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Ethiopia set for millennium party – Reuters

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (Reuters) — More than seven years after most of the world marked the start of the 21st century, Ethiopia is putting the finishing touches to its own millennium bash.

art.ethiopia.afp.gi.jpgA screen in Addis Ababa counts down the time to Ethiopia’s new millennium.

Using the Julian calendar, an ancient system of measuring time abandoned by the West in the 16th century, Ethiopia enters its new millennium on Sept. 12 with a huge concert expected to draw hundreds of thousands of partygoers.

Organizers hope U.S. singer Beyonce will headline the New Year’s concert with popstar Janet Jackson and rapper 50 Cent also rumored to appear in a 20,000 capacity venue being built on Addis Ababa’s priciest avenue.

President Girma Woldegirogis has billed the celebrations a time to focus on fighting poverty and advancing democracy in the Horn of Africa country of 81 million people.

But, reports that Saudi-Ethiopian tycoon Sheikh Mohammed Al Amoudi is paying $10 million to build the Millennium concert hall has angered some in Ethiopia, which ranks 170 out of 177 in the United Nation’s Human Development Index.

“We could spend smarter,” said Fasile Abebe, a 34-year-old taxi driver, gesturing to a man begging beside a fast food restaurant recently renamed “Millennium Burger”.

“He won’t be partying with Beyonce. I have no time for this Millennium.”

Boasting medieval cities, ruined castles and palaces, Ethiopia is often described as the cradle of humanity after the remains of a three-million-year-old skeleton called “Lucy” was discovered in 1974.

But for all its rich heritage, Ethiopia has struggled in recent years to shake off the effects of cyclical famine, centuries of feudalism and nearly two decades of Marxist totalitarian rule under Mengistu Haile Mariam which spawned the “Red Terror” purges.

The millennium celebrations are likely to provide a welcome distraction for Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s government whose troops are embroiled in a conflict in neighboring Somalia where they were deployed in December to bolster the interim government.

Meles also faces armed opposition in the ethnically Somali Ogaden region where separatist rebels killed 74 people in an April attack on a Chinese-run oil exploration field, and worsening ties with Eritrea over their disputed border.

Despite the country’s troubles, many Ethiopians are optimistic the millennium may usher in a new period of reconciliation among its myriad ethnic groups.

The president pardoned 38 opposition leaders, activists and journalists last month who were convicted of trying to overthrow the government following disputed 2005 elections. It released another 31 detained opposition supporters on Saturday.

The vote, Ethiopia’s freest, provoked two bouts of violence in which 199 people were killed, 800 wounded and 30,000 arrested, according to a parliamentary inquiry.

“This rapprochement is indeed a result of the feel-good factor that the millennium has brought about,” said Mulugeta Aserate Kassa, public relations chief for the committee organizing the celebrations.

“It’s time for the nation to undergo a renaissance. A renaissance in our way of doing things — and in our acceptance of a democratic society.”

Other events in a year-long festival include a 10 km Millennium Race led by legendary long-distance runner Haile Gebrselassie, the unveiling of 11 new national monuments and opening of a coffee museum in Bongo, where the Arabica coffee variety originated.

Hiwot Binyam, a 27-year-old lawyer, cannot wait for the party to begin.

“It’s fantastic. We want to leave behind our image as a place of war and poverty,” she said.

Ethiopia set for millennium party – Reuters

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (Reuters) — More than seven years after most of the world marked the start of the 21st century, Ethiopia is putting the finishing touches to its own millennium bash.

art.ethiopia.afp.gi.jpgA screen in Addis Ababa counts down the time to Ethiopia’s new millennium.

Using the Julian calendar, an ancient system of measuring time abandoned by the West in the 16th century, Ethiopia enters its new millennium on Sept. 12 with a huge concert expected to draw hundreds of thousands of partygoers.

Organizers hope U.S. singer Beyonce will headline the New Year’s concert with popstar Janet Jackson and rapper 50 Cent also rumored to appear in a 20,000 capacity venue being built on Addis Ababa’s priciest avenue.

President Girma Woldegirogis has billed the celebrations a time to focus on fighting poverty and advancing democracy in the Horn of Africa country of 81 million people.

But, reports that Saudi-Ethiopian tycoon Sheikh Mohammed Al Amoudi is paying $10 million to build the Millennium concert hall has angered some in Ethiopia, which ranks 170 out of 177 in the United Nation’s Human Development Index.

“We could spend smarter,” said Fasile Abebe, a 34-year-old taxi driver, gesturing to a man begging beside a fast food restaurant recently renamed “Millennium Burger”.

