Saturday 20 October 2007

Worldwide campaign to stamp out "Sidamo" misnomer


Starting from this week, the worldwide campaign to stamp out the degrading name "Sidamo" is underway.

The campaign targets those who use the degrading term without knowing its background. Among them are coffee importers worldwide, development campaigners such as OXFAM and FAIRTRADE, and all those who are linked to coffee trade.

Some coffee shops are seen displaying the wrong names. The following, in Washington DC, is one such example. The following is the letter to the owners of the shop.

Sidama Times

=================================

Dear the owners of the "Sidamo" Cafe
Washington, USA

Thank you very for your great work in promoting the market for Sidama Speciality Coffee which has also been known by "Sidamo" coffee. The term "Sidamo" province was used to refer to a region in South Ethiopia which included Sidama, Wolayita, Gedeo, Burji, Guji and Borena Oromos. That region was reduced to "Sidamo" adminstrative region by the socialist government by removing Wolayita from it in ealry 1980s. In 1993 EPRDF dissolved the "Sidamo" adminstrative region and created SNNPR. There were no people who were called Sidamo then or now. Since 1993 the term "Sidamo" ceased to exist as a legal term as did "Wolamo" and "Galla" long time ago. But knowginly or unknowingly people continued to use this term both in Ethiopia and globally up to now.

Thus, the Sidama people at home and in Diaspora have begun a massive campaign to correct the continued use of the derogatory misnomer "Sidamo" and replace it with the rightful name Sidama world wide. Please visit www.sidamaconcern.com or read the article attached herewith for your information about the history of the Sidama people and how the misnomer "Sidamo" originated. The article was written to the Oxfam offices world wide.

We thank you in advance for your understanding.

Sidama not "Sidamo" Coffee campaign team.

Saturday 13 October 2007

Qinjit's shaleqa Yoseph bribes non-existent "leader"

Sources close to the only member and "leader" of SLF say that Qinjit's shaleqa Yoseph transferred $1500 (100,000 Kenyan Shilling) to the retarded "leader" of SLF.

The bribe took place on the occasion of the AFD formation in 2006. While they met in Holland, the transfer took place a few days later when the Shaleqa was back in the U.S. and the retarded back to Kenya.

The Qinjit money is collected from the unsuspecting diaspora.

Stay tuned for more.

Kefyalehu Yunka passed away

We received sad news that Kefyalehu Yunka, one of Sidama's best artists passed away. He died on the habasha millennium day. He along other artists were taken to Addis Ababa to sing on the occasion of the millennium celebration.

The circumstances of his death are not yet clear. Some called it political assassination, others attribute his death to natural causes. Either way, Sidama lost a beloved human being.

He, with the famous Sidama artist, Adugna Dumo, produced several songs in 2005/06. Some of his great, cultural, patriotic and inspirational songs are:
Anni'ya doyeena horreemmo
Di aguranno side, sharrammanno
Aleeni Hawasa woroonni Abaya ha'ri dayinno kaayya
Qoqqowu xa'moya higgo xanni

Kefyalew will be missed by millions but his great work will remain.

Link to some of these songs: http://www.sidamaconcern.com/sidama_music.htm

Sunday 7 October 2007

Fichchee

Dear fellow Sidamas

Do not you feel sky high proud being of citizen of Sidama Nation, which is one of may be 4 or 5 nations in universe who have their own calender of year, months, weeks days, hours.

This year Fichchee will be celebrated on the coming Monday (the day after tomorrow) night and Canbalaalla will be celebrated for weeks starting Tuesday morning.

So, Dear Sidamas

1/ Each of us be abroad or in Sidama land, have ancestral obligation to celebrate Fichchee on Monday night.
2/ On this day night, every of us should celebrate in gathering with our relatives, friends,etc where ever we are.
3/ Every of us should pass this information to every Sidama in the universe.Each of us not less than 10.
4/ On that day let us invite others and make them know about Sidama.
5/ Every Sidama should make effort in publicizing about Sidama culture, history, struggle social values etc. at any means of public media at his disposal.
6/ On that and for the next 7 days, let us say hello to each other, to our relatives friends, abroad and inside.

Once again Happy Fichchee , Happy Sidama New Year

Haru sidaamu diri baxxilena mitima abbonke.
Rabisa

Thursday 4 October 2007

Ethiopia capitalises on its coffee names

Ethiopia capitalises on its coffee names
Tia Goldenberg | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
22 September 2007 09:26

In one of Addis Ababa's bustling and noisy coffee shops, where cups are clinking and the bubbling sound of a cappuccino machine undertones conversations, Ethiopians, who claim they live in the birthplace of java, while away a weekend morning.

