ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia—Five opposition members imprisoned since 2005 pleaded guilty Wednesday to attempting to overthrow Ethiopia’s government, but asked the judge for a pardon.
The Meles regime pardoned and freed 38 other opposition members in the same case last week after international condemnation and strong pressure from the United States. The detainees were all arrested in connection with deadly election protests.
The five defendants Wednesday submitted a letter saying, “I plead guilty and I don’t want to defend the case. I request the court give a judgment on me,” High Court Judge Adil Ahmed said, adding that they immediately asked for a pardon.
The defendants are accused of inciting violence in an attempt to overthrow the government. Prosecutors have been pushing for the death penalty.
The opposition won an unprecedented number of parliamentary seats in the 2005 vote, but not enough to topple Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. The opposition claimed the voting was rigged, and European Union observers said it was marred by irregularities.
Last year, the Meles regime acknowledged its security forces killed 193 civilians protesting alleged election fraud but insisted they did not use excessive force. A senior judge appointed to investigate the violence disagreed, saying there was excessive force.
Initially, the opposition leaders, journalists and others were charged with treason, inciting violence and attempted genocide. Judges dropped the treason and attempted genocide charges in April and later that month freed 25 prisoners, among them eight journalists.
In Washington last week, a House subcommittee completed work on legislation that condemns Ethiopia’s recent human rights record and opens the door for sanctions. The bill would have to be passed by both houses and signed by President Bush.
UNITED NATIONS, July 23 — Does the UN system have humanitarian access to the Ogaden region of Ethiopia or not? In the July 22 New York Times, the director of the UN World Food Program in Ethiopia, Mohammed Diab, was quoted that ”Food cannot get in.”
Further inquiry by Inner City Press yields responses that imply either that the New York Times misquoted the UN official or the UN system is backing away from the statement — or both. Two separate UN explanations are quoted extensively below.
The after-the-fact spinning may be explained by the fact that the UN, whose Security Council declined to criticize Ethiopia’s ongoing incursion into Somalia which began last December, and whose humanitarian coordinator in Somalia urged uncritical support of the Ethiopia-backed Transitional Federal Government, is in a conflicted position with regard to human rights violations by the government of prime minister Meles Zenawi in Ethiopia.
The Times article had another, seemingly non-UN quote: “‘It’s a starve-out-the-population strategy,’ said one Western humanitarian official, who did not want to be quoted by name because he feared reprisals against aid workers. ‘If something isn’t done on the diplomatic front soon, we’re going to have a government-caused famine on our hands.'”
Perhaps the UN now wishes that WFP’s director of Ethiopia had also demanded anonymity — some say that his candor, meant to highlight the impending starvation of civilians, is not kindly looked upon by others in the UN system who have a more go-along to get-along attitude.
Or was the tough talk, and then stepping-away, a sort of high-stakes diplomatic game in which bad press is threatened if food is not released? Already in the U.S. Congress there are moves to condemn or de-fund Ethiopia. Will a retraction or amplification not be sought from the New York Times because the story, from the UN’s point of view, fulfilled its purpose? Is this the function of journalism, or more specifically of humanitarian journalism?
At Ban Ki-moon’s spokesperson’s noon briefing on July 23, Inner City Press asked:
Inner City Press: The people in that region called for some kind of UN inquiry. So one, are you aware of that call for an inquiry? And two, what is the UN going to do if its humanitarian agencies are denied access to regions they are supposed to be serving?
Deputy Spokesperson: To be completely truthful, I have received many pages of reaction from the humanitarian agencies on this report. So, I think I’d rather share with you this report afterwards. OCHA — the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs — the World Food Program and the World Health Organization, all of which have programs in this region which they consider to be the poorest area of Ethiopia, have reactions to this. And rather than go through the whole Q&A here, I think I would rather share the whole thing with you afterwards… (Video here, from Minute 10:06).
But the “whole thing” wasn’t shared. When Inner City Press afterwards asked for the three sub-agencies’ reactions, at first the (mis) direction was to contact WFP. While Inner City Press sent WFP’s New York spokesperson an e-mail, the response at the noon briefing was that three agencies’ reactions — “the whole thing” — would be shared afterward the briefing. It was never explained why, as to a fourth agency, UNICEF, involved in the polio program described in the Times article, no reaction was provided, or even apparently sought.