“He won’t be partying with Beyonce. I have no time for this Millennium.”

Boasting medieval cities, ruined castles and palaces, Ethiopia is often described as the cradle of humanity after the remains of a three-million-year-old skeleton called “Lucy” was discovered in 1974.

But for all its rich heritage, Ethiopia has struggled in recent years to shake off the effects of cyclical famine, centuries of feudalism and nearly two decades of Marxist totalitarian rule under Mengistu Haile Mariam which spawned the “Red Terror” purges.

The millennium celebrations are likely to provide a welcome distraction for Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s government whose troops are embroiled in a conflict in neighboring Somalia where they were deployed in December to bolster the interim government.

Meles also faces armed opposition in the ethnically Somali Ogaden region where separatist rebels killed 74 people in an April attack on a Chinese-run oil exploration field, and worsening ties with Eritrea over their disputed border.

Despite the country’s troubles, many Ethiopians are optimistic the millennium may usher in a new period of reconciliation among its myriad ethnic groups.

The president pardoned 38 opposition leaders, activists and journalists last month who were convicted of trying to overthrow the government following disputed 2005 elections. It released another 31 detained opposition supporters on Saturday.

The vote, Ethiopia’s freest, provoked two bouts of violence in which 199 people were killed, 800 wounded and 30,000 arrested, according to a parliamentary inquiry.

“This rapprochement is indeed a result of the feel-good factor that the millennium has brought about,” said Mulugeta Aserate Kassa, public relations chief for the committee organizing the celebrations.

“It’s time for the nation to undergo a renaissance. A renaissance in our way of doing things — and in our acceptance of a democratic society.”

Other events in a year-long festival include a 10 km Millennium Race led by legendary long-distance runner Haile Gebrselassie, the unveiling of 11 new national monuments and opening of a coffee museum in Bongo, where the Arabica coffee variety originated.

Hiwot Binyam, a 27-year-old lawyer, cannot wait for the party to begin.

“It’s fantastic. We want to leave behind our image as a place of war and poverty,” she said.

The Meles regime is sprinting toward total collapse

By Ahmed Osman, Jijiga
Galbeed editorial

Leadership Crisis in Somali Region

From the oil fields of Somali Region, to the diamond and copper fields of Gambelas, to the rich mineral deposits of the Great Awash lake region of Afar, to the mountain ranges, plains and tourist havens of Oromo land, the country of Ethiopia is undoubtedly blessed. However, Meles Zenawi and his ethnic group are in control and looting by force. The recent killing of nine Chinese oil drillers illustrated how the Tigreans exploiting the resources of the country without involving the native people frustrated Ethiopian Somalis. The heart of the problem is leadership crisis emanated from Federal Government and the Regional state.

From these blessings, however, much sorrow has flowed. During the military regime of Mengistu Hailemariam, most Ethiopians did not benefit from the country’s resources. Ethiopian economy was geared toward socialist mode of production. It was primarily focused on cultivating raw materials for export, and roads, health care, and other infrastructure were available only in areas where those materials were produced.

The end of Derg regime unleashed struggles for political control, social emancipation, and access to resources — struggles that, in turn, have degenerated into conflicts and internecine wars. Retarded in its development, unbridled in its lust for power, steeped in official corruption, chaotic in its political engineering, Ethiopian regime of Meles Zenawi and his cabinet are now sprinting toward total collapse.

The regime of Meles Zenawi is not drawing a lesson from the past African leaders who were overthrown, who were killed and who were jailed because of their mismanagement and corrupted system of governance. He is pushing the wrong button since he is managing and ruling by forces. His memory is very short and shallow. He is also thinking in bush style of saber rattling instead of dialogue and political consensus.

When Tigrean People Liberation Front took the power, everybody thought that they learned a valuable lesson from their past guerrilla warfare and they did not dare to impose their will on the people, but their acts reminded us that power has been historically corrupting human being unless they follow rule of law, democracy and justice. For example, we have witnessed in Somali Region that many Tigreans origin have got rich in overnight. We are talking about millionaires. In other words, the Tigreans are only given permission to invest in Oromo, Somali and Afar regions while the natives are forced to be exiled, to be jailed on fabricated history and to be killed on the pretext of being part of terrorism and against peace.

