Thursday, November 30, 2006

Islamic fighters ambush Ethiopian convoy and kill 20

11/30/2006

The Islamic fighters targeted the convoy with a remote-controlled bomb, blowing up one of the vehicles, 35 kilometers (20 miles) south west of Baidoa, the government's headquarters.

Islamic fighters ambushed an Ethiopian convoy close to a camp where the Ethiopians are training troops loyal to the weak transitional government, witnesses said Thursday.

The Islamic fighters targeted the convoy with a remote-controlled bomb, blowing up one of the vehicles, 35 kilometers (20 miles) south west of Baidoa, the government's headquarters. Islamic militia told The Associated Press around 20 Ethiopians were killed during the attack. The claim could not be independently verified. A Somali government official denied the attack took place.

Tensions are high in this Horn of Africa nation where the Islamic movement and the Ethiopian-backed transitional government are vying for control. Analysts fear a war could engulf the region.

Late Wednesday the U.N. Security Council condemned the "significant increase" in the flow of weapons to and through Somalia in violation of a 1992 arms embargo. The top U.S. diplomat for Africa, Jendayi Frazer, warned the same day that al-Qaida militants are operating with "great comfort" in Somalia, providing training and assistance to a radical military element loyal to the Islamic group.

The United States is consulting council members on another resolution that would lift the arms embargo for a regional force to help promote dialogue between the transitional government and the Islamic group that has expanded its control across much of southern Somalia.

However the Islamic movement is fiercely opposed to foreign intervention. Meanwhile in Ethiopia the country's parliament authorized military action if attacked by the Islamic movement who have declared holy war on the country over its troop incursions.

Parliament backing

Prime Minister Meles Zenawi told lawmakers the country had already suffered attacks on Ethiopian soil by insurgent groups working closely with bitter rival Eritrea and Islamic forces in Somalia.

The move came a week after Meles asked parliament for its backing. The full scope of the authorization and Ethiopia's interpretation of what constitutes an attack were not immediately clear. The latest attack on Ethiopian forces occurred late Tuesday as a convoy of six vehicles crossed the border into Somalia, heading for Baidoa, the only town the interim government controls.

"The Ethiopian convoys were targeted with a remote controlled bomb, then one of their vehicles exploded," local resident Abdullahi Gaafaa told the AP by telephone. He said both sides then opened fire on each other before the Islamic group melted away into the surrounding areas.

Ethiopian officials were not immediately available for comment. There have been heightened tensions in Somalia and fears that an all-out war could engulf the region. Ethiopia backs the transitional government, whose authority has been severely challenged by an Islamic movement that has taken over the capital and much of southern Somalia since June.

On Tuesday a top Islamic leader accused Ethiopia of shelling a town in central Somalia. On Nov. 19, witnesses said Islamic fighters ambushed an Ethiopian military convoy, killing six Ethiopian soldiers and wounding 20 others.

A confidential U.N. report obtained last month by the AP said 6,000-8,000 Ethiopian troops are in or near Somalia's border with Ethiopia, backing the interim government. Ethiopia says it just has a few hundred military trainers in the country. The report also said 2,000 troops from Eritrea are inside Somalia supporting the Islamic movement.

Somalia has not had an effective government since 1991, when warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on one another. The interim government was formed with the help of the United Nations two years ago, but exerts little control.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Kenya: Country Opposes Military Intervention in Somalia

Aweys Osman Yusuf
Mogadishu

Kenyan foreign minister Raphael Taju revealed yesterday that his country will never agree that foreign countries to bring their military troops in Somalia.

The minister invited Somalis in Kenya to a banquet in Nairobi where they have discussed over Kenya's stance in Somalia, as Taju stated that he does not believe military intervention is the solution for the political discord between the Union of Islamic Courts and the transitional government.

Somalis who have convened with the minister were combined of businesspeople and traditional elders.

"The Kenyan government is always looking for a peaceful solution for Somalia. Kenya does not believe that military intervention in Somalia will produce good results", he said.

A committee of 12 persons was appointed in the meeting to assess the developments in neighboring Somalia, where fears of war are running high.

Taju has told Somalis he met that Kenyan government would not take for granted what view they present to the government over the worsening situation in their country.

Mohammed Guled, the chairperson of the Somali businesspeople in Eastlight nationhood within Nairobi told Shabelle by telephone that the meeting has ended in happiness.

US plans Somalia peace force



Story by REUTERS
Publication Date: 11/29/2006

UNITED NATIONS, Tuesday

The United States expects to unveil this week a draft Security Council resolution authorising African peacekeepers to help prop up Somalia’s shaky interim government, UN diplomats said yesterday.

The resolution would approve deployment in Somalia of a joint peacekeeping force put together by the African Union and the regional Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (Igad), as the two groups have requested.

The text, being prepared in consultation with Britain, would also ease a UN arms embargo to enable both the peacekeepers and interim government security forces to legally obtain weapons, said the diplomats, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the resolution was not yet in final form.

But even before its debut in the 15-nation council, the measure has kicked off a lively debate over whether it would help stabilize Somalia, as Washington and London hope, or trigger wider fighting, as European Union experts and a major international think-tank have suggested.

"We are still in consultation on the situation and at this point I’d rather not comment publicly. But we are very actively making progress, and I would hope within a couple of days we might have something that we are prepared to say publicly," US Ambassador John Bolton said when asked about the draft.

The Brussels-based International Crisis Group, in a report released yesterday, warned the text could backfire on its supporters by undermining the transitional government, strengthening rival Islamists and leading to wider war.

A regional intervention force should be deployed only if it is supported by all warring factions, the group cautioned, encouraging the Security Council to instead press both the interim government and Islamists to agree to a cease-fire and the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Somalia.

The United States has accused the Islamists, which have been expanding their reach after seizing the Somali capital of Mogadishu in June, of harbouring Al Qaeda operatives.

Washington has also warned that Kenya and Ethiopia could be targets of extremist elements from Somalia.

Ethiopia says it has sent a few hundred military trainers into Somalia to guard against a possible Islamist attack. But a recent UN-commissioned report says it has deployed thousands of troops in Somalia.

Somalia’s Islamists to invite international Islamists in the country

Aweys Osman Yusuf
Mogadishu 28, Nov.06 ( Sh.M.Network)
– A huge rally organized by Somalia’s Union of Islamic Courts has taken place in Mogadishu, the Somali capital, where several hundreds of people have assembled to demonstrate against Ethiopian military intervention.


The demonstration has taken place at “21 October Square” known as Tarebunka where rally makers were chanting anti-Ethiopian and American slogans.

Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed, the Islamic Courts executive council leader and Sheik Yusuf Mohammed Siyad Indho-Adde, the Courts’ senior security officer, were the senior Islamists who delivered speeches at the rally, telling the rally makers that time of war with Ethiopia has come.


Speaking at the rally, Sheik Yusuf Indho-Adde reiterated that Union of Islamic Courts would invite foreign Islamists to Somalia, if they have to, to fight with Ethiopian troops in the country.
“If a war begins, we will ask international Islamists (Jihadists) to come to our country to take part in jihad (holy war) with the enemy once the arms embargo on Somalia is lifted”, he said.


The Islamic Courts head for education department, Fuad Mohammed Khalf, who also spoke at the rally, said schools and universities would be closed down if a war between the Ethiopia and Islamists started. “Hospitals, media and business places will only be allowed to open”, he said, adding that students are required to participate in the jihad.

Fears of war have escalated after the Ethiopian government revealed it had completed preparation for war with Somalia’s Islamists by deploying larger numbers of fresh Ethiopian troops in the country.

Islamists have massed their fighters near the Ethiopian border where both troops are facing off.

Somalia’s Islamists seized most central and southern of the country, including the capital Mogadishu where they defeated warlords after fatal battles in which nearly thousand people lost their lives.

Islamists have accused the United States government of intending to approve a lift of the arms embargo on Somalia, alleging that if the sanction were lifted, a war, which will be regional, would start in Somalia.


Shabelle Media Network Somalia
E-mail us: info@shabelle.net

Ogaden rebels to resist Ethiopian army if it attacks Somali-statement

Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)

ONLF Statement On Events Unfolding In Somalia

Nov 28, 2006 — There has been much written about the events unfolding in Somalia with frequent mention of the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) and speculations on our position with regards to the events unfolding in Somalia. Hence, we would like to take this opportunity to clarify to the international community and members of the media our principled position on the Somali civil war and Ethiopia’s involvement in that country’s internal affairs.

First, the ONLF categorically denies assertions by the TPLF led regime in Ethiopia and members of the media that ONLF military personnel are in Somalia. As a matter of principle the ONLF has never been and does not intend to be a party to the conflict in Somalia. We wish to affirm that the scope of our military operations is and will continue to be limited to Ogaden and Ethiopia. We further wish to make clear that the Ogaden cause in not a territorial dispute between Somalia and Ethiopia but rather a legitimate struggle for the self-determination of the Somali people of Ogaden

Secondly, the ONLF strongly cautions the international community against permitting an Ethiopian invasion of Somalia as that would have dire consequences for the entire region. An Ethiopian invasion of Somalia will trigger a catastrophic regional war with massive loss of life and continued instability in the Horn of Africa for years to come.

Thirdly, the ONLF wishes to affirm that we will not allow our territory to be used as a launching pad for an Ethiopian invasion of Somalia without stiff resistance from our armed forces.

Fourthly, the ONLF bears witness to the fact that the TPLF led regime is in continuous breach of the arms embargo placed on Somalia and has been since the inception of the embargo. The current Ethiopian regime has clearly been the primary obstacle to the peaceful settlement of the Somali conflict for over a decade by actively interfering in the internal affairs of Somalia by arming various factions, training their militias and undermining through diplomatic maneuvers nearly all attempts at a peaceful settlement between conflicting parties.

In This time of increasing tensions in the Horn of Africa, the ONLF wishes to confirm that the people of Ogaden stand in strong solidarity with the people of Somalia to reclaim their sovereignty and achieve a lasting peace free of foreign influence and manipulation.

Despite the Ethiopian regimes policy of deliberately undermining peace in Somalia, the ONLF urges all parties in Somalia to solve their differences through dialogue and recognize that they are at the threshold of a crucial decision that will usher in a period of sovereignty or foreign domination for Somalia depending on the choices they make.