Ten hours later, no World Health Organization reaction had been provided. As to OCHA, the deputy spokesperson said that, “as I mentioned earlier, John Holmes, the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs will be here tomorrow. So, I think maybe he will in a better position to also brief you on that.”
The WFP written statement provided tried to back away from the agency’s Ethiopia director’s quote, and stated that the New York Times presented it out of context:
Subj: response on your ethiopia question from WFP
From: unspokesperson-donotreply [at] un.org
To: Inner City Press
Date: 7/23/2007 1:34:26 PM Eastern Standard Time
Following from: Bettina Luescher, WFP Chief Spokesperson, North America
The New York Times quoted WFP Country Director Mohamed Diab as saying this was the first time he had heard of such diversions, but in fact Mr. Diab said it was the first time he had heard of allegations of a government blockade on the region… The New York Times quotes Western humanitarian officials as estimating that up to 30 percent of food aid to the Somali region is diverted and that to cover their tracks soldiers and government administrators tell aid agencies that the food assistance has been spoiled or been stolen or hijacked by the rebels.
WFP is surprised by such a statement – we take seriously this allegation of major food diversion, and will quickly investigate together with the government and other agencies. In Ethiopia, a number of agencies as well the government provide food assistance – we will ensure this allegation is raised with all relevant parties…
Contrary to what is implied by the WFP quote in the New York Times, WFP does not consider there is a government ‘blockade’ on the Somali region as multi-agency and government assessment teams are currently working on the ground in three zones, and WFP food distributions are underway in three other zones. WFP, however, like FEWS holds that restrictions on commercial trade and movement of humanitarian aid because of military operations as well seasonal floods, rising prices, and other factors could lead to a humanitarian crisis among pastoral and agro-pastoral communities in some areas unless the restrictions are lifted soon.
The dispatch of emergency food assistance was delayed in some areas because of restrictions on movements of commercial traffic and humanitarian assistance since a security operation began in parts of the region in May.
The government has allowed WFP food assistance into three zones — Shinile, Afder and Liben – in the Somali region and the food is moving now and being distributed. We have monitors on the ground to check it is distributed to the people in need.
In addition, the authorities this month allowed multi-agency and government assessment teams into the most restricted zones: Fik, Degehabur and part of Gode zone. The government has also assured us that if those assessments find there is a need for emergency assistance then food can be distributed. The assessment teams will move onto other zones once they complete the assessments in those three zones. Assessments are continuous in the region.
The Disaster Preparedness and Prevention Agency allocated a total of 9,600 tons of relief food, a one-month ration, for 530,000 beneficiaries in the Somali region in May before the assessments. Part of that 9,600 tons is what is being distributed in the three regions where assessments were completed.
That is certainly a more upbeat picture of the situation in Ogaden than was painted by the New York Times. Inner City Press asked WFP, early Monday afternoon, if it is saying that Mr. Diab was misquoted by the Times. In the ten hours since, this direct questions was not answered.
The OCHA response, received later, is set forth below, as it mentions WHO:
The United Nations today welcomed efforts by the Government of Ethiopia to provide much needed humanitarian assistance to the people of Somali Regional State. On Saturday, 21 July, the President of Somali Regional state ordered the release of food to five zones in the region that have been the subject of security operations since May of this year.
The United Nations, like other humanitarian actors, holds that restrictions on commercial trade, including the delivery of food to rural areas as well as seasonal floods, rising prices and other factors could lead to a humanitarian crisis in the region unless restrictions are eased soon.
Roughly 4.6 million people reside in Somali Region – the poorest area of Ethiopia. The region is overwhelmingly rural and consists almost exclusively of pastoralists / agro-pastoralists, who depend on a delicate lattice of local and international trade with Somalia for their survival. There are ongoing concerns about such health issues as Acute Watery Diarrhoea, polio, malaria, measles and other infectious diseases. Approximately 530,000 vulnerable people currently receive Emergency Food Assistance. Approximately 1.1. million people are chronically food insecure. Malnutrition accounts for 8 percent of all deaths. Last year, a series of floods disrupted the lives of more than 361,000 people, more than half of the total flood-affected population of Ethiopia. These events took place after severe drought affected the lives of 1.4 million.