History has showed that in the post-colonial period, many African leaders have exerted dictatorial control over their societies. Through their undemocratic policies, they have spread dissatisfaction among the people, which has manifested over time in nationalistic feelings and even popular rebellions. These political tensions, in turn, have generated fierce conflicts over resource control. The same scenario is currently unfolding in Ethiopia. In every region of Ethiopia, insurgents are fighting to liberate their lands. The people are forced to take arms to fight for their survival. Meles Zenawi is one of the worst leaders in Horn of Africa. He is ruling with iron fist and is imposing his ephemeral power on the people of Somalis, Oromo, Afar and Gambelas while his own ethnic group is looting the resources of the regions of these oppressed nations.

Much of the blame for Ethiopians recent spiral of violence belongs to generations of opportunistic and venal Ethiopian leaders, who have done little to develop their societies and emancipate their peoples. The so-called ministers of Meles’s cabinet are handpicked by the Tigrean and they are only there to be used against other ethnic particularly Amhara ethnic group whom the Tigrean is considered as threat to their power. For instance, Minister of Tourism, Mohamed Dirir, is a token that insults Amhara ethnic to be chauvinist and settlers; on the contrary, Tigrean are the real settlers and oppressor in Ethiopia. Their schemes are geared to dividing and ruling in the name of ethnicity empowerment while they field in any position their own ethnic group, Tigrean and its servants. All the key positions of Federal government are filled with Tigrean; they are 3.5 millions, but they have five Ministers and 71 members in the parliament; however, Ethiopian Somalis are 4 to 5 millions, but they have only one Minister in the Federal government. He is a yes man to their myopic and narrow political manipulation. The same could be said in any region of Ethiopia.

It is not Ethiopian Somalis that are governing Somali State, but a certain Tigrean , Abay Tsaye, who has the power to change the so-called President. Seven Presidents have been removed in the last sixteen years. In the same vein, Somali Region President, Abdillahi Hassen, who is the worst leader that somali regional state has known, is nominated because he married to a Tigrean lady. He does not have any a clue how to manage state let alone to express his opinion on public arena except echoing the statement of Meles, Sebhate and Abay Tsaye; the worse of Somali Region is the quotas style of sharing power. Former Minister of Federal of regional state, Abay Tsaye, has promulgated that Somali Region’s president should be from Ogaden clan, the Vice President must be an Issa clan and the speaker has to be an Isaaq; this is truly antiquity system of governance. In the 21 century, one can not share power through genetics, but it should be by merit. Somali Region is inhabited by many clans who live peacefully and share power for century.

Further, Ethiopian Somalis, Oromos, Afars and Gambelas do not have the right to manage its own regional state. Thousand of people of those regions are jailed, executed or forced to flee their land. The recent wave of killing in Somali Region is another form of stifling the rights of people. Meles ‘s happy triggered soldiers are prohibited food , raped women, strangulated elderly, and burnt villages in the name of fighting terrorism.

An elderly Ethiopian Somali lamented, “When Amhara was in the power seat, they limited themselves in the politics, but the Tigrean does not allow us anything; they loot the resources, they kill our children, they rape our women and they destroy the social fabric of Ethiopian-ness. It will take a generation to overcome their barbaric acts.”

On the election of 2005, the token Minister, Dirir and his thugs went to Somali Region and opposed that Kinijit could not be allowed to compete to any seat. To add insult to injury, four Ethiopian Somali parties were instructed to stay home in the election days and did not participate . Dirir and a few opportunists were giving money to the leaders of the parties and jailed some of them that questioned their acts. For instance, Western Somali Party leader, the brother of a well respected former Ethiopian Somali Politician Peter Roble, was harassed not to think about involving in the election. He was told that EPRDF is the only party in Ethiopia. This echoes the old one party style of Soviet Republic. Dirir and his gang fielded only EPRDF loyal members to take part in the election since they were implementing the order given to them by the TPLF thugs.

Moreover, the expansion of corporate dominance has accentuated the steady descent into near economic strangulation and political chaos. Many transnational corporations have acted as economic predators in Ethiopia, gobbling up national resources, distorting national economic policies, exploiting and changing labor relations, committing environmental despoliation, violating sovereignties, and manipulating government and the media. In order to ensure uninterrupted access to resources, TNCs have also supported repressive corrupted leaders such as Meles Zenawi and his warlords, and guerrilla fighters, thus serving as catalysts for lethal conflict and impeding prospects for development and peace.

In addition, the West has supported Meles and his kind of leaders by calling them “The new breed of African Leader”; however, the reality is far from it. Meles Zenawi and his thugs based upon one and only one party system is maiming and killing Ethiopian people.