The ONLF will continue to support and encourage every legitimate effort to provide all necessary assistance to the Somali people so that they can fully grasp their political future into their own hands and move toward a peaceful, prosperous and democratic future built by Somalis and for Somalis.

Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

UN Independent Expert on Minority Issues Commences Visit to Ethiopia

Below is a press release issues by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights:

Ms. Gay McDougall, the United Nations Independent Expert on minority issues, will undertake a country visit to Ethiopia from 28 November until 12 December 2006 to consult on issues related to her mandate. The mandate of the Independent Expert was established in 2005 to promote implementation of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities.

The Independent Expert will consider a wide range of minority issues while in Ethiopia. Ms. McDougall will visit Addis Ababa, and will also undertake visits to regions including Oromia, Gambella and Benishangul Gumuz, to gather first-hand information from a range of sources. She will hold meetings including with representatives of the Government, non-governmental organizations and community members, and United Nations officials. The visit offers an opportunity to consider policy and practice relating to minority communities, and consult on issues including measures to alleviate poverty and achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) for members of minority communities.

Ms. McDougall welcomed the opportunity to travel to Ethiopia, the first visit of the mandate to an African State. Following her visit, the Independent Expert will present a report containing her findings and recommendations to the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Ms. McDougall, the first Independent Expert on minority issues, was appointed by the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms. Louise Arbour, in July 2005. A former member of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) and the Sub-Commission on Human Rights, Ms. McDougall was Executive Director of the NGO Global Rights until April 2006. She is currently Scholar in Residence at the American University, Washington.

For further information regarding the visit of the Independent Expert on minority issues, please contact the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. For more information about the role and function of the UN Independent Expert, please also visit the homepage:

http://www.ohchr.org/english/issues/minorities/expert/index.htm

Source

Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

Islamists claim clash with Ethiopian troops


By Mustafa Haji Abdinur

Mogadishu - Islamist officials warned against United Nations authorisation of a peacekeeping force for Somalia, saying they would invite Islamic fighters from around the world to join in the fight against it.

Islamist officials said the two sides began to exchange fire around 9am (03H00 GMT) when Ethiopian troops fired 12 missiles into the Islamist-held town of Bandiradley, about 630km north of Mogadishu.

"We exchanged heavy fire this morning," said Mohamed Mohamoud Jumale, the Islamist spokesman in central Somali region of Mudug, where Bandiradley is located. "We didn't suffer any causalities,
but I think they did.

"It was sporadic, but I think the game has begun and the worst fighting will take place in the coming hours," he said.
In Mogadishu, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, leader of the executive wing of the Supreme Islamic Council of Somalia (SICS), told an anti-Ethiopia, anti-US rally that Ethiopian forces were
trying to surround Bandiradley.

"Ethiopian soldiers have massed around Bandiradley and started firing missiles toward our positions," he told a crowd of at least 10 000 people, urging prosecution of a holy war against Ethiopia.

"Their tanks are trying to surround the area and now they are about 10 km away from the town where our fighters are based," Ahmed said, vowing that Islamist fighters would resist Ethiopia to the death.

"We will never accept surrender to Meles, we are devoted to our religion and will fight until we die," he said. "That is our promise."

He referred to Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi who has declared the Islamists a "clear and present" danger to his country and said Ethiopia is prepared for war to defend itself and the weak
Somali government.

There was no immediate reaction from Addis Ababa to the claims of clashes, which could not be independently confirmed.

But tension in the Bandiradley area has been mounting since the Islamists took the town from Somali government-allied local militia earlier this month, bringing them to their northernmost point since seizing Mogadishu in June.

The move took them to within 100km of the semi-autonomous enclave of Puntland, where authorities have vowed to resist the Islamist advance toward the region's main town of
Galkayo.

Puntland has strong ties with Ethiopia and when Bandiradley fell to the Islamists on November 12, residents of Galkayo reported large movements of Puntland troops accompanied by Ethiopian military convoys.

Mainly Christian Ethiopia, with a large and potentially restive Muslim minority, is wary of the rise on its border of the Islamists, some of who are accused of links with al-Qaeda.

Reports of the artillery battles come as fears for a full-scale war between the Islamists and the Ethiopian-backed government have skyrocketed with many concerned it could engulf the wider Horn of
Africa region.

Diplomats and security analysts believe the conflict could suck in Ethiopia's arch-foe Eritrea, which denies UN experts' claims it
is backing the Islamists, as well as other nations allegedly arming the rival sides.

In Mogadishu, the Islamists denounced not only Ethiopia but the United States, which intends this week to introduce a UN Security Council resolution authorizing a regional peacekeeping force to
help the Somali government.

The draft resolution calls for an easing of the much-violated 1992 UN arms embargo on Somalia to permit the proposed force that the Islamists have vowed to fight.

"If the arms embargo on Somalia is lifted, we will invite all Islamists around the world to Somalia and they will fight by our side," said SICS security chief Sheikh Yusuf Mohamed Siad
Indoa'adhe.

"We shall not hesitate if the UN Security Council lifts the arms embargo and I am sure more Islamist fighters will mass in Somalia," he said, raising the specter of further bloodshed.

The Islamists took Mogadishu in June and now control most of southern and central Somalia while the government is confined to its seat of Baidoa, the only town it controls.

Somalia has lacked an effective government since dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was toppled in 1991. - Sapa-AFP

Kenya denies it accommodated Ethiopian and American troops, intending to attack Somalia


Aweys Osman Yusuf
Mogadishu 27, Nov.06 ( Sh.M.Network)
–The Kenyan government has denied that Ethiopian and American forces intending to fulfill undercover operations in neighboring Somalia.

National security minister and assistant foreign minister have held a news conference in Nairobi,





Foreign Minister of Kenya, Rapharl Tuju.


the Kenyan capital, refuting accusations against the Kenyan government by Kenyan officials in the government that

Ethiopian and American troops are in Kenya to secretly attack Somalia’s Islamists.

Moses Mwatangal, Kenyan assistant foreign minister, has vehemently denied the accusations.

The minister has pointed out that his government, which is now chairing the regional body of Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) was impartial about the situation in Somalia.
“Kenya was never part of the problems in Somalia. Kenya is neutral in the situation of Somalia”, he said.

The news came after Kenyan officials blamed the government for keeping foreign troops in its soil, intending to invade a neighboring country, targeting the bases of the Union of Islamic Courts.

Journalist who reported “massive” Ethiopian presence held by pro-government militias for three days


Reporters Without Borders today condemned the arrest and mistreatment of Abdullahi Yasin Jama of privately-owned Radio Warsan by militiamen loyal to the federal transition government in the western city of Baidoa, who held him for three days and abused him physically after luring him to the presidential palace on 24 November with an invitation to an non-existent news conference.

“The treatment Jama received was disgraceful,” the press freedom organisation said. “His arrest and use as a plaything by militiamen was an act of the utmost cowardliness. Somalia’s journalists, who are trying to cover a war consisting of lightning raids, betrayals and news manipulation, must be left in peace by the belligerents, as the population has a right to know what is going on in their country. The transitional government cannot claim to want to bring democracy to Somalia while tolerating such behaviour.”

Jama, who is also a correspondent for the Somali Broadcasting Corporation (SBC), a privately-owned radio station based in the northern city of Bossasso, received a call from a security official shortly after midday on 24 November inviting him to a news conference. Pro-government militiamen arrested him when he arrived at the presidential palace and took him to their base, where they repeatedly abused and humiliated him.

Omar Faruk Osman, the secretary-general of the Reporters Without Borders partner organisation, the National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ), said Jama was arrested for reporting the “massive presence” of Ethiopian troops in Somalia. The NUSOJ’s attempts to get the transitional government to free him met with rebuffs or expressions of bad faith, with officials claiming they were “unaware” of the case.

Jama was finally released today after Baidoa city elders interceded on his behalf, but he is still under surveillance by the militias and fears further reprisals.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Islamists mass troops on Ethiopian border

MOGADISHU — Somalia’s powerful Union of Islamic Courts began massing thousands of troops on the border with Ethiopia over the weekend, days after Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said he was ready to confront the Islamic militants in Somalia.

“War is imminent. There is no other alternative,” Islamist military officer Sheikh Mohamed Ibrahim Bilal said by satellite phone from the border. “Ethiopia declared war, so we will defend ourselves and protect our country and people.”

The Islamists have declared a jihad on Ethiopian troops in the country to back the weak transitional government based in the northern town of Baidoa.

Ethiopia last week said it was ready for a confrontation with the Muslim militants, who control most of the country.

Residents of the border area have begun fleeing.

Meles told a news conference on Saturday he had explained Ethiopia’s position to western powers. “Both Brussels and Washington appear to believe that any military response on our part might be counterproductive, saying that dialogue is the best way forward,” he said.

“We, too, agree that dialogue is the best way, nevertheless as the direct victims of the aggression, we feel we might be forced at some stage to respond with force.

“It is our country that is being attacked. Naturally, we do not seek any green, red or yellow from anyone to protect ourselves.

“If, and when, we are convinced that all options of resolving the invasion through peaceful means are exhausted, only then we may act to respond in kind,” Meles said. The Islamists had trained, armed and smuggled hundreds of Ethiopian rebels into the country, he said.

Ethiopia has in the past sent troops into Somalia to fight Islamist radicals, fearing they could stir up trouble in ethnic Somali regions on its side of the border.

Senior Somali Islamist Sheikh Sharif Ahmed has accused Washington of giving Ethiopia the go-ahead to fight his movement.

Meles was speaking two days after appearing in parliament to urge legislators to back plans to fight the Somali Islamists, although he has refrained from declaring outright war on them.

Ethiopia insists it has only sent a few hundred military trainers across the border, but a United Nations-commissioned report says it has deployed thousands of soldiers and weapons in Somalia.

In Mogadishu, senior Islamists and visiting parliamentary speaker Sharif Hassan Sheikh Adan on Saturday condemned the parliamentary address by Meles as “naked aggression”.

The group also issued a 10-point communique which called for the Islamists and the interim government to resume talks in Khartoum next month.

Talks between the two sides collapsed last month, with the Islamists saying they would not negotiate unless Ethiopian troops withdrew from Somalia.

Interim government Deputy Defence Minister Salad Ali Gele said the Islamists had to drop their demands before the government would return to talks.

Meanwhile, some 320 Ugandan soldiers arrived in a military plane at the Baidoa airstrip overnight on Friday as part of a regional peacekeeping mission that is vehemently opposed by the Muslim militants, said a government official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Security was stepped up at the government’s base in Baidoa, where the internationally backed government put a stop to all civilian flights. Experts have warned the conflict could escalate into an larger regional war.

