Monday, April 30, 2007

Ethiopia rescue attempt warning

Ethiopia rescue attempt warning
map
An Ethiopian separatist movement has warned the government that any attempt to rescue the seven Chinese civilians it is holding could put them in danger.

The Ethiopian government said it will send a mission to free the Chinese.

The Ogaden National Liberation Front attacked a Chinese oil installation in eastern Ethiopia on Tuesday in which nine Chinese and 65 Ethiopians died.

The ONLF said the seven were being well cared for and would be handed over to the Red Cross at the first opportunity.

It is "a very delicate operation, because Ogaden is a battle zone," said ONLF spokesman Abdirahman Mahdi.

China has strongly condemned the rebel attack against its interests.

The Ethiopian leader denounced the attack as "cold-blooded murder".

Ethiopia has accused neighbouring Eritrea of sponsoring the ONLF, an ethnic Somali rebel group.

We have warned the Chinese government and the Ethiopian government that... they don't have a right to drill there
ONLF's Abdirahman Mahdi

Eritrea has denied the accusation, saying Ethiopia is trying to trigger a war.

Beijing urged the government in Addis Ababa to ensure the safety of Chinese expatriates after the "atrocious" act.

It says the attack will not stop it from investing in Africa, but it plans to boost security measures.

The clashes took place at an oil field in Abole, a small town about 120km (75 miles) from the regional capital, Jijiga.

"It is an outrage," Ethiopian Prime Minster Meles Zenawi said at a news conference.

"I can assure you that those responsible for this act will pay in full for what they did."

Fire fight

The ONLF has been waging a low-level insurgency with the aim of breaking away from Ethiopia.



OGADEN NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT (ONLF)
ONLF fighters
Want Somali-speaking region to break away from Ethiopia
Founded in 1984
Has been accused of bomb attacks in Somali region and the capital, Addis Ababa
Fought major battles with Ethiopian government in 2006

The ONLF has in the past made threats against foreign companies working with the Ethiopian government to exploit the region's natural resources.

A Chinese oil worker said about 200 gunmen attacked the field, where the Zhongyuan Petroleum Exploration Bureau is searching for oil.

Gunmen briefly took control of the field after a 50-minute fire fight with soldiers protecting it, Xu Shuang, a manager for the oil group, said.

China has been working to increase its influence and investment in Africa in recent years as it looks to secure energy supplies for the future.

Ethiopia faces ‘Iraq situation’ in Somalia

By ABDIKADIR KHALIF

A young woman from Hamarbile area of Mogadishu was recently reported to have been gang-raped by Ethiopian soldiers.

While many people sympathised with the 18-year-old, others were skeptical that the Ethiopians could engage in such an emotional act because there has never been reports of abuse against them, despite being in the country in their thousands.

The Ethiopians are supposed to be here to stabilise the security of Somalia, especially the capital, said some of their supporters.

An earlier allegation of rape made by a mother of two had not attracted much attention, because people and human-rights activists probably thought it was a fabricated story, meant to smear the Ethiopians.

“The fact that Suban exposed her dilemma to the media in the company of her husband made the tale rather suspicious,” said a city resident.

Besides such incidents raising suspicion over the presence of the Ethiopian forces in Somalia, the the downing of an army helicopter on March 30 also showed what some feel about the foreign troops in Mogadishu.

Aerial strikes by the Ethiopian helicopters were aimed at accomplishing missions at different places, said Mohamed Hussein Dibi, an Islamist sympathiser in Mogadishu, but “putting a nasty chopper out of combat must be a relief for the fighters.” In mid-March, too, another incident, in which a mob dragged the dead bodies of two government soldiers along the streets was yet another demonstration that sections of the Somali community have only developed hate over the past decade and half, said an opinion writer in a local paper.

For many people, the war situation is worrying, especially since there is no clear winner in the contest. The insurgents set up roadblocks, and use snipers to attack their enemy.

This has created the impression that Addis Ababa is likely to face a situation similar to that confronting US troops in Iraq: A war with no end in sight.

The Ethiopian troops and the TFG forces, on the other hand, prefer shelling from defunct government stations and makeshift barracks.

The most dangerous areas to live in include Fagax, Casa Poplare and Ali Kamin crossroads in North Mogadishu, former military headquarters of the former Somali army better known for its Italian name Commando Esercito.

These places are densely populated, but women and children have since fled, leaving the men to guard their properties.

The TFG forces and their Ethiopian supporters reached Mogadishu four months ago, not as humble visitors but a show of force. But this has not intimidated the insurgents.

People are now wondering about the “stabilisation” role of the Ethiopians.

“The Ethiopians are just invaders with the ultimate objective of colonising Somalis in Somalia as they oppress the Somalis in the Ogaden region inside Ethiopia,” said a sympathiser of the insurgents. “It is struggle against occupation.”

But for others, the intervention is timely. “The Ethiopians stand for a noble course; not only to help the stabilisation of the TFG’s institutions, but also to initiate harmony among the people’s of the Horn of Africa region,” said a TFG sympathiser.

A series of international gatherings has also praised Ethiopia for bringing about the biggest opportunity for Somalia to regain its statehood.

The Contact Group for Somalia’s talks in Dar-es-salaam and Cairo, the African Union Summit in Addis Ababa and the Arab League Summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, have all praised efforts by Ethiopia.

Indeed, the UN Security Council and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development have said that Ethiopian troops should not leave until they are replaced by competent peacekeeping contingencies from the AU or the UN.

Friday, April 27, 2007

Ethiopian rebels say working on release of Chinese

By Andrew Heavens

ADDIS ABABA, April 27 (Reuters) - Ethiopian insurgents who captured seven Chinese workers during a deadly attack on an oil terminal will free them as soon as the military stops activities in the area, a rebel spokesman said on Friday.

Ethiopia has sent defence forces to the region bordering Somalia to hunt down fighters from the separatist Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) which carried out Tuesday's pre-dawn raid killing 65 Ethiopians and nine Chinese.

The raid on a Chinese-run oil facility was one the worst attacks to date on Beijing's growing interests in Africa.

