Opposition Voice

Opposition Voice

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Ethiopian Security Forces opened fired and killed 30 people.



Ethiopian Security Forces opened fired and killed 30 people.


Ethiopian security Forces opened fire during the oromo students nonviolent protest rally at western oromia Ambo town.
Eye witnesses said more than 30 people including 8 students killed and several wounded by security forces. the peaceful protestors opposing the alleged “integrated Master Plan of Addis Ababa”.The peaceful protest continued in different oromia region.
more info to come soon.
ambo

http://abbaymedia.com/2014/04/30/ethiopian-security-forces-opened-fired-and-killed-30-people/

ESAT’s distortion of the Protest by Oromo Students



by Tedla Asfaw
I followed VOA’s Amharic today’s report by Solomon Abate andSisayAgena’s analysis onOromo University students protest in Ambo, Adama,Welega and Jimma.
A student at Adama University told Solomon Abate the protesters demand as follows.
- Stop Addis Ababa/Finfine Master Plan incorporating Oromo Kilil into Addis.
- Oromo prisoners to be released.
- Removal of Emperor Menelik statue from Addis Ababa.
From the interview ESAT made with Ambo resident the students demand remain the same except the removal of Menelik statue, might be censored.
OPDO organized protest in Ethiopia
Picture credit: Qeerroo
Sisay Agena on his analysis hopes the diaspora will sooner rather than later will come to support the Oromo students struggle. I am sure Sisay is visiting Oromo websites and he should have told us the reason we should give support for those who framed the students protest as struggle between Habesha/Ethiopians and the Oromos.
Is he expecting the Diaspora Ethiopian nationalists who fought Jawar Mohammed and his likes tooth and nail to go and support the establishment of Oromo Republic with its capital at Finfine destroying Menelik statue.
Sisay Agena claims the similarity of the Sidama people struggle defending Awasa from becoming “Federal” in the past with the Oromo struggle of keeping the Oromo Kilil its capital Finfine/Addis Ababa intact.
Sisay Agena should invite Jawar Mohammed as his guest to hear from the horse mouth directly. ESAT reporting and analysis is distorting this week students protest to say the least.
We have fought the eviction of farmers from all parts of Ethiopia since 2008. Oakland Institute stood beside our cause. Unfortunately the Oromo Students did not mind the land to be taken by foreigners then.
The current students protest is about keeping Oromia Kilil intact for future Oromo Republic. Sisay Agena Sidama example he brought on his analysis is the hardest to achieve. Sidamas have to fight many nationalities in South to declare a Sidama Republic. Oromo Republic has “fewer enemies” if someone believes Ethiopia will be disintegrated that easily.
ESAT the media that claims to be Ethiopian should not be a propaganda machine for anti Ethiopia Diaspora Oromo extremists. We are supporting the united struggle for freedom and justice but never give hands for destruction of Ethiopia directly or indirectly. The worldwide protest we witnessed at the end of last year proves for all that Ethiopian nationalism never died!!!

http://ecadforum.com/2014/04/29/esats-distortion-of-the-protest-by-oromo-students/

Afar facing ethnic cleansing, human rights violations



ARDUF




ARDUF has learnt that TPLF/EPRDF regime has recently ordered its racist paramilitary forces to invade Ammih-baxa, district, zone 3, of Afar Regional State to arbitrary arrest and indiscriminately kill any person who disagree with and express their dissatisfaction with Federal Government's policies. On 19th April 2014, TPLF/EPRDF forces committed to deliberate, systematic and indiscriminate mass killing against innocent civilians over 12 people, including women, children and the elderly people; a dozen were critically injured, more than 120 homes destroyed purposely. This systematic and disproportionate massacre against innocent Afar civilians took place, at KurkuraTaa'a (Taaqa) Ward ofAmmih baxa district of Zone 3, Afar Regional State, while the Afar civilians were grazing their cattle on their grazing land. TPLF/EPRDF forces continue to conduct widespread attacks, arbitrary arrest, torture, rape and enforced disappearance and human rights abuses against Afar civilians in deferent areas of Afar Regional State.
ARDUF extends its deepest condolences and heartfelt sympathy to the victims and families of those killed and injured in the TPLF indiscriminate bombardment attack and detention Centre.
The reasons behind on-going widespread human rights violations committed by TPLF/EPRDF regime against Afar civilians are relating to: -
(1)- The Afar objection to TPLF/EPRDF forcible eviction from their ancestral land, without taking their economic and cultural considerations and social responsibility into account;
(2)- The Afar strong objection to accept the on-going Issa-Somali's illegal settlement and TPLF/
EPRDF plan to transfer some districts of Afar land to the Issa-Somali illegal settlers who occupied these districts by force with the support of TPLF/EPRDF regime.
(3)- The Afar objection to TPLF/EPRDF endless systematic political repression and socio- economic marginalization and human rights violations;
(5)- The Afar opposition to TPLF Ethnic and cultural hegemony over Afar and their land.
ARDUF strongly and condemns, in the strongest possible terms the TPLF/EPRDF disgraceful mass killings and arbitrary detention which targeted Afar civilians in Afar region. RDUF also condemns, in the strongest possible terms, any abuse of basic human rights, killing of innocent Ethiopian peoples by TPLF/EPRDF forces on the basis of their ethnicity in any part of Ethiopia. Afar Region is presently facing a grievous political, economic, social, and insecurity problems, gross human rights violations and crimes against Afar committed by TPLF/EPRDF regime.
ARDUF would like to inform the people of Ethiopia and international community that ARDUF will continue its armed and democratic struggle against TPLF/EPRDF regime until our legitimate right to self-determination of the Afar people is fully recognized and TPLF/EPRDF regime dismantle Issa-
Somali illegal settlements built in the Middle Awash (AdaytuQunxa-Foqo and Gadamaytu), and TPLF/EPRDF’s Sugar Projects, Mining Exploration corporations, such as Allana PotashaStratext International, Indian SainikPotash, Norwegian fertiliser firm Yara and other foreign land grabbing companies are completely halted in Afar region.
ARDUF call on all Ethiopian political and civic organisations, and concerned individuals to coordinate our democratic struggle to end the current political, economic and social injustice experiencing our peoples in the country.
ARDUF call on the UN, EU, AU, IC, A L and human rights organisations to urge Ethiopian government to stop ethnic conspiracy, ethnic cleansing and ethnic genocides against the Afar People in Ethiopia and to release all peoples have been detained and imprisoned by TPLF regime because of their political opinions immediately and unconditionally.
Qafar Uguugumoh Demokrasiyyoh
Inkiinoh Fooca (Uguugumo)