Somalia has been without strong central rule since the 1991 ousting of a dictator plunged the country into anarchy. DPA, Reuters

Somalia's Islamic militia deploys troops near Ethiopian border amid fears of violence

MOGADISHU, Somalia: The Islamic militia that controls much of southern Somalia dispatched thousands of troops Sunday to within 15 kilometers (9 miles) of the border with Ethiopia amid increasing fears that tensions between the two sides could explode into violence.

"All our troops in the region are now ready at the front lines to face their enemy," said Mohamed Mohamud Agaweine, the military commander for the Council of Islamic Courts in central Somalia. He said thousands of Islamic fighters were in the region around Abud-waq, but did not give an exact figure.

Ethiopia, a largely Christian nation, fears the emergence of a neighboring Islamic state and has acknowledged sending military advisers here to help Somalia's fragile government. But Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has repeatedly denied sending a fighting force, despite widespread witness accounts.

Ahemd Isse Gutaale, a reporter for local radio station HornAfrik, said the Islamists were using loudspeakers Sunday to call for people to join the holy war against Ethiopia.

"They were enrolling new volunteers and asked people to stand for the defense of their country," Gutaale said.

On Saturday, Meles said he expected legislators to back a resolution giving him authority to use military force against Somali extremists if they attack Ethiopia. He also stated that Ethiopia would not seek approval from the U.N. Security Council or any other body to defend itself militarily, saying it was Ethiopia's "sovereign right."

Somalia has been without an effective central government since warlords toppled dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 and then turned on each other, carving much of the country into armed camps ruled by violence and clan law.

A government was established two years ago with the support of the U.N. to serve as a transitional body to help Somalia emerge from anarchy. But the leadership, which includes some warlords linked to the violence of the past, wields no real power outside the western city of Baidoa.

The Islamic council, meanwhile, has been steadily gaining ground since seizing the capital, Mogadishu, in June. The United States has accused the group of sheltering suspects in the 1998 al-Qaida bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which it denies.

Somalia has also been struggling to recover from the catastrophic floods that have also hit Ethiopia and Kenya. On Sunday, more than 200 women and children in the devastated town of Belet Weyne claimed they weren't get enough help to deal with the disaster.

Also Sunday, a Somali reporter was arrested in Baidoa, said Mowlid Hagi Abdi, of the Somali Broadcasting Corp. It was not clear why the reporter was arrested; the government's information minister did immediately answer his phone. Several journalists have been arrested recently for reporting about Ethiopian troops in the country, but they have been released after a few days.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Ethiopia-US: Outsourcing the Somali war


Sunday 26 November 2006 01:00.

By Haile Kassahun

Nov 25, 2006 — War in the Horn of Africa appears imminent. If large-scale violence breaks out, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia and the Bush administration will bear major responsibility for the ensuing chaos and human suffering.

Zenawi, who already has at least 8,000 troops in Somalia, just declared his readiness to widen the war.

There is a marriage of convenience between Ethiopia’s Prime Minister and the Bush Administration. Zenawi is desperate to divert attention from his internal troubles and human rights abuses. An overextended Bush administration finds it cost-effective and expedient to outsource the Somali war to an eager, yet repugnant local tyrant.

Zenawi is a polished Tigrian warlord in an Armani suit. He is an Albanian-style Marxist turned Christian crusader, a ruthless megalomaniac perfectly willing to burn down the neighborhood to stay in power.

Ethiopia’s ruling Tigrai Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) has devised a grand internal and external strategy to stay in power. Creating Christian-Moslem conflict is the weapon to be used on the domestic front. This is designed to create a wedge between regime opponents who have united without regard to religion or ethnicity.

The recent religious violence that took the lives of some 19 people in the South West of the country appears to be the work of regime agents. ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SwSYIHlQ5ZI&eurl .)

There is an active domestic propaganda campaign about the danger of jihadists and Islamic extremists. The campaign aims to confuse the issues, to hoodwink the country’s Christian population and to garner its support. Such a situation will create a Christian-Moslem rift, virtually assuring the continuing rule of the ruling minority group. Sadly, such poison is being introduced to a population that has had unprecedented religious tolerance.

The bond between Christians and Moslems goes back to the beginnings of Islam. The prophet Mohammed sent his followers to Ethiopia when they fled persecution in Arabia. Ethiopia’s Christian king received Mohammed’s followers as honored guests and treated them with civility.

Although there were periods of contention, the early history of tolerance created a precedent for mutual respect and coexistence. It will therefore be an unforgivable crime to introduce religious conflict to an otherwise harmonious society.

Zenawi’s external survival strategy depends on currying favor with the United States. Towards that end, he continues to fabricate intelligence reports about the danger Somali Islamists pose to Ethiopia and the United States.

Ethiopia’s Prime Minister says the Somali Islamic Courts Council (ICC) is a terrorist organization that has to be stopped in its tracks. He provides no proof beyond accusations and name calling.

"I think the U.S. government panicked. They saw Islamic group; they said, ’Taliban is coming," said Herman Cohen, former Under Secretary of State for African Affairs, in a recent interview with Margaret Warner of PBS. Cohen continued, "also, there are friends in the region, like the Ethiopians, who probably are feeding false intelligence about terrorists being hidden and that sort of thing…. So they want to keep the Islamists out of power, and they will bring the U.S. into it, if they can." http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/africa/jan-june06/somalia_06-06.html

Ironically, this same grandstanding Zenawi and his organization were classified as terrorists by the United States not long ago. (See, for example, US Homeland Security’s database for terrorist organizations at http://www.tkb.org/Group.jsp?groupID=4287 . See also http://www.ethiogermany.de/tplfTerror.pdf .)

Somalia’s Islamic Courts Council poses a "clear and present danger," Ethiopia’s strong man said during a recent, carefully-orchestrated speech to his rubber-stamp parliament. Again, he provided no proof.

Many Ethiopians would beg to disagree. What poses a "clear and present danger" is a homegrown rogue minority regime that refuses to respect election results, shoots opponents at will, throws tens of thousands in jail without respect for due process of law. The "clear and present danger" comes from the ruling Tigrai Peoples Liberation Front that runs away from solving domestic post-election problems, pimps the country for political gain and starts an unprovoked war with a neighboring country.

No matter how much one disagrees with the religious bent of the Islamic Courts Council, they have brought a modicum of stability to Mogadishu and other areas they control.

This is in contrast to the incompetence of the so-called Transitional Government of Somalia which has failed to show any popular support. President Abdullahi Yusuf has little credibility with his own people, spending most of his time in Ethiopia. It is reported that he has been in the service of Ethiopian security services going at least as far back as a decade. Even his kidney operation a few years ago was paid for by Ethiopia.

A Bush administration preoccupied with Iraq appears to have decided to let Ethiopians do the fighting. US policy in Ethiopia and Somalia has been relegated to low-level, inexperienced officials.

It’s the same folks who lent American support to unsavory Somali warlords, leading to an embarrassing foreign policy debacle in June. The public face of this rookie team is Jendayi Frazer, US Assistant Secretary for African Affairs. Frazer is reportedly close to the Zenawi regime and relies heavily on the EPRDF’s self-serving intelligence feed.

Incidentally, some of the pro-US warlords may be among those responsible for the killing of US rangers during the "Blackhawk" incident. According to a Washington Post dispatch of May 17, 2006, some of the warlords "reportedly fought against the United States in 1993 during street battles that culminated in an attack that downed two U.S. Black Hawk helicopters and left 18 Army Rangers dead.." http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/16/AR2006051601625_pf.html

These warlords continue to spend a great deal of time in Addis Ababa, chewing the narcotic Khat, driving expensive cars, guzzling top-shelf whiskey and frequenting whorehouses - all courtesy of the American tax-payer.

Zenawi is eager to keep the focus away from his domestic troubles at all costs. In the past, he had no qualms sacrificing at least 50,000 Ethiopian troops during the Ethio-Ertrean war of 1998 -2000. The war was allegedly fought over a barren border area called Badme. Incomprehensibly, he was quick to give up Badme — land over which so much blood was shed. When ceding territory became domestically unpopular, he began backtracking and flip flopping, making border demarcation a permanent thorny issue that continues to this day.

Zenawi also had no problem giving orders for the shooting of civilians protesting the stealing of the 2005 elections. Over 193 civilians were murdered in broad daylight and upwards of 30,000 jailed in a post-election reign of terror, according to a commission established by the regime. Among those arrested are almost all elected leaders of the opposition party, including the mayor of Addis Ababa, human rights advocates, journalists and civic society leaders ( http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6064638.stm .)

There is no rule of law or an independent judiciary to dispense justice. Prisoners are guilty until proven innocent. Even when the court releases prisoners the security forces rearrest them. Long imprisonment without any evidence —sometime lasting as long as 10 or 15 years – is common.

Beyond imprisonment, the autocrat’s 15-year rule has been marred by a systemic pattern of human rights abuses and extra-judicial killings.

A few additional examples of the regime’s violent rule include the following: At least 30 helpless prisoners in Kaliti were shot dead last year; 424 ethnic Anuaks war massacred by the Ethiopian army in 2003 to make way for oil exploration by a Malaysian company; 66 protesters were gunned down in Awassa and Addis Ababa in 2002; 40 students were murdered in 2001; and another group of 19 students were killed in Addis Ababa in 1993.

Widespread killings and mass arrests have been common in regions inhabitted by the majority Oromos. Some 15,000 to 20,000 people have been killed in the Oromia region alone, according to a former judge who recently defected to the West. This disturbing information was revealed in a recent interview the judge, Teshale Abera, gave to the Mail and Guardian newspaper. According to the judge, Ethiopia’s current regime is as bad as the Mengistu regime it replaced. (http://www.unpo.org/article.php?id=5826 .)

Ethiopia is also gripped by an economic crisis, contrary to the government’s Orwellian propaganda. Regime cadres are increasingly squeezing peasants. Urban unemployment is still upwards of 50 percent. The cost of living has skyrocketed, making life unbearable for the ordinary person.

Upwards of four million Ethiopians need ongoing international food handouts. Over three million are infected with HIV/AIDS. (The only sector doing well is party-owned businesses and the few parasites that benefit from ethnic patronage.) Add to that mass arrests and the continuing intimidation of all opponents. A state of fear pervades the country. All is not well behind the façade of a few high rises that have cropped up on Bole Road.

