Friday, September 30, 2011
Ethiopian media gagged by anti-terror laws (The Bureau of investigation journal)
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
A tightening noose (The Economist)
Friday, September 16, 2011
The compass fails (The Economist)
Monday, September 5, 2011
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Unity of purpose (EMF)
Friday, August 5, 2011
Sunday, July 24, 2011
In Addis Ababa poverty pushes girls to the streets (Daily Nation)
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Voice of America: Do Not Censor the Voiceless! (Addis Voice)
The record will show that I have been an unapologetic defender of the Voice of America. A couple of weeks ago, I defended the VOA as the Voice of the Voiceless. When Zenawi lambasted the VOA for being the flipside of the VOI (Voice of Interhamwe-Rwanda), I rose to its defense. When Zenawi jammed the broadcasts of the VOA to Ethiopia in 2010, I defended the right of the VOA to broadcast to Ethiopians and the right of Ethiopians to receive VOA broadcasts. I am the #1 fan of the VOA. Read more...
Friday, July 22, 2011
Ethiopia: Oromo opposition officials detained by Zenawi Govt (Jimma Times)
VOA and Ethiopia: Challenges and Danger By Eskinder Nega (Abugidainfo)
They chased me out, and now are chasing my idea (Abugidainfo)
Monday, July 11, 2011
Ethiopia: Apocalypse Now or in 40 Years?(IndepthAfrica)
Will There Be Ethiopia in 2050?
Whether Ethiopia survives as a viable nation in 2050 free of war, disease, pestilence and famine will not depend on an imaginary 15 percent economic growth or a ludicrous 99.6 percent election victory. It will depend on what is done to deal with the little big 3 percent problem. In other words, overpopulation poses the single most critical problem and decisve issue in Ethiopia today and the years to come...read more..
Walk of horror: Hungry Somalis endure death in weeks-long walk to find food at camps (Lethbridge)
The U.N. expects at least 10 million people will need food aid, and a U.S. aid official said Monday he believes the situation in Ethiopia is even worse than the government acknowledges.
The Ethiopian government announced Monday that 4.5 million people need food aid there, 40 per cent more than last year. Jason Frasier, mission director of USAID in Ethiopia, the U.S. government aid arm, suggested that Ethiopia might even be under-counting those who need help.... read more
Sunday, July 10, 2011
[Video] New African State of South Sudan born (Jimma Times)
Thursday, July 7, 2011
VOA censored itself after fallout with Ethiopian gov’t (Addis Voice)
-Horn of Africa chief suspended over critical comments
By Abebe Gellaw
The Voice of America (VOA) has been accused of censoring itself and suspending its Horn of Africa Chief, David Arnold, over fallout with the Ethiopian government. The suspension of Mr. Arnold was directly related to his comments in a news report that was broadcast on VOA Amharic service on June 23rd, informed sources told Addis Voice...read more..
Monday, June 27, 2011
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Saturday, June 25, 2011
የአሜሪካ ድምጽ የስርጭቱን ይዞታ እስኪያሻሽል የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት ትብብር አላደርግም አለ (VOA)
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Monday, June 13, 2011
Ghana : George Ayittey’s War on African Dictatorships (Africa Indepth)
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Published : Saturday, 11 Jun 2011, 7:01 AM CDT
LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) - U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Saturday warned Africa of a creeping "new colonialism" from foreign investors and governments interested only in extracting the continent's natural resources to enrich themselves and not the African people. ..Read more..
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Ethiopia May Charge More Oromo Rebels, After Fighters Sentenced Over Plot (Bloomberg)
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Land Grab: are Indian investors misled or collaborators in crime against Ethiopians(ECAD)F
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
The Unconquered Nation, Crippled By Bureaucrats (Tech Crunch)
Sunday, May 29, 2011
Protesters Absent as Ethiopia Marks Anniversary of Meles Rule (VOA)
Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s nationally televised anniversary address lasted little more than five minutes. It was largely a patriotic appeal for support of construction of a massive dam that is challenging Egypt’s long-standing monopoly over the Nile River waters...read more..