Afar Revolutionary Democratic
Unity Front (ARDUF)
Contact: mabay44@yahoo.com

http://www.ethiomedia.com/16file/4537.html




Teddy Afro chosen to perform at The IAAF Diamond League



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Best of TeddyAfro In Doha – Qatar 2013
(EMF) Ethiopian pop star Teddy Afro is chosen by The International Amateur Athletics Federation (IAAF ) to perform in this year’s IAAF Diamond league to be held on May 9, 2014 at the Qatar Sports club, in Doha, Qatar.
Sources also said that the Filipino star Christine Reyes will accompany Teddy Afro to perform at the league.
The IAAF Diamond League encompasses 32 individual Event Disciplines, with a points scoring ‘Diamond Race’ which runs throughout the 14 meeting series. Winners of each Diamond Race will get a Diamond Trophy, a cash prize, a wild card for the IAAF World Championships (certain conditions apply) but more importantly, will have shown season long consistency to earn the unchallenged honour of being the World Number 1.
World record holders, including Ethiopian athlete Genzebe Dibaba, athlete of the year Shelly Ann Fraser-Pryce, the indoor World Champion and Olympic medalist the Qatari Mutaz Barshim will be participating at the IAAF race.
Teddy Afro has also performed last year at Doha 2013 Diamond League . Over Ten thousand fans have enjoyed his show after the diamond league competition.
The Qatar athletics federation was very happy with Teddy’s fascinating performance.
http://ethioforum.org/teddy-afro-chosen-to-perform-at-the-iaaf-diamond-league/

Misplaced opposition to the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (Minga Negash, Seid Hassan and Mammo Muchie )