The Bush administration has made a Faustian bargain with the Zenawi regime. It has downplayed widespread killings and egregious human rights violations in exchange for Zenawi’s services in the war against terror.

The same administration that has refused to speak up against the massacre of Ethiopians wants Ethiopia to sacrifice its sons and daughters fighting Somalis in pursuit of a big power’s muddled, questionable strategic goal.

U.S. troops stationed in Djibout and Camp Hurso in Ethiopia appear to be directly involved in the Ethiopian invasion of Somalia. The US has also been actively spreading disinformation that demonizes the Islamic Council while creating sympathy for the Ethiopian invasion. For example, the dubious document recently leaked to the media and purportedly prepared by UN experts has all the markings of a US disinformation campaign to justify a war against the Islamic Courts.

Ethiopia and Somalia are among the poorest countries in the world. Both people have experienced tremendous suffering in the last thirty years.

Where’s the morality in pitting one poor African country against another? Where is justice? Where is the morality in coddling a tyrant once labeled terrorist by the United States? Why is it acceptable for the United States to ally with a murderous regime that has massacred at least 193 civilians and arrested over 30,000 in secret concentration camps? Why is such immorality being perpetrated in the name of the war against terror?

Congressman Donald Payne said the following during a recent briefing on the situation in Ethiopia: "…During the Cold War, United States supported dictators like Mobutu and never really condemned South Africa’s apartheid government because they were anti-communists, and we were fighting the communists in the U.S. And so we’re not going to repeat those mistakes," Payne said.

Thousands will die, tens of thousands will be maimed and millions will be made refugees. Just as in Iraq, when the mess gets to be too much to handle, the US will walk away under one pretext or another, leaving the local people holding the bag. There will be so much suffering that no amount of international handout will make a dent.

The Islamic Council has invited the US to come to Mogadishu, to engage in dialogue and observe first hand the situation on the ground. This is a good gesture that the United States and Ethiopia should take advantage of. The parties need to resolve all issues through dialogue. The misery and mayhem a new war brings, nor matter what the pretext, is not worth the cost to the people on the receiving end.

It’s still not too late to stop this madness.

211 Ethiopians on Hunger strike at UNHCR Gate in Khartoum

211 Ethiopians on Hunger strike at UNHCR Gate in Khartoum
By Debteraw Associate Reporter
Khartoum (22 November 2006): Arresting, deporting and harassing Ethiopians continued. The house to
house search in selected areas of Khartoum has continued. This has paved the way for crooks, hooligans
and all other types of cheats who pretend as authorized search teams. According to reliable sources
reaching this reporter rapes, attempted rapes, flogging, entering houses by force, confiscating properties are
rampant.
Ethiopians on hunger strike at UNCHR gate in Khartoum
Ethiopian who escaped the attempted rape, the arresting and deportation have occupied the UNHCR’s
Khartoum office gate at Amarat street one. Cars can not go in and go out into the compound while people
can. These Ethiopian have started a hunger strike starting on November 21, 2006.
According to their representative Mewchaw, who was a university student at Arat kilo, the hunger strikes
have three demands for the UNHCR and the Sudanese refugee commission ( COR):
To be given Refugee IDs
If they can not issue at least temporally IDs to be taken to refugee camps and save them from
arrest and deportation
To protest the on going abusing of Ethiopians with no IDs.
Among the 211 hunger strikers
13 are children and 60 women.
There are also Elderly people.
The hunger strikers are
weakened not only by the
hunger but also the heavy cold
which has just begun and the
scorching sun.
According to ministry of
interiors statement published
in the Arabic news paper
Sudani on November 22, 2006
issue number 374 so far 1261
foreigners are arrested among
these 881 are Ethiopian and
380 are Asians. The ministry’s
statement further states no
refugee will be allowed in the cities and Ethiopian have no reason to stay as refugees in the Sudan.
According to reports many Ethiopians are in many jails in Omdurman, Bahri, Arkewit and Giref areas. Some
are freed by their employers help. Some were taken to court and sentenced to be deported after paying
100,000 Sudanese pound (around 50 dollars)
fines for being in the Sudan illegally. The
Sudanese authorities have deported so far No
less than 500 Ethiopian via Metema. There are
unconfirmed reports the Oromo Origin
Ethiopians are taken to Demazine Province
bordering the Benishangul area. The reason of
taking the Oromo origin Ethiopians to
Demazine is not yet established.
According to observers, which the ministry
of interior seems to confirm, the whole fiasco
of cracking down aliens turned out to be only
targeting Ethiopian whom UNHCR and COR
denied refugee status for no reasons.
The hunger strikers kindly request the following:
Ethiopians all over the world to voice their
concern
Ethiopian Media outlets to high light their
demands and the on going abusing of
Ethiopians.
http://www.debteraw.co.uk/Ethiopians-on-hunger-strike.pdf

Incident with 2403 S. 16th Avenue residents

Incident with 2403 S. 16th Avenue residents


In the last 30 minutes, my son and I had a nasty incident occur. It didn't have to be, but the residents at 2403 made it so.

Before it even started, their younger son was calling for my son saying "Hey white boy" but Josiah brushed it off seeing as it wasn't his name. I doubt even their younger son understood he didn't have to call him by that and just say "hey, do you want to play?" since he was the only other child outside.

But the incident all started when my son was playing with their two younger kids outside at the townhome park. They were playing fine until two older brothers ( or just kids who also live at 2403) decided to go out on the playground as well. They didn't want to play, but harass the younger kids. They threw footballs at them, they chased and called them names.

I didn't think this very funny and asked them to leave the younger kids alone. They ignored me and persisted. Josiah went after then with a stick, and from my position did not see whether he hit one of the older kids or pushed him. Either way, the older child's response was to throw my son on the ground. My parental instincts kicked in and I put my right arm on the older kid's shoulder ( though briefly because he ran away ) and told him to leave my son alone.

Honestly, I cannot stand bullying. But the older children decided I had gone too far and went to their parents. ( one of the younger children already had gone inside 2403 a few minutes prior balling his head off due to harassment) Then their Grandmother came out and asked what was happening. She immediately went into attack mode and told me that we had no right on "their property."

So I went home with Josiah, his toys, and tricycle. Even while he was in the yard, we were approached by the Grandmother and her children who cussed me out. Again we were told we were unwelcome and she would call the police if we set foot on their property. Though we are friends with the residents at 1611, 1613, 1615,1617 and 2402, residents at 2403 claim sway over property rights. After her tirade, they all went home.

A few minutes later a middle-aged man came running out of 2403 cussing at me and saying he would kick my ass. The women called him back saying he didn't need assault charges when it would be me going to jail - according to them. Stopping, he and his eldest son told me to "watch my back."

Not since I was Josiah's current age ( 4 ) have I felt so unwelcome and threatened by my neighbors. The root cause of both incidences appear to be racism. The residents at 2403 are primarily Native American, and East Phillips is known for its extreme Nativist mentality. Brandy was made fun of by natives at the park, they called her Fiona after the character on Shrek . I have been told by native youth on my walk home from work that I was in the "wrong hood." But the residents at 2403 are clearly the most threatening to myself and my family.

The residents at 2403 also do not like our Ethiopian, Somali, and Oromo friends who live at the other mentioned townhomes. The older kids of 2403 take glee in saying that they smell and make racist comments. It appears 2403 residents have no intention of supporting a community.

I see potential for this situation to improve, but will need outside assistance. I first contacted the Minneapolis Police Department, who came to my home and referred me to the mediation phone number. I called the Minneapolis Mediation Project and e-mailed the City of Lake Community Land Trust. The townhomes were created by CLCLT and TC Habitat for Humanity, so I believe there is some sort of association in charge. The sooner we can resolve this issue, the sooner we can prevent future ones from escalating as well. I pray for the best results to occur and we can have peace and understanding on our block.

Remembering Paradise Hotel bombing four years later

an Government prevent another terrorist attack? Experts believe it is coming soon but fears are rife that the Government cannot prevent an attack or adequately respond to one, writes Dennis Onyango

Paradise Hotel, Kikambala, after it was bombed four years ago.

As the fourth anniversary of the Paradise Hotel bombing approaches, fear is rife that terrorists are not done with Kenya but the Government maintains it is in control.

The Government maintains that security in northern Kenya has been stepped up since the Union of Islamic Courts militia captured the southern Somalia port of Kismayu. It cites the recent anti-insurgency courses, and says security officers have undergone anti-terrorist training.

Western intelligence and counter-terrorism experts however say terrorists are likely to hit Kenya before the end of next year.

They base their concerns on several pointers, which have worked as signals elsewhere. "Al Qaeda works in a four-year attack cycle. They bombed Kenya in 1998 and did it again in 2002. Between now and the end of next year, Al Qaeda is likely to attack Kenya again," an independent counter- terrorism specialist said in Nairobi.

"Every counter-terrorism expert should be worried. Nobody thinks Kenya is taking this seriously," he added.

Mid last September, suicide bombers came close to assassinating Somalia’s President Abdullahi Yusuf outside the country’s Parliament. A car bomb exploded, killing five people and wounding several others.

The car exploded when the President’s convoy was passing on the way to his residence. The attack was described as an Al-Qaeda-type attempt. A car was put next to other cars and exploded through remote control.

Foreign intelligence experts say the incident in Baidoa last September was the first suicide bombing in The Horn of Africa. It indicated that the terror groups that had been congregating in Somalia are coming of age.

Intelligence experts from the West say Kenya is at risk. "When the suicide bomber blew himself in Baidoa, the war on terror changed," an expert said. "That was the first suicide bomber in The Horn. It showed people are being taught suicide bombing. Once you begin to teach people to blow themselves, it becomes fashionable."

The fear is that terror is taking roots in Somalia, but there are no Western interests there. "The terrorists will come to where Western interests are, and that is Nairobi," the source said.

On November 28, 2002, a bomb explosion at the Israeli-owned Paradise Hotel in Mombasa killed 15 and injures 40 people, minutes after two missiles narrowly missed an Israeli holiday jet on take-off from the Moi International Airport in Mombasa. Al-Qaeda admitted responsibility.

Since that attack, a number of initiatives have come up to monitor regional terrorist activities.

The Combined Joint Task Force for Horn of Africa was set up to prevent conflict and promote regional stability. It is also meant to present a buffer zone against extremism.

