ONLF Rebels Claims Killing Around 20 Soldiers

October 30, 2008

Ethiopian rebel group The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) officer on thursday claimed their fighters had killed some 20 Ethiopian soldiers in the Ogaden region over the past week where the Ethiopian forces are cracking down on insurgents, spokesman said.

Abdullahi Arte also said that the rebels had also burnt 3 armed vehicles in the area of Fiiq.

They had been regrouping in the Lander area of southeast Ogaden.

“Around 20 colonial soldiers have been killed after regrouping in the Lander area,” Arte said.

“Several hundred others, including seven top leaders and were also injured,” he said, in a telephone teleconference for the local media.

Neither the claims by the rebels nor the army have been independently verified.

The army has stopped journalists and aid workers from entering the region, which borders lawless Somalia.

The Ethiopian army launched a crackdown on the region after ONLF rebels attacked a Chinese oil venture in April that left 77 people dead.

The barren Ogaden region, neighbouring lawless Somalia, has long been extremely poor, but the discovery of gas and oil has brought new hopes of wealth as well as new causes of conflict.

It is about the same size as Britain with a population of about four million.

Ethiopia accuses arch-foe Eritrea of supporting Ogaden separatists, which the authorities in Asmara have denied.

Formed in 1984, the ONLF is fighting for the independence of ethnic Somalis in Ogaden, whom they say have been marginalised by Addis Ababa.


Nineteen killed in Ethiopia road accident

October 30, 2008

A former marathon champion was one of 19 people who died in road accident in Ethiopia, police said on Wednesday.

Police spokesman Demsash Hailu said Turbo Tumo — who represented Ethiopia at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics — was among those killed late Monday when the bus they were travelling in hit a wall after its wheels snapped off some 200 kilometers (124 miles) south of Addis Ababa.

“It has been confirmed that Turbo was among the dead in the accident,” Demsash said, adding that more than 30 others were injured.

Turbo won the Netherlands’ Eindhoven Marathon in 1996.

Ethiopia has one of the world highest road fatalities, with 114 deaths per 10,000 vehicles, according to official figures.


Zenawi reshuffles Cabinet

October 30, 2008

Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has reshuffled his 15-member cabinet, including key ministries of Defence, Justice and Agriculture.

Mr Zenawi, who returned on Wednesday from an Inter-Governmental Summit in Nairobi, appointed nine new ministers and presented them to Ethiopian parliament on Thursday.

He has appointed Siraj Fergesa, former Federal Affairs Minister, as the new Defence Minister. The position had remained vacant since June when former Defense Minister Kuma Demeksa became Mayor of Addis Ababa.

Information Minister Berhan Hailu now becomes Justice Minister. No replacement was announced for the ministry. The Public Organization Advisor to the Prime Minister Haile-Maraim Desalegn is the new Government Whip.

Former Minister of State for Health, Dr. Shiferaw Tekle-Mariam,was appointed Federal Affairs Minister while Tefera Deribew becomes Agriculture and Rural Development Minister. He replaces Deputy PM Addisu Legesse.

Deputy Chief of the Amhara State Administration, Demeke Mekonnen, is the new Education Minister, replacing Sintayehu Woldemickael.

The Transport and Communication Minister Junedin Sado has been moved to the Science and Technology Ministry.

Diriba Kuma is the new Transport and Communication Minister and Muferiat Kamil is the Women Affairs Minister.

Addressing the Ethiopian parliament, Mr Zenawi said poor performance was the main reason for the reshuffle.

He expressed hope that the appointees would manage to register a good result by discharging the responsibilities entrusted to them.


Somali Parties Agree on Ethiopian Pullout

October 27, 2008

The interim Somali government and the opposition Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS) agreed on Sunday, October 26, to implement a dormant ceasefire deal, paving the way for the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops.

“Effective 26 October 2008, ceasefire observance has been announced. It will become effective 5 November 2008,” reads the agreement cited by Reuters.

The ceasefire deal was signed in June but never respected.

“…starting 21 November 2008, the Ethiopian troops will relocate from areas of the cities of Beledweyn and Mogadishu,” says the new agreement signed in Djibouti.

“The second phase of the troop withdrawal shall be completed within 120 days.”

The areas vacated by Ethiopian troops will be left initially under the control of African Union troops in Somalia (AMISOM) which has 3,400 troops in Somalia.

It remained unclear when exactly the last Ethiopian troops would leave Somalia territory.

Formed last September, the Asmara-based ARS is an opposition umbrella for groups resisting Ethiopian forces.