Click here to read the story (with references) in PDF.
I
The 1929 Nile water allocation agreement that was signed by Egypt and the United Kingdom (which excluded Ethiopia and nearly all other upper basin countries) allocated 48 billion (65%) cubic meters of water per year to Egypt and 4 billion to the Sudan. The 1959 agreement between Egypt and the Sudan raised the share to 55.5 (75%) billion and 18.5 billion cubic meters to Egypt and the Sudan, respectively. This agreement also excluded all the other upper Nile riparian nations. Egypt wants to keep the colonial-era agreements and the 1959 accord. This unfair allocation of the Nile water enabled Egypt to construct the Aswan Dam and the two countries never cared to consult the upper riparian nations. As argued by Badr Abdelatty, a spokesman for Egypt’s Foreign Ministry, Egypt wants to keep the status quo because it needs all the “assigned 55 billion cubic meters a year for vital use such as drinking, washing and sanitation needs” by 2020. This clearly indicates Egypt’s desire to secure its own Nile water-related benefits intact while at the same time denying other (Sub-Saharan) Nile riparian countries from using their own waters for alleviating poverty and enhancing sustainable development. Contrary to the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI) that was formalized in 1999 that Egypt was a party to, it is now saying that any change to the colonial era agreement would be tantamount to affecting its strategic interests and repeatedly threatens to use all means available if Ethiopia continues to build the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD). Egypt continues to escalate the confrontation despite Ethiopia’s claim that the dam would have no appreciable negative impact on Egypt. Ethiopia, along with the other upper Nile riparian countries object the privileges that Egypt gave itself and consider Egyptian monopoly over the Nile waters as a violation of their sovereignty. In accordance to the 2010 Entebbe Agreement by the upstream countries, which included Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Tanzania, and now effectively Sudan and South Sudan), Ethiopia, therefore, insists on adhering to its plan and is forging ahead on constructing the dam.
In what follows, we use an amalgam of economics, history, law, security and environment factors to examine the Egyptian opposition to the construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD). We try to triangulate these factors hoping to contribute to the debate and gain insight into the current tension between Egypt and Ethiopia. We attempt to make a dispassionate analysis of the water sharing problem between upstream and downstream countries. Consistent with theory and real life cases, we surmise that water has been and continues to be the cause for conflict in a number of regions in the world and, unfortunately, water wars tend to be irrational, unsustainable and economically and socially destructive. Trans-boundary water sharing and pollution (environmental-ecological) problems are never resolved through hegemonies, militarism and ultra-nationalism.
Dissenting voices against mega projects such as GERD are not new – the criticisms ranging from cost and scheduling overruns (as a recent study by Ansar, Flyvbjerg, Budzier and Lunn of Oxford University shows ), to their impacts on population dislocation, corruption, transparency in awarding of contracts, the manner in which such projects are financed, social and environmental impacts in upstream and downstream countries and water security concerns. Hence, Ethiopians may legitimately ask questions and raise concerns about the manner in which the Government of Ethiopia is handling the project. In this article, however, we focus on trans-boundary environmental problems, the fair use of the Nile water and address Egyptian concerns. This is important because the construction of GERD has reignited the long standing explosive issue of the equitable use of Nile waters. We also believe the recent (counterproductive) Egyptian threats of war and various forms of diplomatic offensives require the attentions of scholars of substance and policy makers.
Egyptian worries and aspirations over the Nile River system however is historical and goes back to the days before the formation of the Egyptian nation/state even though the issue began to dominate the country’s political landscape with the generation of militarism and ultra-nationalism (from Gamal Abel Nasser to the late President Sadat’s 1979 threat of war and to the current leaders of Egypt vowing not to lose a “drop of water).” The recent political instability in Egypt must have made the trans-boundary water sharing problem a point of political opportunism. Reports indicate that Egypt may indeed be laying the ground work to “destroy the dam before Ethiopia starts filling it with water or risk flooding Sudan’s flat eastern territories upon its destruction.” A WikiLeaks report is also known to have revealed that Egypt, in collaboration with Sudan, had plans “to build an airstrip for bombing a dam in the Blue Nile River Gorge in Ethiopia.” In its June 2013 analysis of Egypt’s military options, Straighter, a global intelligence organization indicated that the country does have military options against Ethiopia’s dam, but noted that distance will heavily constrain Egypt’s ability to demolish the work. The options, however, may include air attack from bases in the Sudan, Djibouti and Eritrea and/or sponsoring present day local “militants” to frustrate the construction of the dam. Obviously, Ethiopia is aware of the Egyptian options and its age-old aspiration to control the sources of the Nile River system. For example, on April 17, 2014, amid reports that Egypt was trying to woo South Sudan towards its dispute over Nile waters , the Voice of America reported that the President of South Sudan assured the Ethiopian authorities that the recently signed military and economic cooperation between Egypt and South Sudan would not allow Egypt to attack Ethiopia or allow subversive activities.
Egypt’s policy towards upstream countries is primarily driven by its interest on the water which aims at thriving at the misery of downstream countries, apparently without any form of substantive reciprocity. In contrast to the present day relationship between Egypt and Ethiopia, their ancestors, despite their limited knowledge of geography and hydrology, had a better understanding of the economics of water sharing. As the renowned historian Richard Pankhurst documented, the Turkish Sultan who ruled Egypt before the British, had “paid the ruler of Ethiopia an annual tax of 50,000 gold coins” lest the latter diverts the Nile. Nowadays, and not surprisingly, even the Egyptian Minister of Antiquities is against the GERD. In fact, institutional memories and abundant documents of the last sixty years indicate not only just the inconsistency, but also an immense level of damage that Egyptian foreign policy has done to Ethiopia and the Sudan. Egyptian interference in the two countries’ internal affairs has been largely driven by the Ethiopian and the Sudanese use of the Nile waters. For instance, Egypt objected the independence movement in South Sudan but promoted the separation of Eritrea and the creation of one of the most densely populated landlocked countries in the world. The international community is not unaware of these facts but Egypt’s strategic location and its pivotal role in the politics of the Middle East did not allow the powers to be to call a spade a spade. As of late, intergovernmental organizations like the African Union which were once mute about the behaviors of successive military rulers of Egypt, who often controlled political and economic power under the cover of phony elections and revolutions, have started to recognize the problems of the Nile River system. Ethiopia’s and the other upstream riparian countries’ rights to equitably share the waters of Nile is now an African agenda though key members of the Arab League continue to support the position taken by Egypt.