Bamlak Getachew sits at an outdoor table at Kaldi's Coffee, sipping an espresso with a friend. "Coffee is very important to me. I love it. I can drink it any time, but I must drink one in the morning," she said, cradling the small green mug in her hands.

And now, Ethiopia is showing its citizens there is more to coffee than just its robust, mild or medium taste.

A precedent-setting deal with coffee giant Starbucks this year was the most renowned Addis Ababa has had in a push to promote the names of its coffee-growing regions worldwide.

Hopes are high that this strategy will increase the coffee's value and hopefully bring a much-needed increase in income to its poor farmers, and eventually shake up the developing economy.

"Our goal is for farmers to sleep on a mattress instead of on the floor. It's for them to be able to have at least one meal a day; for them to be able to send their children to school," said Getachew Mengistie, head of the Ethiopian Intellectual Property Organisation (EIPO), a government body.

In June, Ethiopia signed a deal with Starbucks that would see the Seattle-based company refrain from trademarking the names Harar, Sidamo and Yirgacheffe -- its coffee's brand names but also the names of three of the Horn of Africa country's coffee-growing regions.

It came after months of wrangling, with the government arguing the names were key to increasing revenue from its largest foreign-exchange earner.

"We see intellectual property as a tool for development," said Getachew, who helped draft the country's intellectual property legislation in the mid-1990s.

Ethiopia, best known for its devastating famine that killed nearly one million people, is one of the poorest countries in the world, with more than half its population living on less than $1 a day.

Farmers' cooperatives
About 85% of Ethiopians are farmers who only in the past decade grouped together in cooperative unions to get a fair share of profit for their product.

This season, 1kg of coffee from the southern Sidamo region (also called Sidama) sold for $1,65, with Starbucks selling a bag of the same amount for more than $10.

The farmers make about $550 a year and such a deal, proponents say, could significantly increase their standard of living.

But much work remains to be done. The EIPO attempted to raise awareness among farmers and continues to hold workshops to show them that a good brand must be matched by good quality.

Sidama Coffee Farmers' Cooperative Union meets its 87 000 farmers regularly to show them the best methods to produce excellent coffee. "The name will not help us unless we keep the quality. We have a lot to do in this area," said Tsegaye Anebo, head of the union.

The government must also step in, Getachew said, taking quality assessments and urging small traders to sell only the best coffee abroad. "We need to make our coffee known. But the initiative has just started and it's a process," he said.

Meanwhile, he added, ordinary Ethiopians must be shown that the country's reputation for good coffee is important for them and must be exploited. "People should be convinced that by asserting our IP [intellectual property] right over intangible values, like by promoting coffee, they would benefit. That is the target," he said.

And Ethiopians at Kaldi's, whose logo bears a striking resemblance to Starbucks's green-and-white circle, are beginning to think they might. "In a way this can help those is urban areas. If Ethiopia can earn more money, we might have better roads and infrastructure," said Adugna Dissassa, reading a newspaper at the coffee shop.

Aid agency Oxfam, which worked with Ethiopia to garner public support for the push against Starbucks, said this deal and others like it have the potential to empower farmers, so they know they deserve a better standard of living.

"IP and branding are tools that corporations around the world use to add value," said Seth Petchers, who heads Oxfam's coffee programme. "Now a developing country is seeking to use those same tools that have benefited corporations to benefit farmers."

Ethiopia has signed similar licensing agreements with 24 coffee companies in the United States and Europe and the goal is to get about 150 companies worldwide to do the same to make sure the names of its regions are recognised to the extent where farmers and unions can set their own price.

"The Sidamo name belongs to the people of Sidama," said Tsegaye, with piles of coffee bags sitting atop his file cabinet. "No one can take something which is not his property. And we proved that." -- Sapa-dpa

Tuesday 2 October 2007

Reaction of Woyane ambassador to HR2003 passage

The Embassy of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia in Washington, DC, released this statement by Samuel Assefa, Ethiopia's Ambassador to the United States: The U.S. House of Representatives today approved irresponsible legislation that, if it becomes law, would create fresh obstacles to Ethiopia's bold efforts towards comprehensive democratic reforms. The legislation also would undermine regional stability in the Horn of Africa by jeopardizing vital security cooperation between the United States and Ethiopia. The action disregards Ethiopia's immense progress in creating a competitive, pluralistic system of government and a more open civil society. According to the U.S. State Department, "[t]he [2005] elections stand out as a milestone in creating a new, more competitive multiparty political system in one of Africa's largest and most important countries.