At the advent of the new millennium, Ethiopia is hurting badly. Most parts of the country are embroiled in ethnic conflicts, violent wars for political and resource control, and cross-border conflicts. The opposition groups are in full geared to unseat Meles Zenawi’s regime and the biggest problem of this turmoil is the crisis of leadership in the Federal government and regional state. The current regime did not want to make operational what it couches in the constitution. On the contrary, a certain token Ministers and regional state official are implementing the instructions that are given by the Tigrean ethnic who are in the power seat. For example, for the first time in the Somali Region history, a Tigrean person is nominated in the security position. This shows how much woyanes people are violating the new constitution that they pretend Ethiopian people have endorsed.

In conclusion, the exploitation has resulted in serious environmental damage, developmental neglect, human-rights abuses, economic oppression, and inequitable resource allocation. These abuses, and the need for redress, are at the heart of the conflict in Ethiopia. In recent months, calls for emancipation by rebels of every region have grown louder. The only lasting solution is to redress the injustice and implement rule of law when all Ethiopian are permitted to participate in the process of power sharing. Western World should enforce rule of law, democracy and other form social equities in Ethiopia.

Ahmed Osman can be reached at [email protected]

Oromo protestors flock Minnesota state capitol

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A demonstration in St. Paul against the Ethiopian government. Photo: Abdiaziz Ahmed/Mshale

The United States should stop supporting the Ethiopian Woyanne government’s aggression against its opposition if there is to be peace in the Horn of Africa region, an official of the Oromo Liberation Front said.

Hassan Hussein, the foreign relations head of the Ethiopian-based OLF, accused the U.S. government of continued collaboration with the Ethiopia’s dictatorMeles Zenawi, despite consistent reports of human rights abuses in that country.

“Zenawi is an enemy of peace, not only inside Ethiopia, but look what’s happening in Somalia, where his troops are killing innocent civilians,” Hussein told a crowd of nearly a thousand people, who gathered outside the State Capitol to demonstrate against Ethiopia’s Woyanne’s treatment of Oromos.

Hussein said time had come for the U.S. government to cease its diplomatic ties with Zenawi’s regime. Instead, Hussein said the Bush administration could play an active role as a mediator between the OLF movement and the Ethiopian government. Hussein appealed to Washington to initiate space for dialogue with the Ethiopian government that would bring the two sides to the negotiating table to meet face to face and talk about ways of resolving their differences peacefully.

The Oromos, who make up an estimated 32 percent of Ethiopia’s 76.5 million people, have been involved in a conflict with the central government for over a decade and a half. One of the major issues of the conflict is the state of Oromo prisoners in Ethiopian prisons and the continued handing down of sentences against Oromo people on what many feel are trumped up charges. Oromos also say their kinsmen in refugee camps around the Horn of Africa live in constant fear of being kidnapped by Ethiopian security agents.

Hussein told the crowd that the Ethiopian population and the government were being led by a person who ruled with “an iron fist.”

The demonstration, which was organized by the International Oromo Youth Organization, brought together hundreds of people from the Oromo ethnic community in the United States, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom. Dubbed the Annual Oromo Convention, the gathering, according to Damee Ormaa, the immediate vice president of the youth association, was meant to bring the community together.The convention was also aimed at raising funds for several developmental projects in and out of Ethiopia.

The demonstration kicked off at the intersection of Dale Street and University Ave. in St. Paul before snaking through traffic on its way to the State Capitol. Waving placards that condemned torture and illegal detention by Ethiopian security forces, the participants, dressed in traditional Oromo regalia, braved the scorching heat to hear their leaders speak.

“You cant imagine a government functioning like this, rounding up people in a village and taking them to mountains to be shot and their bodies left for hyenas to feed, only because they are suspected to have links with the OLF,” said Ormaa. “It’s against anybody’s imagination”

Ormaa alleged that students from his community were being expelled from schools and universities for engaging in demonstrations against the Ethiopian regime.

The group, under the umbrella of the International Oromo Youth Association, has already written a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Rep. Keith Ellison and Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Norm Coleman to bring to their attention the “trials and tribulations of the parents, relatives and friends in Oromia and other parts of Ethiopia feeling the pain and sufferings of their compatriots who are denied the right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness because of their yearning for democratic governance.”

The threat of Tigrean Nationalism

By Kallacha Dubbi

In my previous writing entitled “TPLF and Tigrean Identity Politics” dated May 25, 2007, I expressed a view that Tigrean nationalism is overtly discriminatory, and it is therefore distinguished by negative manifestations of the Ethiopian integrative power. Instead of uniting multi-ethnic Ethiopia, the Tigrean Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) leadership has antagonized them, and as such, it has excluded even Tigreans from mainstream Ethiopian political discourse. In this follow up, necessitated by email feedbacks I received, I intend to provide some evidence without encumbering the reader with too much detail that such data would otherwise require.

