Opposition Voice

Opposition Voice

Friday, May 30, 2014

The Switzerland government has granted asylum to the Ethiopian Co-pilot Hailmedhin Abera



Ethiopian Airlines Co-Pilot Hailmedhin Abera Granted Resident Status
May 30, 2014
(EMF) — The Switzerland government has granted asylum to the Ethiopian co-pilot who seized control of the Boeing 767-300 on 17 February 2014 and flew it to Geneva, according Ethiopian attorney who closely following the case.
Ethiopian-Airlines1
The Ethiopian government has pushed the Swiss government to extradite the Co-pilot Hailemedhin Aberaby labeling him as a “traitor”. The regime has also opened file to try him in absentia, sources said.
The Swiss Federal Office of Justice has confirmed that it has refused the extradition request by the Ethiopian government.
Hailemedhin Abera can freely move now and defend his case out of confinement.
The pro-democracy Ethiopian Diaspora and, attorneys, like Shakespeare Feyissa, are trying to defend the rights of the co-pilot.
The airliner’s second-in-command, Hailemedhin Abera Tegegn, 31, took control of the plane when the pilot left the cockpit to use the toilet. He then sent a coded signal announcing he had hijacked his own aircraft. The plane landed safely, and none of the 202 passengers and crew members on Flight ET-702, which originated in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, were injured.
The Co-pilot has exposed the gross human rights violations in Ethiopia at a global scale.
Diaspora Ethiopians took the streets of American and European cities in Support of the Co-pilot Hailemedhin Abera.
http://abbaymedia.com/2014/05/30/the-switzerland-government-has-granted-asylum-to-the-ethiopian-co-pilot-hailmedhin-abera/

Thursday, May 29, 2014

The legalization of political repression in Ethiopia




It has been one month since the latest round of repression against government critics in Ethiopia began. Last weekend, the Zone9 bloggers and three journalists who were arrested in late April appeared in court.

To date, very little information has been given about the crimes the bloggers and journalists are accused of committing or the reasons why they are being held practically incommunicado. Rather than indicting the prisoners during the recent court appearance, the presiding judge gave police an additional 28 days to investigate the case, sending the nine bloggers and journalists back to jail without officially charging them. It was the second time since their arrest that the court has delayed the process, and knowing Ethiopia’s dodgy laws around “crimes against the state,” it probably will not be the last time.
The tactic of detaining and delaying is not uncommon in Ethiopian political trials. The recent Anti-Terrorism Proclamation gives the court broad liberties on detention and remand, allowing the accused to be held up to a period of four months while investigations are underway. Four months without knowing what one is charged with, without the possibility of bail (as in this case) and without sufficient access to legal representation or time with family and friends. The longer the bloggers and journalists linger in jail, government may hope that media attention and the initial outcry against the crackdown will wane. But, the move is more than just a ploy to diffuse interest in the situation. More importantly, it buys time for the state to build a legal case against the accused because in Ethiopia the façade of legalism has become an indispensable gloss on political repression.
As ludicrous as the accusations of terrorism or subversion by bloggers and journalists is the ritual of political trials and court proceedings used to affirm such crimes. If a state seeks to silence criticism and repress freedom of expression, why go through the trouble of a trial? In the past, regimes that sought to clamp down on opposition did so more candidly, without any pretexts or deliberations. Yet, in recent years, few states—liberal or illiberal—have attached as much significance to legalism as the Ethiopian government when it comes to resolving political disputes.  On the surface, this is a welcomed change—since it would be foolish to argue that anyone would prefer the barrel of a gun to a trial—but the reliance on laws hides a deeper problem at the core of the political system in Ethiopia and other states that have adopted liberalism without fully buying into it.
continue reading on Africa is a country 
By Beza Tesfaye – Africa is a country 
http://ethioforum.org/the-legalization-of-political-repression-in-ethiopia/