Kenya is deeply involved in this initiative.

Since 2002, Kenyan and United States military forces have held bilateral military exercises along Kenya’s coastal region.

The exercises have involved an exchange of tactical knowledge between the US Marine and Kenyan forces.

Dubbed "Edged Mallet", the exercises started in Lamu on the Kenya-Somali border and have gone on annually.

The Department of Defence (DOD) says the exercises involving officers from the Army, Navy and their US marine counterparts include joint sea patrols. "The military exercises have also involved small arms training, reconnaissance and joint sea patrols," DOD says.

Edged Mallet exercises also involve civil assistance projects like medical and dental camps, drilling of bore holes and construction of schools.

The exercises began barely days after the terrorist attacks in Mombasa.

The US says the exercise aims to refine and strengthen the already robust military to military relationships between the two countries.

The Combined Joint Task Force has gone for minds and souls of people in The Horn. Its officials have held talks with high-ranking Islamic official in the region.

Alongside the US Government, the Task Force has donated patrol boats to Djibouti, opened clinics and schools in Ethiopia, Yemen and Kenya. The idea behind the Taskforce and the heightened activity at The Horn, according to senior US officials, was to monitor the region after the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"There was fear that terrorists being flashed out of Iraq and Afghanistan would run to The Horn of Africa. We wanted to strengthen border and coastal security," the official said.

Independent experts say the joint project have been helpful. It has succeeded in stopping terrorists from Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq from crossing into Africa.

Experts however worry that with about 17 rebel groups in the greater Horn of Africa constantly crossing borders, the danger is real.

Kenya is particularly seen to be at risk because of the anarchy in Somalia.

"As the US monitors Iraq, Pakistan, Saudi Arabi and Afghanistan, where will these rebel groups run to? They are likely to move to ungoverned space. Ogaden in Ethiopia, Eastern Sudan and North Eastern Province are possible hideouts," one expert said.

The expert, who has been in Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel and Lebanon, said he is not convinced Kenya is prepared to counter the danger or to respond to it. "From what I know about Al Qaeda works, I think it is only logical to expect that they are coming back. Al Qaeda likes hitting one target on and on again. It has only hit Kenya twice. Its sympathisers like Fazul are holed up in Somalia. Fazul knows Kenya well. He speaks Kiswahili and he has friends here. I am not convinced Kenya is taking the threat seriously," he said.

Other than the four-year attack cycle that Al Qaeda is working on, Western terrorism experts say the seven entry points on Kenya-Somalia border are not properly manned. Equally worrying is the situation in NEP, where Oromo Liberation Front soldiers and Ethiopian rebels have recently crossed into Kenya at will.

"The Moyale border needs to be better manned. If a bunch of rifles can move from Mogadishu to Eastleigh without being intercepted, there is danger. If truckloads of TV sets can be smuggled into Eastleigh from Mogadishu, there is a problem. If the boxes have bombs instead of TV sets, they would be enough to bring down a huge building in Nairobi, a counter terrorism expert said.

Kenya is caught in a difficult situation. The country is struggling to keep its neutrality in regional and global issues, even as it wants to cooperate with the US in the war on terror.

But others see the country as the weakest link in the effort to build a wall around Somalia so that none of the terrorists holed up in their can come to The Horn.

The US has been training Kenyan officers in coastal patrols for some time now.

Last month, the US donated six powerful armoured speedboats to Kenya to boost patrols along its Indian Ocean coast amid fears of a spread in unrest from neighbouring Somalia. The US embassy in Nairobi said the boats, worth three million dollars would enhance Kenya’s efforts at the Coast.

"This is timely in view of heightened concerns by Kenya about potential exploitation of the Kenyan coast by criminal groups, and terrorists (and) particularly important in view of the deteriorating situation within Somalia," the US embassy in Nairobi said.

Sources however say Kenya is wary of being seen to be taking sides with the US in the war on terror.

In Ethiopia and Djibouti, US military experts work with the local soldiers to man their coastlines and borders.

In Ethiopia, the US has about 10 bases across the country, monitoring the terror networks. Yemen on the North has an entirely new Coast Guard unit trained and equipped by the Taskforce and the US.

Kenya on the other hand has been cautious. There are only two US bases in the country, and it will not allow US and Kenyan soldiers to jointly patrol the coast.

"Kenya has been trying to maintain its neutrality. It does not want to be seen as taking sides with America in the war on terror," an independent terrorism expert said.

Kenya nearly lost the right to host the just concluded UN climate change conference because of the perception that the Government has not appreciated the evolving events at the Horn and in Somalia.

But even after hosting it, the country lost millions of shillings after the venue was transferred from the Kenyatta International Conference Centre to Gigiri. Sources said the organisers threatened to take the Conference to France after the Government showed up with "a one-page" security plan for the conference.

Sources independent of the US and Kenya say one-third of the volunteer fighters being caught in Iraq are from the Horn of Africa.

A senior US official said some of those accused in the 1998 Embassy and the 2002 hotel bombings are holed up in Somalia. They could spread to the Ogaden and NEP, if borders are not properly manned.

Somalia: In fear of Ethiopian attacks, residents in Abudwaq begin to flee

Aweys Osman Yusuf

Mogadishu 25, Nov.06 ( Sh.M.Network)
- Amid tension in Somalia, residents in Abudwaq town near the Ethiopian border have begun fleeing following Meles Zenawi’s war declaration on Somalia’s Islamists.

Somalia's Powerful Islamists

Abudwaq in Galagadud province in central Somalia has become quite controversial after Islamists seized the town without a single shot, although tribal militias in the area who were against the Islamist seizure of their town took control of a police station demanding that Islamists leave.

Residents said they fear Ethiopian troops might invade the town under the new control of Islamists.

On Thursday Ethiopian premier Meles Zenawi told his parliament his government has completed gearing up for war with Somalia’s Islamic Courts that he said pose greater threat to Ethiopia, asking parliament to approve the rules of engagement.

Ironically, members of Somalia’s parliament and the Union of Islamic Courts senior officials indicated Ethiopia’s declaration of war on Somalia as one that would trigger an all out war which could spread into the region.

Abdinasir Haji, an Islamic official in Abudwaq said people are frightened by rumors that Ethiopia may attack the town, adding: “Ethiopia can not attack us, therefore, I call on the civilian population in Abudwaq to remain calm and give their sincere support to Islamic Courts”.

The news comes as people in the country are coping with floods, food shortages and diseases like malaria, cholera and measles caused the flood swamps in Somalia’s south-central provinces.

Several neighborhoods have been vacated by their residents fleeing Abudwaq as they feared an imminent war against Islamists by Ethiopian troops that are positioned somewhere quite close to Somali border.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Ethiopia's Meles says won't wait for green light to attack Somali Islamists


Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has said his country would not wait for foreign approval to attack powerful Islamists in neighboring Somalia that many fear could lead to a regional war.

As the powerful Islamist movement poured troops into frontline positions outside the Ethiopian-backed weak Somali government's seat, Meles called for international understanding but said he needed no "green light" to attack.

Speaking to reporters in Addis Ababa two days after announcing to parliament that Ethiopia had completed preparations for war, he said he had heard calls for restraint on his side but did not agree with them.

"We respect their views but because it is our country which is being attacked, naturally we do not seek any light -- green, red, amber -- from anyone to protect ourselves," Meles said Saturday.

"The international community should be more supportive of Ethiopia," he said, asserting as he did to lawmakers on Thursday that his nation faced a "clear and present danger" from the Islamists.

"I want to stress again that we are not saying we might be attacked, we have already been attacked," Meles said of the Islamists, who have declared holy war on Ethiopian troops in Somalia deployed to protect the Somali government.

Many in the international community fear that all-out conflict in Somalia could engulf the Horn of Africa, drawing Ethiopia and its arch-foe neighbor Eritrea, which is accused of supporting the Islamists.

Meles said he agreed with diplomat who have called for dialogue to curb the tensions but that Ethiopia would act to defend itself.

"We agree that dialogue is the best way forward, nevertheless, we, as the direct victims of this aggression, feel that we might be forced, at some stage, to respond in kind," he said.

But even as the Islamists braced for conflict and accused Ethiopia of sending airpower to strike them, the prime minister said he had not yet made a decision on whether engage in direct military action.

"We do not yet feel the need to respond," he said, repeating that Ethiopia had several hundred military advisers, trainers and support staff in Somalia but not the thousands of combat troops alleged by UN experts and others.

He also maintained that no Ethiopian troops had yet been involved in combat with the Islamists who claim to have attacked several Ethiopian military convoys this week.

"There have been some clashes between elements of the (Somali government) and (the Islamists), minor incidents here and there, but in any case our troops have not been involved," Meles said.

Mainly Christian Ethiopia has watched with growing concern the rise on its southeastern border of the Islamists, who seized Mogadishu in June and now control most of southern and central Somalia.

With a large ethnic Somali population, Ethiopia fears radicalization of its sizable Muslim minority by the Islamists, some of whom are accused of links to Al-Qaeda, who have imposed strict Sharia law in areas they control.

Somalia: Ethiopian troops and armor arrive in Mudug region

GALKAYO, Somalia Nov 25 (Garowe Online) - More Ethiopian troops driving some 30 military vehicles arrived Saturday in Galkayo, the capital of Mudug region in central Somalia, witnesses confirmed.

The Puntland administration has not commented on the arrival of more Ethiopian combat troops but for the past 3 months Ethiopian “military trainers” have been training Puntland’s security forces.

In recent months, Mudug region has become a central battle front between competing powers in Somalia, as the Islamic Courts sought to push north towards Galkayo.

Source: Garowe Online

Avert an East African Islamic Terror Volcano – Break down fake ‘Ethiopia’!

Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

Avert an East African Islamic Terror Volcano – Break down fake ‘Ethiopia’!

When all the world focuses almost exclusively on Iraq, Lebanon, Iran, Syria and Israel, forgetting at the same time the Darfur Drama, and tolerating the existence of the African Hitler, President Al Bashir of Sudan, critical developments take place in Somalia and Abyssinia, a country falsely called Ethiopia. The next rendezvous of the Islamic Terror is with Abyssinia.

By Prof. Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

A bogus-state plunged in ethnic tyranny, underdevelopment and starvation

Abyssinia, do not call it ‘Ethiopia’ if you please, the reasons are to be found in this article, has all it takes to present the rest of the world one of the nastiest surprises we have ever had: an Islamic Revolution that will pressurize over Sudan, Yemen, Kenya, and Egypt.