The ONLF, fighting for independence since 1984, had contacted the Red Cross to help with the handover of the Chinese hostages who were "safe, healthy and well treated", a London-based spokesman said.

"The Ethiopian army is making lots of movements around the area at the moment. That will impact how quickly we can release them," Abdirahman Mohammed Mahdi told Reuters by telephone.

"We are trying to work out how to release the seven Chinese people safely. We can't just leave them somewhere to be picked up. This is the Ogaden and there are lots of lions and hyenas. It would not be safe."

Ethiopian officials were not immediately available for comment. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it was ready to facilitate in the handover of the Chinese hostages, but declined to say whether the ONLF had contacted it about playing a role.

"The ICRC is always ready to act as a neutral intermediary for humanitarian reasons if all parties involved agree and make a request," ICRC spokeswoman Anna Schaaf told Reuters in Geneva.

The ONLF have repeatedly warned energy companies they will not allow oil and gas exploration in the area as long as the Ogaden people are "denied their rights to self-determination".

In an open letter published on its Web site, the ONLF said it wanted to "assure the people of China that your citizens are safe, healthy and well treated."

"The ONLF would like to assure the people and the government of China that your citizens will be reunited with their families as soon and as safely as possible. We have no conditions on this pledge," the statement said.

The Chinese staff worked for Zhongyuan Petroleum Exploration Bureau, part of the much larger China Petroleum and Chemical Corp. (Sinopec).

Thursday, April 26, 2007

The OROMO refugees living in Sana'a


The ORMO refugees in Sana'a e-mail-getacc-10@hotmail.com usyo-@yahoo.com



We are the Oromo ethnic group refugees of asylum seekers. At the moment we are registered under U.N.C.R for the refugee protection Status in Sana'a. We were departed from our home country because of the political conflicts there, but we haven't got any response or solution for our problems from the UNCR office in Sana'a.

We are the Oromo refugees threatened by the Ethiopian government prosecution .The following suggestions are the main points of our problems occurred to Oromo refugees in Yemen.

1- The UNCR interpreters don't know our status in Sana'a.

2- The UNCR staff members or employees changed the files of the Oromo refugees without our knowledge. So, there is a sort of discrimination.

3- The one who has got under the mandate doesn't get the security and safety life under protection, all refugees are kicked and not respected in contradiction to what stated in stated in the protocol convention, 1951.

4- When the appointment held they extended it for a period of 6 months plus they postponed it for 3 times as a matter of hesitation. However, we were waiting till the appointment came and finally they gave us a rejection.

5- If one of our refugees is arrested, no-one would follow his/her case to set him/her free. Also, there are neither health centers nor schools for refugees.

There is some news that the Ethiopian government& Yemeni government are negotiating to co –operate the departure of those refugees from Yemen to Ethiopia. How come at this time? It is dangerous for us to be departed to a country we had escaped from.

There are many serious problems face us. One of them is that the Yemeni soldiers interrogate us every where they meet us especially at night. Also, they take us to the prison and rob what we have.

At large, we haven’t any right in this country. If we want to explain it to UNCR deputy representative we couldn’t find him/her. Still, we haven’t got the solution to our problems so we are kindly request you that our serious problems to be investigated by the concerned as soon as possible.

Thank you for your co-operation

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Ethiopian Rebels Kill 70 at Chinese-Run Oil Field

Ogaden National Liberation Front fighters show their readiness to fight Ethiopia in this file photo. The group said it attacked the oil field.
Published: April 24, 2007

NAIROBI, Kenya, April 24 — Separatist rebels stormed a Chinese-run oil field in eastern Ethiopia today, killing more than 70 people, including nine Chinese workers, in one of Ethiopia’s worst rebel attacks in years.

Witnesses said dozens of rebel gunmen crept up to the oil field at dawn and unleashed an intense barrage of machine gunfire at Ethiopian soldiers posted outside. After a fierce hourlong battle, the rebels rushed away, taking with them seven Chinese hostages.

Ethiopia, a close American ally, has been wracked by a number of separatist groups for years, but the severity of this attack seemed to unnerve Ethiopian officials, who usually play down any threats to their control.

“It was a massacre,” Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said in a televised address tonight. “It was cold-blooded murder.”

The Ogaden National Liberation Front, a militant group fighting for independence for eastern Ethiopia, immediately claimed responsibility, circulating an e-mail message that said, “We will not allow the mineral resources of our people to be exploited by this regime or any firm that it enters into an illegal contract.”

Ethiopian officials vowed to crush the rebel group, but the crisis comes at a precarious time for the country.

Thousands of Ethiopian troops are bogged down in Somalia where they face increasingly intense resistance. Today, a suicide bomber apparently targeting Ethiopian troops killed seven civilians in Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital, the second time in a week that suicide attacks were used.

Ethiopia’s intervention in Somalia may have spurred the rebels to attack the oil field. Ethiopian troops have recently rounded up dozens of separatist rebels captured in Somalia, including many members of the Ogaden National Liberation Front.

“This is the rebels’ response,” said Ted Dagne, a specialist in African affairs for the Congressional Research Service. “They are fighting a classic guerrilla war against the government and those widespread detentions became another one of their grievances.”

The Ogaden has been a contested area for decades, home to Somali-speaking people who identify with Somalia and who have accused the Christian-led Ethiopian government of persecuting them because they are Muslim. The Ogaden National Liberation Front, which has offices around the world and a Web site, contends that the Ethiopian government has targeted civilians and burned Ogadeni villages.

Western military analysts estimate that the separatist group has several thousand fighters who receive arms from Eritrea, Ethiopia’s neighbor and bitter enemy, and sanctuary in Somalia.

Xinhua, the state-run Chinese news agency, confirmed late today that at least nine Chinese workers were killed at the oil field, which is located about 75 miles away from Jijiga, a trading town in eastern Ethiopia near the Somali border. Xinhua reported that the rebels briefly seized control of the field before kidnapping seven Chinese workers, who were among the field’s 37 Chinese and 120 Ethiopian employees.

China has become increasingly involved in Africa as it hunts for oil and other resources to feed its booming economy. Chinese workers often operate in areas considered unstable and several have already been kidnapped in the volatile Niger Delta in Nigeria.