MENA country director deported from Ethiopia



MENA country director deported from Ethiopia
Egyptian foreign ministry says no explanation was provided by the Ethiopian side and demanded 
Egyptian citizen Hamdy Al-Anany was deported from Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, an incident which prompted the Egyptian Foreign Ministry to express “deep regrets”, in a statement on Sunday, and demand an explanation.
Al-Anany, who served as the Ethiopia director of the Egypt’s official state-run news agency, the Middle East News Agency (MENA), was detained by Ethiopian authorities before his deportation.
Spokesman of Egypt’s Foreign Ministry Badr Abdelatty said that the Egyptian foreign ministry demanded in an official memo that that the Ethiopian foreign ministry provide “explanations and clarifications” on the reasons behind Al-Anany’s deportation and the failure to notify the Egyptian Embassy once he was detained.
MENA, which describes itself as the largest and oldest African news agency, expressed condemnation at the position of the Ethiopian authorities and said that the deportation came without “justification or warning”. It condemned Al-Anany’s “mistreatment” and said that it conflicts with all international norms and conventions for the protection of journalists working abroad.
It added that Al-Anany is accredited by both the Ethiopian Authorities and the African Union Commission. MENA demanded an explanation to this “strange behaviour” and that Ethiopian authorities correct their position and guarantee correspondents’ freedom to exercise their duties.
MENA also demanded that the African Union, the Federation of African Journalists and the Egyptian Press Syndicate “bear their responsibilities” towards guaranteeing the protection of the work of journalists and correspondents and securing their lives and property.
Ethiopian-Egyptian ties have been strained since Ethiopia began construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam in April 2011. In May 2013, Ethiopia began diverting waters from one of the Nile’s main tributaries, the Blue Nile. Egypt fears that the dam will affect its lion’s share of Nile Water, which is guaranteed to Egypt by agreements, signed in the absence of Ethiopia.
The latest round of bilateral talks in February failed, although both sides have expressed an interest in engaging in negotiations since.\
http://abbaymedia.com/2014/05/26/mena-country-director-deported-from-ethiopia/

Ethiopia holds editor-in-chief without charge (CPJ)




New York, May 28, 2014–The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the detention of a journalist without charge since Monday and calls on Ethiopian authorities to release him immediately. An Ethiopian court on Tuesday extended by 14 days the pre-trial detention of Elias Gebru, according to news reports.
Elias Gebru is being held without charge. (Enku)
Ethiopia’s federal police in the capital, Addis Ababa, summoned Elias, editor-in-chief of the independent news magazine Enku, for questioning in connection with a column published in his paper, according to news reports. The Awramba Times reported that the column discussed a monument recently erected outside the capital in honor of ethnic Oromos massacred in the 19th century by Emperor Menelik’s forces. The monument has ignited divisions between some Oromos and supporters of the emperor’s legacy.
Local journalists said authorities were attempting to link the paper’s publication to the deadly clashesbetween Oromo student protesters and security forces last month. Ethiopian authorities claimed eight protesters were killed in the violence, while news outlets and human rights groups cited witnesses as saying that security forces killed more than a dozen protesters.
At least 17 other journalists are in jail in Ethiopia in connection with their journalistic work, according to CPJ research. Only Eritrea holds more journalists behind bars in Africa, CPJ research shows.
“The detention without charge of Elias Gebru is the latest move by the Ethiopian government to tighten the noose on the country’s independent press,” said CPJ Africa Advocacy Coordinator Mohamed Keita. “We call on authorities to release Elias immediately and to stop arresting journalists as a means to quell information and debate.”
Elias is being held at the Maekelawi detention center, according to local journalists.
In 2008, thousands of copies of Enku magazine were seized by Ethiopian authorities in connection with the paper’s independent coverage of the trial of a pop singer who had been critical of the government, according to news reports. The copies were later returned.
http://abbaymedia.com/2014/05/28/ethiopia-holds-editor-in-chief-without-charge-cpj/

    Tuesday, May 27, 2014

    Ethiopia: Call for Opposition & Government – Zelalem Eshete, Ph.D.