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Inspired by the Arab Spring, Ethiopians gear up for ‘day of rage’ (Al Arabiya)
Friday, May 27, 2011
Ethiopians Celebrate 20 Years of Meles Zenawi Rule(VOA)
Thursday, May 26, 2011
"Beka!" ("enough"). Will Ethiopia be next?( Opend Democracy)
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Ethiopian Activists Opposed to Meles Claim Power-Cable Sabotage Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2011/05/23/bloomberg1376-

Jailed journalist: 'I will never hesitate from criticizing'(CNN)
Monday, May 23, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
ESAT interview dr Getachew Begashaw may 2011
Monday, May 16, 2011
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
An Imaginary Conversation with Nelson Mandela – Alemayehu G. Mariam (ANAASO)
Q. Do you believe an election is a contract between Africa’s iron-fisted rulers and the people?
A. “Only free men can negotiate, prisoners can’t enter in contracts.” .. read moreMonday, May 9, 2011
Friday, May 6, 2011
Ethiopia censors UNESCO World Press Freedom Day event (CPJ)
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
The Mega Nile Dam and the Millennium Bond: Redemption or Deception of the TPLF Government? (Ethiomedia)
Many Ethiopians are wondering why Zenawi’s regime decided to embark on this huge project that could have serious impact on peace, stability, and development of the country and the region. The general sentiment is captured in a paragraph of an article by an anonymous writer that appeared on Ethiomedia, May April 26, 2001:
Undoubtedly, given the topography of the Blue Nile valley, constructing a hydroelectric dam on it requires a high-level engineering technology not to speak of the billions of Birr it requires. Has Meles acquired donor funding for it? We know he hasn’t and in the deputy prime minister’s own admission they have not secured any funding; and it is highly unlikely that donors will ever fund it because of political reasons that can trigger the wrath of Egypt thereby affecting the Middle East peace process. Why choosing this risky business at this time? No funding, political risks: why risk it now? Is it really possible to build a dam of such scale without donors’ grants or loans from them but with contributions from the most impoverished people in the world and by selling bonds to them? We can discern from this that the purpose of the millennium project rhetoric is not development as it is neither serious nor feasible. By now, we can see the dominant feature of the political aspect in this project. It is indeed a political project aimed at deceiving the public and diverting their attention from a possible uprising....more..
TPLF and the art of reverse engineering (Zikkir)
When you take an object apart to see how it works, or take software and disassemble it to locate the source code it is referred to as reverse engineering. Basically what you are doing is inverting the system by going back wards the developmental cycle all the way to conception. Reverse engineering begins with a final product and works backwards...read more..
Journalists: Ethiopia Hijacked Press Freedom Day Conference (VOA)
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
The 10 Tools of Online Oppressors (CJP)
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Uganda unrest gathers pace despite bloody government crackdown (Guardian.co.uk)
Monday, April 25, 2011
ANALYSIS : Ethiopia’s usefulness eclipses its repressiveness (The New age)
Compared to Egypt and Tunisia, Ethiopia has a much smaller, less educated middle class, with less access to the internet. Internet connection in Ethiopia is 0.5% compared to 21.2% in Egypt. Somalia, which has not had a stable government for more than 20 years, has a higher internet connection rate than Ethiopia.....read more.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Ethiopia Declines to Respond to US Rights Charges (VOA)
The 56-page report documents restrictions on academic and press freedoms, including intimidation and detention of journalists, jamming foreign broadcasts, blocking internet websites, and prohibiting political activity on college campuses. ...more..
Click here to read USA State Department Human right report.