The Ogaden National Liberation Front sent send a message to the Chinese and others considering investing in eastern Ethiopia.

“We urge all international oil companies to refrain from entering into agreements with the Ethiopian government as it is not in effective control of the Ogaden,” the statement said. “Oil investments in Ogaden will result in a similar loss.”

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Somali sub-clans unite against Ethiopian occupation

Two prominent Somali clan leaders, Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed and Hussein Aideed, have issued an ultimatum to the Ethiopian forces to leave Somalia now or prepare to fight to the death.
The two leaders of the Hawiye clan that dominates the Somali capital, Mogadishu, spoke after holding talks in Eritrea. Aideed said that Somalis will unite against "the brutal occupation" by Ethiopia.

Ahmed and Aideed were joined by Sharif Hassan Aden, the interim government's former speaker of parliament and leader of another major Somali tribe, the Digil-Mirifle. He was removed from his post in January for being too conciliatory toward the ousted Islamists, and on April 17 was among 30 dissident Somali lawmakers fired by the government.

A South African-based expert on Somalia, Richard Cornwell, told VOA that Aideed's apparent alliance with the Islamists is a sign that Hawiye's numerous sub-clans have decided to unite to oppose the interim government. Aideed and Ahmed belong to different Hawiye sub-clans, who have fought each other for control of Mogadishu for more than 15 years.

Cornwell notes that since the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) took power in Mogadishu in January, the Hawiye clan has become alarmed over moves to forcibly disarm Hawiye militias and give key security posts to members of President Abdullahi Yusuf's clan, the Darod.

"I think what has happened is that the TFG-Ethiopian assault on Mogadishu is cementing the Hawiye back together," he said. "A large part of the Islamic courts movement was always based on the Hawiye. So, basically, it has melted back into the clan structure. What we could well be looking at, if things turn nasty, is a Hawiye-Darod civil war. Unless the international community manages to understand that they must not continue with this unquestioning support of the TFG, we are going to head down the path of civil war."

A Somali observer in the United States, J. Peter Pham, says the withdrawal of Ethiopian forces could allow for a new government with a broader base of support. "If those forces withdrew, that will be the end of the TFG," he noted. "However, I would not see that necessarily as the worst possible outcome. One of the TFG's on-going problems is that it is not a representative institution of Somalis. If the TFG falls, so be it, and let the Somali people themselves decide what they want." (VOA via Red Bolivia, April 20)


Insurgents, Ethiopian troops clash for 4th day

Islamic insurgents and Ethiopian soldiers turned the streets of the Somali capital into a battleground for a fourth straight day, firing rockets and mortar rounds at each other yesterday in what a human rights official said was the worst violence in years.

At least 165 civilians have been killed last week's fighting, including at least 52 yesterday as residents hid inside, cowered under trees or abandoned the city altogether.

Dahir Dhere, director of Medina hospital, said his hospital had more wounded patients than it could handle and had pitched tents outside to care for them.

Neither the insurgents nor the Ethiopian government, which sent troops to Somalia last year to oust the Islamic movement, has admitted to any casualties.

An Associated Press reporter heard the boom of Ethiopian mortar shells fired toward northern Mogadishu, which appears to be the main battlefield between the two sides.

Residents fled their single-story homes to seek shelter on the ground floors of taller buildings, believing that the higher roofs would better absorb mortar damage, said Aden Mohamed, a former banker who had sought refuge in such a home.

Hundreds of women, children and men walked or piled into trucks to flee to Mogadishu's outskirts or leave city, joining an exodus of hundreds of thousands who have abandoned Mogadishu since February.






Thursday, April 19, 2007

Ethiopian military truck explodes in Somali capital


alad Duhul, Canadian Press

Published: Thursday, April 19, 2007

Article tools

MOGADISHU, Somalia - An Ethiopian military truck exploded on Thursday on the outskirts of the Somali capital, possibly killing the soldiers on board, said a witness, who did not know what caused the explosion.

The explosion comes after two days of on-off street battles between Ethiopian troops backing Somalia's fragile government and insurgents that saw both sides use tank shells, mortars and rocket-propelled grenades. Some residents characterized the fighting as the most intense in many years. At least 14 people were killed in the fighting and dozens injured.

The truck was one of two carrying Ethiopian soldiers travelling on the main road to key southern Somalia towns. The explosion took place about 20 kilometres south of Mogadishu.

Yusuf Osman, who runs a small pharmacy on that road, said on the phone that he saw the trucks leaving and "within minutes we heard a blast and saw one of the cars burning ... I think all the soldiers were killed as the whole car was on fire."

Ali Hussein Mohamed, a street vendor, told The Associated Press on the phone that he saw 10 injured Ethiopian soldiers lying on the ground.

Osman said that Ethiopian soldiers in the second truck opened fire on a nearby minibus. He saw two injured people, but he did not know if anyone was killed.

Policemen from a nearby station then cordoned off the area, said Osman.

Neither government nor police officials were immediately available for comment.

Somali troops backed by Ethiopian forces ousted the country's Islamic movement in December from Mogadishu and other strongholds. Remnants of the Islamic group have vowed to wage an Iraq-style insurgency and the capital has seen of waves of violence. The most deadly began in late March and saw hundreds of people killed, most of them civilians.

Diplomats have said, though, that also involved in the violence are clan militias that are not necessarily linked to the Islamic insurgents. Clan elders and Ethiopian military officials have negotiated truces in the past but these have not held for long.

Somalia has not had an effective national government since 1991, when warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on one another, throwing the country into anarchy.

A transitional government was formed in 2004 with UN help, but has struggled to maintain control over the country.

© The Canadian Press 2007

Five Ethiopians die in Yemeni detention

By: Amel Al-Ariqi



A skeleton of an African emigrant was found on Yemeni beaches. No one knows its identity. UNHCR records for 2006 show some 26,000 emigrants making the voyage from Somalia, with at least 330 dying while another 300 were reported missing and are believed dead.
SANA’A, April 18 - Five Ethiopian emigrants have been found dead in a Yemeni jail, according to an Ethiopian Embassy official.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to the press, said the bodies belonged to two young Ethiopian women and three young Ethiopian men. “They were among 100 Ethiopian infiltrators who entered Yemen illegally last week via smuggling boats. Yemeni authorities seized them in Shabwa governorate and sent them to Sana’a to be held in custody.

