Friday, August 31, 2007

Woyannes Banned Medecins Sans Frontieres from Ogaden

Aug 31, 2007

By Andrew Cawthorne

NAIROBI, Aug 31 (Reuters) - International aid agency Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) accused Ethiopia’s [Woyanne regime] on Friday of denying it access to the remote Ogaden region where battles are raging between government troops and a rebel movement.

“The government of Ethiopia [Woyanne] has denied MSF access to the five zones of the Somali region under military operation, often referred to as the Ogaden region,” it said in a statement.

Woyanne launched a campaign several months ago to flush out Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) rebels after they carried out one of their bloodiest attacks to date, on a Chinese-run oil field, killing 74 people.

A United Nations fact-finding mission is in the region, assessing allegations by the rebels and rights groups of human rights abuses, as well as the food, water and health needs of Ogaden’s ethnic Somali people.

“MSF urgently calls on the Ethiopian authorities to allow MSF teams to provide humanitarian assistance to vulnerable civilians living in that area,” the group added in a statement released in Nairobi. But a senior Ethiopian official said the group’s accusation was unfounded.

“Ethiopia does not have any no-go zone,” Bereket Simon, special adviser to [dictator] Meles Zenawi, told Reuters.

MSF said an “exploratory mission” by its personnel in the region prior to the ban had revealed “urgent health needs and a deteriorating humanitarian crisis.”

“Despite a signed agreement with MSF, the authorities in Addis Ababa continue to deny MSF access to the area, in order to help the civilian victims of the conflict.”

Earlier in August, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it had pulled out of the Ogaden following a government order.

The ONLF accuses [Woyanne] of blockading food relief, choking commercial trade and risking “man-made famine.”

The government denies that, saying the ONLF are Eritrean-backed terrorists peddling lies to the world.

The claims and counter-claims are hard to verify, as the arid region, populated largely by nomadic herders, is effectively off-limits to most rights workers and journalists. (Additional reporting by Tsegaye Tadesse in Addis Ababa)

Posted by halgan at 20:06:23 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Sunday, August 26, 2007

ONLF Statement On UN Fact Finding Mission To Ogaden

25th August 2007

The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) welcomes the decision of the United Nations to send a fact finding mission to the Ogaden. This represents a positive first step by the United Nations in addressing the man made humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Ogaden.

We call on the United Nations not to limit the scope of this mission to a humanitarian assessment but to include an preliminary investigation of war crimes being committed against our people by the current Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) led regime. We further urge the United Nations to allow international journalists, who are currently banned from entering Ogaden, to travel with the mission.

The ONLF is prepared to provide all necessary assistance to this mission and members of the international media who may join them in gaining access to all areas of Ogaden.

onlfpress@onlf.org

Posted by halgan at 15:18:21 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Sanad Guuradii 1aad ee Asaaska Boggan.

 

Waxaa ka soo wareegetey hal sano intii uu asaasmay bogga ethio-Somali. Boggu intuu jirey waxa uu garab taagnaa, markastana garab taaganyahay halganka dadka Soomaaligalbeed (Ogadeeniya) ay ugu jiraan aaya -katalintooda. Waxaan dadka soo booqda boggan leenahay nagula dabaaldega heesahan. Hadii aan nahay diyaariyayaasha boggan waxaan leenahay ha dhaco Taliska Meles Zanawi, Ha xuroobaan dadka Soomaali Galbeed (Ogaadeeniya).

mahadcelin banadir-city.com

www.banadir-city.com/audio/songs/Music/html/track19.htm

www.banadir-city.com/audio/songs/Music/html/track16.htm

Posted by halgan at 18:08:59 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, August 17, 2007

Ureal:War crimes from Ethiopia coming closer to the White House.