Recent press reports have stated that UN assistance to Somali Region has been diverted by Ethiopian military and militias. The United Nations takes these reports seriously and investigates all information regarding misappropriation of resources. However, since Ethiopia-based food distributions have not taken place during the period of military operations due to new modalities in performing assessments, it is hard to imagine that such diversions existed.
Reports have also indicated that some diversion may have occurred from the World Health Organization’s Polio Eradication Program in Somali Region. The WHO program in the country is unaware of any funds being diverted from the our polio vaccination program to members of the Ethiopian Defense.”
For the record, we understand that the Polio Eradication Program is a partnership between WHO and UNICEF. More generally, one wonders how much the differences between these UN statements and the reporting and (UN) quotes in Sunday’s is attributable to the fact that the UN needs to maintain good relations with the Ethiopian government of Meles Zenawi in order to maximize (remaining) access.
The impact such backing-away will have in Addis Ababa, and more importantly in and for the people of Ogaden, remains to be seen.
Feedback: innercitypress.com UN Office: S-453A, UN, NY 10017 USA Tel: 212-963-1439 Reporter’s mobile (and weekends): 718-716-3540
We spent the weekend at the Sheraton in Addis Ababa the capital of Ethiopia. I was glad to get out of the countryside as most of Ethiopia is so sad and full of begging. I knew from stopping at the Sheraton that it was much nicer than the Hilton and actually cheaper. This is where the NGO’s and government agencies send their people to stay in luxury and waste your contributions. From reading Lords of Poverty, I now know that so much of aid money goes to keeping people traveling or living in style.
We had tried to stay at the Sheraton when we got back from the Omo river valley but that night involved all sorts of soldiers, police, and militia running around like something was going on on the road in front of the hotel. Our driver said that sometimes the president (prime minister) stays there as he moves around a lot to keep from being assassinated. He had rescinded the election results and then killed a lot of protesters. What a guy, i hadn’t known about this before i came.
Here’s my wrap-up of Ethiopia. The people are as bad as Indians at hassling you and stare at you in much weirder ways. They want to rip you off as much as they can and no one is friendly without an agenda. They lie to you less than the Indians but beg a lot more, which is saying a lot as India has professional beggars. It’s just that it’s more prevalent.
We, meaning the West, have turned Ethiopia into a nation of beggars. Or, they have turned themselves into beggars as they have suffered through various man-made and natural disasters. The UN, Save the Children and other agencies have a big presence in the country. It’s their industry and they need more and more money to get things done. The problem is there are often little results or the aid is misappropriated through corruption.
This is a nation with little charm, and even less pride. That’s ironic since Ethiopia is supposed to be so proud of their ancient adherence to Christianity and the fact that they were never colonized. But children, many teenagers, and even some adults are totally willing to beg from you. All the children shout at your car, dance to get your attention, and run after it with their hands open expecting some handout. We’ve never seen anything like it anywhere else in the world.
People will randomly come up to you and think that you will give them money since you are white and therefore rich. Children will walk beside you and harass you to give them something. One time when when were camping i was walking by a hillside looking at a little river when two dirty shoeless children approached me to talk about what they were studying in school. Then, it turned into a begging session with them insisting ‘you give me pen’ saying this over and over again, chasing me and getting in my face until i just started walking up the hill vertically and they couldn’t keep up.
Other annoying things are the complete insistence that you answer them if they see you no matter where you go. People will shout ‘hello’ at you and keep raising their voice and pitch as if to force you to acknowledge them, since that is obviously why you are there, to recognize and validate their existence.
_________________________ Before Kevin and Kirst reach the above conclusion they had travelled through Ethiopia and posted the following blogs:
Tuesday 24th July 2007 Bekele Mola Hotel, Arba Minch
This morning we went up to Chencho, 1.5Km vertically in 25Km. The village is at 2650m from 1100 at Arba Minch, up a winding road through the mist at 19deg C. The village was hosting its market day and our excellent guide protected us from the “1-Birr” kids while Willy and Brian stayed to look after the vehicles. We saw the women selling ensiled Banana plants for human consumption. They also smoke ensiled tobacco through a water-calabash contraption. The horses were very small and delicate and many had huge saddle sores from carrying their burdens to the colourful market. I chose to see one of the traditional homes and was taken even further up the mountain, panting in the thin air to an 18m tall thatched hut. The old man made a living from weaving, shuttle and loom style. It was a time-warp back to 16th century rural Europe. A moving experience. We have taken lots of photos, loaded onto my laptop. Back in Arba Minch Willy kindly donned his gumboots and braved an oil-filled pit to check our Landy’s oils little knowing there was a sump in the pit, fell in and canged colour!! He was not amused. He serviced his and Brian’s Landys. At the campsite we found our flags from each country which we were sticking onto our Landy had been pulled off, and Brian’s ladder (for getting into his tent) had been removed from the front of his Landy. Round Arba Minch the land is flat and fertile with old dysfunctional irrigation canals. The crops which are planted, bananas and maize are excellent, but a lot of the land is fallow. Arba Minch, a beautiful town left a sour taste because of the thieving and begging.