The country is an amalgamation of African ethnic groups that underwent various regimes that were all imposed by a dominant and analphabetic ethnic group, the Semitic Amharas. They do not represent more than 20% of the entire population of Abyssinia but tyrannize the Oromos (42%), the Ogadenis (10%), Sidamas and other Southerners (10%), and the multi-split Afars (8%), who are dispersed among three states, namely Abyssinia, Djibouti, and Eritrea. The post-communist era American policy in Abyssinia was not relevant of deep understanding of the Horn of Africa area and of the dangling dangers: they supported a Semitic Tigray (12%) president, pushing them to establish a larger Semitic basis of rule by forming a most unsolicited alliance with the Amharas.

The concept was definitely ill-fated: replacing a ruling dictatorial group represents 20% of the country population with an alliance of totalitarian groups that correspond to less than 1/3 of the entire population does not change much this situation at the helm of the country in question. The equation 32% vs. 20% does not democratize enough a country! Even worse, the attempted alliance that was kept for so many long years in power despite undemocratic elections, dictatorial practices, serious violations of Human Rights, and complete disregard for socioeconomic progress and market liberalization (no Stock Exchange and no foreign bank in Abyssinia) consist in a non representative regrouping of two Semitic ethnic groups (originating from Yemen), leaving the overwhelming Kushitic majority (Oromos, Ogadenis, Sidama and Afars) out of power and out of the cultural frame of Semitic Abyssinia.

Under the guidance of French and English colonialists, the Semitic Amharas found a disreputable cultural – political trickery to demonstrate that Abyssinia is not an ethnic tyranny: they falsely renamed the country ‘Ethiopia’, after a name that relates to the Kushitic (not the Semitic) past of the country. Even worse for the Amhara-Tigray tyrants of Abyssinia, the most glorious pages of the Kushitic past of the Oromos took place in today’s Sudan, which was the land in the south of Egypt that the Ancient Geeks and Romans were calling ‘Ethiopia’. If Sudan was not a Pan-Arabist tyranny but a properly developed nation, Sudan would have already been named ‘Ethiopia;, and the Amhara obscurantist and idiotic ruling class would have no chance to opt for the name of ‘Ethiopia’.

How an Amhara-Tigray tyranny, with all the cultural stamps of Semitic past (the successive Axum, Lalibela, Gondar kingdoms of Abyssinia), can insist on naming the country after a name that relates to identity of the local oppressed Kushitic majority?

How would it have looked, if Hitler renamed in 1939 Germany as ‘Israel’?

The ethnic – linguistic – cultural dimension of the Abyssinia predicament is not the only existing; the religious dimension gains momentum, as recent developments in neighboring Somalia are being interpreted as the only possible way to outmaneuver and ultimately bring down the Amhara - Tigray Christian Monophysitic tyranny.

Abyssinia is divided into three religious groups, Muslims, Christians, and animists; this is utterly schematic and definitely simplist.

First of all, Animists are known for use of idolatrous cults and practices; there are some animists in Abyssinia indeed. But the traditional Oromo religion, or Code of Wisdom and Belief, Waaqeffanna to name it in the Oromo language, is known for no use of icons, idols, statues and divine representations of any kind! It is an authentic African system of transcendental faith that would be described within political context as ‘the antipodes of fanaticism, egotism and extremism’.

Second, Christians in Abyssinia belong to various denominations. You have Monophysitic Amhara fanatic and obscurantist monks who remind us the Librarian of the monastery in the famous novel ‘The Name of the Rose’ by Umberto Eco; they are renowned for murdering Christian monks and priests who had great trouble traveling in Abyssinia in the 18th and the 19th centuries! And you have Oromos who accepted Catholicism and Protestantism due to the missionaries who preached there over the past 200 years.

Third, and this is more important, you have Muslims and Christians, among almost all the ethnic groups in Abyssinia; there are many Amhara and Tigray Muslims who of course represent the lowest social class of these ethnic groups, being also oppressed because of their religion.

Finally, Abyssinia is not made out of 6 ethnic – linguistic groups but consists of about 15 to 20 combined ethnic – linguistic – religious groups: a real multi-division that can become explosive when the ruling class is not representative and democratic.

This lets us understand the current Abyssinia Volcano; the political power is shared among the Christian Amharas and Tigrays, so it reflects less than 20% of the entire population of the country, with the Muslims amounting to about half the combined Amhara – Tigray Semitic population (32% of the entire population of Abyssinia).

The Real Lava of the Abyssinia Volcano

Afars and Ogadenis are predominantly Muslim; and as such they are the most exposed to contacts and exchange of ideas with the Somali Islamists who are guided by Al Qaeda. There have always been channels of communication among the Ogadeni and the Afar Muslims and the other Abyssinian Muslims, the Amhara Muslims, the Tigray Muslims, the Oromo Muslims, etc. As the Abyssinian Muslims in their entirety have been oppressed continuously by the Christian Amhara group, the radicalization spread from Somalia would demonstrate to them that the only way for the Muslim majority of the country to get rid of the oppression of that group is the alliance with the Somali Islamists and Al Qaeda. This choice would put an end to the concern for national independence and emancipation, and will drive the entire country to the brink of abyss. Signs of Islamic radicalization have been noticed over the past year throughout Abyssinia.

If America does not help the Oromo majority to secede, form an independent country, kick the Amharas out of Addis Abeba, which is a fake name for the Oromo city of Finfinne, soon the world will be taken by surprise by the new Islamic Volcano explosion, this time much worse than the supposedly marginal Somalia. When the Islamic extremism will make a basis in Abyssinia, no containment policy will be able to be successful throughout Africa. It will be the End.

The present article does not only reveal a potential danger; it also analyzes and the historical past of the Kushitic and the Semitic groups of Ethiopia / Abyssinia, and consists in a Plead for the establishment of at least two countries in the area of present day Abyssinia:

Kushitic Oromo Ethiopia / Semitic Amhara Abyssinia

It is only natural that the sovereign people of Oromo tries to outline its own past, its own links with the Khammitic peoples of the African Antiquity in an effort of National History that is certainly and by definition different than that of the Semitic, Yemenite, Abyssinian Axum, the original state from which originate the Amhara and the Tigray ethnic groups of Abyssinia. We specify here that the term Kushitic represents a subdivision of the Khammitic peoples, as the Slavic group is a subdivision of the Indo-European peoples.

In addition, it is only ‘recently’ that the Oromo country was included within the borders of the modern Abyssinian state within which the Oromos consist in the main, central ethnic, national, racial, linguistic, cultural and societal group.

If the Khammitic past and present of Oromos is different than that of the Axumite Abyssinians, if the Khammitic cultural identity of the Oromos is different than that of the purely Semitic Amhara, if the Oromos of today’s Abyssinia want to form an independent country, this must be taken immediately into consideration.

1. History as a Discipline of the Humanities

History as modern discipline of the Humanities is based on a) facts and evidence and on b) interpretations of facts and evidence. But more than all the rest, History is a matter of Conception, Perception, Theoretical Approach, and – quite unfortunately but very unavoidably – Conceptual Manipulation of data. When one reaches this level, one asks oneself how far one can go in ‘re-establishing’ and ‘representing’ (to ourselves in our present time) the past. One wonders up to what extent one should go far from events or even distort reality! The reason of these questions is that others did it first, did it earlier, did it extensively, and did it in a very disastrous way.

If the French and British colonial Historians distorted to so terrible extent History and they did it in order to promote misunderstanding, hatred, wrong perceptions, wars and permanent underdevelopment, what matters if you misconceive or misinterpret a detail in your effort to set up a Historical system that will serve as basis for Democracy, Human Rights, Progress, Development and Fraternity of Peoples? This is the question. And the real answer depends on what philosophical school the Historian belongs to. Philosophy of History is a vast field whatsoever, already developed by several great peoples of the Ancient Orient.

2. Ancient Egypt is already a totally African – Khammitic – Civilization

To be more precise and start approaching the subject itself, I should ask the following academic question. What does it matter if you make a ‘mistake’ when considering and concluding that the modern Oromos are the descendants of Ancient Egyptians, if this theory helps Oromos and other Khammitic peoples of Eastern Africa establish a fully accredited democratic and free system, within which Human Rights, Equity, Fraternity, and Respect for the ‘Other’ will prevail, and from which progress and development will emanate?

I mean if an alternative historian makes a mistake, the criminal colonial scholars, historians and diplomats have already made so many mistakes on purpose, they diffused them, and even they applied the negative consequences of so many – worse – mistakes that we cannot compare either in terms of error analysis (just a wrong evaluation of data is ‘innocent’ if compared to the perverted willingness and intention to diffuse something that you already know it is wrong) or judging upon results (democratic societies instead of colonial Third World type tyrannies of all sorts).

As a starting point, we should examine the relation between Egypt and Meroe – Oromo within the Khammitic – Cushitic context. Many Oromo ask the question: “Are we direct descendants of the Biblical Cush to which Egypt was connected too”? These are forms of colonially imposed falsehood that have penetrated their mind? Your question is typical of colonial impact!

Colonial Historians and schools of History try to make of Ancient Egypt a rather ‘mythical’ subject, based on Ancient Greek and Roman mythologies of Ancient Egypt, misconceptions and misunderstandings that the Colonial Historians need for their ideological forgery. They want to make of Ancient Egypt a kind of ‘detached’ subject, related to European history only in terms of Exodus, of ancient Greek and Roman ‘visits’, of Jesus’ crossings, and of Alexander’s coronation.

Ancient Egypt is not the falsified and forged ‘Ancient Egypt’ of the misleading Colonial Historians and Orientalists.

And more than that, Ancient Egypt is Africa, fully, totally, completely, overwhelmingly, unadulterated Africa.

We certainly say that Egypt as civilization starting with Narmer, the first pharaoh of the first dynasty, and the introduction of the Hieroglyphic writing around 2950 BCE (the famous ‘palette’ of Narmer bears his name as first testimony of Ancient Egyptian scripture, and can be visited at the Cairo Egyptian Musem), is a Khammito-Semitic product, because of the Semitic emigration – through Canaan to the Nile valley decades before the reign of Narmer – that resulted in a certain intermingling we have been able to attest at the linguistic level in the form of vocabulary, and at the archeological level in several pottery techniques and patterns. And this is true! But, one must never forget that within this Khammito-Semitic mixture, the Khammitic part is absolutely preponderant and overwhelming.