Ethiopia’s right to use the water that originates within itself would have included (and, in our view, should include), in addition to power-generating purposes, irrigation, water recreation and navigational services, flood control as well as water storage and supply. It is obvious, therefore, that dams provide valuable economic benefits. Just like any mega project, dams also involve several side-effects, which could be summarized as environmental and ecological, social (forced relocation of locals), economic and even political. Other concerns may include evaluating and managing the risks associated with dam construction as well as asking questions whether the product (GERD in our case) would provide the desired and needed benefits to stakeholders such as access to electricity. A reasonable framework of concern about dam construction, therefore, would include a thorough benefit-cost analysis, not just one-sided focus on the costs. This is our major concern in regards to environmentalists and some of their Ethiopian supporters who campaign against the 6000 MW dam.
The environmentalists refer to the GERD as a “white elephant,” despite the fact that the project’s leaked document, alleged to be prepared by International Panel of Experts (IPE) showing favorable financial and social benefits to Ethiopia and the Sudan. Environmentalists such as the International Rivers Network (IRN) need to, therefore, quantify the magnitude of the side effects of the project and should not rely on “covert” and “secondary” data. More importantly, rather than being the butterflies of potential conflict in the Eastern Nile region, they need to: (i) acknowledge Ethiopia’s sovereign rights to use its own resources in accordance to international law and without hurting downstream countries; (ii) identify mitigation strategies so that genuine concerns are addressed before the construction is finalized; and (iii) propose how the mitigation strategies are going to be financed. In April 2014, the California based environmental pressure group which is against any form of large dam that is proposed to be built in Africa and Asia leaked the 48 pages long confidential document that was prepared by International Panel of Experts (IPE) on Ethiopian Grand Renaissance Dam. Now that the confidential report is in the public domain, it allows everyone to put to test the concerns of both the friends and foes of the GERD.
II
The key features of the IPE’s report could be summarized as follows:- (i) unlike the options of smaller dams which would have included potential irrigation projects, GERD is an energy production project and any fear of large and permanent reduction in the flow of freshwater to downstream countries is unfounded; (ii) the filling up of the dam is planned, to be done in stages by taking into account rainfall patterns and the catchment area; (iii) both the financial and social cost-benefit preliminary analysis of the project on upstream and downstream countries are favorable and the expected damages on downstream countries are not insurmountable; (iv) the preliminary findings about the project’s side effects on Egypt is not sufficient and hence there is an information (hydrological) void, and much of the current allegations and threats are based on unfounded Egyptian fears; (v) work has progressed to the extent that, at the time of writing this article, the project has reached a degree of completion rate of 31% and the water diversion has been successfully carried out; (vi) the expected loss of water due to evaporation for the new project is not worse than what Egypt is currently losing from its environmentally unfriendly projects and poor water management; (vii) recent geological and hydrological studies have documented an abundant level of ground water in the Nile basin countries and hence downstream countries will not be thirsty if upstream countries build dams that generate electricity. It is clear, therefore, that Egypt’s no dam policy or stance against large energy producing dams in upstream countries is a misplaced opposition and therefore calls for a new thinking in Cairo.
As Professor Aaron Wolf of Oregon State University observes, there are about 261 trans-boundary rivers across the world and unless carefully handled a significant proportion of these rivers could be causes of conflict. Wolf documented that water has been the cause of political tensions between a number of countries, including but not limited to Arabs and Israelis; Indians and Bangladeshis; Americans and Mexicans, the Chinese and other downstream countries, Brazilians and Paraguayans and all the ten riparian states of the Nile River system. He observes that “war over water seems neither strategically rational, nor hydrographically effective nor economically viable.” In other words, there is little reason for a “water war” between Egypt and Ethiopia. The two countries can also learn from inter-basin development projects that are successful, such as the Colorado River Basin allocation between the US riparian states and Mexico, the Columbia River Agreement between the US and Canada and the numerous European collaborative projects and integrated river basin managements of the River Rhine. In particular, Egypt and Ethiopia could learn a lot from South Africa paying Lesotho to quench its increasing thirst from the Lesotho Highlands Waters Project. The framework for exploiting the Niger River Basin, the Zambezi River basin and the Nile Basin Initiative itself could serve as useful points of departure for cooperation.
Notwithstanding the above, Egyptian politicians often argue about “historical rights” and connect the water issue with the civilizations of the antiquities on the Nile delta and forget about the history of the formation of nations and states. Evidently this stance is self-serving in that it ignores historical tensions between black people in the region (present day Sudan, South Sudan, Niger, Eritrea and Ethiopia, among others) and the race controversy in the African origin of humanity and the history of the Nile Valley (see for example Martin Bernal’s Black Antenna, 1987; Anta Diop , among others). The politics of the Nile River system thus has an Africa-Arab dimension and hence sensitive to Pan Africanist and Pan Arabism agendas. Hence, if a conflict between Egypt and Ethiopia erupts, it is more than likely to have spillover effects on the rest of Africa.