Click here to read Freedom House 2010 rep0rt on Ethiopia.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Friday, April 15, 2011
ANALYSIS : Ethiopia’s usefulness eclipses its repressiveness (The New Age)
Ethiopia : Open letter to Ambassador Girma Birru ( Nazret)
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Ethioipan Oppositon protest against Woyane in USA & Canada (Updated)
Click here to watch video
Click here to listen audio VOA
Click here to watch video
Click here to listen audio Germany
Click here to watch video
Click here to watch Video
Click here to watch video
Click here to watch video
Click here to watch video
Click here to watch video
Click to watch Video
Click here to watch video
Click here to watch video
Click here to listen audio Addis Dimts
Click here to watch video
Friday, February 18, 2011
The Poverty of Dictatorship (Project syndicate)
Monday, February 14, 2011
Group plans to beam free Internet across the globe from space (Raw Story)
Saturday, February 12, 2011
How to bring down Meles Zenawi (Addis Voice)
By Abebe Gellaw
TPLF is a house of cards. It is fundamentally weak as it is founded on the ideologies of oppression, injustice, exploitation, domination, discrimination, corruption, thievery and fraud driven by a greedy colonialist mindset. The only reason why it is still riding roughshod over our people is because those who have stepped forward to be leaders of the freedom march have been preoccupied with their own infighting.
The time for self-promotion, empty promises and bravados must come to an end. Leaders as well as followers must focus on the real issues that really matter to ordinary Ethiopians. People who have resolved to change their destiny no longer need undemocratic leaders that preach about democracy and freedom. It is impossible to bring liberation without a clear vision. To be free of tyranny and oppression is a simple and powerful vision that can mobilize anyone suffering under the boots of Meles Zenawi and his cronies. Read more...
Monday, February 7, 2011
A Declaration in Defense of Human Rights in Ethiopia (Huffington Post)
RSS Feeds RSS Feed Ethiopia Says 2.8 Million People Need Emergency Food Aid (VOA)
What about farting to protest? (Afrik)
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
America's Other Most Embarrassing Allies (FP)
Hosni Mubarak has plenty of company.
BY JOSHUA E. KEATING | JANUARY 31, 2011
ETHIOPIA
Leader: Meles Zenawi
Record: The 2010 election, in which Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's party won a remarkable 99.6 percent of the vote, was the culmination of what Human Rights Watch called "the government's five-year strategy of systematically closing down space for political dissent and independent criticism." This included attacks and arrests of prominent opposition figures, the shutting down of newspapers and assaults on journalists critical of the government, and doling out international food aid as an incentive to get poor Ethiopians to join the ruling party.
In addition to attacks on domestic media and NGOs, the government also jammed broadcasts by Voice of America and Deutsche Welle in the run-up to the elections. The U.S. NGO Freedom House downgraded Ethiopia to "Not Free" for the first time in its annual Freedom in the World survey this year.more....
Friday, January 28, 2011
Aid Should Not Sustain Repression in Ethiopia (Indepthnews)
Monday, January 24, 2011
Human rights group says democracies ignore abuses, opt for dialogue (Macleans)
"A dictator will weigh this cost-benefit analysis and decide that repression pays. The aim of the international community is to make repression not pay," he said.
The group also complained about what it called the West's "soft reaction to certain favoured African autocrats, such as Paul Kagame of Rwanda and Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia." ..read more..
Monday, November 22, 2010
Ethiopia: Talking Trash, Speaking Truth(Huffington Post_
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Why Are We Supporting Repression in Ethiopia? (NYR)
Monday, November 15, 2010
Is humanitarian aid bad for Africa? ( The Globe and Mail)
Mr. Meles has an explanation for all this. As he told Mr. Gill, Ethiopia will have to stay undemocratic until the important work of development is done. ..read more...
Ethiopia's Zenawi and the Willing Stooges ...(Nazret)
So, Mr. Zenawi, the choice is yours. Either reverse the disastrous trend, or keep deceiving yourself. As we learned from the bleak history of so many tyrants, including Mengistu, your predecessor, time is not on your side!...read the whole article...