Nor was the impetus towards democratic reform impeded following the post-election riots that tragically cost the lives of so many civilians and police officers. After intense discussions between the majority and opposition parties, the Ethiopian Parliament took legislative measures to address contentious issues such as revision of parliamentary rules of procedure and reform of the National Election Board.

In her testimony before the House Africa and Global Health Subcommittee, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazier said these "steps are unprecedented in Ethiopia and represent monumental advancement in the political environment."

While many of these democratic gains seem to have gone unnoticed by Members of Congress, the very presence of two recently convicted and pardoned senior opposition leaders who testified at the Congressional hearing today bears witness to the Ethiopian Government's brave resolve to reinvigorate the democratic process. It is jarring, to say the least, that immediately in the wake of these pardons the U.S. House of Representatives approved punitive measures against Ethiopia.

There is no mistaking that this action does not serve the interests of the United States or Ethiopia. By taking this step, the House sadly has allowed itself to be used by extremists in Ethiopian politics who reject peaceful and legal avenues of political participation. The House action serves only to bolster these hard-line elements by encouraging the politics of extremes.

The legislation is equally destructive to regional security in the Horn of Africa. Dr. J. Peter Pham, invited by the Africa subcommittee to testify at today's Congressional hearing as an expert witness, said "The most significant national interest at stake for the United States in this complex context is to prevent al Qaeda ... from acquiring a new base and opening a new front in its war against us and allies."

Mr. Payne and his allies seek nothing less than a realignment of U.S. interests in Africa. Mr. Payne made this clear in a recent press release in which he accused Ethiopia -- against all evidence and common sense -- of being "a source of instability in the region."

The fact is that the entire region faces a serious threat from Eritrea -- a country that the U.S. Department of State is considering listing as a state sponsor of terrorism, and that has rejected the core institutions of legal opposition parties and a private press, officially banning both, and also outlawed worship by minority religious denominations.

A recent United Nations report concluded that Eritrea has armed terrorists in Somalia with weapons including suicide belts and anti-aircraft missiles. Yet, rather than move against the country that denies all rights and religious freedom to its citizens, and foments instability, Mr.Payne is leading the Congress to condemn Ethiopia.

One of Mr. Payne's key advisors, an Africa specialist for the Congressional Research Service, recently told the New York Times, "If there is one country where the fighting of extremists and terrorists was a priority when it mattered, it was Eritrea."

This view is nonsense, and this legislation simply is not consistent with the responsible, reflective action of a legislature weighing U.S.interests around the world. Instead this is legislation favored by regional and domestic political activists who have chosen to use the U.S.

Congress in support of a partisan Ethiopian political agenda. It is baffling that the House would allow itself to be used in this way.

Ethiopia thanks the current U.S. administration for its continued support and carefully considered opposition to this legislation. It also welcomes the support of thoughtful Members of the House and Senate who understand the reality of the Horn of Africa and recognize Ethiopia's steadfast commitment to democracy in one of the most dangerous regions in the world.




Fawsia Abdulkadir - Testimony Statements to United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs

Fowsia Abdulkadir

Chair, Ogaden Human Rights Committee Canada



House Committee on Foreign Affairs

Subcommittee on African and Global Health



“Ethiopia and the State of Democracy: Effects on Human Rights and Humanitarian Conditions in the Ogaden and Somalia”

Tuesday October 2, 2007

Chairman Payne, ranking member Smith and the distinguished members of this committee – Thank you for holding this very important hearing that puts a spotlight on Ethiopia and the documented human rights abuses in the Ogaden and elsewhere in Ethiopia. Mr. Chairman I am honored to be given the opportunity to come and speak today on a subject that I hold dear, the plight of the people of Ogaden, also known as the Somali region in Ethiopia.

Mr. Chairman, at this time I would like to ask that my full testimony be submitted into the record, consisting of the paper I am reading and the 2007 annual report of Ogaden Human Rights Committee, released on August 8th, 2007.