Proof that Ethiopia is guilty of human rights abuses in the Ogaden and war crimes in Somalia is piling up. They can deny it and try to start a smear campaign against Human Rights Watch, but these instruments are loosing all power, now also the United Nations and European countries are starting to ask questions. Burundi was willing to participate in the peace keeping forces in Somalia, but has postponed the transport of their soldiers. Many countries are not willing to participate, now that it is clear, that the Ethiopians are committing war crimes.

By now, we are in a situation that one abuse after another and one crime after another is being divulged. The reputation of the gang is gone and they are getting deeper and deeper in the self made pitfall. Once the sweetheart of the west, by now they are one that can be in line with Robert Mugabe and Isayas Afaworki, when it comes to human rights and commitment to peace and development. It is telling that Tony Blair visited Muammer Al-Gadaffi on his farewell tour through Africa, but avoided to meet the Ethiopian crime minister.

And let it be clear, that this army is being advised by the United States of America’s marines. We remember vividly, that Vicky ‘look I can shoot’ Huddlestone, former Chargé d’Affairs of the American Embassy, was visiting these instructors. So maybe the HR2003 can be followed by investigation and legislation on the involvement of American soldiers in these abuses. The Agazi, the “elite” unit from Tigray, had to withdraw their Humvees from Addis Ababa in November 2005, because they were given or sold to the Ethiopian army, under condition to control the borders with Somalia. Now this same equipment is used to throw phosphor grenades, which to my knowledge is a war crime and chemical warfare.

And being a journalist and reporting about these crimes is a dangerous thing. This week two Somali born journalists have been assassinated and they are not the first. The Ethiopian army is misbehaving grossly and does not want noisy parkers. It wants Bereket ‘Goebbels’ Simon, alias Baghdad Bob, to have the opportunity to create his own reality.
And we all know that this pathological liar is shameless enough to call black white and red green as he labeled the recent Human Rights Watch 113 pages report on Somalia and referring a.o. to the destruction by tanks and looting of hospitals in Mogadishu: “unsubstantiated fairy tales”. Indeed very fairy!!

Quote:
A new report by United Nations Arms Monitors accuses Ethiopia’s army of using illegal white phosphorus bombs during the US-backed occupation of Somalia. The report was compiled by an UN panel of independent experts and analysts and was delivered to the UN Security Council at the end of July. It covers the period from November 2006 to late June 2007. The most damning accusation in the report is that during a battle in Mogadishu on April 13 between the Ethiopian military and the forces of the United Islamic Courts (known as Shabaab), “Ethiopian military forces resorted to using white phosphorus bombs…. Approximately 15 Shabaab fighters and 35 civilians were killed.” Residents reportedly said that the bombs literally melted people. The report’s analysts said this was not an isolated incident. Unquote

Posted by halgan at 20:36:59 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Why the Pit is a Bull: the threat of Tigrean nationalism

Kallacha Dubbi

August 16, 2007

 

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, an independent country 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 70s, 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, that 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 virtues that link it to the Ethiopian political power and shape its capacity to destabilize the opposition.

They are its a) military, and b) economy.

a) The military : Strictly speaking, the Ethiopia 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:

  • The Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray (EFFORT)
  • 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.

The author resides in USA and can be reached at kallachadubbi@yahoo.com

Posted by halgan at 19:28:32 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Analysis: Ethiopian Claims of Military Victories in Ogaden


Aug 08, 2007
Ogaden Online Staff

women_fighter_08082007.gif

The Ethiopian government has, for the past two days, come out with widely varied claims of military victories against the Ogaden National Liberation Front, ONLF. Having reporters throughout Ogaden with up to the minute news of the happenings in Ogaden, we attempt to analyze the veracity of these claims by the Ethiopian autocracy and its puppet, hand picked regional administration based in JigJiga.

The Ethiopian administration headed by Mr. Meles Zenawi came out, in a little over a year, with three widely publicized ‘crackdowns’ in Ogaden. This means in almost every six months from February 2006 up to June this year, the Ethiopian regime announced a new Ogaden ‘crackdown’ with a different objective be it the one announced in February 2006 with the grandiose plan of  ‘wiping’ out ONLF or the latest one announced in June 10th this year which had the modest objective of ‘containment’ of ONLF.  