My previous argument leads to a conclusion that the negative identity formation in which a group (TPLF) defines itself and also others in terms of what it is not, according to a famous sociologist, tends to lead into a “pathological situation of internal violence.” This has occurred on a large scale in the Balkans, Sri Lanka, or the Middle East. The situation in Ethiopia is an even more fitting example with acutely rising consequences. Tigrean discrimination ignores individual merits based on the victim’s ethnic background, and this serves as a stifling factor for development, killing ideas in a poor country that requires mobilizing all its brain capacities to get rid of the ravaging poverty.

My previous view also suggests that Tigrean discrimination has paradoxically played a very important role of coalescing the discriminated people, pulling together victims who share the same abuse to a united powerhouse capable of undermining or perhaps even toppling the discriminator. Oromos, Somalis, Sidamas, and Amharas, etc. are united in wanting to dethrone the TPLF. In other words, even a negative integration, integration that is achieved for a reason of shared abuse – threats, hatred, tortures, arrests, and killings is integration of some sort. This natural coalition of the oppressed is as strong as it can effectively resist political opportunism as well as TPLF’s corruptive infiltration. There is tangible evidence, that creation of a country-wide united national opposition front to this Tigrean domination is targeted by infiltrators from the TPLF dominated regime. But the creation of a broad-based unity has its own weak points that expose it to such manipulations.

The weakest link

The Ethiopian political intolerance, exceptionally violent and intense in its makeup, is nourished by delusional tradition that borders with compulsive disorder. By and large, it assumes that every human being with opposing opinion, every political group with a dissenting view, is an enemy. This intolerance characterizes the individual activist’s manner so profoundly, that one can observe its manifestations in coffee bar debates, at community gatherings, and even at scholarly meetings. This is in major part the legacy of the Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Party (EPRP), the weakest link in the creation of a broad-based opposition against Tigrean domination, i.e., a hazard for political progress in the country.

In a familiarly condescending tone whose authorship must have a thing or two to do with EPRP mentality, one wrote, ‘The theory of the nation which decomposes Ethiopia by weaving the myths (emphasis mine) of Tigreanism, Eritreanism, Oromoism and so on goes counter to the core experience of the people…’

After reclaiming Eritrea and replacing the well established Ethiopian myth with his own, the author attempts to guard the mythical ‘framework’ by delivering another punch to its contents: “There can be no compromise on the Ethiopian and African framework for citizen expression and engagement.”

The author forces all the Ethiopian cultural and ethnic diversities to either become Ethiopians or Africans of his personal definition of certainly chauvinistic preeminence, or face a wrath of his verdict and imagination — no compromise, we are told in no uncertain terms.

So, vaguely articulated malice of EPRP’s ideology still permeates through the deeds and words of the now senior or middle-aged activists who commenced politics in the 70s as infantile children. Their politics never stopped growing, but it grew crook!

In the 1970s, in a bizarre combination of feudal tradition with Marxism, the EPRP offered nothing else to the Ethiopian political roundtable other than winning by killing or dying, even when in its opposition stood a well-armed national army pronouncing its sure demise.

There was no compromise then as now. Blinded by emotional ambition, traits of which are still glaring among its rank and file, the children were too young to fathom the essence of a military balance and too confused to comprehend the impact of a generation’s death.

The military junta was driven insane by their obnoxious and unflinching ambition, and as a result, the junta passed a collective death verdict on the generation.

This in part allowed the military to keep political power for one more decade, leaving behind a scar of historical magnitude.

In this sense, the EPRP and the TPLF have little to distinguish them from Khmer Rouge, except that the TPLF, also a teen army that grew to power without growing to the society, is now terrorizing Ethiopia whereas the EPRP resides in old Diaspora minds as a political paranoia. They do share concealed hate and love for each other; they can’t go against each other, they can’t go for each other either. It is sad to see that neither the politics nor the social evolution of the last thirty years offered any cure to the survivors of the lost generation of Ethiopia that continue diffusing discord throughout all the political establishments of the region.