    Here is an independent voice for those who are in opposite political spectrum.
    Having a strong united purposeful opposition is essential for Ethiopia to practice true democratic governance. Everybody knows this.
    The opposition in Ethiopia is doing its best by putting their lives on the line. It is hard to criticize them from afar.
    The opposition in diaspora is living in the safety of democratic nations. There is no excuse for failing to form a unity in order to support those who are on the ground in Ethiopia. But it is enough to talk about the past. So there is no need bashing the opposition in Diaspora either. Lets look forward…
    Opposition in Diaspora: Call for Annual All Ethiopian Oppositions Conference
    We do it for soccer. We come together yearly to celebrate sports as Ethiopians. How come all oppositions in Diaspora couldn’t come together once a year to discuss on matters of Ethiopia to create a common platform in unison? Why not start now?
    The oppositions have spent too much time analyzing and criticizing the government. It is time to do self-evaluation now. You have given deaf ear to the public’s cry for unity. If you cannot agree on a platform to challenge the current government as a united front, it seems: (1) you don’t have a real case against the government that galvanize all; or (2) you are just motivated by hate and you want the government to go no matter what; or (3) you are just driven to assume power by personal ambition regardless of the merit.
    Government: Call for National Reconciliation
    It is long over due.
    The government being in power for multiple decades, it is time to show maturity and confidence by reaching out to the opposition through unilateral gesture of good will. Imagine declaring a time of “Jubilee” by freeing all political prisoners. How about you introduce the tone of winning together in Ethiopia by championing national reconciliation?
    You are the government now. Don’t take it for granted. Time changes and if you don’t change accordingly – you become history. Be prepared to be the match when the opposition comes united. Instead of relying on brute force to stay in power, it is wise to lead by excelling in good governance. Force can only works for a time and brings disaster later for sure. It is wise to consider winning together and adopt reconciliation for Ethiopia anew. That is the true test of your greatness.
    ——-
    Dr. Zelalem Eshete may be reached at: one@EthioFamily.com

    http://ethioforum.org/ethiopia-call-for-opposition-government-zelalem-eshete-ph-d/

    Is Djibouti al-Qaeda's new front?



    By Jamal Osman, Channel4




    Members of the Djibouti Diaspora in Brussels protest against the Guelleh regime when the EU-Africa Summit was being held on April 2, 2014 (Photo: International Workers Blog)
    The [suicide bomb] attack is the first of its kind. No one has claimed responsibility yet, but it appears to be the beginning of a campaign by al-Qaeda-linked groups to open a new front in the continent.

    With a population of less than a million, mainly ethnic Somalis and Afar, the Red Sea country is the smallest in the horn of Africa, but it's strategically important. It is home to the largest and the "only" US military base in Africa. Other western forces are also present; especially Djibouti's former colonial master, France.
    It appears that Djibouti now offers key characteristics for the Islamists to come in and do business.
    From its base in Djibouti, the US has carried out drone strikes and other military operations against Islamists in Yemen and Africa. The fact is that Djibouti poses a serious threat to al-Qaeda-associated organisations. The weekend attack will, at the least, unsettle US soldiers who usually enjoy freedom.
    Unlike neighbouring countries, westerners feel comfortable walking on the streets in Djibouti without fear of being killed. On weekends, they go out to restaurants and clubs designed to cater for rich foreigners.
    Many of the army personnel have rented houses in Djibouti city for their girlfriends, where they spend their free time. All that is likely to change.
    The US embassy in Djibouti has already released a statement advising members of its staff to "limit their movements and exercise heightened security measures at this time". US citizens are advised to do the same.
    To successfully operate in a country, any political group would need a local network for support. It appears that Djibouti now offers key characteristics for the Islamists to come in and do business.