I represent a human rights advocacy organization. The Ogaden Human Rights Committee, (OHRC) is an independent, voluntary, non-profit community-based human rights advocacy organization. OHRC was founded on June 13th, 1995, in Godey, Ogaden, to monitor and promote the observance of internationally accepted human rights standards in the Ogaden. The OHRC researches, documents and reports human rights violations in the Ogaden.

The Ogaden Human Rights Committee has branches across the globe. As a volunteer and an independent researcher, I chair the Board of Directors of OHRC Canada.

Background

The Ogaden also known as the Somali Region of Ethiopia is located in the south-eastern part of Ethiopia; bordering the Afar region and the Republic of Djibouti in the North, the Oromia region in the south and west; and Somalia in the east, it is 250,000 SQK area.

The Ogaden is a place many of us hold dear. Partly because it is a place where Somalis have been historically marginalized by successive Ethiopian regimes; and it is laced with history of refugees and internally displaced persons; but most importantly it is a place dear to our hearts because it’s our homeland. My parents fled from the Ogaden in the early 50s, and became refugees in Somalia, where I was born. My mother died in 1988 in Mogadishu not fulfilling her life long dream of going back home to Werdher, Ogaden in her lifetime.

Like my mother, too many Ogadenis have died in exile as refugees, and in their memory I would like to share with you a quote from David Turton’s article titled “the Meaning of place in a World of Movement: lessons from long-term Field Research in Southern Ethiopia.

He states: “...to understand how a sense of place becomes bound up with a person’s social and individual identity, we must treat place, not as stage for social activity but as a ‘product’ of it. Such an understanding of the link between people and place helps us to appreciate that displacement is not just about the loss of place but also about the struggle to make a place in the world, where meaningful action and shared understanding is possible” (Turton 2005: 258)[1]

The dislocation and displacement of the people of Ogaden

Today, because of state sponsored violence, and a century long protracted ethnic-based conflict, the people of Ogaden are internally displaced and are forced to flee from their homes. It is important to note, unfortunately, this has happened too many times. Just like what is happening right now, massive displacement of civilian population, there were a number of crisis in this region, which resulted in massive displacement of people and mass exodus from the Ogaden. I have compiled in my research several such historical dates when the people of this region where internally and externally displaced over the years; here are two examples:

· The 1977 Somali – Ethiopian war reeked havoc in this region.

After this war, there was a mass exodus from this region into neighboring countries in the Horn of Africa. And there were thousands of people who ended up in refugee camps in Somalia. For instance, there were no less than ten refugee camps in Northern Somalia, and five refugee camps in Central Somalia.

· In 1991 when the Somali state totally collapsed, and the Somali civil war erupted, these refugees were once again forced to repatriate into the Ogaden[2].

Through all these upheavals, women from this region were giving birth to children and raising them under such uncertainties, enduring the challenges that come with life as refugees. Although I was not born there, I grew up with the stories of these refugees who like my mother, their dreams of one day returning to their homeland overwhelmed the imagination.

The current state of Ethiopia under the current regime

Currently the present regime has engaged in what can be described as a war on the civilian population and as the case is always women and children are bearing the brunt of the pain. As you know Mr. Chairman, when the current regime came into power it promised a new beginning for all the people of Ethiopia including the people of Ogaden. A new constitution was written, chapter three of which enshrines the fundamental human rights principle. The new Ethiopian constitution is notably comprehensive and its human rights provisions are clearly stated. But so far, they remain only on paper[3].

Unfortunately, and to the disappointment of Ethiopian citizens and the international community the current regime failed to respect human rights it vowed to protect. Local and international human rights organization (such as Ogaden Human Rights Committee, Oromo Support Group and Sidama Concern, as well as Amnesty International and Human Right Watch) widely report on the violations of basic constitutional rights.

In the Ogaden recently, American journalists were harassed and jailed for some days. It is important to note that, according to the Washington Post (April 13, 1998), during the three-year period, from 1995 to1998, this current Ethiopian regime has arrested and detained more journalists than any other government on the continent of Africa[4]. The people of the Somali region and many other regions of Ethiopia have witnessed and suffered under this violent and aggressive state machinery.

Human rights abuses by Ethiopian armed forces in the Ogaden

Under successive regimes, the entire Ethiopian population suffered, my testimony today focuses on the Ogaden, The people of Ogaden have been subjected to harassment, unlawful detentions, rape and torture.

“Human rights violations reports are body counts, torture practices, an endless list of horrors; the violations seem beyond comprehension, mad men acting without reason. And the reports seem to be written by someone with stomach of a physician and the mind of a statistician” (David Matas, 1994:3)[5].