There is little doubt that most of the destructive vectors and inward fighters in all political fronts and organizations can be traced to this futile ideology in a resistive or adaptive form. Their relentless propaganda for the unity of Ethiopia, on one hand, and equally relentless objection to the unity of Oromos, Amharas, Somalis etc. when not on their own sadistic terms on the other, their objection to the very idea of the Alliance for Freedom and Democracy (AFD), is a synopsis of their fixation on winning, with extremely poor judgment of their capacity that would enable them to win. By betraying its own mission and stated goals, the EPRP is acclaimed to be the weakest link of the Ethiopian political opposition against Tigrean domination, and therefore the creation of a better tomorrow for the region.

TPLF’s Strength

Facing a disgruntled Ethiopian opposition forces is the TPLF, an organization that has an exceptional talent in further disgruntling opposition forces. The TPLF has two strong suits that link it to the Ethiopian political power and shape its capacity to destabilize the opposition. They are: a) military, and b) economy.

The military

Strictly speaking, the Ethiopian armed forces are Tigrean no less than the TPLF is Tigrean. The following list makes this argument abundantly clear.

Ministry of Defense

* Commander of Ethiopian armed forces – Melles Zenawi (Tigrean)

* Defense Minister is a non-Tigrean, but this position is constitutionally manned by a civilian, not a military person

* Chief of Staff – Samora (Mohamed) Yunis (Tigrean)

* Department of Training – Major General Taddese Wored- (Tigrean)

* Department of Logistics and Administration – Major General Gezahi Abera – (Tigrean)

* Department of Operations – Brigadier General Gebrzgiabher Mebrhatu (Tigrean)

* Department of Military Intelligence- Brigadier General Yohannes (John) Gebre Meskel – (Tigrean) …. Recently appointed as Deputy Commander of Central Command. This Department will also be commanded by head of operations Brigadier General Gebrezgiabher Mebrhatu (Tigrean).

* Commander of the Air Force – Brigadier Molla H. Mariam (Tigirean)

Under the Ministry of Defense there are 5 Ethiopian Army Commanders.

* Northern Command (HQ Mekele) – Major General Seare Mekonnen (Tigrean)

* North Western Command (HQ Baher Dar) – Brigadier General Abraham Gebre Mariam (Tigrean)

* Special Army Command (HQ Dessie-Bure Front) – Birgadier General Teklai Ashebir (Tigrean)

* South Eastern Army Command (HQ Harar) – Brigadier General Seyum Hagos (Tigrean)

* Central Army Command (HQ Shire Indasilassie) – Major General Taddese Wored (Tigirean – Agaw). Recently, Brigadier General Yohannes G. Meskel also Tigrean.

The Ministry of Defense has 28 Division Commanders.

* All but one are Tigreans

Division Commands have 106 Regiments.

* 98% of the Regiment Commanders are Tigireans

It can be safely argued therefore, that there is no Ethiopian national army but Tigrean.

b) The economy: The Ethiopian economy is controlled by two large conglomerates:

l The Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray (EFFORT)

l The Ethio-Saudi AI-Amudi-family – Midroc Ethiopia

Of interest to my ongoing argument is EFFORT. We will return to Midroc at another opportune time.

In 1978, the TPLF created the Relief Society of Tigray (REST), a financial umbrella organization of the TPLF which acted as an NGO despite headed by a TPLF Central Committee member. It collected donations from the international community and channeled it to the TPLF, playing a key role in the survival and ultimate victory of TPLF over the Derg.

After the rise of the TPLF to power in 1991, REST was formally registered with the governmental Relief & Rehabilitation Commission in Ethiopia as an NGO. As the TPLF’s financial backbone, it continued enjoying the state protection, and the restructured organization emerged as the richest “NGO” in the continent. In the summer of 1995, about four years after it took control of central power in Ethiopia, the TPLF established a stronger peer for REST – the Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray (EFFORT). Sources suggest that EFFORT started its business venture with a lofty investment volume of about 2.7 billion birr — then just under US $1 billion (currently $1 US is about 9 birr).

Through EFFORT, the TPLF has considerably diversified its economic activities and expanded its outreach even to foreign countries. The European financial maneuver of the TPLF is based in UK where family members are trained and placed in key areas of Ethiopia’s financial institutions. In some cases, they are assigned to a now growing number of internationalized affiliates co-owned or owned by EFFORT, such as the Tower Trading Company (TTC) – a London-based TPLF owned company mandated with money laundering.