    'Father Ismael'

    Djibouti doesn't only provide a base for the US, but its forces are part of the African Union mission fighting to defeat Somalia's al-Shabaab. However, that is not a major factor for locals to potentially see Islamists as an alternative to the current rule.
    Anger against western forces - especially the US forces - has been growing in the past few years. It's a familiar story in many parts of the world: while the US claims to be promoting good governance, human rights, freedom and justice, in Djibouti it is supporting what is viewed by some as a ruthless authoritarian regime.
    As long as he is part of the "war against terror", Washington seems to be happy to give Djibouti's president Ismail Omar Guelleh military and financial support. This month, the US signed a 10-year deal for its military base , worth $63m annually.
    That money is partly what keeps leaders like Guelleh in power. He inherited the leadership position in 1999 from his uncle and the country's first president Hassan Guled Abtidon, who ruled the country since it gained independence from France in 1977. Djibouti is a country run by aabo Ismail: "father Ismael" and his associates. The US State Department's latest annual report is very critical of the regime.
    Though they don't get media attention, there have been regular anti-government protests since the last election in 2011.
    Opponents could spend years in jail. Freedom of expression is non-existent. Anyone found criticising the "father of the nation" could disappear. Privately-run media are not allowed, unless they regularly praise "father Ismael".
    Apart from the president's family and their allies, most locals live in abject poverty. Even basic necessities like electricity and water are in short supply.
    Youth unemployment is very high. With that, the US army, which gave hope of employment to local people, have disappointed them. Locals are angry with the Pentagon for hiring staff from Asia when there are thousands of Djiboutians desperate for work, coupled with the US' support for a leader who is not popular.
    That's why, though they don't get media attention, there have been regular anti-government protests since the last election in 2011.
    For some reason, locals do not blame the former colony as much as they blame the Americans. It could be that the French government sometimes criticises President Guelleh publicly.

    'Little Paris'

    Many of the high profile figures, who raised concerns over the country's direction, have been locked up without fair trial in the Gabod prison, the biggest in the country. They include the most famous religious leaders locally known as the "two Abdirahmans".
    I met one of them before the crackdown and he was complaining about how the country's leader was allowing "foreign soldiers to turn a Muslim nation into a brothel". In particular, he was blaming western military personnel for "contributing to an un-Islamic behaviour". Djibouti is a small country so is its capital city, also called Djibouti. The effect of thousands of foreign soldiers is felt, therefore.
    During the French colonisation, Djibouti was known as "the little Paris". It was a prime destination for Europeans seeking sea, sun and sex. From the 1980s, religious leaders, who felt the country was losing its Islamic identity, went on the offensive.
    In Djibouti, with thousands of personnel on the ground, the Americans are vulnerable.
    To some extent, they had influence and many locals subsequently became more conservative. However, since the US soldiers started arriving in Djibouti in the early 2000s, Muslim leaders feel decades of hard work to hold on to their Islamic principles have been reversed.
    Although many women are trafficked or come from neighbouring countries, especially Ethiopia, religious figures told me that they have seen a growing number of local girls turning to prostitution.
    Over the past two decades, I have been travelling to Djibouti and following developments closely. Society in general feels oppressed. Young, poor and unemployed see no way out of the situation. Muslim leaders suspect foreigners are undermining their religious beliefs and the country is at the forefront of America's "war on terror" with no prospect for a brighter future.
    On top of that, due to the US' support for the regime, anti-western resentment is growing. The conditions suit al-Qaeda operatives well. Unlike Somalia or Yemen, where Islamists cannot hit US drones or war ships, in Djibouti, with thousands of personnel on the ground, the Americans are vulnerable. It will no longer be machines versus men.




    Djibouti is likely to become another battlefront between the "war on terror" coalition led by the US and al-Qaeda-affiliated Islamist organisations.

    http://www.ethiomedia.com/16file/4653.html

    Ethiopia: Crimes Against University Students and Humanity



    By Alemayehu G Mariam




    On May 2, 2014, BBC reported that the security forces of the regime in Ethiopia had massacred at least 47 university and high school students in the town of  Ambo 80 miles west of the capital Addis Ababa. The regime dismissed the massacre and tried to sweep it under the rug claiming that a “few anti-peace forces incited and coordinated the violence”.   There has been little international coverage or outrage over the massacre. 