David Mata argues that human rights violations do not occur in an ideological vacuum, to the contrary, in many instances these acts are manifestations of an ideology[6].

Mr. Chairman, in researching human rights violations in the Ogaden, we have documented the rape of innocent young girls, the hijacking of privately owned vehicles, publicly shooting innocent people to instill fear in the communities, looting people’s properties and general dehumanizing acts by the Ethiopian military. Human rights violations are defined as “torture, disappearances, killings, detentions and unfair trails”’ these acts occur continuously in the Ogaden in a blatant manner. This regime deals with the people of Ogaden with impunity in some instance going so far as to leave the murdered innocent civilians out in the public square. The local community is then instructed that no one can burry the dead, and so carcass is left to rot in full public view.



There are countless instances where it seems, that rape is being used as a weapon. In 2003, the Ethiopian troops’ commander, in Qabridaharre, told a gathering in the township, “Any women suspected of harboring or being a relative of an ONLF member would be raped and then killed” (OHRC Report, 2007:29.

Women from the Ogaden (the Somali region) have recounted horror stories of rape:

· Rape in detention centers.

· Rape in their homes while their children watch.

· They have been raped in their villages and were put under house arrest to prevent them from sharing their stories.

According to the OHRC 2007 report, on March 27th, 2007, Fathi Moalim Khalif, who is a former rape victim, was detained with other four civilians, in Dhagahabur. Prior to this arrest, members of the Ethiopian armed forces have gang raped her in January 2007. Fathi is pregnant as a result of that rape. Speaking to OHRC’s researchers her younger brother said: “They think they can hide their heinous crime by putting her behind bars. Everyone knows what happened to her. No jail or detention camp can cover their crime. We will never forget what they have done to her”. (OHRC, 2007:29)

Mr. Chairman, and distinguished committee members, you might be aware, almost the entire Ogaden population is Muslim; and as such they raise their daughters in a very traditional environments. It is with tremendous sadness that I report to you these women are not only living with the socio-cultural stigma that comes with rape in such traditional communities; but they are also contracting HIV/AIDS and other STDs at an alarming rate. This is one of the rare communities that HIV/AIDS has not been detected until recently.

In addition to these women getting STDs, they oftentimes get pregnant and bear children because of these rapes. It is important to imagine the magnitude of the suffering these women endure.

Since the current Ethiopian government came to power, a large number of women have been detained, tortured, raped, and some have disappeared or been killed. Women are the most vulnerable groups to suffer abuse and violence in the Ogaden, simply because they are the relatives of, or suspected sympathizers with the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF).

It is important to note that the above mention actions are in direct violation of the international convention on the protection of women.

Article 1 of the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women (DEVW) states that: “for the purposes of this Declaration, the term “violence against women” means any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in physical, sexual or psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life”.

Similarities to the Darfur situation

Mr. Chairman, the Somali region in Ethiopia is heavily militarized zone, and it has not known a stable and peaceful period. It is a military outpost and the people of this region have suffered immensely. In the spirit of time, I would encourage the distinguished members of this committee to please consult the Ogaden Human Rights Committee report of 2007; more reports can be found in www.ogadenrights.org

Mr. Chairman, It is no secret that Somalis in Ethiopia have been historically marginalized by successive Ethiopian regimes. I would argue they have been particularly persecuted by this current regime.

Mr. Chairman, many have compared what is happening in Ogaden to Darfur, We all know what has happened in Darfur amounted to genocide. I would submit to you that, the actions of the Zenawi regime placed upon the Ogaden, could be defined as genocide. And to that end, it is morally imperative that action be taken to mend broken lives.

Furthermore, my presentation would be incomplete if I did not mention the one big difference between Ogaden and Darfur. And that is, the government is doing the very acts of terrorizing the communities.

The currently accepted definition of genocide is the one contained in the 1984 United Nations Convention on Genocide:

“In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national ethnical, or religious groups, as such: 1) Killing members of the group; 2) Causing serious bodily harm to members of the group; 3) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; 4) Imposing measures intended to prevent birth within the group; 5) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group”.

Actions by the Ethiopian military such as these listed below are to genocide.