“According to the medical examiner in Sana’a, the five were suffering malnourishment, which led to their deaths,” he added, noting that emigrants always face risks and inhumane treatment by smugglers, who savagely beat them and steal their food and clothing during their journey to Yemen.

However, the Ethiopian official didn’t want to comment on whether African prisoners receive any type of medical care while in detention. “They’ll be buried in Sana’a,” he said, pointing out that such an incident isn’t the first among Ethiopian detainees. Four months ago, the Ethiopian Embassy in Sana’a received the body of another national who also died in a Yemeni jail.

According to a November 2006 U.N. report, most Ethiopian emigrants travel to the Somali port of Bossaso to take boats across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen, which is one of the few Middle Eastern nations to have signed the 1951 Refugee Convention.

However, the report said, not all Ethiopians emigrants are seeking asylum, as most infiltrate the Yemeni-Saudi borders searching for better employment in the Gulf states. There are no available statistics reflecting the actual number of Ethiopians coming into or out of Yemen.

Many Ethiopians don’t want to be registered at the center because they fear immediate deportation, said UNHCR official Erika Feller during her three-day visit to Yemen last month. UNHCR has offered to help screen new arrivals in order to ensure that any actual refugees among them will be detected and not deported. So far, Yemen hasn’t accepted this offer, as most Ethiopian emigrants are deported back to their country.

“Emigrants remain in detention at the Passport and Immigration Authority until they receive a passport and tickets, which are at the Yemeni government’s expense, and then they are deported to Ethiopia,” Ethiopian Embassy official said.

However, such measures don’t stop Ethiopian emigration to Yemen, the official noted, adding, “They return every year. Many times, we find the same emigrants that we deported previously once again entering Yemen illegally.”

In related news, various press reported on Tuesday that scores of Ethiopian army troops arrived at the Yemeni coast aboard two smuggling vessels after fleeing fighting with Islamic insurgents in Somalia.

Some 89 Ethiopians solders arrived at Arqa area in southern Yemen after crossing the Gulf of Aden from Bossaso, Al-Ayyam daily newspaper reported. According to the paper, 49 Somali refugees were aboard the same boats carrying the soldiers, who were wearing civilian clothing.

An Ethiopian army officer was quoted as saying that he and his comrades had fled the ranks of Ethiopian troops in Somalia after a dramatic escalation in fierce fighting with Somali Islamic insurgents.

Ethiopia sent army forces into Somalia last December to back the country’s interim government to drive out forces from the Islamic Courts Union, which controlled most of central and southern Somalia for nearly six months last year.

One officer mentioned that many other Ethiopian troops had decided to flee Somalia after they found themselves stuck in a “flaming hell.” Wanting to remain anonymous, the official told Deutsche Press-Agentur that the Ethiopian soldiers were transferred by military truck to Aden on Monday. It wasn’t clear whether they’ll seek asylum in Yemen or not.

UNHCR’s 2006 records show some 26,000 emigrants making the voyage from Somalia, with at least 330 dying while another 300 were reported missing and are believed dead.

UNHCR has registered only 1,990 Ethiopian refugees, all residing in Sana’a and

urban areas, with the exception of 663 Ethiopian Oromo refugees accommodated at Kharaz Camp in Laheg goveronrate.

The Ethiopian refugee community in Yemen also includes some 720 former officers and cadets of the Ethiopian Navy and their dependents, who received prima facie refugee status from Yemeni authorities in 1991.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Ethiopia rebel OLF deny arrest of Oromo people in Somalia

April 17, 2007 — For the past 16 years, the TPLF regime has shown itself to be the mother and father of all mendacity. The regime has fabricated a great deal lies to confuse and victimize the Oromo and other peoples in Ethiopia. In the process the regime’s survival has totally depended on manufacturing lies and hate propaganda on those it believes threat to its multiple agendas. The regime has been fabricating such baseless lies primarily for the consumption of its international financiers. Thus, over the years the regime has perfected the art of deception for the purpose of obtaining financial and military support from its international backers. Recently as usual, the regime is concocting and spreading a series of false propaganda about the circumstances of the abduction of Kumsaa Gadaa and other and Oromo compatriots.

The goal of the latest fabrication is of twofold. The first is to intensively continue to confuse international community about the OLF, the Oromo people and their legitimate struggle for self-determination, justice, and the rule of law, economic development and peace. The second is to cover the crime it is committing daily against the Oromo people, other people in Ethiopia including the Ogaden Somalis, and the people of Somalia.

A few days ago, the propaganda machine of the regime claimed that it has captured in combat a member of OLF leadership and other OLF fighters in Somalia. Contrary to TPLF regime̢۪s fabrication, Kumsaa Gadaa and the other Oromo compatriots were not captured in combat. They were abducted in Mogadishu on January 13, 2007, during the TPLF regime̢۪s illegal aggression and occupation of Somalia. The Kenyan Government, in violation of the Geneva Refugee Convention, has also handed over several non-armed Oromo compatriots, who are currently in secret detention center in Ethiopia with other Mogadishu abductees.

The OLF did not engage in combat in Somalia and has no reason to do so. The OLF has been engaged in war of liberation and resistance in Oromia against the tyrannical minority rule of the TPLF regime. It is the TPLF regime that declared war on the OLF and the Oromo people to perpetuate its illegitimate rule. The struggle that the OLF has engaged in is for just cause and the Oromo war against the TPLF rule is a war of resistance justified under international law.

Oromo compatriots who were abducted; and illegally detained are political prisons and prisoners of conscience. The OLF has all reasons to believe that Oromo compatriots are subjected to torture in violation of the Geneva Convention on the Treatment of Prisoners and the UN Convention against Torture. The statements that the TPLF tormenters obtained from Kumas Gada and the other Oromo compatriots were given under duress, torture and in situation of inhuman and degrading treatments and they should be taken in these contexts. It will not be surprising if the regime goes beyond that and use these prisoners of conscience for other degrading purposes to continue its rule.