Of course, it would be wrong to delete entirely the Semitic presence and role in Ancient Egypt, but it would be equally wrong to think that Semites and Khammites contributed to the formation of Ancient Egyptian civilization to the same extent!

Egypt is Khammitic with some Semitic touch; this would be the correct evaluation of the situation.

3. Egyptians are not Semitic

When it comes to Culture, Thinking, Mentality, Behaviour, Weltanschauung, (mainly Khammitic) Egypt differs from the Semitic Akkad, Assyria and Babylon totally. In the same way Egypt has been the top Khammitic contribution to the World Civilization, Akkad – Assyria –Babylon has been the unmatched, archetypal and paradigmatic model of Semitic legacy in the History of the Mankind.

Neither Hebrews or Jews, nor Aramaeans or Phoenicians, nor Arabs, did they influence and determine the Human Mind as much as the Akkadian – Assyrian – Babylonian, Mesopotamian Cradle did.

The differences between the Khammitic Nile Civilization and the Semitic Mesopotamia are at times dramatic, astounding and bewildering.

All this is essential as an introduction, since modern pathetic and ludicrous nationalistic beliefs – diffused by the Colonial intellectuals and academia in a way to serve the criminal colonial purposes – mixed with backward Islamist and extremist non-sense influenced the average mind and the poor, low level, local ‘academia’ in Egypt up to the point of diffusing the aberration that Egyptians are a Semitic people.

The forgery about the Semitic nature of the Egyptians served the purpose of Colonial powers to diffuse Pan-Arabism and Arab nationalism in order to alter the real face and the true characteristics of the Egyptians, who are not Semitic. It also served the purpose of the Islamic extremism and its false version of Arabo-centric, Islamo-centric, Hedjazo-centric ‘history’.

De-personifying totally Egypt and the Egyptian Civilization, Colonialism and Islamism are the two aspects of the same coin, that of disaster, poverty, diseases, underdevelopment, analphabetism, barbarism, misery and sickness for today’s dictatorial and tyrannical Egypt.

So, what matters first is the absolute perception of Ancient Egypt as an authentic African phenomenon.

To the aforementioned one should add the Khammitic – Kushitic nature of Ancient Ethiopia, i.e. Sudan, that had first capital at Napata and second capital at Meroe.

4. Ancient Egyptian influences spread throughout Africa

The subject of Egyptian influences spread throughout Africa is nor very pleasant to European, Colonial historians, who try to minimize the radiation of Ancient Egypt, and to falsely increase that of Ancient Greece and Rome. To show that Egypt and Kush / Meroe radiated for millennia down to Mali, Senegal, Cameroon, and Ghana, at a moment we know that the Ancient Greek culture did not expand outside the Mediterranean but for a short period after the invasions of Alexander the Great, would be shocking for the mistaken Greco-Romano-centrism of Sorbonne.

That is why Europeans do not favour a decisively necessary Egyptological –Africanist rapprochement that would help a lot by means of many inter-disciplinary dissertations. They do not push European students to do so, they divert African students attempting – quite naturally – to advance in this field, and they defame any supposedly ‘revolutionary’ approach highlighting Ancient Egyptian influences throughout Africa. In this regard, it is essential laud the difference made by several American universities and scholars, notably Prof. Martin Bernal, famous author of ‘Black Athena’, a vast research and voluminous book that detects the Egyptian origins and character of Ancient Greece, and many others, who are often accused of Afro-centrism!

5. The Nubians – another group

Let’s get to the point! In Ancient Egypt since the Dawn of History, except the Egyptians, lived other local peoples, notably the Nubians. Nubians are not Khammitic – Kushitic at all; they belong to the so-called Nilo-Saharic group that is much smaller than the big families, the Semitic, the Indo-Europeans (Japhethic), the Khammitic, the Turco-Mongolian / Uralo-Altaic, the Dravidians, the Malay, the Bantu, and others.

We have very few words of Ancient Nubian saved as written in Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic texts; it is difficult to establish a language continuity between Ancient Nubian and the modern Nubian dialects, the likes of Kinzi and Fudjeki (in Egypt), as well as of Halfawi, Mahas, Sukkot, and Danglawi (in Sudan). We simply consider the continuity as plausible.

6. The Desert is Satanic for the Ancient Egyptians

An Egyptian expansion in Africa means always ‘expansion’ alongside the Nile. Almost nothing more! Certainly Egyptians controlled the oases of the Western Desert, Siwah, Kharga and the like, but they never reached the Libyan South-western confines where the Garamanteis of the Ancient Greek texts dwelled. Of course, Egyptians crossed the Eastern Desert, either for trade and communication needs (there were harbours in the Egyptian Red Sea coast) or for goldmines exploration and precious stones’ extraction needs. But the desert was for the Ancient Egyptians the realm of Seth, the Satanic force that cut Osiris, lit. ‘the Well Being’, into pieces, and that will be exterminated by Horus, an archetype of Messiah / Mahdi, at the end of Time. Ancient Egyptians spent the night in the desert only in cases of serious reason and ultimate need.

Egyptian expansion in the south meant occupation of Sudan; the bolder Pharaoh in this regard seems to have been Thutmosis I, the father of the illustrious Queen Hatshepsout, who campaigned until Kurgus, where he had a fortress built at a distance of approximately 1500 km from Aswan, which was the southernmost point of Egypt.

Of course, there was always the famous African trade of Egypt, the abundant and exquisite merchandises one could find at the Customs Office that was located at Elephantine (Abu in Ancient Egyptian), a 1 km long island in Aswan! Through many references and texts, we are able to understand that they came throughout Africa, the Red Sea coast, the Horn of Africa area, as well as the faraway confines of Sahara.

7. The Blemmyes – Bedja are still there!

But all this trade was effectuated most through intermediaries, Nubians, Kushites of the Sudan, and several tribes of the desert the most famous of which were the ancestors of the present day Bedja, who are identified with the Blemmyes of the Greek and Latin sources, as well as with the Berehi or the Medjiay of the Ancient Egyptian texts.

8. Ancient Egyptians living in the Desert

Of course, what consists in the regular and average day-to-day life is at times totally interrupted. We know very well that at a period of upheaval, Egyptians rejecting the imposed form of rule and administration used to move to the desert. Opponents to the Ptolemaic rule started staying longer in the desert before returning in order to rebel and impose a revolutionary, democratic form of state at Thebes. Control in Upper Egypt was frequently lost for the pharaohs of Alexandria, and the Romans faced challenges there as well!

This mass movement towards the desert shows that basic characteristics of the Egyptian mind had changed by that late period. In earlier periods, such an attitude would be unthinkable! This mass movement, a genuine social phenomenon of Ptolemaic Egypt, gave later birth to the religious phenomenon of anachoretism, the departure of Christian monks from the valley and the ensuing residence in the desert!

9. Ancient Egyptians moving to Kushitic ‘Ethiopia’ (Sudan)

Is it possible that Egyptian rebels of the Ptolemaic times moved towards the south? Well, the answer is certainly ‘yes’. But south means ‘Ethiopia’, not today’s Abyssinia but today’s Sudan. The Meroitic state of Ethiopia had relatively good relations with both, the Ptolemaic dynasty and the Upper Egyptian rebels. There were two buffer zones, where neither Egyptians, nor Meroitic Ethiopians, but Nubians were in majority, one comprised within the other; Dodekaschoinos (a 12 schoinoi long area) was the northern part of Triakontaschoinos (a 30 schoinoi long area). Financial and security control was at times assumed jointly by Meroe and Egypt (or later Meroe and Rome) either in Dodekaschoinos or in Triakontaschoinos. Did these Egyptians move even further in the south to the area of present day Oromo land? We totally ignore. But it is sure that in these later periods Egyptians were not afraid of the Kushitic / Meroitic ‘Ethiopians’ in the same way they had been earlier, when in the 3rd and the 2nd millennia ‘Kas’ (Kush) meant for the average Egyptians the people who practices continuously black magic.

10. Ancient Ethiopia is today’s Sudan: Kushitic period

Similarly, at the times of the Kushitic period (850 – 525 BCE), the ancient rulers of Napata in Sudan never controlled as much in the south as the area of Khartoum. This is only normal, since the main interest was to move to the north, and control Egypt (as Shabaka, Shabataka, Tahraqa and in the beginning of his reign Tanutamon did), not to invade the militarily and geo-strategically useless jungle of Africa! This is the famous ‘Ethiopian’ dynasty of Manetho.

Dealing with the vast area of Sudan, and attempting to understand its geo-strategic, geopolitical, geographical and environmental challenges throughout History is a puzzle. In several areas of Sudan today the desert reaches the Nile! The famous ‘valley of the Nile’ becomes nil! All the major Kushitic and Meroitic monuments of Sudan lie today in the desert! This characterizes the various Christian monuments of Sudan, Dongola Agouza, al Ghazzali, high places of the historical African Christianity that is more abundantly documented in Sudan than in Abyssinia!

But in the Antiquity, the pyramids of Nuri and Napata, the vast necropolis of Meroe (Bagrawiyah), the magnificent palatial city at Mussawarat as Sufra, the four temples at Naqah, at a distance of 35 – 40 km from the Nile, and Basa, the ‘lost’ marvel of Ancient Ethiopia – that has nothing to do with a state ruled from Addis Abeba – in the middle of the present day wasteland ‘Butana’, were all surrounded by green lands!

11.Ethiopia and the ‘Island Meroe’ have nothing to do with Abyssinia!

Suffice it to state the Ancient Greek term ‘Nesos Meroe’, and the similar term in Latin ‘Insula Meroe’, i.e. ‘Island Meroe’! How can an inland desert place like that be called ‘island’? Well, the ancient authors had their good reasons!

As we all know at the area of Khartoum the Nile is bifurcated into the White Nile and the Blue Nile, with the latter coming down from the Abyssinian mountains in the east – southeast. After they merge, the united Nile is formed and takes the northeast direction until meeting its affluent Atbara (Ancient Greek and Latin ‘Astabaras’). Atbara river flows from the Abyssinian mountains as well, and its sources are not far from the lake Tana that is the source of the Blue Nile. So, the piece of land that lies between the Blue Nile, the united Nile and Atbara is almost an island since the distance between the sources of the Blue Nile and those of Atbara is very small, and perhaps in the Antiquity it was even smaller!