Monday 23rd July 2007 Bekele Mola Hotel, Arba Minch
We decided to leave and had to go over the rocky pass yet again, into Arba Mich and found a campsite with a spectacular view over both Lakes at the hotel. There I recovered from the bout of diarrhea. Maybe I picked up the bug at the village yesterday.
Sunday 22nd July 2007 Bush camp Nechisar National Park, Lake Abaya
Last night was the noisiest night we have spent, and were glad when the rooster started to announce the dawn. Nev paid off Biruk and we headed for ‘New York’. Another bad road, and as we arrived there we were greeted by open pit toilets at the view site with ten slotted poles over the pit, no walls. The aim wasn’t good because the place was disgusting. ‘New York’ wasn’t a town. It was a place of massive soil erosion of a section of 20m deep soil on a mountain covered in vocanic laval rocks. The wind and water has caused pinnacles of soil to remain looking, with huge amount imagination, like a skyscraper skyline, giving the town of Gesergiyo the nickname New York. The area covers about 20Ha. From there we went to one of several Konso villages over 400 years old, surrounded by 2m high stone walls on the ridge of the mountainous volcanic rocks. They put the rocks to good use by constructing walls around their villages and by terracing the steep hillsides for agriculture. They planted maize, sunflowers, sorghum, hops, cassava and beans all mixed together in the long narrow terraces. Inside the village the animals live with the people and the food is brought to the animals. The young men are separated from the females and sleep in central ‘community houses’ while the girls live in the parent’s home. Each family home is separated by stone walls with dry wooden poles sticking out vertically from the top. They make their living farming and weaving. They have the poorest soils we have seen so far in Ethiopia but are the hardest working, with the women bent double from carrying heavy loads on their backs. Although having been living in this way for over 400 years, they have not adapted to use a pit toilet and all round the village, including on the walls and in the pathways between the houses there was human excreta. Villagers do make compost from their animal dung and vegetable matter which is carried on the women’s backs and put onto the lands, but it is insufficient to sustain the fertility. We then dropped off the excellent local guide and proceeded to Nechisar National Park, Ethiopia’s premier game reserve. The road was rough, Brian had a puncture. We paid Birr250 for each family to enter and camp and traveled for about 20Km over a very scenic but steep and rough pass between two natural Rift Valley Lakes. This road made Nev cry for his Landy. We fond a nice campsite next to the Lake Abaya, the water was brown! 1160sqKm of lake, not with “ferrous hydroxide” suspended, as the Bradt Guide book, claims, but with silt eroded from the surrounding mountains. The whole lake is brown. The one further south is the usual blue, but has fewer rivers flowing into it from the erode-able mountains. We had a good night and left to go to the plains and the hot springs. The road continued to be terrible, the hot springs were a local washing place and the plains had very little game, a few zebra and gazelle. Only the scenery was good.
Saturday 21st July 2007 Hotel, Karet-Konso
Nev went into Jinka to get punctures fixed and saw that in the town he and Biruk got hounded by guides and touts so decided that we all would catch a taxi and go into town to the market later on.
All 7 of us (plus driver and ‘conductor’ who hung on the back) squashed into a cute little 175cc 3-wheeler (tuk-tuk in SA) with two rows of seats at the back. It couldn’t get up the hill with the load and we had to walk the last bit.
The market we saw the Musi women with their removable plates inserted into their overstretched bottom lips. Their two bottom front teeth had to be removed to accommodate the 12cm diameter round plate. Apparently if they do not wear the plate, the stretched lip shrinks and we saw many with very fat bottom lips. The men had very stretched ear lobes. I didn’t feel good photographing them as I felt it was degrading, humiliating and they were prostituting their bodies to get money for photos. I didn’t feel much better when the others said they were proud to have photos taken, and we paid them 2Birr anyway. I still didn’t feel good about it.
