers have been known to starve and beat their passengers for days.

“I’m planning to travel to Yemen. The deadly voyage is just about luck, I’ve seen my two friends hanged and thought I’d be the next. I’ve escaped the angel of death quite a few times and I hope to escape again,” he said.

The Ogaden refugees in Bosaso express dismay at what they see as the world’s indifference to their plight and their region, an arid zone believed to contain large quantities of oil and natural gas though rebel activities have scuppered efforts to develop a significant mining industry.

“Darfur gets all the world attention but Ogaden is the same… It’s unfortunate and sad that the world has turned a blind eye on what is happening there,” said Abdi Ahmed Abdillah.

The 31-year-old farmer says he fled the village of Koos in July with his wife and three children. He had to leave two other children behind.

“In my lifetime, I’ve never seen such massive displacement of civilians by the Ethiopian government, it’s new,” he said.

Ethiopian Woyanne forces launched their sweep of Ogaden following an ONLF attack on a Chinese oil venture in April that left 77 people dead, including several Chinese workers.

The refugees charge that Addis Ababa is targeting civilians and their livelihood in a bid to undermine support for the ONLF.

“I was a livestock farmer, I had cows but the government took all of them, accusing me of being affiliated to ONLF,” said Abdillah, who denies any rebel affiliation.

“I felt threatened… I heard about relatives who were mutilated… One of my aunts was gang-raped and hanged from a tree by Ethiopian Woyanne forces,” he said.

He said that violence in the Ogaden for years was confined to skirmishes between the rebels and government forces. “The past year, it has became worse… Now, the source of livelihood of civilians is being targeted.”

Jama Ali Aden had a similar story.

He left his home in Werder district in early August after Ethiopian Woyanne troops raided neighbouring villages.

“I witnessed the army burning the village of Arawelo,” said Aden, who fled to Puntland, a semi-autonomous region in northern Somalia, with his camels, which he sold to pay for the crossing.

“Over the past six months, we’ve experienced a new tactic of indiscriminate punishment from the government to take revenge on the ONLF,” he said.

Hawa, a 43-year-old woman from Gabo-Gabo in eastern Ogaden, said anybody could fall victim to the Ethiopian Woyanne crackdown.

“All the males were rounded up and detained, we could hear their screams being tortured. I was so traumatised I decided to flee,” she said.

Hawa said that the risks of the crossing are dwarfed by those of simply staying in her home region.

“I’m much happier in my hut here. There’s no sense of security and peace in Ethiopia… You are never sure when the soldiers will come.”

Humanitarian organisations have recently complained that Ethiopian troops and authorities have prevented them from pursuing their activities in Ogaden, raising fears that a major crisis was looming in the region.

“I think we are missing a big thing that is happening under our eyes,” said Loris de Filippi, operational coordinator for Medecins Sans Frontiers (Doctors Without Borders) Belgium in Ethiopia, after Addis Ababa expelled both MSF and the International Committee for the Red Cross from reaching Ogaden’s worst-hit areas.

A UN fact-finding mission visited Ogaden earlier this month to determine the impact of the violence on the civilian population, but it has not yet made its conclusions public.