The relationship of the OLF with the Eritrean people, EPLF and the Eritrean Government goes back for decades and it is a relationship based on mutual interests and common goal of searching for justice, peace and progress. The OLF has similar relationship with other peoples, governments and other regional and worldwide organizations that are in quest for justice peace and progress. The OLF and the Oromo people have all the rights to get help from all the people or Governments that sympathize with their just struggle. It is abominable for the TPLF regime to use the Oromo cause to wage its war mongering propaganda against the Eritrean people and the Eritrean Government. The OLF has nothing but appreciation for all who support the just cause of the Oromo struggle for self-determination.

The OLF vehemently condemns the continuation of TLPF̢۪s inhuman and degrading treatment of Oromo prisoners. The OLF Calls upon all human rights and humanitarian organizations and concerned Governments to intervene and save the liberty of all Oromo political and war prisoners languishing in secret prisons.

Finally, we end this statement with an Oromo proverb, which says: â€Å“a person being washed away by cresting river tries to cling to life by hanging on the fluff”. The TPLF regime’s sinister fabrication about the illegally abducted Oromo nationals will not save it from facing its inevitable demise. Like all tyrannical regimes, the fate of the TPLF regime is already sealed. Meles Zenawi’s regime will soon pass into the dustbin of history. . Victory to the Oromo people!

The Oromo Liberation Front April 17, 2007

- Odaa-Aboubaker
- External Information Division Head
- Foreign Relations Department
- Oromo Liberation Front
- P.O.Box - 73247
- Washington DC 20056
- Tel. (202) 462-5477 Ext. 202
- Fax. (202) 332-7011

e-mail:olfinfodesk@earthlink.net www.oromoliberationfront.org

Somali capital rocked by fresh clashes

Mogadishu - Heavy fire broke out Tuesday in the Somali capital as Ethiopian army units and Islamist insurgents clashed in southern Mogadishu killing at least seven civilians, witnesses said.

Machinegun and heavy mortar fire rattled the Al Kamin quarter and some shells exploded close to the presidential palace, an AFP correspondent said.

Residents said long-range mortar shells rained over the nearby Bakara area, leaving a trail of casualties.

"At least four people have been killed and six others wounded after a mortar shell landed in their house," said resident Hussein Ali Mohamed.

'The bodies are lying in the house'
"The bodies are lying in the house and the wounded cannot be taken out at this time," he added.

Another Bakara resident Halima Mohamed said an artillery shell crashed into her house wounding four brothers.

"Two people were killed by stray bullets as they fled," she added.

An AFP correspondent saw a body of another man killed in the fighting, bringing the total fatalities to at least seven.

But residents said the toll could be much higher as nobody had managed to venture into Al Kamin, one of the worst-hit neighbourhoods.

'We congratulate the heroic people of Somalia'
Tuesday's fighting is the latest in a series of skirmishes following a truce announced by elders of Mogadishu's dominant Hawiye clan after talks with Ethiopian military commanders.

But the talks foundered after Ethiopian troops refused to meet the elders for further negotiations unless commanders of the insurgent movement attended.

Ethiopian forces have been deployed in the country since the start of the year to boost a UN-backed transitional government, which it helped oust Islamists from much of south and central Somalia.

The truce followed four days of intense fighting which erupted March 29 when Ethiopian troops launched a crackdown on suspected insurgents accused of attacking government and Ethiopian army positions in the capital.

Elders said at least 1 000 people were killed and more than 4 000 wounded in what humanitarian groups described as the worst fighting in 15 years.

The UN refugee agency said that at least 124 000 people had fled Mogadishu in the past two months.

Somalia has lacked an effective government since the ousting of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 touched off a power struggle that exploded into inter-clan warfare.

About 1 500 African Union peacekeepers from Uganda deployed in the lawless city early March have failed to stem the upsurge in violence.

The Ugandans are an advance contingent of about 8 000 peacekeepers the pan-African body plans to deploy in Somalia to help President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed exert his tenuous control across the country.

In neighbouring Eritrea, which is accused of supporting the Islamists, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, head of the executive arm of the Islamists, called on Somalis to intensify their resistance against Ethiopian forces, whom he accused of "destruction and genocide against defenseless civilians".

"We congratulate the heroic people of Somalia, and their victorious resistance," Ahmed said in a joint statement issued with former powerful Somali parliament speaker Sheikh Sharif Hassan Aden in Asmara.

"We call upon all citizens everywhere to oppose the Ethiopian occupation, defend their country and guarantee the freedom and independence of the nation," he added.

Eritrea has called for the withdrawal of Ethiopian and Ugandan forces, warning that their presence in Somalia would worsen the situation. Asmara has rubbished claims of backing the insurgents.

Analysts have expressed fears that Ethiopia and Eritrea, still at odds over their unresolved 1998-2000 border conflict, may fight a proxy war in Somalia. - Sapa-AFP

Some 89 Ethiopian soldiers flee Somalia to Yemen

Sana'a - Scores of Ethiopian army troops have arrived off the coast of Yemen onboard two boats belonging to smugglers after they fled fighting with Islamic insurgents in Somalia, a press report said on Tuesday.

Some 89 Ethiopian soldiers arrived in the Arqa area in southern Yemen after crossing the Gulf of Aden from Bosaso city in the semi-autonomous region of Puntland in northeast Somalia, the al-Ayyam daily newspaper said in a report on its website.

The paper said 49 Somali refugees were aboard the boats that carried the soldiers, who were wearing civilian clothes.

An Ethiopian army officer was quoted as saying that he and his comrades had fled the ranks of Ethiopian troops in Somalia after a dramatic escalation in fierce fighting with Somali Islamic insurgents.

'I am a member of the Ethiopian army and I took part in toppling the rule of the Islamic courts (in Somalia),' said the officer, identified as Muhammad Hassan.

'We did not expect the fighting to reach this level of fiercity or that it could turn into a guerrilla war,' he said.

The officer added that many other Ethiopian troops had decided to flee Somalia after they found themselves stuck amid a 'flaming hell.'