Monday, October 11, 2010
Ethiopia: Birtukan Unbound! (Huffington Post)
There are also other prisoners who are in dire need of help. These inmates inhabit a prison of their own making. They are the prisoners of hate "locked behind the bars of prejudice and narrow-mindedness", as Mandela would describe them. They live in a prison of the closed mind dwelling in a body with a stone cold heart. Our sister Birtukan has been to hell and back; but her tormentors still live there; or in the verse of Mark Spencer:
So here sits the prisoner,Shackled in his cell.Wrestling with the demons,Of his private hell.
In the right season and at the right time, I have no doubts that Birtukan and her generation will free those shackled in the cells of their private hell because they know all too well the wages of hate. Birtukan and her generation will rise up and declare in the words of Martin Luther King: "We can no longer afford to worship the god of hate or bow before the altar of retaliation. The oceans of history are made turbulent by the ever-rising tides of hate. And history is cluttered with the wreckage of nations and individuals that pursued this self-defeating path of hate." It is now the right time and right season to rededicate ourselves to Birtukan's "future country of Ethiopia." No more bitterness, no more hatred, no more cruelty and no more inhumanity. Read more..
Friday, October 8, 2010
Ethiopian Opposition Leader's Release: For Show? (Time)
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Mr. Zenawi Goes to College! (Huffington Post)
Since Prof. Stiglitz is interested in having a "conversation", here are a few topics he should ask Zenawi to talk about. How is it that Ethiopia, under his "seasoned" leadership, managed to rank:
138/159 (most corrupt) countries on the Corruption Index for 2010.
17 among the most failed states (Somalia is No. 1) on the Failed States Index for 2010.136/179 countries (most repressive) on the 2010 Index of Economic Freedom.
107/183 economies for ease of doing business (investment climate) by The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development in 2010.
37/53 (poorest governance quality) African countries in the 2010 Ibrahim Index of African Governance.
101/128 countries in 2010 on the Bertelsmann Political and Economic Transformation Index, and
141/153 (poorest environmental public health and ecosystem vitality) countries in the 2010 Environmental Performance Index....read more..
Monday, September 20, 2010
Columbia’s invitation to Zenawi sparks outrage (Columbia Spectator)
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Cry the Beloved Country: Ethiopians Criticize Columbia for Hosting Meles (AID WATCH)
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Open Letter to President Lee C. Bollinger, Columbia University (The Huffington Post)
Oromsis' Open Letter to Columbia University (Oromsis)
EPRDF Conference: Reshuffling or Repositioning? (Oronsis)
Monday, August 23, 2010
Can democracy thrive in Africa? (CNN)
He said a wave of "new African leaders" including Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia became the "darlings" of Western democracy in the 1990s.
They promised a fundamental change in African politics towards Western-style democracy and found favor with President Clinton's administration in the U.S.
"President Museveni came to power in 1986 saying African leaders stayed in power too long and wrote into Uganda's constitution that presidents should only serve two terms," said Cargill.
"However, in 2005 he changed the constitution to allow him to serve a third term and will probably stay for a fourth term in 2011."..read more..
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Switching Viewpoints: Africa Is Not a Victim of Nature; It Is a Victor of Nature. (Huffington Post)
Fears for South Africa's Press Freedom (IPS)
Identity politics and the struggle for liberty and democracy in Ethiopia1(Advocacy for Ethiopia)
The Ethiopian Flag: Stop putting political symbols on it (Brown Condor)
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Clinton says steel vise crushing global activists (Yahoo)
KRAKOW, Poland – Intolerant governments across the globe are "slowly crushing" activist and advocacy groups that play an essential role in the development of democracy, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Saturday.
She cited a broad range of countries where "the walls are closing in" on civic organizations such as unions, religious groups, rights advocates and other nongovernmental organizations that press for social change and shine a light on governments' shortcomings.