· On July 22nd, 2007, in Qoriile, Ethiopian armed forces came in with a list of names, and then arrested a number of civilians. They transferred them to their barracks, where they were subjected to extensive torture. On July 24th, 2007, the Ethiopian armed forces killed the detainees in their custody, in Babaase. Most of the victims were hanged from acacia trees and then shot to ascertain their death. Ridwan Hassan Rage survived, and told about this massacre.

· Mr. Chairman, in November 20th, 2005, Ethiopian forces razed to the ground the village of Fooljeex, which is located 44 Km east of Qabridaharre. Before torching the residences, they looted personal properties and burned all the things they could not carry with them including the village’s barns, which contained more than 6000 Quintals of sorghum and maize. Pastoral development and Relief Association’s educational project in the area has also been damaged. (OHRC report 2007:18)

· Earlier in 2005, Ethiopian armed forces committed mass killings in Qabridaharre, Farmadow, Shilaabo, Madax-Maroodi, Karin-Bilicle and Gurdumi. (OHRC report 2007:18)

Mr. Chairman, I would submit to you that these acts fit very well within Article I and II of the current UN definition of genocide.

Mr. Chairman, it was clearly stated in the US State Department’s Human Rights report on Ethiopia that there is the existence of:

1. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life

2. Disappearance

3. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment

4. Arbitrary Arrest or Detention

5. Police detained journalists during the year

6. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence

7. Denial of Fair Public Trial

Mr. Chairman, the current regime has recently released some prisoner, however in the Ogaden the jails in major cities, such as Jigjiga, Dhagahbur, Qabridahare, Godey and Fiiq, are full of victims of unlawful arrests. And the resulting overcrowding in these un-kept below human standard prisons is further causing a health risk.

Mr. Chairman, the Ogden community as a whole is experiencing the brutality of the Addis regime. Collective punishment is the order of the day in the Ogaden. The communities of Dhagahbur; Qabridahare, Godey and Fiiq have been subjected to:

· Severe physical and emotional torture, constant danger of rape that looms over all women to include girls as young as early teens

· Random indiscriminate open air shooting, and killing.

· Open-ended intimidation of Community and Business leaders

· The current military blockage, as documented in the UN report, of villages, towns and cities is making Manmade disaster exponentially worse

Ethiopia and the State of Democracy

Mr. Chairman, on August 3, 2007 - Senator Leahy made a passionate statement on the floor of the US Senate. After sighting election fraud, illegal imprisoning of civilians, documented Human rights abuses, the government’s role of inciting violence, he finished in part

“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.”

Ladies and Gentlemen, there isn’t anything complex about what the people of Ogaden want.

The people of Ogaden want what is due to them under the current Ethiopian constitution. The Ethiopian constitution explicitly states that human rights, civil and political rights, economic and cultural rights and the essential tenants of living with basic human dignity must be honored.

Mr. Chairman, the current regime failed miserably to adhere to its own constitution. And when questioned about its actions, this regime gets into defensive obfuscations to conceal the unpleasant realities on the ground. To that end, we are encouraged by the recent UN fact-finding mission into Ogaden. We look forward to the day when the Ogaden is open to international aid agencies and can begin to repair and rebuild where the current regime has destroyed and depleted.

Mr. Chairman the people of Ogaden are hopeful of the day they can participate in fair and democratic elections, enjoy freedom of the press, and access to development and investments from the outside world.

Mr. Chairman, being minority is not a reason to be killed and tortured, being Somali is not a reason to be raped and beaten; and certainly being a Muslim is not a crime punishable with indignity.

Mr. Chairman, Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the world, the Somali region, even by Ethiopian standards, is the poorest and least developed region of the country. As it is stated in the UN report that came out last week, the people of Ogaden urgently need the basics to live decently.

While we, the Ogaden community, in the Diaspora, applaud this very important hearing, we want you to know that this is only the beginning. We are going to hold you accountable as well. You have now taken on the task of researching what is happening on the ground, therefore, you have no choice but to take action.

Ladies and Gentlemen, I applaud you for your leadership but I implore you to live up to the standards of Human Dignity that your constituents here at home live by.

The Ethiopian regime needs to be challenged by the United States to demand that the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Doctors without Borders and other aid groups be allowed to help the people and Ogaden. And that their efforts and access to this region be unrestricted.

Concluding remarks.

Mr. Chairman, having highlighted the difficulties the people of Ogaden are dealing with, I would like to point out that it is not only the Somali region that has suffered under the brutalities of the current regime of Ethiopia. The people of Oromia region, Gambella region, Amhara region and Sidama region have also been subjected to human rights abuses. We need to ask ourselves; where do we go from here?