A police official in Arqa, about 600 kilometres from Sana'a, said that 10 Ethiopian women and seven civilian men were among the group that reached the shores of Arqa on Sunday.

The official, who wanted to remain anonymous, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that the soldiers were transferred by military truck to the southern Yemeni port city of Aden on Monday.

Ethiopia sent army forces into Somalia last December to back the country's interim government to drive out forces from the Union of Islamic Courts that controlled most of central and southern Somalia for nearly six months last year.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Oromo Students Hold Rally On Mall

Britney Black

4/17/07

While the eyes of America are focused on the war in Iraq, thousands of Oromo people are trying to survive a different type of war in Africa, a war where innocent people are being murdered simply because of their nationality.

This is the message that the Oromo Youth Association wanted to convey to the U.S. government during their rally in Washington, D.C. on March 31.

The rally, which began at 11 a.m., started in front of the U.S. State Department and ended in front of the U.S. Capitol at 2 p.m. The protest gathered more than 500 supporters, including those who are not Oromo.

The Youth Association participants used several different ways to get their message across, such as painting their clothing to depict bloody wounds and walking in lines with ropes tied around their necks. Looking out at the rally, one could glimpse a small part of Oromo culture within the colorful sea of reds, yellows, greens and whites.

“Our aim was different from other marches done by the organization,” Gelane Gemechisa, one of the organization’s board members, said. “We were not trying to get Congress to read a letter. We were not trying to get the state department to read a list of our issues. We wanted the media attention. We wanted people to ask, ‘Who are the Oromo people [and] what is their story?’”

Bontu Itana, a junior finance major and a member of the organization, said, “The official mission of Youth Association is to engage in a multifaceted struggle to bring freedom, justice, equality and development to the Oromo people of East Africa.”

Itana continued, “The Youth Association also works to alleviate the economic, social and human rights deprivations of the Oromo nation at no cost to any other nation or country.”

The Oromo Youth Association was founded in 2006 as a response to the ethnic cleansing being done by the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLC) in Ethiopia.

The TPLC has now combined with the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) in Somalia. Together, these two governments are systematically killing the Oromo people in Ethiopia, Somalia and other neighboring countries.

Due to a lack of media attention and unresponsiveness from international governments, such as the United States, the Oromo people have been forced to fight their battle alone.

“The really sad thing is that hundreds of refugees fled to Somalian refugee camps to escape persecution, just to discover that soldiers were killing Oromo citizens there also,” Itana said.

There seems to be no safe place for the Oromo people to go when even the world’s most powerful nation turns a blind eye.
“There has been a history of brutalization in an attempt to maintain the Oromo land,” Gemechisa said.

Even though the Oromo people make up about 50 percent of Ethiopia’s population, they are the most marginalized group, Gemechisa said.

“The goal of the rally was to gain media attention and to let the whole world know that everyone in Ethiopia does not support the war,” Itana said. “The Oromo people do not support the war. [They] are dying because of it.”

Itana added, “The youth effort that we have is pushing to give a voice to the voiceless. The Oromo people have been suffering for hundreds of years and their plight is still unknown.”

Gemechisa said, “It is my dream that more youth become involved in the struggle. Youth have always been the driving force of revolution. The Oromo problem is far from over. Now it is time for this generation to do its part. We need you.”

The next rally will be July 26 in Minneapolis, the home of more than 15,000 Oromo people.

The situation at present in Ethiopia.

The colleges, of which there are plenty in Addis Ababa, are becoming watched by the Federali and security apparatus. For a long time these private schools were, in contrast with the government secondary schools and up, left alone. But as I reported earlier, in Nazareth/Adama the Unity College has been closed for a while after problems with Oromo students that ended up in federali invading the campus and beating up the students before arrests were made.

The method is different from the state schools. Two uniformed policemen are sitting just one hundred meters away from the entrance and are observing the students walking to/from the school. But it is obvious because the school I am talking about is on an industrial complex; there is nothing else to watch. Later on somebody I can trust confirmed that at other places the same thing is happening.

People seem to have forgotten what happened if you observe superficially, but whenever someone says something that could be explained as favorable for the current regime, people knot their brows and shake their head. It is better not done to do so. Even mentioning the Crime Minister is not appreciated. It seems that at many governmental offices the top down commands are changing so often that lots of work can be thrown through the drain, when, without explanation, budgets are altered or withdrawn.

This proves that there is a real budgetary problem, which they are not able to solve.
The375 million dollar from the European Union, which is withdrawn, hurts.
But right they are. Up until political reforms are made, in line with the eight demands, it will not be business as usual. The other thing is that they are capable of spending millions in a war that is about American interests, not Ethiopian ones. They should be punished about that too.

The sad thing is that the poorest people suffer most of it. The protection of basic services which came instead of the direct budget support is useless if the government is creating more poverty by raising food prices to an irresponsible level.
But this is certainly not the first time this regime is nullifying aid and development

Monday, April 16, 2007

Oromia>>Reports of torture in Oromia are widespread

Reports of torture in Ethiopia are widespread
Bush says prime minister is committed to human rights
Nick Wadhams, Chronicle Foreign Service

Monday, April 16, 2007

04-16) 04:00 PDT Ghimbi, Ethiopia -- First, the police threw Tesfaye into a dark cell. Then, each day for 17 days, it was the same routine: Electric shocks on his legs and back, followed by beatings with rubber truncheons. Four or five officers would then surround and kick him. At last, a large bottle of water would be tied around his testicles. He'd pass out.

Tesfaye's crime? Maybe it's that he refused to join the ruling party of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. He was accused of organizing street protests in late 2005. Police suspect he's a member of a rebel group called the Oromo Liberation Front. Tesfaye doesn't know for sure because no court ever charged him with a crime.

"They took us turn by turn to a dark place, and they would shock us and say, 'What do you think now? You won't change your ways now? Do you want to be a member of our party now?' " Tesfaye recalled of his time in prison early last year. He refused to give his last name for fear of being rearrested.

Accounts like this are common in today's Ethiopia. Interviews with dozens of people across the country, coupled with testimony given to diplomats and human rights groups, paint a picture of a nation that jails its citizens without reason or trial, and tortures many of them -- despite government claims to the contrary.