Somalia has been ravaged by violence since Ethiopian and interim government troops ousted the Islamic Courts, which restored rare law and order for six months after routing a US-backed alliance of warlords in 2006.

More then 10,000 people have been killed and 1 million displaced in fighting since then.

On Sunday, at least 13 people were killed in southern Somalia in clashes with Somali and Ethiopian forces.

Ethiopia’s military intervention in Somalia was largely seen as having the blessings of Washington, which considers Addis Ababa a key African ally in its war on terror.

Somalis traditionally view Ethiopia, a Christian military giant across the border, as a rival.

Tough Sell

Under Sunday’s ceasefire accord, the interim government and the ARS agreed “to stop waging hostile campaign against each other by using the media both in the country and abroad.”

They also agreed “to call on supporters of the two parties and the Somali population to adhere and support this cessation of armed confrontation for the interest of Somalia.”

But the new deal drew immediate criticism from groups fighting on the ground.

“The agreement reached in Djibouti on Sunday is an illusion to deceive the Somalis,” said Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, leader of a breakaway ARS faction.

“Neither the international community nor Ethiopia itself announced the complete withdrawal of Ethiopian troops.”

The US accuses Aweys of links to Al-Qaeda.

A string of previous peace initiatives and truce deals have failed to stabilize the country, which has been plagued by an uninterrupted civil war since the 1991 overthrow of president Mohamed Siad Barre.

 


Ezega Launches Ethiopia’s Largest News and Information Web Portal

October 23, 2008

 

Ezega Engineering PLC has launched the largest news and information portal with highly interactive and customer-friendly interface to serve the Ethiopian public at home and abroad. The portal includes various sections with distinct feel and look including News, Jobs, Real Estate, Classifieds, Social Networking and Shopping.

 

Ezega.com is highly interactive and comprehensive website that gives users various tools to retrieve and post data. It provides breaking news, latest Ethiopian job openings, real estate for sale or rent, classifieds, shopping place, and tools for entertainment and social networking. The site is divided into six major sections: Ezega News, Ezega Jobs, Ezega Real Estate, Ezega Classifieds, Ezega Community, and Ezega Shopping.

Ezega News provides breaking news of interest to Ethiopians from home and abroad. They post news throughout the day as they arrive. The news section includes categories for Ethiopian news, African news, and international news. It also includes news segments for business, sports, entertainment, politics, commentary, etc.

Ezega Jobs provides the latest vacancies targeted primarily towards Ethiopians. Companies can register free of charge at Ezega.com and create their profile. They can post vacancies at anytime, screen resumes of potential candidates, invite potential candidates to apply for openings, and coordinate their pre- and post-interview activities. Jobs seekers can view latest job openings, save their favorite job openings, create multiple resumes, edit/activate/deactivate their resumes, and apply for jobs online. Their Private Message Board (PMB) allows employers and jobs seekers to communicate online at anytime.

Ezega Real Estate displays the latest homes and properties for sale or rent throughout Ethiopia. The real estate home page is divided into two sections, one displaying the latest 10 properties for sale and the other displaying the latest 10 properties for rent. Anyone can register at Ezega.com and post properties for sale or rent free of charge. Users can browse their real estate database and search for properties using various filter parameters. Using their Private Message Board (PMB), registered users can communicate with property sellers/renters and get more details, arrange for site visits, etc.

Ezega Classifieds allows users to browse classified listings on various topics, including merchandize for sale or rent, service offerings, entertainment, hotel and hospitality services, tenders, etc. Any registered user can post classified ads on Ezega.com. Users can bookmark an ad, forward ads to friends, or respond to ads online which will trigger email message to the person who posted the ad.

Ezega Community is probably the largest module at Ezega.com. It includes various tools for entertainment and social networking. Registered users can blog on various topics. It has Events page where users can advertise their upcoming events. In the Links section, users can post their favorite links. In Galleries, they can post friends and family pictures for public or private viewing. Using Greeting Cards, registered users can send cards to their loved ones. They can use forums and chats to discuss issues and communicate with one another. They can view their large collection of Ethiopian-centric videos anytime, as well as post videos on their site if they have one. Users can search members using various filter parameters such as sex, age, etc., and invite people of interest to them to form friendships, groups, or for dating.

Ezega Shopping displays various merchandises for sale. It has two sections. One lists merchandises that are provided by and shipped from Ezega.com directly, and the second one lists select merchandise from Amazon.com that they believe are of value to their customers.