Among those she named were Zimbabwe, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, Venezuela, China and Russia.
"Some of the countries engaging in these behaviors still claim to be democracies," Clinton said at an international conference on the promotion of democracy and human rights. "Democracies don't fear their own people. They recognize that citizens must be free to come together, to advocate and agitate."..read more..
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Ethiopia: Speaking Truth to the Truth-Seekers (Hffington Post)
....The Greek philosopher Diogenes used to walk the streets of ancient Athens carrying a lamp in broad daylight. When amused bystanders asked him about his apparently strange behavior, he would tell them that he was looking for an honest man. Like Diogenes, one may be tempted to walk the hallowed grounds of Western academia, search the cloistered spaces of the arts and scientific professions worldwide and even traverse the untamed frontiers of cyberspace with torchlight in hand looking for Ethiopian intellectuals.
Intellectuals -- a term I use rather loosely and inclusively here to describe the disparate group of Ethiopian academics, writers, artists, lawyers, journalists, physicians, philosophers, social and political thinkers and others -- often become facilitators of change by analyzing and proposing solution to complex problems and issues facing their societies. Their stock-in-trade are questions, endless questions about what is possible and how the impossible could be made possible. There are engaged and disengaged intellectuals. Those engaged are always asking questions about their societies, pointing out failures and improving on successes, suggesting solutions, examining institutions, enlightening the public, criticizing outdated and ineffective ideas and proposing new ones while articulating a vision of the future with clarity of thought. They are always on the cutting edge of social change....Read more...
Why Democracy Isn’t Working (Newsweek)
But backsliders have them outnumbered, a shift that hasn’t gone unnoticed in the West. Political freedoms declined in 10 countries on the continent in 2009, while they improved in just four, according to an annual report by Washington, D.C.–based Freedom House, which dropped three African countries from its list of “electoral democracies” last year. “Repression can take many forms, and too many nations, even those that have elections, are plagued by problems that condemn their people to poverty,” President Obama told Ghana’s Parliament last year. His top diplomat for Africa, Johnnie Carson, took office last year listing the continent’s democratization as his top priority.Read more ...
Monday, June 14, 2010
Speaking Truth to Strangers (Huffington Post)
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Donor darling: What Ethiopian poll can teach Africa (BBC)
Press freedom has also been under attack. Journalists have fled the country since 2005 and if you try sending an e-mail from Ethiopia to the Committee to Protect Journalists, it miraculously bounces back.
Filming on the streets of Addis Ababa, it was hard to find people prepared to say on camera that they supported the opposition - many suggested that would be asking for trouble. Read more...Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Ethiopia: Medrek Rejects Election Results (AllAfrica)
Spotlight on the Struggle of Birtukan Mideksa: Ethiopian Human Rights Activist in the Global Women's Movement (Huffington Post)
Ethiopian Opposition Coalition Calls for New Vote (VOA)
Monday, May 31, 2010
‘Of Elections and Diapers in Ethiopia ‘ (Awramba Times)
Friday, May 28, 2010
Nineteen more, Prime Minister Meles (Foreign Intrigue Blog)
,...Clearly, our real allies are the brave Ethiopian men and women fighting the rot of years of Meles' unchecked reign. Aid them. Sadly, power has gotten to the point of absolutely corrupting Meles' 19-year rule. Read full story..