One of our senior reporters in Jig Jiga, a fellow with an intimate knowledge of the inner workings of the Ethiopian administration and one with impeccable sources, confirmed that the final report he had seen which was prepared for and delivered to Zenawi regarding the February 2006 military ‘crackdown’ concluded in no uncertain terms that almost every military objective of the February plan ended up in abject failure.

He added that the report in particular pointed to the loss of the twenty-six highest ranking military personnel leading the February 2006 ‘crackdown’ as a highly visible example of the failure of the military operations carried out against ONLF. Furthermore, our senior reporter, said that the report was harsh on the Ethiopian military and the leaders of the so-called local administration on not being able to claim the loss of a single high ranking ONLF military official while most of the Ethiopians leading the February crackdown were lost of all things in a single hit on a military helicopter that was transporting them to a town that was said to have been cleared of ONLF months earlier.

Having failed in the February 2006 plan and one that was quietly announced in late Fall of the same year, the Ethiopian regime were said to have been roused from self-induced hibernation by the successful ONLF military strikes that took place in Cobole early May this year. Having awakened to an ONLF might they might not have foreseen, the Ethiopian government announced the June 2007 ‘crackdown’ in a press release read by none other than by Mr. Zenawi himself.

A source close to the Ethiopian prime minister’s office intimated to one of our Addis Ababa reporters the fact that ‘containment’ was the goal of the latest ‘crackdown’ was testament to the realization by the Ethiopian military that the current Ethiopian military was not capable of dislodging ONLF from a single town let alone from the whole of Ogaden.

This source added that the failure of the latest crackdown to make any headway resulted in the direct targeting of the Ogaden civilians with blockades, mass detentions, as well as extra judicial killings. This source concluded that the Ethiopian leadership did not account for in it’s planning the possible publication of the widespread atrocities that might result from the deliberate targeting of the Ogaden civilians. The Addis Ababa source added that the Ethiopians never expected the Ogaden issue to make headlines in the West and specifically end up in the United States Senate floor as it did.

Many of our sources within the Ethiopian government as well as our reporters throughout Ogaden all agree that the latest claims of military victories with no evidence of any prisoners and no mention of actually when and where in Ogaden were these victories against ONLF achieved is meant to drown out the outcry of the atrocities being reported from Ogaden.

It is also meant our sources said to change the topic from Ogaden atrocities to possible Ethiopian military victories against the enemy that the Ethiopian government classifies as a ‘terrorist’ organization. When we asked our reporters and their sources whether there is any veracity to the fluctuating claims of a high casualty rate of ONLF being reported by the Ethiopian military, it was poignant to hear the following from a highly placed source within the Ethiopian premier’s office:

The number of 200 dead ONLF soldiers reported by the Ethiopian ministry of defense yesterday is correct in a way. It is not actually ONLF soldiers, per se, that were killed but this is an initial count of the number of Ogadens be they herders, grocers, children or elders that were documented to have been killed by the Ethiopian military in the past two months. As to the five hundred plus that were today reported captured by the regional administration, this is also correct in a different way. This is a partial list of the number of civilians that have been detained so far in many parts of Ogaden by the Ethiopian military. These civilians have been accused without any evidence of being ONLF ‘sympathizers’ whatever that means. To the current Ethiopian leadership an ONLF soldier or an Ogaden civilian accused of being an ONLF  ‘sympathizer’ are considered one and the same hence this latest claim.

In conclusion, since we have been able to report any major military engagement, or series of military skirmishes between ONLF and the Ethiopian military that may resulted such a high casualty rate, we are confident that there is no truth to the claims of military victories by the Ethiopian government. It is apparent from our analysis that the Ethiopians are engaging in misinformation missives to deflect attention away from the Ethiopian army brutalities that have been reported in Ogaden.