We bought some fruit and made our way back to Karat-Conso to spend the night at the Hotel. Biruk wanted us to stay in the hotel and told us incorrectly that there was no campsite. This annoyed Nev and he was really getting irritated with Biruk, having had him with us for four days. This was the last straw.
Friday 20th July 2007 Rocky Camp site Jinka
Ethiopians we have come across are friendly, spontaneous, generous and a natural, happy people. Being a firanje (foreigner), however, they see us as an easy source of money or Birr. So everything is measured in terms of Birr. It is difficult to get used to negotiating a price for lodging/food/photograph and then have the price doubled after sleeping/eating/taking a picture. Our guide, Biruk (pronounced Brrrook) is invaluable and not only protects us from the aggression which easily surfaces, but also negotiates far better prices than we could, being a firanje. I said to a child with a bicycle, Nice bike, he said 2 Birr, meaning I could have a ride for 2 Birr. Children hang on to your hands and then expect to be paid for being friendly. Biruk keeps telling them that begging is not culture, and firenje come to see the culture.
We left Turmi for Omorate on the Omo river just north of Lake Turkana. We went through NTvl veld again and passed a herd of Galeb nomads moving house and cattle. Their meager possessions carried by the women (wearing only loincloths) on their heads, the men driving the cattle. The possessions were a couple of calabashes, sleeping mats and clay pots. A light load.
We came across the Omo valley which was flat flat flat. 7km from the Omo river we observed disused well contructed, unmaintained irrigation canals. Our guide informed us the the North Koreans constructed it all for flood irrigating, ran the farms and then with the change of government 15years ago, were thrown out of the country and the Ethiopians took over. Need I say more? Biruk said “Africans do not have the mind to do these things.” There were 35 parked off tractivators, with ploughs, planters, potato ridgers, spray rigs, trailers, tractors and 8 huge TLBs just rusting with parts missing. (Rick and Patrick: Molubesi revisited!!) A complete power station not operational, all the overhead electric wires, half had fallen off the insulators and were lying on the ground.
The Omo river is half as big as the Zambesi and rapid flowing and could generate all the water and power needed to make the area an oasis with all the soil and heat units lying fallow.
We traveled back towards Weito, and as we got near there was a valley similar to the San Joakim Valley in California, also with all the irrigation laid out, lying fallow for the last 10 years, now the government with the Italians are growing sorghum 4m high, and the scheme is just starting up again. The potential is huge. We proceeded to Jinka on a road built by the Chinese to replace the twisted, rutted horrible road where the Ethiopians think the Chinese are wonderful people because they can see results of input of aid. Up the hills towards Jinka, Brian’s landy boiled and burst a pipe, and he had 2 punctures, and we had our first puncture since leaving home. A small piece of rock went right through the centre of a tyre ruining it. With all the delays we arrived in Jinka in the dark.
Thursday 19th July 2007 campsite, Turmi
After spending a really noisy night with radios going, roosters crowing, someone chopping, others cleaning, loud talking and cats mating, we set off from Weito towards the market at Key Afer. We took photos of the people in their traditional clothing, paying 1 or 2Birr per photo and being pestered by kids saying you-you-you-you-you as fast and as loudly as could be said. It means ‘how are you’ and really gets irritating after a time. They also pull your sleeve and say ‘photo 1Birr’ over and over again even if you say no thanks.
We then went towards Turmi along a really potholed road, also N Tvl, but slightly wetter through different tribal land who were herders, not agriculturalists and we thought it was thinly populated until we stopped in a remote place for lunch and in a matter of minutes were surrounded by people who were inquisitive and friendly. Brian’s landy eventually couldn’t take all the twisting in the chassis and the windscreen nearly fell out of the cab. He braced his cab from the bull bar to the roof carrier to stabilize the cab until he can get it fixed in Addis. If it rained now he wouldn’t only get his feet wet, but would get a shower through the cracks – but the bracing helped.