Mr. Chairman, Ethiopia and the Ethiopian masses need the international community and particularly the United States to intervene, and put pressure on the current regime to allow substantive democratic processes to be put in place.

Setting the context for democracy and the process of democratization in Ethiopia is very important. Furthermore, Mr. Chairman, it is important to underline the facts about democracy as a universal principle of governance, it is a moral imperative, a social process, and particular kind of political system, which can apply to all societies including Ethiopia[7]. I would submit to you that internal weak leadership and narrow-minded dictatorship have derailed democratic process in Ethiopia.

Mr. Chairman, Ethiopia is a country with great ethnic, linguistic diversity as well as religious diversity. Ethiopians need to be very careful not fall into the trap of narrowly defined nation-building ideologies; which many African countries pursued at the dawn of independence to their determent. These ideologies are summarized in Womb’s formula, as cited by Shivji, “One people, one nation, one political party and one supreme leader” (Shivji, 2000:30)[8].

Mr. Chairman, the United States and the international community can facilitate a dialogue among the different Ethnic groups in Ethiopian; a dialogue I hope would lead to conflict resolution processes and substantive gender equity; and help the Ethiopian masses to heal after the abuses of successive regimes

I thank you for giving me this opportunity to speak regarding this life and death issue and I thank you on behalf of the many whose lives you your action will touch. I look forward to your questions and I hope I can shed additional light on this issue.

Monday 1 October 2007

Meles due to meet opposition in Washington this week

Indian Ocean Newsletter N° 1222 25/09/2007

The American government has invited Ethiopian opponents to Washington for talks with opposition leaders recently freed from prison. The latter group, led by Ms Birtukan Mideksa (ION 1222), came to the USA on its own steam two weeks ago. All were received at the State Department on 21 September by American officials working on the Africa and Ethiopia desks.

This meeting gathered Beyene Petros, Merera Gudina, the former President Negaso Gidada, Ayele Chemiso (an MP from the legal arm of the CUDP), Lidetu Ayalew, Berhanu Nega, Birtukan Mideksa and Hailu Araya.

Their discussions with the American officials concerned how the Ethiopian opposition could adopt a joint political platform so that it could take part in the next elections in Ethiopia with the approval of the Addis Ababa government.

They also discussed a strategy to sideline the hard wing of the opposition, consisting of Hailu Shawel and the EPRP, which wants nothing to do with the current EPRDF regime in Ethiopia. The talks are expected to continue with further meetings with the presence of Bulcha Demeksa, currently passing through Washington.

The American Deputy Secretary of State for African Affairs, Jendayi Frazer is expected to meet these Ethiopian opponents this week. This American mediation is consistent with the strategy devised by the US Ambassador to Addis Ababa Donald Yamamoto, intending to isolate Amhara radicals such as Hailu Shawel and the anti-EPRDF forces like the EPRP.

Congress Should Condition Military Aid to Ethiopia on Human Rights


Congress Should Condition Military Aid to Ethiopia on Human Rights

This week, a vote is expected in the House on H.R. 2003, the "Ethiopia Democracy and Accountability Act," introduced by Rep. Donald Payne. If you think that the U.S. shouldn't be green-lighting human rights abuses in Ethiopia, why not drop your Representative a line.

Supporters of democracy in Ethiopia have faced repression from the ruling party since 2005. Residents of the eastern Ogaden region are now at serious risk of starvation because the government has withheld food and other humanitarian aid, the New York Times reports.

Unfortunately, the Bush Administration has accepted these abuses, and continues to provide military aid unconditionally to the Ethiopian government, because - they claim - the Ethiopian government is promoting U.S. interests in the region. The U.S.-backed Ethiopian invasion of Somalia last December, which was condemned by human rights organizations, is cited as an example of how the Ethiopian government is a useful ally, despite the fact that the Ethiopian invasion and occupation have greatly increased the violence and suffering in Somalia.

This week we have a chance to change U.S. policy. The House of Representatives is scheduled to vote as early as tomorrow on H.R. 2003, which would make military aid to Ethiopia conditional on democratic and human rights reforms.

Our government's support for abuses by the Ethiopian government has not received prominent media attention. But advocates for democracy and human rights in Ethiopia have been lobbying Congress. Now we have a chance to change course from a destructive policy in Africa based on the "global war on terror" towards a policy based on democracy and human rights.

Act now.

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