Like most of the post colony states of Africa, modern and independent Egypt was created out of the ashes of colonialism (see for example Achille Mbembe and Samir Amin, among others). Britain’s colonial interest on the Nile dam at Lake Tana (main source of Abay/Blue Nile) is the foundation of Egypt’s historical and legal claims to the water. Britain’s interest however was primarily driven by its desire to irrigate its large cotton plantations in the Anglo Egyptian colony of the Sudan and supply its factories which were located in the United Kingdom. Modern day cotton plantations in Egypt are entirely dependent on the soil that gets exported by the river primarily from Ethiopian highlands. In a series of short articles, Dr. Yosef Yacob documented the history of colonialism in the region and indicated how Emperor Menelik (1844-1913) and Emperor Haile Selassie (1892-1975) managed to escape Britain’s colonial ambitions over the Ethiopian highlands. He also revealed how Emperor Haile Selassie was visionary in that he successfully resisted Britain’s encroachments on Lake Tana by hiring an American engineering company to construct the dam and trying to finance the project through the issuance of debt securities in the United States. In other words, had the Emperor’s wishes were realized, the GERD would have been built a long time ago. We have yet to see any reasonable criticism of Dr. Yosef Yacob’s treatise by those who oppose the construction of the dam.
The next leg of the Egyptian opposition is international law. Here too the argument collapses before it faces the scrutiny of legal scholars. Egyptian officials often refer to the 1929 colonial era agreement and the 1959 agreement signed between Egypt and the Sudan (both former British colonies) that Ethiopia was not party to and had never consented to. First, it is important to note that colonial treaties have no direct relevance for resolving Africa’s contemporary problems. The Nile basin countries have already rejected it. Thus, the dominant view is that trans-boundary assets belong to the post-colonial states and the new states have to agree how to share their jointly owned assets. Second, Ethiopia was and is an independent state and it was not a party to the 1929 and 1959 agreements. Historical records also indicate that Britain, Egypt and the Sudan conspired and excluded Ethiopia from the negotiation. In this respect, Wuhibegezer Ferede and Sheferawu Abebe, writing on the Efficacy of Water Treaties in the Eastern Nile Basin, Africa Spectrum, 49, 1, 55-67 (2014) outline two approaches that evolve from the principles of international law. The authors show the fundamental differences between upstream and downstream countries in that upstream countries (Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, Kenya, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea and South Sudan) appear to favor clean slate policy while downstream countries (Sudan and Egypt) favor colonial treaties. Notwithstanding the preference of one or another form of legal principle, Egypt’s insistence on colonial treaties collapses simply because Ethiopia was not a colony of Britain or indeed any other European power.
III
Now that we have seen Egypt’s historical and legal arguments falling apart, the next step is to examine the third foundation of the Egyptian stance – the environmental aspects of the dam. Previous literature indicated that carbon emissions and contaminations of rivers that cross national boundaries are examples of trans-boundary environmental problems. Hence, policy formation requires enforceable global treaties, sound national policy and the examination of advances in a number of disciplines. Furthermore, investments in big national projects such as stadiums, mineral extraction, oil and gas, canals, big dams, highways, and big architectural projects add behavioral and political dimensions to the science, technology and the economics of such undertakings. Most of the finest buildings and stadiums that host world cup games were and are being constructed in that national pride. And behavioral and emotional factors dominate financial arguments. In other words, national projects by their nature have behavioral dimensions and may not be captured by the paradigms of rationality and net present values. Time will tell whether the Ethiopian dam is different.
The mainstream literature on environmental economics focuses on welfare measurement, sustainability, technological change, externality and green accounting. The world commission on environment and development (aka the Bruntland Commission, 1987), for example, states that “sustainable development is meeting the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”. Consistent with this understanding, the Nile River system has both trans-boundary and non-trans-boundary features for the riparian states and hence Egypt, in theory, may have a cause for concern. This concern can nonetheless be resolved through international instruments and institutions and bilateral relations that are based on mutual respect and trust. The international convention on the protection and use of trans-boundary and international lakes which was signed by nearly 40 countries does not provide the base for resolving disputes, and worse, no country from Africa (including Egypt) has actually ratified it. It nonetheless can be another point of departure. The United Nations Environmental program could also be a facilitator. Furthermore, as noted earlier, Africa has frameworks for inter-basin development. The Nile Basin Initiative (NBI) has been a major institutional development which enables all riparian states to collaborate and act as equal members. Egypt’s effort to undermine this agreement is a mistake.
Other features of the leaked report of the International Panel of Experts covers the main factors of the project. Among other things, it confirms that: (i) GERD is economically feasible; (ii) the design meets international standards, subject to minor “corrections”; (iii) the contractor is reliable and has extensive international expertise and reputation in building large dams; (iv) the environmental impact study within Ethiopia is adequate and the trans-boundary effect on the Sudan is favorable and controls flood; and (v) the section on trans-boundary effect on Egypt requires additional study using complex models and actual data rather than reliance on desk work. In short, the authors of the 48 pages-long confidential report did not say that they expect a catastrophe and the vanishing of the Egyptian nation if the project gets completed. In short, Egypt is not in any imminent danger. This conclusion has ramifications for the multilateral institutions that refused to finance the project. In summary, Egypt’s opposition to GERD is indeed misplaced. Its return to the negotiation table and the African Union and the ratification of the Nile River Basin Cooperative Framework and Convention on the Protection and Use of Trans-boundary Watercourses and International Lakes are avenues for resolving the sticky problems of water sharing.
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Click here to read the story (with references) in PDF.
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  •  Minga Negash is a Professor of Accounting at the Metropolitan State University of Denver Colorado and at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg Minga Negash can be contacted at mnegash@msudenver.edu or minga.negash@wits.ac.za.
  • Seid Hassan is professor of Economics at Murray State University. He can be reached at shassan@murraystate.edu.
  • Mammo Muchie is a research Professor of innovation studies at Tshwane University of Technology (Pretoria) and Senior Research Associate at Oxford University (U.K). He can be reached at MuchieM@tut.ac.za  
http://ethioforum.org/misplaced-opposition-to-the-grand-ethiopian-renaissance-dam-minga-negash-seid-hassan-and-mammo-muchie/