The fact that there is no mention of when and where the reported victories took place, coupled with the lack of presentation of a single ONLF prisoner or dead soldier further lends credence to the information provided to us by our highly placed sources within the Ethiopian administration.

staffl@ogaden.com
Ogaden Online Staff

Posted by halgan at 18:16:38 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Monday, August 6, 2007

SHIRKII 11AAD EE JAALIYADAHA SOOMAALIDA OGADENYA.FINLAND HELSINK, Aug 2-4,2007.

Bayaankii ka soo baxay Shir Sanadeedkii Jaaliyadaha Ogadenya ee ka dhacay Magaalada Helsinki, Finland, Aug 2-4, 2007

Shirkii 11 aad ee Jaalyadaha Soomaalida Ogaadeeniya oo Sanadkiiba mar la qabto ayaa sanadkan ka dhacay Xarunta shirarka iyo dhaqamada ee magaalada Helsinki,Finland, intii u dhexeysay August 02-04, 2007. Waxaa shirkan  ka soo qayb galay ergooyin ka socda Jaaliyadaha Ogadenya ee dalalka Swedan, Switzerland, Denmark, Germany, UK, Canada, USA, Norway iyo Jaaliyaddii martida loo ahaa ee Finland.

Sidoo kale waxaa shirka ka soo qayb galay, xubno  ka socda Ururka Ardayda,  aqoonyahano, Odey dhaqameedyol, Ururka Haweenka  iyo xuquuqul insaanka Ogadenya  oo wadamo kala duwan ka kala yimid. Waxaa goobta shirka aad u soo buuxiyey bulshadda Soomaaliyeed ee deggan dalka  Finland, khaasatan magaalada Helsinki iyo nawaaxigeeda.

Qodobadii Shirka

Shirkan waxaa si qoddo-dheer loogaga dooday qodobadan-

1        Xaaladda dhabta ah ee uu ku sugan yahay dalka Ogadenya ee ay ka soo bara-kaceen Jaaliyadaha kulmay, sida gumaadka, xabsiga, jidh-dilka, kufsiga, gubista                    tuulooyinka , gubista hantada shacabka, dhaca iyo guud ahaanba xadgudubyada xuquuqda asaasiga ah ee aadamiga ee gumaysiga Itoobiya uu ku hayo shacbiga Ogadenya.

2        Is-bedallada siyaasadeed ee dunida ku cusub iyo saamaynta ay ku leeyihiin Geeska Afrika, gaar ahaan Ogadenya.

3        Kaalinta Jaaliyadaha reer Ogadenya kaga aaddan burburka ku billowday gumaysiga Itoobiya.

4        Taageeridda halganka shacbiga reer Ogadenya ugu jiro hanashada xaqa aaya-ka-tashigiisa.

5        Daganaasha la’aanta Geeska Afrika iyo sababaha asaaska u ah.

6        Dilki loo geestay madaxdii haayada OWDA iyo kasaaristii ICRC(Laanqayrta cas) ee dhulka Ogaadeeniya.

Go’aannadii shirka

Ka dib markii uu shirku si wayn u lafa-guray qodobadaas kor ku xusan, isla markaana falanqeeyay nuxurka ay xanbaarsan yihiin wuxuu gaadhay go’aannadan soo socda:- 

1        In la taageero halganka uu shacbiga Ogadenya ugu jiro hanashada xaqa aaya-ka-tashigiisa.

2        In  fulinta shaqada halganka ee dibadu ay ka mid noqota shaqo maalmeedka Jaaliyadaha dibedda.

3        Waa in halganka loo abuuro saaxiibo taageero wax ku ool ah ku soo kordhiya.

4        In caalamka lala socodsiiyo gafafka joogtada ah ee gumaysiga Itoobiya uu ku hayo shacbiga Ogadenya iyo in caalamka si joogto ah loogu bandhigo xadgudubka uu taliska Itoobiya ku sameeyo dhammaan xeerka iyo qawaaniinta caalamiga ah.

