Ethio-Sudan Border Committee reports that last week the Sudanese army entered Ethiopian territory and has burned at least 24 farming communities. The Sudanese have also rounded up and taken away several Ethiopians from the villages. The Woyanne army in the area took the side of the Sudanese and has accused the villagers of attacking Sudanese troops… Read more in Amharic >>
ከኢትዮጵያና ሱዳን ድንበር ጉዳይ ኮሚቴ የተሰጠ መግለጫ
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ሚያዚያ 18 ቀን 2000 ዓ. ም. (April 26, 2008)
ሀ) ሰኞ ሚያዚያ 13 ቀን 2000 ዓ. ም. ከጥዋቱ አራት ሰዓት (April 21. 2008 @ 10:00 A.M.) ላይ ከፍተኛ ቁጥር ያለው የሱዳን ጦር ሠራዊት ቋራ ወረዳ ነፍስ ገበያ የተባለውን ከፍተኛ የርሻ አካባቢ በድንገተኛ በመውረርና የአካባቢውን ሕዝብ በማሸበር፣
1ኛ 24 የርሻ መንደሮችን በእሳት አቃጠለ
2ኛ 34 ኢትዮጵያውያኖችን ይዞ በማሠር ወደ ሱዳን ወሰደ። ከነዚህም ውስጥ አቶ መሐሪ የተባሉት ሰው የአንዱ የተቃጠለ የርሻ ቦታ ባለቤት ሲሆኑ 33 ደግሞ በርሻ ቦታዎች ተቀጥረው የሚሠሩ ዘበኞች፣ አሠሪዎችና የቀን ሠራተኞች ናቸው።
3ኛ ጦሩ አንድ ትራክተር ይዞ ከመሔዱ ሌላ የአካባቢው ሕዝብ የሚገለገልበትን አንድ የእህል ወፍጮ በእሳት Aቃጥሏል።
ለ) ዓርብ ሚያዚያ 17 ቀን 2000 ዓ. ም. ጦሩ ወደ ነፍስ ገበያ በመመለስ በአንድ ባልተቃጠለ የርሻ መንደር ላይ በደንብ የተደራጀና የታጠቀ የፖሊስ ካምፕ መሥርቶ ተመልሷል።
ሐ) የአካባቢው አራሾች በየአቅጣጫው እየተሰደዱ በሚገኙበት በአሁኑ ወቅት በቋራና በጎንደር መካከል ያለው የኢሐዴግ አግአዚ ጦር ደግሞ ለሚሸሹት ገበሬዎች በሱዳን ጦር ላይ ጦርነት ከከፈታችሁ እኛ በስተጀርባችሁ ጠብቀን ነው የምንጨርሳችሁ በማለት ሌላ የሽብር መልእክት በማስተላለፍ ላይ ይገኛል።
በየጊዜው የሚከሰቱትን ሁኔታዎች እየተከታተልን መግለጫዎችን እናወጣለን፣ የአገር ወዳድ ኢትዮጵያዊያን ይህንን ግፍን አስመልክቶ በምናደርገው እንቅስቃሴ ትብብራችሁን እንጠይቃለ።
የኢትዮጵያ ሉዓላዊነት ለዘለዓለም በልጆቿ ይጠበቃል!
We’ll reclaim our country
ከኢትዮጵያና ሱዳን ድንበር ጉዳይ ኮሚቴ
e-mail:- [email protected]
By Chris Floyd
(The Baltimore Chronicle) — Earlier this week, we noted reports that Ethiopian Woyanne invaders in Somalia had killed several clerics and other unarmed people in a mosque north of Mogadishu during the recent bloody reprisals against civilian areas launched by the Bush-backed invaders and their Somali allies. At the time, sketchy reports from the BBC indicated that at least 10 people had been killed in the mosque.
Now Amnesty International has charged Ethiopian Woyanne soldiers with killing 21 people in the mosque — and slitting the throats of seven of their victims, the Herald-Sun reports. Amnesty said the invaders are also holding dozens of children they captured during the raid:
Amnesty said those killed at the mosque included imam Sheikh Saiid Yaha and several scholars of the moderate Tabligh group that operated there.
“Eye-witnesses report that those killed inside the mosque were unarmed civilians taking no active part in hostilities,” Amnesty said. “Seven of the 21 were reported to have died after their throats were cut – a form of extra-judicial execution practiced by Ethiopian forces in Somalia.”
Amnesty urged the Ethiopian Woyanne military to release all 41 children it said were held after the mosque raid. “Witnesses have told Amnesty International that Ethiopian Woyanne forces would only release the children from their military base in north Mogadishu ‘once they had been investigated’ and ‘if they were not terrorists’,” it said.
Some of the children — who were aged as young as nine — were reported to have been freed, though the majority were still in custody, Amnesty said.
Witnesses said they had seen beheaded bodies lying outside the mosque after the fighting.
Let us stress the plain fact once again: These atrocities are the direct result of a “regime change” operation launched with the funding, arming, training — and direct military intervention — of the United States government.