Such cases are especially troubling because the U.S. government, a key Ethiopian ally, has acknowledged interrogating terrorism suspects in Ethiopian prisons, where some detainees were sent after being arrested in connection with Ethiopia's invasion of Somalia in December. There have been no reports that those jailed have been tortured. The invasion ousted an Islamic movement accused of having ties to al Qaeda that threatened to topple an interim Somali government struggling to control the country.

The Bush administration maintains that Meles' government, a leading partner in its war on terror in East Africa, is committed to democratic and human rights reform. The government was severely criticized for a 2005 crackdown that saw tens of thousands of opposition members jailed and nearly 200 people killed following elections in which the opposition made major gains.

People across Ethiopia recounted stories of a government backsliding on human rights issues. They told of confinement for days in tiny, dark cells with their hands bound 24 hours a day; electric shocks; beatings with rubber clubs; police who held guns to prisoners' heads; mutilation or pain inflicted on the genitals.

"If you think differently, that is enough to put you on the side of the opposition," said 34-year-old Teferi, who recently was released from prison after two months without being charged with a crime. "If you say, 'This is not right, this is right, it's good to rule peacefully,' if you talk something fair, it's over for you because there is no fairness from them."

Teferi said a police source told him that he was arrested because he played too much pingpong -- and that police suspected he was recruiting people to a rebel group while he played. He said he was imprisoned at a police training camp called Sankele outside the city of Ambo, which the International Committee of the Red Cross has been barred from visiting.

Ethiopian officials dismiss stories of torture as lies, and have taken the further step of expelling everyone from foreign journalists to representatives of human rights groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Ethiopian reporters for the U.S.-financed Voice of America must work in secret for fear of harassment.

Bereket Simon, a top adviser to Meles, said it's in the interests of rights groups to lie about the situation, and he rejected the idea that torture occurs in Ethiopia.

"No way. No way. No way. I think you know, these are prohibited by laws, by Ethiopian laws -- torture, any human treatments," Bereket said. "In fact, we have been improving on our prison standards. We've been working hard to train the police forces, the interrogators."

U.S. officials say Washington's close alliance with the government in Addis Ababa allows it to raise concerns about Ethiopia's record privately. The State Department is requesting more than $500 million for Ethiopian aid in fiscal 2008, almost all of it for HIV/AIDS relief. The United States trains Ethiopian troops, and the two governments have shared intelligence about Somalia.

U.S. Ambassador Donald Yamamoto said he wants to investigate claims of abuse, but warned against making allegations about Ethiopia's actions without proof.

"There's a lot of misinformation about Ethiopia -- I mean, it's amazing," Yamamoto said. "The problem comes in trying to divide or separate what is fact and what's fiction, and trying to keep an open mind on every issue. ... There are problems, and we're free to admit that, and the Ethiopians are open to admitting that as well."

Ethiopia's critics are skeptical of the government's promises to improve its human rights record.

"Over the years, the more I see, the more I become convinced that not only does the government tolerate it, but I think they direct this kind of behavior," said Ethiopian-born Theodros Dagne, a senior aide to Rep. Donald Payne, D-N.J., a leading critic of Ethiopian practices on human rights.

European diplomats and employees of Western aid groups, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they keep quiet about abuses because they fear the government will freeze them out of aid work. About 2.8 million of Ethiopia's 75 million people depend on foreign food aid.

Washington's steadfast support has led some Ethiopian opposition leaders to assert that Meles' government has only been emboldened.

"We fully believe that the international community is not going to democratize this place -- it's going to be the tough task of the Ethiopians," said Beyene Petros, a lawmaker and leader of the United Ethiopian Democratic Forces, a coalition of opposition groups. "Simply, the U.S. State Department's or the U.S. government's position on Ethiopia is that it's a friendly government, and how can you go and quarrel with your friend because somebody told on him?"

Oromia>>Ijji koo, ija koo baqate! fi NAMOON OF BAQATE

Ijji koo, ija koo baqate!

Ijjii ijjaa hin argitu
Gooba funyaannitu rakkisaa
Daawiitiin fakkii ilaalu
Ijja of agarsisaa
Namni funyaan goobsatu
Hin qabu duris beekumsaa
Dhugaa fakkii daawiitii
Ijja seenaat boosisaa
Imiimman bishaan miti
Hidda-dhigaati burqaansaa
Dhugaan dhokatte hin haftu
Yerootu bilisa baasaa

Dhugaa qabda obbo Balchaa
Eenyumaatu qorichaa!

Eenyummaa hin dhoksanii
Yoo dhoksaan ta'u raatu
Eenyummaaf gowwomani
Lammii ofii komatu
Lammii hidhaata badee
Addaggee qomoo gaantu
Qoorattii dhoqqee keessaa
hoo wooraantu hin muldhatu
Hadhee namatii taatii
Maalaan hoo nama nyaatu
Akka dhiitoo muudaanmuddii
Eejjennaa nama hin laattu
Akka saafaa bara caamsaa
Kan daafqa goota yaaftu
Addaagee hin abdatanii
Kan kaakatee nama gantuu!
Waan hundaa hin himatanii
Mee seenaaf nuuf haa bultu!

Yoo sooran bulloo soruu
Ittin sirbu foollee Gadaa
Yoo farsaan ittin boonuu
Qondaala taalila yaadaa!

Booreef koorata dhaqnee
Nyaanee galaa ingirdada
Seenaaf eenyummaa gatee
Nutti roobstti gaddaa
Galma kam dhaaqnu laata?
Toorbii naanoofnu lataa?
Waan jarreef ta'u hooda!