12. When the Kushitic state was destroyed twice in 65 years, Kushites migrated to the South!

What was certainly a tremendous shock for the Kushitic people of Ancient Ethiopia, the citizens of the rulers of Napata and Thebes (the pharaohs of the 25th dynasty of Egypt), was the ‘bad luck’ Egypt brought to their Qore (‘king’ in Ancient Kushitic and Meroitic)! In 671, 669 and 666 BCE, Taharqa and Tanutamon were defeated by the Assyrian emperors Assarhaddon and Assurbanipal, who definitely invaded and annexed Egypt. Kush was limited again in the south of the present day border between Sudan and Egypt.

But, in 590 BCE, Psammetichus II, despite the pressure of the Babylonian Nabukadnezzar (who was present in Judea, ready to invade Jerusalem and to deport the Jews to Southern Mesopotamia), arranged a big expedition – based on Phoenician, Aramaean, Jewish, Greek, Lydian, Carian, Lycian and Libyan mercenaries, attacked and destroyed Napata (2000 km in the south of Sais the capital of Psammetichus II at the area of Delta), probably because he was afraid of rumours that the Kushites were still the favourite option of the Theban priests, who despised the pharaohs of the 26th, ‘Libyan’, dynasty!

Even worse, in 525 BCE Cambyses, the Achaemenidian Shah of Iran, after invading Egypt, pursued his campaign reaching as far as Napata, and destroying again the Kushitic capital! At that moment, Cambyses was at a distance of no less than 4000 km far from his capital! Two attacks within 65 years from the north could not be easily accepted by the Kushites, who certainly counted on the geographical distance as an advantage in their defense! So, they transferred their capital to the south! The went more than 500 km further on alongside the Nile, up to the area of the aforementioned ‘Insula Meroe’, i.e. the present day Butana, in an effort to isolate themselves and to ensure the defense of their country from the only place an attack could be expected: the North!

This testifies – in addition to archaeological evidence from Axum and other places in the Abyssinian plateau – to the fact that in the area of present day Abyssinia there was not a sizeable and strong state that would challenge Meroitic Ethiopia around 500 – 450 BCE, when the transferal took place.

13 Kushitic mass movement and migration within Kushitic ‘Ethiopia’

What we can note at this point is a Kushitic mass movement – of course within their own country, ‘Ethiopia’, that is present day Sudan! Whereas for the period 850 – 500 BCE the bulk of the population seems concentrated between today’s Abu Simbel and Karima (Napata), and becomes progressively scarce beyond Karima, for the next period (450 BCE – 370 CE) the most populated area seems to be present day Butana, around the new capital Meroe (Bagrawiyah), and population becomes scarce between the fourth and the fifth cataracts, being again dense between the second and the third, which is the part of the country that borders Egypt.

14. Meroitic expansion and trade

Until the beginning of the Christian era, we cannot raise the subject of Meroitic – Ethiopian expansion far beyond Khartoum in the south. By that time, Meroitic Ethiopia had its pivotal place in the trade between East and West, i.e. between China - India and Alexandria – Rome. Especially critical was Meroe for the African trade with Egypt (by that time a Roman province), and for long the African elephants had been elevated in Meroe and thence transported to Ptolemais Theron, the Egyptian Ptolemaic and Roman colony at the Sudanese Red Sea coast (today’s Suakin), and shipped to Alexandria.

The trade enhanced the exchange of ideas, beliefs and faiths. The rock relief at Djebel Qeili (southeastwards of Khartoum) testifies to an unbelievable diffusion of Iranian Mithraism that was until that moment completely unknown in the area of Meroitic Ethiopia. At the same time, we attest Indian influences on the Semitic Axum that was about to rise, thanks to the rich trade of Adulis, the Red Sea port of call at the area of Massawa.

The fact that we must wait until a so late period for a significant expansion of Ethiopian Meroe far in the ‘south’ is a sign that the jungle was receding and that meteorological conditions were changing the environment and the Meroitic Ethiopian habitat.

The famous text of the Periplus of the Red Sea makes a hint that there was a trade road between Axum and Meroe or other places further in the west or south of Axum, but it is definitely inconclusive evidence.

15. The Abyssinian invasion of Ethiopia and the destruction of Meroe

Life seems to continue calm until the christianization of Axum, mythologized through the story of Frumentius, and of the Roman Empire. By 350 Christians started having the upper hand in Egypt, but the north was earlier and more densely christianized than the South. Then, an event of major importance occurred, namely the Axumite Abyssinian Semitic invasion and destruction of the Kushitic Ethiopia and Meroe (by king Ezana – 370 CE). It is only then that started the royal Abyssinian propaganda about Axum being supposedly ‘Ethiopia’!

It is necessary to stress the point that the New Testament reference to an Ethiopian prince traveling in Judea reveals the endeavours of a Sudanese highness from Meroe, visiting his neighboring country (Roman Empire), and showing an interest in the newly diffused belief. The guy had nothing to do with Abyssinian Axum…..

When Ezana destroys Meroe, we testify to dramatic changes in the area of Ethiopia indeed. This is actually one of the mysteries that tantalized the specialists until now.

16. Christianization of Egypt and Eastern Africa

In the Egyptian south, Ancient Egyptian cults and forms of religion and culture persist, gradually weakened, until Justinian prohibited (540 CE) the religious activities and services at the last Egyptian shrine, notably the temple of Isis at Philae (5 km in the south of Aswan).

Not only Egyptian cults survived as late as 540 CE, but also Nubian cults had survived until the second half of the 5th century, notably at Talmis (present day Kalabsha) where was the epicenter of the cult of Maluli (in Ancient Greek and Latin Mandulis), the main Nubian god. But what happened after 370 in the south of Triakontaschoinos is very strange. One could surmise that, as in Egypt and in Nubia, so in Ethiopia, i.e. Sudan, a Christian culture stratum would supersede the immediately pre-Christian stratum. But this did not happen!

All the land in the south of the second cataract (at the area of today’s Wadi Halfa) seems to have been deserted. Many sites have been completely abandoned, whereas in the rest the local population seems very scarce. This characterizes the entire valley of the Nile at the area of Sudan from Wadi Halfa to Khartoum! The inhabitants of that vast area seem to have been reduced by 75 to 90%, if we compare the latest Meroitic period (250 to 370) with the so-called Qustul and Ballana culture that follows the destruction of Ethiopia by Ezana, the king of Abyssinia, and precedes the establishment of the independent Christian kingdoms of Sudan, Nobatia and Makkuria!

Of course, it is well known that by that time the bellicose but little kingdom of Axumite Abyssinia extended around Axum and Adulis, the rich port of call at the present day Eritrean Red Sea coast. King Ezana may have annexed parts of Meroitic Abyssinia that were adjacent to his kingdom, possibly part of the Butana desert, the land between the present day Sudanese – Eritrean borders and the united Nile from Shendi to Atbara, but that is all! We have every reason to believe that the invasion of Ezana did not reach as far as Napata (Karima) in the north, and there was not any real need for something like that. Engulfed in decay, Ethiopia collapsed entirely after the destruction of its capital, Meroe.

On the other hand, as early as the end of the 4th century CE Axumite Abyssinia did not control areas in the center, the south, the west and the east of present day Abyssinia. Lake Tana seems to have been beyond the southern border of Ezana.

17. Kushitic mass movement and emigration to the south

How can we interpret these facts? It seems that the end of the 4th century CE in Sudan heralded a major Exodus of Kushitic populations of Ethiopia abandoning Meroe, their destroyed capital and other locations. The Kushitic masses were still practicing typical forms of Meroitic religion and cult evolving around the central figure of the Lion-headed god Apademak, variations of Amun, and several types of Isis – Hathor.

The emigrating Kushitic – Meroitic masses had no reason to move into the already christianized Roman Empire (here I mean Egypt as a Roman province), and could not possible undertake an advance towards the Axumite heartland of Abyssinia that would rather be perceived as an attack, if we take into consideration the fact of Ezana’s earlier expedition and invasion of Ethiopia.

18. 4th CE Kushitic Exodus heading towards the present day Oromo country

Consequently, the only direction the Kushitic mass exodus may have taken is that of areas the Abyssinian king Ezana could not reach, areas that were neither covered by African jungles, nor characterized by desert, areas leading to places of possible shelter. The direction must have been towards the juncture of the two Niles, i.e. present day Khartoum, and further on alongside the Blue Nile towards present day Al Gedaref in Sudan and the Benshangul province in present day Abyssinia.

The dramatic repercussions that this historical exodus’ diagram implies go certainly beyond imagination, since at this very moment this approach consists still in an early interpretational scheme. It is historically plausible, but it takes a lot of effort and studies until it becomes an absolutely established conclusion. A lot of work is in this regard necessary to be carried out towards the completion of the decipherment of the Meroitic Hieroglyphic and Cursive scriptures; furthermore, comparisons and linguistic research must take place with respect to both, Meroitic and Oromo. In addition, History of Religion and Social Anthropology have a great role to play in terms of comparative research.

Ending this very long article, I think that I rather made a diagram of answer than I truly answered this serious question. I want here to close this contribution by stating two things.

A. The Kushitic Exodus I refer to is not the last emigration from the area of historical Ethiopia, i.e. present day Sudan. But it is the most important one. Another significant exodus, although more limited in terms of figures, seems to have taken place a few centuries after the case we studied; but it is another subject.

B. If at the term of many related researches the historical connection between the Kushitic Meroe / ‘Ethiopia’ and the people of Oromo is established, then certainly an independent country, populated by Oromo people, having Oromo as official language, and reassessing the Historical – Cultural Heritage of the Kushitic Meroe / ‘Ethiopia’, would have fully pledged right to the name ‘Ethiopia’. People moving to another place bear always their name, even if they first forgot it.

19. A Kushitic Oromo independent country could be called ‘Ethiopia’

Then, in case of an independent Oromo country, the Kushitic Oromo state should be called Ethiopia, leaving the Semitic name Abyssinia to the Amhara and the Tigray peoples. But this should be reflected in its language, culture, and education.

It is not permissible that a Semitic state, having a Semitic official language, as well as a typically Semitic (Gueze-Christiano-centric) culture and education is called ‘Ethiopia’, usurping in this way monuments that belong to the land of Sudan, and Kushitic culture and heritage of which a line of continuity comes down to the currently oppressed in Abyssinia Oromo people.