About Ezega Engineering PLC:
Ezega Engineering PLC is one of the leading software companies in Ethiopia. Formed in 2007, it provides the Ethiopian public and government and private organizations web and custom software services. The head office is located in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and includes 10 information technology specialists and support staff. The company has established alliances with several foreign companies that allow it to subcontract part of its workload and fulfill it.


From Machiavelli to Meles Zenawi the Prince of Addis Ababa

October 20, 2008

 I have been observing your unseemly political career with fascination for the past three decades. Your astute political maneuvers have the hallmark of my half millennium old scriptures. Your capacity to outmaneuver your political peers and hoodwink the unsuspecting public; your rhetorical eloquence and the unsightly perversions of your regime had always captivated my attention. I am very grateful to know that you have been using as a reference manual, The Prince – one of my best writings on preserving and exercising brute power.

For the past three decades, I assigned Prince Enver Hoxa, one of my beloved surrogates, to enlighten and groom you as you keep climbing up the ladder. However, as you are approaching the end of your two decades term in office, I felt the need to become your minder for the way forward. On the eve of your re-election as the chairperson of the EPRDF party for the seventh time in a row, I wanted to provide you some guidance in executing and maintaining your power.

Throughout the annals of world history, greed and self-indulgence had been the cornerstone of political ambitions and policies of self-centered absolute rulers – the high and mighty who keenly adhere to my ideology. Greed is what prompted Prince Blair and Prince Bush to conquer Iraq. Greed is what impelled you to invade Somalia. In politics, greed and autocracy are intertwined and no tough and self-regarding leader can afford to forgo the expedient tools for self-enhancement. That’s why I am so enthralled with your self-absorbing, condescending and patronizing style.

I dealt with ruthless and power-crazed monsters of every epoch. But my fascination with you is indeed unequaled. Remember the Commission for Africa? That was my Idea. I was the one who convinced Prince Blair to invite you to that short-lived Commission and to the influence-wielding Plutocratic Club – the G8. From a firebrand radical guerrilla fighter with no political credence, I leaped you into the limelight. Now you are a flamboyant aristocrat – a member of the glitterati, the well-heeled filthy-rich.

Your track record is somewhat extraordinary. You will go down in history as the first Ethiopian ruler to conquer the warm waters of the Indian Ocean. You have realized dreams that evaded your equally ambitious predecessors; Menelik, Haile Selassie, and Mengistu Haile Mariam. You will also go down in history as a ruler who unraveled the archaic medieval nation into fragmented and ill-governed, ethnic-based satellite regions. Your archenemies are envious of your impressive feat in vanquishing the irredentist Somalis while keeping Eritrea and the internal opposition at bay. Professor Mesfin Wolde Mariam, one of your worst nemesis and author of Somalia: The problem Child of Africa is full of admiration for you these days. Thanks to the eminent professor, the Amnesty International – the renowned human rights watch-dog, is presently on your side, keeping lip-sealed silence on the appalling human rights records of your regime.

I understand that you are preoccupied with and haunted by feelings of guilty of the thousands of innocent persons murdered, incarcerated, maltreated and molested in your notorious torture chambers which are now widely known as “Africa’s Guantanamo”. I am aware that the boomerang of your profound and prolonged mission to silence dissent has had adverse effect on your rickety, paranoid throne. Reports of summary executions, electroshocks, grisly torture and terror in your detention camps and institutionalized brutality against your political opponents may ultimately effect spontaneous universal condemnations. But that is not something to be worried about. Your benefactor Prince Bush who committed similar crimes in Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib is on your side and shall forestall any attempt aimed at putting you on trial for crimes committed against humanity.

To my delight, you have snatched the spotlight from other autocratic rulers, including your political ally – Omer El Bashir, who was found guilty of genocide by the International Criminal Court. Some in the West are already calling you the “world’s worst dictator” an accolade befitting to your narcissistic, egotistical disposition and ruthless temperament. Some in the West are also becoming acquainted for the first time with your primordial machinations, curmudgeon character and deeply ingrained genocidal passion.

High-placed officials of your key Western allies are quietly accusing you of committing war crimes and collective punishment in your “dirty secret war” in the restive Somali region. Your ethnic cleansing, scorched earth programs and shockingly heavy-handed tactics in that beleaguered region had alarmed the international court of public opinion. International aid agencies and key Western donors are accusing you of showing lack of concern in respect of the unfolding famine in the Somali region where your “troops are destroying villages and property, confiscating and forcing civilians to relocate”, according to Human Rights Watch. Your inhumane and brutal collective punishment against your own Somali population has been described by New York Times as “a starve-out-the-population strategy. If something isn’t done on the diplomatic front soon, we’re going to have a government-caused famine on our hands.”