Bush has gladly embraced the Ethiopian dictator Meles Zenawi whose soldiers are entering mosques and beheading unarmed clerics and kidnapping children. Bush has even sent in American troops to support the efforts of his Ethiopian proxies. All of this is being done, ostensibly, as part of the effort to “combat terrorism.” In reality, of course, the Bush-Zenawi “regime change” operation is itself a massive and ongoing act of state terrorism, one that dwarfs any of the outrages perpetrated by Islamic extremists. And of course, such atrocities only beget more extremism.
They are also hindering efforts to bring the carnage in Ethiopia to an end, as the story by the Herald-Sun’s Andrew Cawthorne makes clear: Some moderate Islamist leaders have reacted to the mosque incident, and a recent upsurge of fighting in Mogadishu, by postponing plans to join UN-sponsored peace talks.
But no doubt this suits Bush, Zenawi, and the CIA-paid Somali allies very well. As in the other “regime changes” of the Terror War, Bush and his clients do not want “peace” — unless it is the peace of the grave that comes from the annihilation.
What did the American “papers of record” have to say about this American-backed atrocity? Both The New York Times and the Washington Post ran the same small Reuters story trumpeting Ethiopia’s Woyanne’s denial of the killings. Except for a two-sentence summary of Amnesty’s charges, the entire top half of the story dealt with statements from minions of the Ethiopian dictator, denouncing Amnesty’s “lies.” The story also describes the Ethiopian Woyanne soldiers as being “stationed” in Somalia, in order “to bolster the interim government.”
Ethiopia Woyanne is occupying Somalia by force of arms and engaging in murderous reprisals — yet all the Times and Post can bring themselves to say is that Bush’s brutal allies are merely “stationed” in Somalia. No doubt the Völkischer Beobachter used to speak of Nazi troops “stationed” in France, Poland and Russia, just as Pravda spoke of Soviet troops “stationed” in Hungary and Czechoslovakia.
This is the precise moral level of the Terror War. The American Establishment — and the two “progressive” Democratic presidential candidates — accept it. The American press abets it. The deluge of innocent blood will go on.
———————-
Chris Floyd has been a writer and editor for more than 25 years, working in the United States, Great Britain and Russia for various newspapers, magazines, the U.S. government and Oxford University. Floyd co-founded the blog Empire Burlesque, and is also chief editor of Atlantic Free Press. He can be reached at [email protected].
Free Teday Afro
Protest rally at the Woyanne occupied Ethiopian embassy in Washington DC
3506 International Drive NW, Washington DC
Click to enlarge the poster

NAIROBI (AFP) — Amnesty International on Friday called on [the Woyanne regime in] Ethiopia to investigate allegations that its troops killed at least 21 people, including 11 unarmed civilians, in a mosque in the Somali capital.
The rights group cited several sources which said Ethiopian Woyanne troops carried out the killings on April 19. The Ethiopian government Woyanne has rejected the claims.
At least 10 other people were killed by Ethiopian Woyanne forces near the Al-Hidaya mosque in northern Mogadishu, bringing the death toll to 31, an Amnesty statement said.
“Deliberately killing civilians is a war crime,” said Amnesty. “We call on the Ethiopian government Woyanne to ensure an independent investigation is carried out into the raid on the mosque and the subsequent treatment of those detained by its forces.”
“Seven of the 21 killed at the mosque were reported to have had their throats cut, a form of illegal execution practised by Ethiopian Woyanne troops in Somalia,” it said.
Mogadishu residents and witnesses have said Ethiopian Woyanne forces carried out the mosque killings. But the Ethiopia Woyanne foreign ministry has accused Islamist militants of carrying out the killings.
“Amnesty International has accused Ethiopian defense Woyanne invading forces of having been responsible for various atrocities. That is regrettable and would not be in the interest of the promotion of respect for human rights and humanitarian laws,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.
“The cutting of the throats of even enemies and mutilating bodies is not in the tradition of Ethiopian troops. On the other hand, the Al-Shabaab (Islamist) terrorists have never been ashamed of these types of atrocities,” it said.
The government said the Islamists carried out the killings because of the success of the April 19 operation.
“The operation was successful beyond expectation … there was minimal civilian causality. All those who argue to the contrary are either deliberately peddling false information or are being misled by Al-Shabaab (Islamist) propaganda,” it added.
Residents said the Ethiopians Woyannes killed at least nine Mogadishu Islamic clerics, but Ethiopia Woyanne said its troops have never killed a religious leader.
Amnesty said the Ethiopians Woyanne forces also detained at least 40 children and youths aged from nine to 18 during the raid which occurred as Ethiopian Woyanne and Somali forces cracked down on Islamists waging an insurgency in the horn of Africa nation.
The Amnesty statement, citing Somali media and a government spokesman, said 32 children had been freed while 18 were handed over to Somali police.
“Amnesty International calls for the 18 who remain in detention to be charged with a recognized offence and brought before a court, or released,” the statement added.