Monday, November 19, 2007
Ethiopia: Dying regime with curious supporters (Biddho)
FEATURE-Ethiopia's Ogaden refugees recount horrors of conflict (Reuter)
"The Ethiopians say that all the Ogaden people are part and parcel of the ONLF, they don't differentiate, so they kill everyone," he said, displaying a scar on his hand that he described as a bullet-wound.
"I heard the grandparents got three of my children. I don't know about the others," added Abdi, revealing at the end of an interview that he had been a "member of the ONLF resistance."....more
Ethiopia 'bombs' Ogaden villages (BBC)
Friday, November 16, 2007
European parliament calls for war crimes probe in Somalia (AFP)
The UN secretary general's special envoy to Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, said Tuesday that war crimes suspects in the shattered African nation should be prosecuted at the International Criminal Court to end impunity.
In April, a European Union envoy to Kenya, Eric van der Linden, asked Brussels to investigate whether Ethiopian and Somali forces had committed war crimes in their recent crackdown on Islamist and clan insurgents in Mogadishu...more
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Ethiopian opposition to brief media today in DC before heading home (Ethiomedia)
Monday, November 12, 2007
Who is in power? On the horns of a dilemma (Ethiomedia)
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Big Marathon Payday Becomes More Than a Dream (Newyork Times)
Gete Wami remembered the first time she earned prize money for running.
“I went to Italy and won $500,” said Wami, a 33-year-old from Ethiopia. “I took the money and built a two-room adobe back home.”
Robert Cheruiyot remembered the poverty of his youth, when he was limited to one meal a day at age 4 and had no shoes until he was 10 or 11.
“I got my first prize money when I went to Brazil, and they gave me $5,000,” said Cheruiyot, 29, from Kenya. “I went home and gave it to my mother.
“Getting this check here, I wasn’t expecting in my life to get this.”..Full txet
Students Protest Beyonce's Ethiopia Trip (Washington Post)
Tuesday, November 6, 2007; 12:03 PM
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia -- Students at Ethiopia's top religious college are protesting the close ties between the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the government, alleged restrictions on their speech _ and Beyonce's recent meeting with their patriarch...full text
Ethiopia, Eritrea on Verge Of Border War, Report Says (Washinton Post)
VOA reports on the killing of Ethiopians in Kenya (Ethiopian review)
10 Ethiopian students killed, 4 journalists attacked in Kenya(Ethiomedia)
Sunday, November 4, 2007
Clan elder accuses Ethiopia soldiers of killing 3 civilians (Garoweonline)
Mohamed Hassan Haad, leader of an anti-Ethiopia Hawiye elders' council, said the dead bodies of the three civilians were found today near Stadium Mogadishu, a major base for Ethiopian forces.
One of the dead victims was an old man who worked as a security guard for the independent HornAfrik radio...full history
Ethiopia rebels say killed 270 more troops (Reuter)
Saturday, November 3, 2007
Coming of Age in America: Ethiopia in the Diaspora (The Ethiopian American)
Scattered by the Winds of Oppression
Perhaps with the exception of those Ethiopians who arrived in the U.S. in the early 1970s, most who came to the U.S. over the past three decades partly did so for political reasons. Whether it is the militarized terror of the Derg or the wanton violence of the current regime, politics remains a principal cause of Ethiopian refugees throughout the world. For obvious reasons, the U.S. remains a preferred destination for the majority of Ethiopian refugees, as it was the preferred educational venue for the earlier arrivals....Ful Text
Eritrea accuses Ethiopia of invasion plans again(Reyter
Friday, November 2, 2007
Thursday, November 1, 2007
A brittle Western ally in the Horn of Africa (The Economist)
The reasons for this economic crawl are not hard to find. Beyond the government-directed state, funded substantially by foreign aid, there is—almost uniquely in Africa—virtually no private-sector business at all. The IMF estimates that in 2005-06 the share of private investment in the country was just 11%, nearly unchanged since Mr Zenawi took over in the early 1990s. That is partly a reflection of the fact that, despite some privatisation since the centralised Marxist days of the Derg, large areas of the economy remain government monopolies, closed off to private business.
...This is where Ethiopia misses out badly. Take telecoms. While the rest of Africa has been virtually transformed in just a few years by a revolution in mobile telephony, Ethiopia stumbles along with its inept and useless government-run services. Everywhere else, a plethora of South African, home-grown and European providers has leapt into the market to provide Africans with an extraordinary array of cheaper and more efficient services, now used even by the poorest of farmers, for instance, to check spot prices for agricultural goods in markets miles away. And the mobile-phone revolution has created thousands of new livelihoods; at times it seems as if every boy on a street corner is hawking a top-up card. Not in Ethiopia.
...The Ethiopian government's efforts at political control are supported by a wide network of informers and secret police. Critics say it is exploiting the jihadist terror threat to link many legitimate opposition campaigners and supporters with terrorist groups and take them off the streets. The threats from Eritrea, where a new border war could erupt at any time, and the Islamists in Somalia are real. But at this rate, argues Mr Demeksa, “the ethnic groups are on a collision course.”...Click here to read more