New companies continue to emerge, fully or partly owned by EFFORT through an intricate system of shares and investments. By controlling key growth areas, EFFORT has become the soul of the country’s economy: agriculture (Hiwot Mechanized Agriculture), industry (Almeda Textiles Manufacturing Sc., Mesfin Industrial Engineering SC.), import-export (Guna Trading House), transport (Trans-Ethiopia SC.), insurance (Africa Insurance SC.), mining (Meskerem Investment SC.), communications (Mega-Net Corporation), banking (Wegagen Bank), just to mention some. Clearly, TPLF’s business enterprises cover numerous activities including textile, chemicals, pharmaceutical, and food industries. They also cover major service industries such as banking, insurance, transportation, printing, advertising, land developing, import/export, construction, mining, leather products, and farming.

EFFORT is divided into several sectors directed by members of the TPLF Central Committee, like Abadi Zemo for industrial activities, Arkebe Oqubay Mitiku for construction and transportation, and Tewodros Hagos for mining. The individuals may be moved around, but no non-Tigrean is appointed to EFFORT. In fact, no non-TPLF Tigrean is appointed to the ranks of EFFORT. Strategic positions of the Federal government that generate large amounts of cash are also led by Tigreans of EFFORT who hold multiple offices. For example, Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin is chairman of Ethiopian Air Lines, chairman of the Mugher Cement Factory, chairman of the Ambo Water Factory, chairman of EFFORT, and deputy-chairman of the TPLF at the same time. The more trusted individuals are usually offered the more strategic positions.

Although EFFORT is strictly controlled by the TPLF, it is not the only entity owned or controlled by high-ranking TPLF officials or favored Tigrean citizens. For example, although EFFORT controls WEGAGEN Bank, the TPLF encouraged the creation of DEDEBIT Credit and Savings Institution, headquartered in Meqele and administered by the local government of Tigray. The bank has numerous financial links with other TPLF controlled businesses of the country. DEDEBIT, as an extension of Rural Credit Program, acquired a near total monopoly over credit to rural areas, mostly farmers. The financial monopoly over rural Ethiopia has serious political ramifications. In the early 2000s, the main source of the bank was interest from fertilizer. Farmers were identified, registered, and forced to make a down payment of 25% on the price for the amount of fertilizer. The Bank estimated the amount of fertilizer the farmer supposedly needed. A credit agreement was written with each farmer, and after six months, the bank collected the debt from the farmers with 15% interest.

Business in Tigray is completely closed to non-Tigreans, and all walks of Tigrean businesses are exclusively owned by EFFORT or the local Tigrean government. For example, the trading company GUNA has a near monopoly in sesame and incense wholesale in Tigray whereas TRANS Ethiopia carries all goods designated as relief.

The TPLF also benefits EFFORT by ordering free transfer of funds from government accounts, often under a bogus claim of services that TPLF institutions offered to the public. It allows free flow of goods in the name of EFFORT, without customs and taxes, but EFFORT is allowed to compete with for-profit businesses of the country through its tentacle bureaus. Thus, Moseb Cement factory was built with public expenditure at a cost of 1.5 billion birr, and a Textile factory in Adwa at 1.2 billion. However, the incomes from these public investments are fully controlled by the TPLF through EFFORT.

EFFORT also makes extensive use of the credit opportunities offered by the state-owned Commercial Bank of Ethiopia (CBE) and other financial institutions controlled by the government. The generous provision of credits by CBE to EFFORT is clearly politically influenced and based upon directives issued by the TPLF controlled government of Ethiopia. When EFFORT defaults in the payment of loans CBE provides relieving credit, obviously upon directives from the Ethiopian government. In some cases, millions of birr loans obtained by EFFORT are unlawfully delayed or even cancelled. In a widely publicized case a few years ago, the Vice-Governor of CBE overruled an earlier decision by the credit department of CBE not to grant 40 million birr credit to SUR Construction, a subsidiary of EFFORT. There is no way escaping the conclusion that the loan was made possible by political intervention from the TPLF regime.

As an almost sole beneficiary of state contracts, EFFORT’s income continues to grow exponentially. For example, during the Ethio-Eritrean war, EFFORT became the financial wing of the war. MESFIN Engineering supplied water, fuel, and vehicles. TRANS-Ethiopia supplied trucks, and SELAM Bus was in charge of transporting militia. The income from the war propelled these companies to powerful monopolies of the country in their respective business domains.

EFFORT has now become a self-contained economic state operating on the call of the official government, formally serving the personal appetite of state officials, a phenomena witnessed nowhere in the world. Its assets are protected federally, and its under-the-table contracts are enforced by TPLF’s iron fisted militias. It has a favored access to government as well as to foreign aid contracts with profitable niches, dominating joint ventures with domestic and foreign investors. One of the strategic alliances is with Amoudi’s Midroc which supplies the TPLF with billions of birr through investments. Midroc buys natural resources of the South including gold and other precious stones from the TPLF with cash, and service contracts at these sites go back to EFFORT.