At Turmi we arrived at the camp site and went to see the traditional dancing at a village. On the way we asked to look into one of the huts, a rondavel made of upright poles about 1m high with no cladding, so it was well ventilated. The roof of steeply pitched grass thatch covered a second story which was the sleeping area for the adults. The cooking was done on the floor 1m under the grass mat on poles of the second story, and the children slept on skins on the floor. The doorway was only 800cm high, not meant for old’ ballies’ like Nev. The dancing consisted of the young men and girls chanting and singing and the men jumped up and down in time to the clapping. They landed flat footed and jumped high with straight legs and their feet parallel to the ground. The girls in their beads just shuffled around. They would approach the ‘man of choice’ and kick his feet just as he was about to land, putting him off balance and indicating her interest. He would then chase her rhythmically for a minute and then return to the line of dancing men. In the light of the setting sun the dust swirled around their gleaming bodies.
Wednesday 18th July 2007 Hor Hotel, Weito
We left early to go to the South Omo with Biruk sitting in our Landy on cushions, squeezed in between the fridge and the door.
At mega we visited what they called the ‘singing well’. Here the well is dug 25m into the hard shale to water their stock. They had dug a stepped roadway 3m wide down to the well where they constructed a trough. To get the water from the well into the trough they use 20l containers, passing the full bucket to the next person in the chain, the last tipping the water into the trough. The coordination had to be good because they were passing the empty containers back at the same time. While they do this they chant, (rightly named the singing well). While we were there, there were at least 500 head of cattle in herds patiently waiting their turn to drink. The cattle looked good and we saw the first horse since Zambia.
At Yabello, Beryl and Dave left us to get their vehicle fixed in Addis Ababa and the three remaining couples continued to the South Omo.
There are many different tribes in the valley, each having their own individual culture regarding wearing apparel, housing and traditions. Any guide book will detail these, so I won’t go into detail. The most different from us (I cannot use the words primitive or uncivilized, because I do not believe that westerners are any more advanced or more civilized, because we simply have a different lifestyles) wear soft loincloth skins decorated with colourful beadwork that sway when they walk in a very provocative manner. And the men wear very short mini skirt kilts that show off their very muscular lean bodies to the maximum.
We went over the mountain and onto a flat plain that stretched for miles and miles and looked very similar to the northern Transvaal. Cattle, Boran type were plentiful, as well as the usual goats and donkeys. We arrived in Konso in the mountains. The Konso tribe work very hard terracing their mountain slopes and plant crops to try to save the soil, but I’m sorry to see the soil is all worn out, and although they have had a good season their crops are very poor and really lack nutrition in the form of fertilizer input. They are the poorest people we have come across so far, and the women labour up and down the slopes with huge bundles of maize stalks (after reaping the green mealies) and hay they have baled manually about the size of two of our square bales. They put this on their backs and are bent double hauling their load to market to receive 1 or 2 Birr (R1 or 2) or to take home to feed their own livestock. The women or children can be seen in the fields on the top of a tree in the middle of a field, or on a wooden tower three metres high, guarding their sorghum and teff crops from the birds. These are the genuine scarecrows.
We slept in our tent at the hotel after supper where you call the waiter by loudly clapping your hands together. It is their custom and not at all rude.
Tuesday 17th July 2007 Borena Moyale Hotel still
The morning was spent servicing the Landy (Nev tightened bolts and checked wheel bearings and found the 4th spare diesel tank was leaking – we aren’t going to fix it.) Willy’s main diesel tank is leaking too, welding the leaking water tanks (Brian and Daves) and fixing punctures, (Brian had two yesterday – surprisingly only 2 on that road) and Dave is replacing rubbers on his shocks again. I spent the time fighting the dust.
Oh the dust! It comes in everywhere and literally rains on the windows outside the Landy and everything is full of dust inside! It is our ‘Sandrover’. It would get anyone down, and I try not to kick the pricks, but try to work with it as best I can. We all get dusty, but having five opening doors on our vehicle means 5 extra places for dust to come in and we don’t have a working aircon so have to have open windows. Not a situation everybody could tolerate, but the huge advantages of traveling outweigh these slight discomforts, and I love my Landy.
We had supper again at the restaurant. Everything comes with Injara, the brown sour-dough tray-sized spongy pancake. You break bits off and mop up some sauce and pop it in your mouth. It is a very social dish where groups sit around the tray and all partake while chatting loudly. The difference in the dishes is the difference in the very spicy sauce.