    Human Rights Watch (HRW) issued a statement  condemning the “shooting at and beating [of] peaceful protesters in Ambo, Nekemte, Jimma, and other towns”. According to HRW, the student “protests erupted over the release of the proposed Addis Ababa Integrated Development Master Plan” which would “expand Addis Ababa’s municipal boundary to include more than 15 communities in Oromia” and displace Oromo farmers and residents. HRW demanded an immediate end to the excessive use of force by the regime's security forces against peaceful student demonstrators.
    I am outraged beyond my ability to express my outrage in words. I grieve and ache for the students cut down by hails of bullets in the prime of their lives. They had an undeniable constitutional right to peacefully petition for grievances; because they exercised that right, we must now all grieve for them. I grieve for Ethiopia for it has lost its best and brightest children. I extend my deepest condolences to the families and friends of the victims of the massacre. 
    I abhor massacres. I got involved in Ethiopian and African human rights advocacy following the post-2005 election massacres of unarmed protesters in Ethiopia. Prior to that time, I had virtually no involvement in Ethiopian politics. I did not know the name Meles Zenawi “from Adam’s off ox”. 
    When troops under the personal control and command of the late Meles Zenawi massacred some 200 unarmed demonstrators and shot and wounded nearly 800 more (the actual figure is documented to be much more than that), I was hopping mad as hell. I just could not let Meles and his criminal gang get away with mass murder. For the past eight years, I have been advocating and promoting human rights in Ethiopia and Africa every single Monday without missing a single week. 
    I am hopping mad as hell today over the massacre of the dozens of unarmed university and high school students in Ambo and elsewhere as I was in 2005 when hundreds of unarmed protesters were slaughtered. I am hopping mad as hell that no one is ever held accountable for massacring innocent people in Ethiopia. There is a long and shameful culture of impunity in Ethiopia. Mengistu Hailemariam committed mass murder and has not been held accountable. That mass murderer said he "did not hurt a fly" while he was in power. He did kill tens of thousands of innocent people. He is comfortably living out his twilight years in Zimbabwe writing fiction and fables about his time in office. 
    Meles Zenawi received divine justice. His surviving disciples and comrades today thumb their noses at justice. The perpetrators of the massacres of 2005 today roam the streets free. Yet we know the names of each and every “federal police” thug who participated in the massacres. In a report entitled “Modernizing Internal Security in Ethiopia” counterterrorism expert Col. Michael Dewar, British Army (Rtd.) revealed that the Director General of the Ethiopian Federal Police Werkneh Gebeyehu told him that “as a direct result of the 2005 riots, he [had] sacked 237 policemen.” Not a single one of these  criminals who committed the massacres or the criminal bosses who ordered the massacres have been brought to justice.  Meles's own Inquiry Commission in 2007 damned Meles for the use of deadly force and absolved the peaceful unarmed protesters of any criminal or civil liability. 
    In December 2003, Meles Zenawi’s troops in a series of attacks in Gambella killed 400 Anuaks and destroyed over 1000 homes. The Meles regime subsequently issued a statement “apologizing for not acting proactively and promised to stand on the side of the victims to see that justice is done.” At the time, the regime claimed to have identified dozens of suspects in the Anuak massacres. No soldier, police or security official has ever been prosecuted, held accountable or sanctioned for those crimes against humanity in Gambella. 
    Beginning in October 2007, Meles Zenawi launched a crackdown against insurgents in the Ogaden region which quickly expanded into a program of collective punishment for Ogadeni civilians. Meles’ troops destroyed  entire villages and committed rape, murder and pillage. They hanged and beheaded suspects to terrorize the population. A Human Rights Watch told the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health that “the Ogaden is not Darfur. But the situation in Ogaden follows a frighteningly familiar pattern”. Retired general and former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell declared genocide had occurred in Darfur. By the same token, in 2007-08 a "mini-genocide" occurred in the Ogaden. No one has been brought to justice for the Ogaden massacres. The catalogue of massacres by the regime in Ethiopia is voluminous.
    I have no illusions that those who committed the “Black Tuesday” massacres at Ambo University and other institutions and towns will ever be brought to justice under the current regime. Not only will there be no prosecution, there will not even be an investigation. The best that could be expected is a kangaroo police investigation if the public could bring sustained pressure on the regime. Of course, the outcome will be a surefire whitewash. The final report of that kangaroo investigation will conclude that a “few anti-peace forces incited and coordinated the violence.” 