Well, your honeymoon with the West seems over. At this point in time, do not try to play hardball to secure concessions from Washington or London. You have to look to the East for a new saviour – China. You need to backtrack on promises you made to the West in ensuring transparency, human rights observance, freer and fairer democratic practice, decentralization of governance and economic reform.

Unleash your propaganda machine! You need to revamp your political formula for manipulation of quasi-autonomous regional states in Ethiopia which has already served you well for most of your 18 years in office. Your life time acolytes, Addisu Legesse, Abadula Gemeda, Shiferaw Shigute, Abbay Sehai and Bereket Simon are already experts in the fine arts of the EPRDF’s monkey business – the expedient strategies of manipulation, divide and conquest and gerrymandering of regional elections. Remember that the end justifies the means. You have to do everything possible to get “re-elected” for another term of premiership.

Though Ethiopia’s Moslem population accounts to more than half of the population, you have successfully held them at bay throughout your reign. You have done well in making the EPRDF – your ruling party, an exclusive Christian Club. Prince Bush and I are thrilled to see that there are no Moslem names in the central committees of the TPLF and the ruling EPRDF party. As long as you continue treating your Moslem population as second citizens, the West will look the other way. You will not be made accountable to your war crimes and crimes against humanity.

And what is all this ridiculous babble about famine? You have better things to worry about than the dying of the impoverished, poverty-stricken, deprived, disenfranchised, systematically neglected poor peasants and nomads. Ethiopia was already synonymous with famine even before you took the reins. At Arat Kilo you are already far away to notice the lean, emaciated and starving fellow countrymen who are distressed by the sheer weight of the ongoing enormous natural calamities in Ethiopia. Honestly the only thing that I would like to caution you is the handling of the dead bodies. Avoid organizing mass graves for the deceased. Intrusive Satellites with powerful and penetrating lenses are hovering over Ethiopia ever since you started burning villages in the Somali region.


Ethiopia says it captured Kenyan terror suspects in Somalia

October 9, 2008

ADDIS ABABA (AFP) — The Ethiopian government said on Thursday that its own troops had captured eight Kenyan terror suspects who were recently released amid accusations by rights groups of a rendition programme.

“They were all caught in Somalia along with fighters from the (Somali) Islamic Courts. There was no secret transportation,” Information Minister Birhan Hailu told AFP.

Eight Kenyans suspected of ties to Al Qaeda-linked Islamists returned to their homeland last week after being freed from Ethiopian jails where they had been held since their capture during Ethiopia’s 2006 invasion of Somalia.

A recent report by Human Rights Watch alleged that they were detained by Kenya at the border and rendered to the Ethiopians, who later tortured them and offered them up for interrogation to US intelligence agencies.

Ethiopia has flatly denied the watchdog’s allegations.

“All allegations of torture are untrue. It’s part of a smear campaign against a country which has never committed, and never will, such practices,” Birhan said.

“They were treated very well and were released upon request from the Kenyan government following negotiations,” he added.


ETN to provide free service

October 9, 2008

 

 

 

 

Press Release

 

This breaking news is coming to you from Ethiopian Television Network (ETN).

ETN has greatly expanded and diversified its offers to Ethiopians both at home and abroad. And it is on the verge of unveiling its outstanding programs and delivery options. Many have been asking why ETN went off the air during the last several weeks. The reason is what you are about to hear and see soon. But first, ETN apologizes to its faithful customers for the temporary interruption. The good news is that ETN has returned with great offers for everyone.

The first piece of good news is that ETN has now decided to provide its customers with free service. Did you get that? Yes, the service is now free. There is no catch and there is no gimmick here. ETN has quickly come of age and it has joined the ranks of other major television networks which provide free basic service to the general public and rely instead on ads, investments, and specialized offers to particular groups. There will be no charge to access ETN’s programs and you can tune in from anywhere in the world and at any time. In other words, you can tune in 24 hours a day 7 days a week. And this remarkable service truly represents a sea change for all Ethiopians. This service is one of a kind and it is ready to win the hearts and minds of its viewers by providing great programs.