Ethiopia: Arrests Upstage Kerry Visit



(Nairobi, April 28, 2014) – The Ethiopian authorities should immediately release six bloggers and three journalists arrested on April 25 and 26, 2014, unless credible charges are promptly brought, Human Rights Watch said today.
HRW_typo_logo650
United States Secretary of State John Kerry, who is scheduled to visit Ethiopia beginning April 29, should urge Ethiopian officials to unconditionally release all activists and journalists who have been arbitrarily detained or convicted in unfair trials, Human Rights Watch said. The arrests also came days before Ethiopia is scheduled to have its human rights record assessed at the United Nations Human Rights Council’s universal periodic review in Geneva on May 6.
“The nine arrests signal, once again, that anyone who criticizes the Ethiopian government will be silenced,” said Leslie Lefkow, deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The timing of the arrests – just days before the US secretary of state’s visit – speaks volumes about Ethiopia’s disregard for free speech.”
On the afternoon of April 25, police in uniform and civilian clothes conducted what appeared to be a coordinated operation of near-simultaneous arrests. Six members of a group known as the “Zone9” bloggers – Befekadu Hailu, Atnaf Berahane, Natnael Feleke, Mahlet Fantahun, Zelalem Kibret, and Abel Wabela – were arrested at their offices and in the streets. Tesfalem Weldeyes, a freelance journalist, was also arrested during the operation. Edom Kassaye, a second freelance journalist, was arrested on either April 25 or 26; the circumstances of her arrest are unclear but all eight individuals were apparently taken to Maekelawi Police Station, the federal detention center in Addis Ababa, the capital.
The police searched the bloggers and journalists’ offices and homes, reportedly with search warrants, and confiscated private laptops and literature. On April 26, another journalist, Asmamaw Hailegeorgis of Addis Guday newspaper, was also arrested and is reportedly detained in Maekelawi.
The detainees are currently being held incommunicado, Human Rights Watch said. On the morning of April 26, relatives were denied access to the detainees by Maekelawi guards, and only allowed to deposit food.
Human Rights Watch released a report in October 2013 documenting serious human rights abuses, including torture and other ill-treatment, unlawful interrogation tactics, and poor detention conditions in Maekelawi against political detainees, including journalists. Detainees at Maekelawi are seldom granted access to legal counsel or their relatives during the initial investigation phase.
The Zone9 bloggers have faced increasing harassment by the authorities over the last six months. Sources told Human Rights Watch that one of the bloggers and one of the journalists have been regularly approached, including at home, by alleged intelligence agents and asked about the work of the group and their alleged links to political opposition parties and human rights groups. The blogger was asked a week before their arrest of the names and personal information of all the Zone9 members. The arrests on April 25, 2014, came two days after Zone9 posted a statement on social media saying they planned to increase their activism after a period of laying low because of ongoing intimidation.
A Human Rights Watch report in March described the technologies used by the Ethiopian government to conduct surveillance of perceived political opponents, activists, and journalists inside the country and among the diaspora. It highlights how the government’s monopoly over all mobile and Internet services through its sole, state-owned telecom operator, Ethio Telecom, facilitates abuse of surveillance powers.
Kerry is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom in Addis Ababa “to discuss efforts to advance peace and democracy in the region.” Kerry should strongly urge the Ethiopian government to end arbitrary arrests, release all activists and journalists unjustly detained or convicted, and promptly amend draconian laws on freedom of association and terrorism that have frequently been used to justify arbitrary arrests and political prosecutions. The Obama administration has said very little about the need for human rights reforms in Ethiopia, Human Rights Watch said.
“Secretary Kerry should be clear that the Ethiopian government’s crackdown on media and civil society harms ties with the US,” Lefkow said.  “Continued repression in Ethiopia cannot mean business as usual for Ethiopia-US relations.”
http://abbaymedia.com/2014/04/28/ethiopia-arrests-upstage-kerry-visit/

Ethiopian authorities lie about crackdown against free speech



Ethiopian authorities lie about crackdown against free speech


AFP – Ethiopia said Tuesday several people had been arrested on charges of “serious criminal activities”, but rights groups identified those detained as journalists and bloggers targeted in a sweeping crackdown against free speech.
Ethiopian  bloggers known as "Zone 9" arrested
“They are suspected of some serious crimes, and the police are investigating,” government spokesman Getachew Reda told AFP, without providing details of the alleged crimes.
The journalists and a group of bloggers known as “Zone 9″ were arrested last week, prompting an outcry from rights groups.
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) called the arrests “one of the worst crackdowns against free expression” in the country, while Amnesty International said it was part of a “long trend of arrests and harassment of human rights defenders, activists, journalists and political opponents.”
Leslie Lefkow of Human Rights Watch said the “arrests signal, once again, that anyone who criticises the Ethiopian government will be silenced”, and called for their immediate release.
The arrests come ahead of a visit this week by US Secretary of State John Kerry.
“The timing of the arrests — just days before the US Secretary of State’s visit — speaks volumes about Ethiopia’s disregard for free speech,” Lefkow added.
The bloggers Zone 9 website, reportedly named after the prison where political detainees are held, listed the names of nine people arrested, saying they were charged with having worked with foreign human rights activists to foment violence or instability.
But the government dismissed the rights groups, and said those arrested were not detained for their work as journalists.
“We don’t take orders from Human Rights Watch,” Getachew said.
- Free speech ‘a crime’ -
An opposition group staged a protest on Sunday following the arrests, calling for “greater liberties and a true democracy” in Ethiopia, but police shut the 200-person demonstration down soon after it started.
HRW said 20 members of the political opposition Semayawi or “Blue” party have also been arrested since Friday, although there has been no official confirmation of exact numbers.
“With the latest arrests, Ethiopian authorities are turning the peaceful exercise of free expression into a crime,” the CPJ’s Tom Rhodes said in a statement.
Amnesty said the group had only restarted blogging last week after suspending their work for the past six months, accusing the government of harassment.
Ethiopia has been accused of cracking down on independent media and has doled out several heavy sentences for journalists charged under the controversial anti-terror legislation, which rights groups have called vague and far-reaching.
“With still a year to go before the general elections, the Ethiopian government is closing any remaining holes in its iron grip on freedom of speech, opinion and thought in the country,” said Amnesty’s Claire Beston.
In 2011, two Swedish journalists were sentenced to 11 years in jail under the law, but were later pardoned after serving 15 months.
Ethiopia has one of the most closed press environments in the world, the CPJ says. It calculates that at least 49 journalists have been forced into exile, the third worst after Somalia and Iran.
    http://abbaymedia.com/2014/04/30/ethiopian-authorities-lie-about-crackdown-against-free-speech/