    Opposition leaders inside the country and in the Ethiopian Diaspora must speak in one voice in demanding a swift and independent investigation into the massacres in Ambo and elsewhere. We have to go beyond moral condemnations and demand legal action in local kangaroo courts and international tribunals. We should put the kangaroo courts on trial in the court of international public opinion. We must take advantage of remedies available in international bodies and political institutions in donor states. 
    I am calling on the regime to launch an independent investigation into the massacres of Ambo University students and other peaceful protesters in Nekemte, Jimma and other locations. I am under no delusion or illusion that the regime will heed my call. I know they do not give a rat’s behind about anything I say.
    I am calling for an independent investigation for a different reason. I want to name and shame the Obama Administration, the Cameron Government in the U.K., the European Union, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the rest (except China for whom a single death is a tragedy and thousands of deaths a statistic) who provide billions of dollars annually to a regime that massacres its best and brightest youth. I want to call attention to the fact that American, British and European taxpayers are bankrolling child killers in Ethiopia. I want to call attention to the fact that the silence of the West in the face of such horrific crimes against schoolchildren and university students cries out to their complicity in crimes against children, crimes against the most vulnerable members of humanity.
    Only the Western donors and loaners have the financial muscle to demand and insist on an independent investigation so that the police and security officials who committed the killings of the Ambo schoolchildren and university students and those who authorized or condoned it could be brought to justice. I also know for a fact that the Western bankrollers of the regime will never call for an investigation because they don’t give a  s _ _t about Ethiopia’s children. I am calling them out though!!!
    In my call for an investigation, I accuse the Obama Administration, the Cameron Government, the European Union, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund as the silent aiders and abettors before and after the fact in the commission of crimes against humanity in Ethiopia. They know in their own laws that those who aid and abet directly or indirectly in the commission of a crime are just as guilty as those who actually committed the crime.  George Bush said, “We will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor them.”  Well said.  

    Ambo University
    I have a personal confession to make. Perhaps it will help my reader understand why I am hopping mad about the massacre of Ambo University and high school students and others. The Ambo massacres are not mere issues of human rights advocacy. They are personal.  As I imagine things, I tell myself that in a different place and in a different time, the massacred students could have been MY students taking my courses. They could have been in my lecture classes or sitting in my advanced special topics seminars.  I would have known each one of them by name. I would have read their papers and graded their exams. I would have stopped them on campus and asked them why they missed class and enjoy watching them squirm trying to come up with excuses. I would have challenged them to achieve academic excellence. They could have been my advisees. I could have mentored them for a career in the legal profession or other areas of public policy. I could have written them recommendation letters. I may even have been able to help place the most able ones at some of the best graduate and professional schools in the world. They could have been MY students!!!