5        In la ilaaliyo dhaqanka iyo hiddaha toosan ee Soomaaliga ah ee shacbiga Ogadenya iyo caadaysiga ku dhaqanka iyo muujinta astaamaha gaarka u ah qadiyada Ogadenya, isla markaasna ubadka yaryar ee Ogaadeeny lagu ababiyo dhaqanka iyo asluubta wanaagsan ee ummadeenu leedahay.

6        In la joogteeyo shirwaynaha Jaaliyadaha Ogaadeenya ee sannadkiiba mar la qabto, waxaana sannadka 2008 lagu qaban doonaa wadanka USA.

7        In la qabto dood-cilmiyeedyo lagu horumarinayo aragtida halgan ee shacbiga reer Ogadenya.

8        In la horumariyo warbaahinta u adeegaysa qadiyada Ogadenya, lana gaadhsiiyo  shacabka dhacdooyinka iyo horumarada halganka.

9        In qadiyada Ogadenya saaxiibo looga kasbo shucuubta lala nool yahay, iyadoo qaabka ugu habboon loogu bandhigayo dulmiga iyo cadaadiska lagu hayo shacbiga Ogadenya.

10    Shirku wuxuu taageero buuxda siinaya sidii loo  xoojin lahaa halwlaha Isbahaysiga AFD.

Baaq

A       Shirku wuxuu shacbiga reer Ogadenya, meel kastoo uu joogo, ugu baaqayaa inuu ku mintido halganka xaqa ah ee aaya-ka-tashigiisa uu ugu jiro.Wuxuuna ku gubaabinyaa inuu u dhabar adaygo cadaadiska isa soo taraya ee gumaysigu ku hayo.

B       Shirku wuxuu dadwaynaha reer Ogaadeenya ugu baaqayaa inay halganka u midoobaan, isla markaana ka digtoonaadaan shirqoollada cadowga ee la xidhiidha iska hor-keenka Beelaha walaalaha ah ee dalkeena wada-dega. Wuuxuuna shirku ku baaqayaa in  shacabka Soomaalida Ogaadeeniya ay ka digtoonaadan shirqoolada gumaysiga.

C       Shirku wuxuu shacbiga Soomaaliyeed een walaalaha nahay ugu baaqayaa inuu joojiyo dagaalka sokeeye, danta guudna u midoobo, iskana caabiyo shirqoollada uu gumaysiga Itoobiya u maleegayo, khilaafaadkiisana ku dhamaysto wada-xaajood iyo is afgarad.

D       Shirku wuxuu shucuubta, dawladaha iyo ururrada caalamiga ah ugu baaqayaa inayna iska indha-tirin xadgudubka, dulmiga iyo cadaadiska uu gumaysiga Itoobiya ku hayo shacbiga ogadenya iyo shucuubta kale ee ku hoos jirta iyo guud ahaanba umadaha kale ee Geeska Afrika.

Canbaarayn

A       Shirku wuxuu canbaaraynayaa hawl galka milatari ee ciidamada gumaysiga Itoobiya ka bilaabeen dalka Ogaadeenya laguna gumaadayo shacabka Soomaalida Ogaadeeniya iyaga mar marsiinyo ka dhiganaya in ay soo afjarayaan Halaganka gobanimadoonka ah ee ay horseedka ka tahay JWXO.

B       Shirku wuxuu canbaareeyay heshiisyadii uu taliska Itoobiya la saxiixday sharikadaha saliidda ee ku saabsanaa inay soo saaraan saliidda Ogaadeenya, wuxuu ku garab tagaan yahay JWXO difaacidda khayraadka dalka, iyo ka hor joogsiga tuugada harka cad doonaysa in ay boobto ogaalaansha Somalida Ogaadeenya umbaa shidaal laga soo saari kara Ogaadeenya.