From now on, ETN will provide multiple channels and programs to make it possible for groups and individuals to choose what they like to watch and listen to. For example, there will be channels dedicated to religious programs, entertainment, movies, documentaries and much more. Ethiopian Orthodox churches as well as Ethiopian Evangelical churches will have their own dedicated channels to hear sermons, listen to music, and communicate with their members by way of announcements and special features. Businesses will be able to advertize to a large audience across state and national boundaries and expand their service. Artists, scholars, and community organizations will be able to reach much larger audience than they do now.

Perhaps, the most exciting aspect of ETN’s new service is its commitment to extend its offers to Ethiopia which will usher in a new day. ETN will become a bridge between Ethiopians at home and their brothers and sisters in the Diaspora. Here again, businesses and other organizations will have opportunities to expand their products and services. Ethiopians in the Diaspora can play a crucial role in making this service available in Ethiopia. Details on how this can happen will be communicated in the next few weeks.

Please stay tuned for further information and instruction

 

 

With best regards,

 

www.ouretn.net

Ethiopian Television Network


Ethiopia fired the regional president of Ethiopia’s Somali region

October 8, 2008

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AFP)–The president of Ethiopia’s restive Somali region has been sacked for failing to curb a secessionist insurgency and implement development plans, state-media said Monday.

“The Somali Peoples’ Democratic Party has decided to dismiss President Abdullahi Hassan following consultations in Jijiga (the Somali province capital city),” state-owned Ethiopian Radio said.

The agency didn’t specify the exact date when the decision was taken.

“Regional officials took the measure after a three-month report highlighted a failure in implementing desired development programs, tackling drought and security threats,” it said.

Ethiopia is a federal system and each provincial assembly chooses a leader. The SPDP is allied to Meles Zenawi’s ruling party.

A regional official who asked to remain anonymous said however Abdullahi may have been given the sack for links with corrupt businessmen and for interfering in the trials of suspected insurgents.

The Somali province, which includes the troubled Ogaden region, has been hit by a series of attacks attributed to separatist rebels in recent years.

Abdullahi himself was injured in May 2007 when grenades were hurled into a stadium where some 100,000 people were gathered for a national celebration.

Eight members of the rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front, or ONLF, were subsequently sentenced to death following the assassination attempt. Last year the army launched an offensive against the rebels after they attacked a Chinese- run oil venture and killed 77 people.

Earlier this month, four people were killed and 22 injured by a separate bomb explosion in Jijiga. The attack was attributed to the Islamist rebel group Al- Ittihad Al-Islamiya.


‘Famished’ Canadian held in Ethiopia

October 2, 2008

A Canadian awaiting trial on terrorism-related charges in Ethiopia was described as injured and malnourished in a human rights report released yesterday.

Human Rights Watch said it had interviewed a former detainee who saw former Toronto resident Bashir Makhtal in a prison in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.

“He was limping. He had a deep cut in one of his legs. He looked weak. He looked so famished,” the report quoted the unidentified witness as saying during an interview conducted at a refugee camp.

The report did not directly accuse Ethiopia of mistreating Mr. Makhtal but it did say that detainees like him have been subjected to “brutal beatings and torture.” It also quoted a man who was detained with Mr. Makhtal as saying that Ethiopian interrogators had repeatedly asked, “Are you al-Qaeda” and beaten him when he said no.

He was arrested in December, 2006, as he was crossing from Somalia into Kenya. He was secretly flown to Mogadishu, Somalia, where he was handed over to Ethiopian officials who brought him to Addis Ababa.

At the time, Islamist militants in Somali were fleeing toward Kenya to escape U. S.-backed Ethiopian and Somali troops. The Canadian government has claimed that some of the Islamists fighting in Somalia were actually Canadians.

Mr. Makhtal immigrated to Toronto from Ethiopia and is the grandson of the founder of the Ogaden National Liberation Front, an Ethiopian guerrilla group, but his family says he was only selling used clothing in Somalia.

The New York-based human rights group yesterday released a report, titled “Why Am I Still Here?” that named Mr. Makhtal as one of 10 who were sent to Ethiopia as part of a rendition program and who remain in detention there.

The report said several of the men were interrogated by American officials in the Ethiopian capital soon after they were transferred there from Kenya and Somalia. Others remain unaccounted for, it said.

Mr. Makhtal was placed in solitary confinement, the report said. He could face the death penalty if convicted at his upcoming military trial.

Canadian officials visited Mr. Makhtal in July, 2008. Ethiopia has assured Canada he will have a lawyer at his trial.

The report called on the Canadian government to ask Ethiopia either to prosecute Mr. Makhtal in a civilian court that meets international standards or release him and return him to Canada. The Department of Foreign Affairs had no comment yesterday.