We chatted to an Austrian, Martin, who is traveling around alone on a motorbike. He is an agricultural economist who teaches at an agricultural college in Austria. He is just as passionate as we are that the ‘donor do-gooders’ are ruining the African economy. We chatted for an hour, very interesting man. The electricity had switched off by the time we got back to our room.
MORE THAN once during the Cold War, the United States aligned itself with dictatorial or corrupt, but anticommunist, foreign governments, compromising democratic principles for perceived advantage against the Soviet Union. These choices were not necessarily wrong, but each one put the U.S. on a slippery slope, at the bottom of which lay a completely amoral foreign policy.
The Bush administration’s global war on terrorism faces similar moral hazards. Even as President Bush correctly declares that ultimate victory against al-Qaeda hinges on the spread of freedom, he sometimes makes common cause with authoritarian regimes that promise to help eliminate terrorists in the here and now. Examples: Egypt, Pakistan and, more recently, Ethiopia, whose authoritarian prime minister, Meles Zenawi, was once a darling of the Clinton administration and has also forged close ties to the Bush administration. With Washington’s blessing, Mr. Meles sent troops to Somalia in December to expel the radical Islamic Courts movement linked to al-Qaeda.
Yesterday 38 opposition politicians and activists walked out of jail in Addis Ababa, where they had been held for almost two years. That is good news, but they never should have been there in the first place. After Mr. Meles’s party tried to deny its opponents the share of Parliament they won in an election in May 2005, protests erupted across the country, only to be crushed by Mr. Meles’s security forces at a cost of 193 civilian lives. (Six police officers also died.) Thousands of people were detained, including the opposition leaders — 35 of whom were sentenced to life in prison on preposterous charges of treason and inciting violence. Their release came after they signed a letter taking “full responsibility for the mistakes committed both individually and collectively” and begging for a pardon, which a regime-controlled board granted. Immediately after his release, opposition leader Hailu Shawel said he had signed the Orwellian statement under duress. But the fact that he and other leaders of civil society were released without restrictions on their political activity is a hopeful sign.
More political prisoners remain. Mr. Meles’s troops also stand accused of human rights abuses in Somalia and in the country’s internal war against rebels in the Ogaden region. The Bush administration has remained mostly quiet about all of this, though the State Department played a back-channel role helping to arrange the prisoners’ release. The most visible U.S. pressure came in the form of a bill, sponsored by Rep. Donald M. Payne (D-N.J.), which would link U.S. aid to Ethiopia’s performance on human rights. It passed the House’s Africa subcommittee, chaired by Mr. Payne, this week. Ethiopia is a strategic ally. But it will probably take more work by its hard-pressed civil society, and more pressure from the United States, before it can be called a democratic one.
NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters) — Ogaden rebels warned of a looming “man-made famine” in Ethiopia’s remote area bordering Somalia and called on Monday for a U.N. investigation into accusations the government was blocking food aid to the region.
On Sunday, a New York Times report quoted Western diplomats and relief officials as saying Ethiopia’s government was blockading emergency food aid and choking off trade to Ogaden.
The Ogaden National Liberation Front, which is seeking more autonomy for its homeland but which Addis Ababa says it is a terrorist group bankrolled by Eritrea, called for a U.N. fact-finding mission.
“The ONLF wishes to affirm to the international community that if there is no immediate intervention in the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Ogaden, there will be a man-made famine created by the current regime of Meles Zenawi,” the ONLF said in a statement.
Ethiopian government officials were not immediately available to comment.
On Monday, the ONLF said Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s administration was engaged in a systematic and deliberate campaign of violence against its people.
“These war crimes include diverting humanitarian assistance for use by the regime’s armed forces … deliberate burning of villages, arbitrary arrests, extrajudicial killings, torture, a blockade on food aid as well as other commercial goods and other forms of collective punishment,” the ONLF said in a statement.
“The United Nations bears a particular responsibility to investigate war crimes in Ogaden given recent reports that its humanitarian assistance is deliberately being diverted to armed forces and militias responsible for these war crimes,” it said.
The ONLF itself has been accused of carrying out atrocities, including an April raid on a Chinese-run oil field in which 74 people were killed and seven Chinese workers taken hostage.
They were later freed but in the wake of the attack, Meles announced a crackdown on the rebels.
It is difficult to get independent information out of the desolate region, which is ethnically Somali.