C       Shirku wuxuu canbaaraynayaa fikirka gaboobay ee gumaysiga talisiyada Itoobiya ee ku dhisan cadaadinta shucuubta, dhul-ballaadhsiga gardarrada ah iyo falalka dilka, xasuuqa, dhaca iyo xabsiga uu ku hayo shacbiga Ogadenya ee dulman iyo shucuubta kale.

D       Shirku wuxuu canbaaraynayaa faragelinta qaawan ee taliska Addis-ababa uu ku hayo dawlada Soomaaliya iyo shirqoollada lidk ku ah dib u-dhiska qaran Soomaaliyeed oo loo dhan yahay, wuxuuna ku baaqayaa in si deg deg ah ay uga baxaan Somalia ciidamad Itoobiya

E        Shirku wuxuu canbaaraynayaa argagixisada iyo falalka darisnimo xumada uu taliska Itoobiya ku hayo dalka ku yaalla gobolka Geeska Afrika.

F        Shirku wuxuu si aad ah u canbaaraynaa dilka naxariisdarad ah ee ciidamada gumaysigu u gaystaan madaxii hayada OWDA iyo dadkii kale ee lala dilay.

G       Shirku sidoo kale wuxuu Canbaareyey go’aankii xukumada Meles ay kaga saartay dhulka ogaadeeniya hayada ICRC.(Laanqayrta cas.)

Helsink, Finland. 05.08.2007.
Dhamaad

Posted by halgan at 15:25:06 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

ONLF Statement On Explosions In Jijiga

5 August 2007

Today’s attack on a Jijiga market and Church represent a despicable act of desperation by cronies of the Ethiopian regime tasked with misrepresenting the just struggle of the people of Ogaden. Similar to the deliberate attack by the regime on the leadership and staff of the Ogaden Welfare & Development Association (OWDA) last week, this latest attack serves no political purpose other than to seek to justify continued war crimes against our people.

The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) strongly condemns this act of cowardice targeting our civilian population in Jijiga. We particularly condemn the deliberate targeting of a place of worship to further a sinister political objective aimed at deceiving the international community.

These attacks confirm that the Ethiopian regime will support any act which they perceive will give them cover for continuing war crimes in Ogaden.

We reiterate our call for immediate international intervention in Ogaden before the situation deteriorates further.

————————————-
Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)
onlfpress@onlf.org

Posted by halgan at 15:16:10 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Senator Leahy’s statement on U.S. assistance to Ethiopia

Statement by Senator Leahy on the the Senate floor today.
Aug 3rd, 2007

After the overthrow of Ethiopia’s brutal former Prime Minister Mengistu, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi ushered in a period of hope and optimism. On May 15, 2005, Ethiopia held its first open multi-party elections. The international community praised the people of Ethiopia for an astounding 90 percent voter participation rate, an encouraging beginning to a new political process. The Ethiopian people deserve a democratic process in which opposition parties can organize and participate, and journalists can publish freely, without fear of arrest or retribution. Unfortunately, as it turned out, the 2005 election was not the turning point many had hoped for.

Early polls suggested the opposition Coalition for Unity and Democracy Party would make gains in the Ethiopian Parliament that could threaten the control of Prime Minister Meles’ ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front. These reports were followed by credible allegations of manipulation of the vote-counting process. When the government finally announced results that assured its continued hold on power, thousands of people took to the streets in protest. The police arrested over 30,000 people and some 193 people were killed. Although most of the protestors were released soon after their arrest, 70 opposition leaders and journalists remained in prison.

Following these events, I wrote to Ethiopia’s Ambassador Kassahun Ayele and officials at the State Department to express my concern with the imprisonment of the Ethiopian politicians. Human rights organizations and other international figures condemned the detentions and urged Prime Minister Meles to release them. These efforts were to no avail.

Some detainees remained in jail for over two years before being brought to trial in a manner that was incompatible with international standards of justice. Last month, they were convicted of such vague charges as “outrage against the constitution” and “inciting armed opposition.” They were stripped of their rights to vote and to run for public office. Several were sentenced to life in prison. Nothing was done to prosecute the police officers who fired on the protesters. The situation had gone from bad to worse.