Thursday, May 27, 2010
ከምርጫው በስተጀርባ - አንዳንድ ነጥቦች (ተስፋዬ ገብረአብ){Cyber Ethiopia})
ግንቦት 25፣ 2002 በፕሮፌሰር ይስሃቅ ኤፍሬምና በአትሌት ሃይሌ ገብረስላሴ የሚመራው የሽማግሌዎች ኮሚቴ መለስ ዜናዊን አጊኝቶ አነጋግሮት ነበር። ሽምግልናው ተቃዋሚዎችንና የመለስን ቡድን ማቀራረብ የሚል ነው። ኮሜቴው በራሱ ተነሳሽነት ተንቀሳቀሰ ወይስ በመለስ የእጅ አዙር ግፊት አይታወቅም። መለስ ዜናዊ ግን ለሽማግሌዎቹ ኮሚቴ የሚከተለውን ቃል ሰጥቶአል።
1. ተቃዋሚዎች ‘ምርጫው ተጭበርብሮአል’ ብለው ወደ ፍርድ ቤት ለመሄድ የሚያስቡትን በመተው፣ የኢህአዴግን ማሸነፍ በይፋ እንዲቀበሉ።
2. ይህን ከፈፀሙ አንዳንድ የሚንስትርነትና የአምባሳደርነት ቦታዎችን ሊያገኙ እንደሚችሉ።
3. ይህን ድርድር ከተቀበሉ ብርቱካን ሚደቅሳም ከእስር እንደምትለቀቅ።
ፖለቲካ ቁማር ነው። የሽማግሌው ቡድን ከተቃዋሚዎች ጋር የሚያደርገው ውይይትና ድርድር ወዴት እንደሚያመራ በቅርቡ የምንሰማው ይሆናል። መለስ ከሽማግሌዎቹ ጋር ባደረገው ቆይታ፣
“መረራን አጥብቃችሁ ምከሩት!” ሲል ለይቶና አፅንኦት ሰጥቶ መናገሩን ሰምቼያለሁ።Read more...
Ethiopian parties reject poll results (Daily Nation)
Ethiopian Opposition Leader Faces Fierce Ruling Party Challenge (VOA)
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Premier’s Party Sweeps Ethiopian Vote (The Newyork Times)
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Published: May 25, 2010
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — Ethiopia appeared to solidify its return to a one-party state on Tuesday, as the country’s election board released provisional results showing Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s governing party winning nearly every seat in Sunday’s parliamentary elections....more...Thursday, May 20, 2010
Repression Is Alleged Before Vote in Ethiopia (The newyork Times)
Elections are looming in each of these countries, and though such contests are supposed to be the embodiment of democracy, they often presage harsh crackdowns. Human rights groups say strongman governments across the continent continue to use a variety of tools — arresting journalists, driving out human rights monitors and jailing opponents — to eliminate any serious political threat...read more..
Five more years (The Economist)
Monday, April 5, 2010
Ethiopia: "C'est la Vie? C'est la Vie en Prison!"(Huffington Post)
Security Forces Clamp Down in Gambella as Shootings, intimidation, rumors of large-scale arrests and more troops Threaten Region (SMNE)
The Anuak and other Gambellans were first pressured to hold a public rally in protest of the VOA program’s statements—saying that the defense troops had nothing to do the massacre; however, the people refused. Now, the TPLF government has produced a petition that essentially blames the Anuak for the December 13-15, 2003 Anuak massacre, in an incredible example of the illogical leaps this government must use in an attempt to cover up the vast evidence of their own complicity.
The governor is threatening to take action if the people refuse to sign it. Because of such threats, some 200, especially women, young students, are signing it. Allegedly the goal is to obtain 2,500 signatures, which it looks like they will not accomplish in Gambella town alone so they have gone to the rural areas and have brought 350 people from all the Woredas to the town to sign and intend to keep the pressure up until they have all the signatures. If the young Anuak students do not cooperate, they may find themselves out of school, or worse yet; in jail. However, some are standing up with courage. A particularly noteworthy example came not from an Anuak, but from a Nuer man.
It may be remembered that the massacre was first called an ethnic conflict between the Nuer and the Anuak; mostly blaming the Nuer when in fact there is a conflict between them in the past, they never killed each other in this way. They usually resorted to solving their problems through their elders. The truth is, there were numerous examples where Nuer actually protected the Anuak in their homes.....more....