Ethiopia Should Immediately Release Bloggers (HRW)


Human Rights Watch

(Nairobi) – The Ethiopian authorities should immediately release six bloggers and three journalists arrested on April 25 and 26, 2014, unless credible charges are promptly brought.
United States Secretary of State John Kerry, who is scheduled to visit Ethiopia beginning April 29, should urge Ethiopian officials to unconditionally release all activists and journalists who have been arbitrarily detained or convicted in unfair trials. The arrests also came days before Ethiopia is scheduled to have its human rights record assessed at the United Nations Human Rights Council’s universal periodic review in Geneva on May 6.
“The nine arrests signal, once again, that anyone who criticizes the Ethiopian government will be silenced,” said Leslie Lefkow, deputy Africa director. “The timing of the arrests – just days before the US secretary of state’s visit – speaks volumes about Ethiopia’s disregard for free speech.”
On the afternoon of April 25, police in uniform and civilian clothes conducted what appeared to be a coordinated operation of near-simultaneous arrests. Six members of a group known as the “Zone9” bloggers – Befekadu Hailu, Atnaf Berahane, Natnael Feleke, Mahlet Fantahun, Zelalem Kibret, and Abel Wabela – were arrested at their offices and in the streets. Tesfalem Weldeyes, a freelance journalist, was also arrested during the operation. Edom Kassaye, a second freelance journalist, was arrested on either April 25 or 26; the circumstances of her arrest are unclear but all eight individuals were apparently taken to Maekelawi Police Station, the federal detention center in Addis Ababa, the capital.
The police searched the bloggers and journalists’ offices and homes, reportedly with search warrants, and confiscated private laptops and literature. On April 26, another journalist, Asmamaw Hailegeorgis of Addis Guday newspaper, was also arrested and is reportedly detained in Maekelawi.
The detainees are currently being held incommunicado. On the morning of April 26, relatives were denied access to the detainees by Maekelawi guards, and only allowed to deposit food.
Human Rights Watch released a report in October 2013 documenting serious human rights abuses, including torture and other ill-treatment,unlawful interrogation tactics, and poor detention conditions in Maekelawi against political detainees, including journalists. Detainees at Maekelawi are seldom granted access to legal counsel or their relatives during the initial investigation phase.
The Zone9 bloggers have faced increasing harassment by the authorities over the last six months. Sources told Human Rights Watch that one of the bloggers and one of the journalists have been regularly approached, including at home, by alleged intelligence agents and asked about the work of the group and their alleged links to political opposition parties and human rights groups. The blogger was asked a week before their arrest of the names and personal information of all the Zone9 members. The arrests on April 25, 2014, came two days after Zone9 posted a statement on social media saying they planned to increase their activism after a period of laying low because of ongoing intimidation.
A Human Rights Watch report in March described the technologies used by the Ethiopian government to conduct surveillance of perceived political opponents, activists, and journalists inside the country and among the diaspora. It highlights how the government’s monopoly over all mobile and Internet services through its sole, state-owned telecom operator, Ethio Telecom, facilitates abuse of surveillance powers.
Kerry is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom in Addis Ababa “to discuss efforts to advance peace and democracy in the region.” Kerry should strongly urge the Ethiopian government to end arbitrary arrests, release all activists and journalists unjustly detained or convicted, and promptly amend draconian laws on freedom of association and terrorism that have frequently been used to justify arbitrary arrests and political prosecutions. The Obama administration has said very little about the need for human rights reforms in Ethiopia.
“Secretary Kerry should be clear that the Ethiopian government’s crackdown on media and civil society harms ties with the US,” Lefkow said.  “Continued repression in Ethiopia cannot mean business as usual for Ethiopia-US relations.”
    http://abbaymedia.com/2014/04/29/ethiopia-should-immediately-release-bloggers-hrw/

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Live Update: Semayawi Party Protest Rally, April 27, 2014


April 26, 2014
ተከብረሽ የኖርሽው ባባቶቻችን ደም… እየተዘፈነ ይገኛል።
ከሚደመጡ መፈክሮች መካከል….
ተርበናል፣ ተጠምተናል፣ መሰረታዊ ፍላጎቶችን ማሟላት አልቻልንም!
semayawi protest live addis ababa
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የሰማያዊ ፓርቲ አባላት ሽሮ ሜዳ፣ መነን ፒያሳ፣ ሀብተ ጊዮርጊስ ድልድይ፣ መርካቶ፣ አብነት፣ ልደታ፣ ሜክሲኮ፣ሸበሌ፣ ብሄራዊ፣ ለገሀር ስታዲየም፣ መገናኛ፣ ኮተቤ፣ ሀያ ሁለት ፈረንሳይ፣ ቦሌና ሌሎችም የአዲስ አበባ ክፍሎች በእግርና በመኪና የተሳካ ቅስቀሳ አድርገው ተመልሰዋል፡፡ ፖሊስ በመኪናም ሆነ በእግር የሚቀሰቅሱትን ለማስቆም ጥረት ቢያደርግም አባላቱ ቅስቀሳውን አከናውነው ተመልሰዋል፡፡ (ነገረ-ኢትዮጵያ)
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ከሰማያዊ ፓርቲ የሰልፍ አስተባባሪ ኮሚቴ የተላለፈ መልዕክት