    I would have been very proud to have them as MY students.  I would have challenged them to think critically. I would have challenged them not to think outside the box but to make their own thought boxes. I would have taught them to challenge the orthodoxy of ideas and always be skeptical of dogma and ideologies. I would have taught them to be open and independent-minded and act on evidence instead of hunches and emotions.  Above all, I would have taught them to stand up for their beliefs and never, never back down from speaking truth to tyranny. How I would have been proud to be their teacher and mentor!
    Just as I believe Ethiopia’s youth are Ethiopia’s future, I also believe America’s youth are America’s future. American college and university students have been the tip of the spear in social and political change. So have Ethiopian university students. From the days of the Freedom Rides to the Free Speech Movement at UC Berkeley to the anti-war movement in the 1960s, American university students remained in the vanguard of social and political change. So were Ethiopian university students from the days of imperial rule.
    Things changed on American campuses on May 4, 1970 at Kent State University in Ohio when Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire on unarmed college students firing 67 rounds over a period of 13 seconds. Those students were protesting President Nixon’s expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia. The Kent State massacres were the only time in American history that tens of millions of American university and high school students went on strike and closed down their institutions. The Kent State killings were the straw that broke the camel's back. By 1973, the Vietnam War had effectively ended as the U.S. began withdrawing its combat units.
    For the past 44 years, the U.S. government has refused to acknowledge responsibility for the Kent State killings. That has not stopped patriotic Americans from seeking accountability for the massacre, including efforts to hold the U.S. government accountable before the United Nations Human Rights Committee. The Kent State killers may never be brought to justice, but the ongoing efforts on their behalf sends a clear message to the U.S. government that it cannot use its armed forces (or its drones) to kill citizens for expressing their dissenting political beliefs.
    The Ambo University and high school students and others at least deserve as much as the Kent State University students. We must never stop demanding justice for them before domestic courts or international tribunals.  I call for an investigation not only to name and shame the regime’s international supporters but also because I believe, as did James Russell Lowell, that “Truth (will not) forever (remain) on the scaffold, (nor) Wrong (remain) forever on the throne.” I believe that “behind the dim unknown, Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own.”
    Speak up and demand justice for the massacred Ambo University and high school students and others!
    When Ambo University students were massacred, not all of Addis Ababa University students came out. Many remained silent. Mekele University students did not protest. They stayed put and remained silent. Students at Bahr Dar, Gondar, Dire Dawa and other universities also remained silent.  
    Silence in the face of crimes against humanity -- my silence, your silence, the silence of the Obama Administration, the Cameron Government, the European Union, the World Bank, the IMF and the African Union -- is the real criminal as we have learned from Martin Neimoller, the German anti-Nazi theologian and Lutheran pastor:   
    When the Nazis came for the communists,
    I remained silent;
    I was not a communist. 
    When they locked up the social democrats,
    I remained silent;
    I was not a social democrat. 
    When they came for the trade unionists,
    I did not speak out;
    I was not a trade unionist. 
    When they came for the Jews,
    I remained silent;
    I wasn't a Jew. 
    When they came for me,
    there was no one left to speak out. 
    I feel the same way as Nimoller. 
    When they came for the Amharas “sefaris from North Gojam” in Bench Maji,
    When they ethnically cleansed the Amharas in Benishangul,
    I remained silent;
    I was not an Amhara. 
    When they hunted down and killed the Anuaks in Gambella,
    I remained silent;
    I was not an Anuak. 
    When they strafed and bombed the Ogadenis and burned their villages,
    I remained silent;
    I was not an Ogadeni. 
    When they built dams and damned the Omotic peoples,
    I remained silent;
    I was not Mursi, Suri, Nyangatom, Dizi or Me'en. 
    When they massacred Oromo students in Ambo,
    I remained silent;
    I was not an Oromo student. 
    When they came for me,
    there was no one left to speak out.
    For me, it does not matter if you are an Oromo, a Tigrean, an Anuak, a Gurage, an Amhara, an Ogadeni, a Mursi… For me, you are an Ethiopian. I love you just as you are! I will NEVER, NEVER remain silent when you are victimized by human wrongs and deprived of your human rights! 
    Lately, I have been cross with Barack Obama. In as much as I was his staunchest supporter in 2008, I am his staunchest critic in 2014 on his human rights (wrongs) policy in Africa. Regardless, I will always agree with his fundamental values about America. “There is not a liberal America and a conservative America—there is the United States of America. There is not a Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America—there's the United States of America.”
    For me there is not an Oromo, a Tigrean, an Amhara, a Gambellan, an Ogadeni, a Mursi, a Gurage... Ethiopian – there is only an Ethiopian. For me, our humanity in our Ethiopianity is infinitely more important than our identity in our ethnicity. This is my simple creed!!!

    Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.
    http://www.ethiomedia.com/16file/4651.html