Then suddenly, less than two weeks ago, the Ethiopian Government announced the pardon and release of 38 opposition leaders. I am pleased that Prime Minister Meles heeded the pleas of the Ethiopian people and the international community and released these prisoners. The fact is, none of them should have been arrested or tried in the first place. Their release was long overdue and is welcome.

I hope the government acts expeditiously to release the remaining political detainees, and bring to justice police officers who used excessive force. I also hope the negotiations that resulted in the prisoners’ release will lead to further discussions between the government and the leaders of the opposition, to ensure that their political rights are fully restored and that future elections are not similarly marred.

While this news is positive, it comes at a time when journalists and representatives of humanitarian organizations report human rights abuses of civilians, including torture, rape and extrajudicial killings, by Ethiopian security forces, including those trained and equipped by the U.S., in the Ogaden region.

Congressman Donald Payne, Chairman of the Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health, and a vocal defender of human rights and democracy in Ethiopia, inserted into the Congressional Record a June 18, 2007, New York Times article that described these abuses.

This situation is also addressed in the Senate version of the Fiscal Year 2008 State, Foreign Operations Appropriations bill and report, which were reported by the Appropriations Committee on July 10. The Appropriations Committee seeks assurance from the State Department that military assistance for Ethiopia is being adequately monitored and is not being used against civilians by units of Ethiopia’s security forces.

We need to know that the State Department is investigating these reports. We also want to see effective measures by the Ethiopian Government to bring to justice anyone responsible for such abuses.

Unfortunately, it appears that the Bush administration has made little effort to monitor military aid to Ethiopia. It is no excuse that the Ethiopian military has impeded access to the Ogaden, as it has done. In fact, this should give rise to a sense of urgency. If we cannot properly investigate these reports, and if the Leahy Law which prohibits U.S. assistance to units of foreign security forces that violate human rights is not being applied because the U.S. Embassy cannot determine the facts, then we should not be supporting these forces.

As if the allegations of human rights violations were not enough, the New York Times reported on July 22 that the Ethiopian military is blocking food aid to the Ogaden region. The article also claimed that the military is “siphoning off millions” of dollars intended for food aid and a UN polio eradication program. A subsequent article on July 26 indicated that the World Food Program and the Ethiopian Government have reached agreement, after weeks of discussions, on a process for getting food aid through the military blockade to civilians in the Ogaden region. But the same article also reported that regional Ethiopian officials have expelled the Red Cross.

Mr. President, during the Cold War we supported some of the world’s most brutal, corrupt dictators because they were anti-communist. Their people, and our reputation, suffered as a result. Now the White House seems to support just about anyone who says they are against terrorism, no matter how undemocratic or corrupt. It is short sighted, it tarnishes our image, and it will cost us dearly in the long term.

Prime Minister Meles has been an ally against Islamic extremism in the Horn of Africa, for which we are grateful. But there are serious concerns with Ethiopia’s U.S.-supported military invasion of Somalia. It has led to some of the same problems associated with the Bush Administration’s misguided decision to invade Iraq without a plan for leaving the country more stable and secure than before the overthrow of Saddam. Iraq’s partition now seems only a matter of time, and it is hard to be optimistic that Somalia a year from now will be any more secure, or any less of a threat to regional stability, than before the influx of Ethiopian troops.

Ethiopia is also a poor country that has faced one natural or man-made disaster after another, and the U.S. has responded with hundreds of millions of dollars in humanitarian and other assistance. We have a long history of supporting Ethiopia and its people, and we want to continue that support. But our support to the government is not unconditional. We will not ignore the unlawful imprisonment of political opponents or the mistreatment of journalists. We will not ignore reports of abuses of civilians by Ethiopian security forces.

I yield the floor.

Posted by halgan at 21:24:28 | Permalink | Comments (1) »