At a policy level, the Financial Sector Steering Committee (FSSC) serves as an umbrella institute for justification of fund transfers, creating the legal framework for supporting even poorly performing EFFORT auxiliaries, or channeling funds to the Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) cash institutes. EPRDF is a bogus amalgam of Fronts populated with non-Tigrean renegades, created and dominated by the TPLF. FSSC defines policies and strategies for banks, appoints board of directors and executives for the banks, and routinely monitors their operations. Thus, the FSSC oversees all government banks, and has full power over their activities. Prime Minister Meles Zenawi chairs this committee. It is a public knowledge that he personally mandated EPRDF companies: Guna, Ambassael, Dinsho, and Wando to take over the sugar company when the plant was privatized. Interestingly Ato Sebhat who owns Guna, Ato Bereket who owns Ambassel, Ato Girma who owns Dinsho, and Ato Kassu who owns Wando are members of FSSC, and some of these same individuals seat on the Board of CBE that financed these companies. As a result, all privately owned enterprises competing for the privatization of the plant, Star, Abeba co. etc. were shut out of the competition.

The EFFORT companies are reported to owe billions of birr to Ethiopian banks. In fact, most of the EFFORT companies would not survive without government protection. In one case, CBE, the Construction and Business Bank, and the Ethiopian Development Bank collectively loaned 1.7 billion birr to EFFORT. According to insiders, the loan has not been paid to date. The 1.7 billion birr was distributed to Adigrat Pharmaceutical Factory, Adwa Textile Factory, Dashen Brewery, and Mesebo Cement Factory. These and other EFFORT or EPRDF affiliates including TESCO, Tikure Abay, Dansho Transport are constantly in deep financial crisis.

Although the main focus of this paper is private business ventures of the TPLF, it must be noted that Tigray, the TPLF’s home region has inequitably benefited from federal funds. For example, a recently published paper presents comparative welfare analysis of four Ethiopian regions: Oromia, Amhara, Southern States, and Tigray. A 2001/2002 data of these regions shows that 42% of children in Tigray are fully vaccinated, where as the percentage is – 10% for Oromia, 15% for Amhara, and 11% for Southern States. Population to physician ratio is 28,600 for Tigray. This jumps to 60,800 for Oromia,, 60,700 for Amhara, and 44,000 for Southern States. Secondary education enrollment for Tigray is about 25% (a six-fold increase in just a decade), but Oromia has 11.6%, Amhara 9%, and Southern States 11%. According to World Bank report “Ethiopia Public Expenditure review” the Federal government never transferred more than 6% of the country’s cash revenue to the states, which leaves more than 94% of the federal budget at the discretion of the TPLF, appropriation of which is apparent from the above numbers.

In conclusion, the TPLF has clearly violated international business rules and practices, and as a ruling political party, it not only owns large amounts of properties and engages in commercial and trading activities whereby it places competing private sectors in a hopeless situation, but it also uses this economic dominance to incarcerate, harass, dominate, and control political opposition forces to stay in power. This injustice justifies continued armed struggle of the people against the TPLF domination, and rejection of foreign expeditions to exploit natural resources of the country on behalf of the TPLF.

Woyanne claims it foiled OLF attack

The Chinese News Agency, Xinhua, reports that the Woyanne regime claims to have stopped the Oromo Liberation Front from carrying out attacks against the regime. Read the news below >>>

This latest attempt was targeted at bombing infrastructures and public institutions and assassinating figures, including the president ofAdama University, located in Ethiopia’s second largest city of Nazareth, said a statement released from the federal police anti-terrorism taskforce.

The statement said police apprehended the coordinators of and those given missions in the foiled acts of terror as well as arms, including 9 explosives, 12 fuses and klashnikov rifles.

The OLF terror ring had its hardware house in Mojo (a town about 70 km southeast of the capital Addis Ababa), its exchange spot in Nazareth and its mission targets mainly in Addis Ababa, it said.

The statement accused neighboring Eritrea of orchestrating this latest attempt of terrorism.

In January this year, a similar terror ring was dismantled by the taskforce, including one targeted against the Eighth AU Summit, held in Addis Ababa.

The OLF evolved from a political party into an armed movement 10 years ago, claiming that the rights of the Oromo people, who make up almost 40 percent of Ethiopia’s 70 million, were not being respected.

The OLF are now fighting Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s government for the independence of the Oromo region from the rest of Ethiopia.