Semyawi party protest preparation Addis Ababa
ነገ የራሳችሁንና የቀሪ ኢትዮጵያውያንን ድምጽ ለማሰማት ወደ ሰልፉ የምታቀኑ ኢትዮጵያውያን ሁሉ ባዶ ጀሪካን፣ ባዶ ስልክና ሻማ ይዛችሁ እንድትመጡ ጥሪ እናስተላልፋለን፡፡
ከዚህም በተጨማሪ ከትግላችን ሰላማዊነት ጋር የማይቃረኑ፣ ከኢትዮጵያዊ ባህልና ወጋችን ያላፈነገጡ መልዕክቶችን ለማስተላለፍ የሚያገልግሉና መብትን ለማስመለስ ምልክቶች የሆኑ ነገሮችን ሁሉ ይዛችሁ በሰፍልፉ መገኘት የምትችሉ መሆኑን እናሳውቃለን፡፡
ከአቅም በላይ በሆነ ምክንያት ለሰላማዊ ሰልፉ መገኘት የማትችሉ ኢትዮጵያውያን በተለይም በውጭ አገር የምትኖሩ ኢትዮጵያውያን ባገኛችሁት መንገድ ሁሉ አዲስ አበባ ውስጥ ለሚገኘው ህዝብ መልዕክት በማስተላለፍ መብታችን ለማስመለስ በምናደርገው ትግል የበኩላችሁን ሚና መጫወት የምትችሉ መሆኑን እንገልጻለን፡፡
ራሳችን ከፍርሃት ነጻ አውጥተን ሰላማዊ ትግሉን ካልተቀላቀልን ሁሌም ከሰው በታች ሆነን እንገዛለን፡፡ በፍቅር፣ በቆራጥነት፣ በኢትዮጵያዊ ወኔ የተነጠቁትን መብቶቻችን ማስመለስ አለብን፡፡ ኑ የተነጠቁትን መብቶቻችን በማስመለስ የአገራችን እጣ ፈንታ እንወስን!
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ሰማያዊ ፓርቲ የዞን ዘጠኝ አክቪስቶችንና ሌሎች ጋዜጠኞች ላይ እየተደረገ ያለውን እስር አጥብቆ ያወግዛል! በነገው ስልፍም ይፈቱ ዘንድ ድምጹን ያሰማል!

ሰማያዊ ፓርቲ ‹‹የተነጠቁ መብቶቻችን እናስመልሳለን›› በሚል ሚያዝያ 19 ሰላማዊ ሰልፍ መጥራቱ ይታወቃል፡፡ በዚህ ሰላማዊ ሰልፍ ወቅት ከምናነሳቸው ጉዳዮች አንዱና ዋነኛው ሀሳብን በነጻነት የመግለጽ መብት ነው፡፡ ከዚህም በተጨማሪ ሰልፉ ገዥው ፓርቲን ላይ የሠላ ትችት ስለሰነዘሩና ለህዝባቸው መረጃ ስለሰጡ ብቻ የሚደርስባቸውን ህገ ወጥ እርምጃ ያወግዛል፡፡
በሳምንቱ ውስጥ የህዝብን መብት ለማስመለስ ለጠራነው ሰልፍ ቅስቀሳ ሲያደርጉ የነበሩ 50 ያህል አመራሮችና አባላት በህገ ወጥ መንገድ ታስረዋል፡፡ በትናንትናው ዕለት የፓርቲያችን ሊቀመንበር (ማታ ተፈትተዋል)፣ ምክትል ሊቀመንበር፣ የህዝብ ግንኙነት ኃላፊ በህገ ወጥ መንገድ መታሰራቸው ይታወቃል፡፡ በተመሳሳይ ወቅት የዞን ዘጠኝ አክቲቪስቶችና ሌሎች ጋዜጠኞችም ታስረዋል፡፡ በአሁኑ ወቅትም ሌሎችን ለማሰር ጥረት እየተደረገ እንደሆነ ይታወቃል፡፡
ሰማያዊ ፓርቲ ይህን የገዥው ፓርቲ ከፍርሃት የመነጨ አምባገነናዊ እርምጃ በጽኑ ይቃወማል፡፡ በነገው ዕለትም በእነዚህ አክቲቪስቶችና ጋዜጠኞች ላይ የተደረገውን እስር የሚያወግዝ መሆኑን መግለጽ ይወዳል፡፡
ኑ ራሳችን ነጻ በማውጣት የአገራችን እጣ ፈንታ እንወስን!
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ዝግጅቱ ተጧጡፏል ፡፡ ሁሉም ስራ ላይ ነው!

ነገ በሰለፉ ለይ የሚገኘውን ህዝብ ለማስተባበር ሁሉም በየድርሻው በቢሮም በተለያዩ አካባቢዎችም የመጨረሻ ስራዎችን እያከናወኑ ነው፡፡ ቅስቀሳም በተለያየ መልኩ ቀጥሏል፡፡
ኑ በአደባባይ ተቃውሟችንን በመግለፅ የተነጠቁ መብቶቻችንን እናስመልስ!
ሰማያዊ ፓርቲ!