Dr. Dhugaasaa irraa
====//====


NAMOON OF BAQATE



Bareeddittii intalaa,
Kan Afrikaaf qacalaa,
Magaallee akka kuulaa,
Keessumaa gadi baatee,
Harma ishii sirriin hootee,
Dugda ishii faa luqqiftee,
Akkanatti jabaattee,
Akka kanaan guddatte.
Gaafa ati of barte,
Naaf baradhu siin jettee,
Waan qabdu hunda gurgurtee,
Huccuu faa sitti bittee,
Kophee faa sitti dirtee,
Hunda siif gumaachitee,
Barumsaaf si ergite.
Gaafa duraa..
Ah! keessummaan nutti dhufte,
'Kun aadaa keenya' jettee,
Abaabileen marcuma itti butte.
Booda keessummaan bubbultee,
Keessaa hundaa gaaf barte,
'Siruma hin deemu' jettee,
Siinqee Abbaa Gadaa fudhatte.
Akka kanaan atis kaatee,
Kanuma keessa tartee,
Mana barumsaa seentee,
Minnoo fi mindinnoo hasawuu eegalte.
Yaa Namoo..
Sanumaan itti fuftee,
Kan bariin dhangiyamte,
Isa Rabbi siif laate,
Dagachaatuma adeemte.
Dagachuu bira luftee,
Haasawuu isaa itti dhiifte,
Edda dubbiin siif galtee,
Kanuma ambaa dirattee,
Fannifattee ittiin kaattee,
Jaburuurtee jaburuurte,
Ah!.. mee Namoo maaluma taatee?
Yaa Namoo kiyya..
Barachuun kan kee silaa,
Bu'aa buusuudhaaf tola.
Ammas ittuma fuftee,
Baar gama faa naaf ceetee,
Carraa gaarii argattee,
Anaan natti fakkate.
Inni manaa si bare,
Achiitis mataa si maree,
Ebuu qacalaa irraanfattee,
Atis barcuma buttee,
Ammas kan kee san gattee,
Kan biraa barbaadattee,
Ol fudhattee diratte!
Ajaa'iba!.. darsa guuraadhum taate.
Namoo..
Mee garagalii ilaali,
Isaa kan keetiif yaali,
Yoo dagattellee shaakali.
Yoo kana hin godhiin turte,
Akkuma duraa itti fufte,
Egaa horma komachuun haftee,
Hin wallaaliin yaa Namoo harkaan of dhabamsiiftee!
.. harkaan of balleessitee!!
.. harkumaan of ajjeefte!!
Yaa Namoo ilama aayyaa,
Ani kana jechuun kiyya,
Onnee fi jaalala biyyaa,
Of tahuudhum siif wayya,
Malee hin qabu dhalootaan iyya.
Ifa Urgeessaa, 2002
Finfinnee, Oromiyaa


Sunday, April 15, 2007

Oromia>> Dhiiga Gootaa


Apr 13, '07 9:43 AM
for everyone







DHIIGA GOOTAA
 
                               
 
Dhugaan hawwaalamte hirriba dhorkitee
 
'' Maaloo naaf birmadhaa '' jettee itti watwaattee
 
Jireenya mi'ooftuu itti hadheesitee
 
Sammuu isaanii  keessatti hidda biqilichitee
 
Bakka  deeman  mara isaan waaliin deemtee
 
Alkanii fi Guyyaa walii wallaalichistee
 
'' Gabrummaan Dukkana ''jettee itti hasaastee
 
'' Yookaan  Bilisoomaa yookaan  du'aa ! '' jettee
 
Mamii tokko malee garaa kutachiistee
 
'' Alli koo fi manni koo Qabisoo ! ''
jechisiisitee
 
Lagatti bobbaaste manaa isaan baastee.
 
 
Kufanii  ka'anii  ka'anii kufanii
 
Itti beela'anii itti dheebotanii
 
Qabsoo bu'uursanii ka wareegamani
 
Akka Hoolaa rakoo ka mormaa qalamani
 
ka karaatti afan ka  awwaalamani
 
Du'a akkamalee ka Harkaan hudhamani
 
Ka duuni dhokate ka jiraa dhabamani
 
Haqa falmatanii  ka nu irraa adda bahani
 
Ka qananii haa taatu ekeraan isaanii
 
Goggogee hin banne !  tasa Dhiiginni  isaanii.
 
 
Duumes   irra bu'ee hin gaadiddeesine
 
cululuquu isaa hin gurraacheesine
 
Bokkaan itti roobee dhiqee hin balleesine
 
Lolaans fudhatee ittiin hin godaanne
 
Bubbee inni hamaan tasuma itti hin buune
 
Ittiin balali'ee fuudhee Biyyaa  hin baane
 
Cabbiin irra ciisee  awwaalee hin dhokkisne
 
Xammee xammisiisee badee hin balleesine.
 
 
Cophee dhiiginni Gootaa  biqilee idda baasee
 
Guddatee dagaagee latee baala  baasee
 
Hidda isaa fageessee damee isaa jabeessee
 
Qancaree gaamaree Firii isaa ramibaasee
 
Oromiyaa guutuu firii isaa facaasee
 
Firii isaa irraa cuunfee Boba'aa irraa baase
 
Boba'aan  Boba'ee nuuf dukkana ibse
 
Isa rafaa jiru tutuqee sochoosee
 
Asi raasee achi raasee irriba irraa kaase
 
Daa'immanni xixiqqoo sossobee hurursee
 
Kotikkotee guddise Seenaa  gurra buusee
 
warri Dhiiga isaanii tasaan  dhangalaase
 
Akkuma qoosaatti Lubbuu isaanii baase
 
ka jireenya isaanii lafa irraa balleese
 
ka jiruun doorsisuuf qalee conqolaase
 
Yoo itti fakkaates waan qabsoo kolaase
 
Isaanis ajjeesee waan kaayyoo balleese
 
Gurra isaa banatee yoo qalbiin caqase
 
Qabsoo hin ajjeesine daran itti cimse !
 
Lubbuu yoo balleese   ekeraan lalise
 
Yoo tokko ajjeese  kuma   bakka busee
 
Guddina qabsichaa isatti agarsiise
 
Ammas haa hubatu haa yaadu  fageessee
 
Qabsoon keenya haqa kanatuu dagaagise
 
Galiin Bilisummaa  guyyaan gaafa geesse
 
Galiin Bilisummaa  guyyaan gaafa geesse.


(walaloon kun Aaddee Meetii (meetii66@yahoo.de) irraa nuqaqqabe. Aaddee Meetii, maqaa OromiaTimes n hedduu isin galateeffanna! Itti nuu fufaa!)