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Dutch, Israeli Flower Farms Attacked by Protesters in Ethiopia

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A woman harvests roses in a greenhouse at the ET Highland Flora flower farm just outside Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa February 12, 2008. The Ethiopian flower industry is booming and the country will export up to two million stems a day in the two weeks leading up to Valentine's day. Picture taken February 12, 2008. To match feature ETHIOPIA-FLOWERS/  REUTERS/Michael Tsegaye (ETHIOPIA)

Bloomberg: A Dutch-run flower farm in northern Ethiopia was among a series of foreign-owned plantations attacked by anti-government protesters as unrest in the country spreads.
A “large group” of people invaded Esmeralda Farms Inc.’s farm 13 kilometers (8 miles) south of Bahir Dar city in the Amhara region on Aug. 29, causing about 7 million euros ($7.8 million) of damage, country manager Haile Seifu said by phone Thursday. Flower farms in the area owned by Israeli, Italian, Indian and Belgian companies were among nine commercial properties damaged in the protests, which continued on Aug. 30, he said.

A woman harvests roses in a greenhouse at the ET Highland Flora flower farm just outside Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa February 12, 2008. The Ethiopian flower industry is booming and the country will export up to two million stems a day in the two weeks leading up to Valentine's day. Picture taken February 12, 2008. To match feature ETHIOPIA-FLOWERS/  REUTERS/Michael Tsegaye (ETHIOPIA)
“They were so aggressive, there were also soldiers who couldn’t control them, so we just ran away, as it’s life or death,” he said from the capital, Addis Ababa. “They came actually at once through our compound, through our fence, through our main gate, so everybody left.”
Authorities in Ethiopia have killed more than 500 people since June, according to human-rights groups, to suppress protests by the two most populous groups, the Oromo and Amhara. Analysts say the demonstrations present the biggest challenge to the government’s authority since it came to power a quarter of a century ago. The economy grew faster than any other in Africa over the past two years, International Monetary Fund data shows.
Nigusu Tilahun, a spokesman for the Amhara government, said he wasn’t immediately available to comment, while a call to Communications Minister Getachew Reda wasn’t answered.
Militias Clashing
Militias are also clashing with the army in parts of Gojam and Gondar areas of Amhara, with 10 people dying Wednesday in Metemma on the Sudan border, and four in Debark to the north of Gondar city, said Yared Hailemariam, executive director for the Association for Human Rights in Ethiopia, which is based in Belgium.
The military is also patrolling Bahir Dar and shooting at protesters, he said by phone from Brussels. Unless the government changes its approach, the unrest may worsen, he said.
“In both Oromia and Amhara region people are saying enough is enough,” Yared said. “They are demanding regime change.”
(Updates with report of violence in parts of Amhara starting in paragraph after Militias Clashing subheadline. An earlier version of this story corrected the spelling of the city’s name in the second paragraph.)


US says ‘excessive use of force’ against Ethiopia protesters

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The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations says her country has raised “grave concerns” about what it calls excessive use of force against protesters in Ethiopia.

Ambassador Samantha Power
Ambassador Samantha Power spoke to reporters late Sunday as the U.N. Security Council ended a visit to South Sudan. It moves on to Ethiopia on Monday for talks with African Union officials.

Power called the violence in Ethiopia “extremely serious” and called for a transparent and independent investigation. She said the U.S. has asked the government to allow people to protest peacefully.

Ethiopia has seen months of sometimes deadly protests calling for wider freedoms, while the government has been accused of killings, beatings and internet blockages.

The AU last week for the first time expressed concern about the recent unrest in its host country.

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Anti-government protesters get into Ethiopian embassies -BBC ( VIDEO)

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A protest at Ethiopia’s embassy in London, where demonstrators got inside and kicked a portrait of former Prime Minister Meles Zenawi.

Ethiopia protests: Protesters Takeover Ethiopian Embassies in England, Sweden and Germany.

It seems that this may have been coordinated with another protest in Sweden’s capital, Stockholm.
Esat, an Ethiopian TV channel based outside the country, has posted images of protesters entering the embassy there.
They can be heard shouting: “You are Nazis.”
The film also includes pictures from the London protest which shows police officers talking to the protesters inside the Embassy.

Ethiopia Declares State of Emergency

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Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn

Ethiopia declared a six-month state of emergency on Sunday following months of violent anti-government protests, according to an official statement released on state media.

“The state of emergency was declared following a thorough discussion by the Council of Ministers on the loss of lives and property damages occurring in the country,” Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said.

The declaration marks a further hardening of the government’s position after months of protests in different parts of Ethiopia.

These have been met with a strong security response that has left hundreds dead, according to human rights groups.

“We put our citizens’ safety first. Besides, we want to put an end to the damage that is being carried out against infrastructure projects, health centres, administration and justice buildings,” Hailemariam said on state media, adding the state of emergency was effective from October 8.

Ethiopia is facing its biggest anti-government unrest in a decade, from the majority Oromo and Amhara ethnic groups which feel marginalised by a minority-led government.

Internet access has been restricted in recent days to prevent protesters from organising gatherings.

In the wake of the state of emergency declaration, residents of the capital Addis Ababa and regional towns reported more police on the streets but little other change.

– Threat to stability –

The protests threaten Ethiopia’s reputation as an economic success story renowned for its stability, even as the government’s authoritarian rule attracts criticism.

Last week protests also targeted foreign investors — regarded as supporting and being backed by the central government — with close to a dozen foreign-owned companies, including textile and plastic factories, set on fire.

Tensions have been rising since an Oromo religious festival last week ended in tragedy when police fired tear gas on anti-government protesters, sparking panic in the massive crowd and triggering a stampede

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በታወጀው የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጅ የሚወሰዱ እርምጃዎችና የተከለከሉ ጉዳዮች ይፋ ሆኑ

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አዲስ አበባ መስከረም 29/2009 በመላ አገሪቷ በታወጀው የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጅ የሚወሰዱ እርምጃዎችና የተከለከሉ ጉዳዮች ይፋ ሆኑ።

የፌዴራል ጠቅላይ አቃቤ ህግ የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጁን አስፈላጊነት፣ ይዘት፣ የሚወሰዱ እርምጃዎች፣ የተከለከሉ ጉዳዮችና ልዩ ልዩ ድንጋጌዎች ይፋ አድርጓል።

የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጁን ለማስፈፀም የተቋቋመው ኮማንድ ፖስት አዋጁ ተፈጻሚ የሚሆንባቸውና የማይሆንባቸውን አካባቢዎች በመለየት ለሕዝብ ይፋ እንደሚያደርግ የፌዴራል ጠቅላይ አቃቤ ህግ ጌታቸው አምባዬ ገልጸዋል።

እንደ አቶ ጌታቸው ገለጻ የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጁ ተፈጻሚ እንዲሆን በተለያዩ አካባቢዎች በይፋም ሆነ በድብቅ በህዝቦች መካከል መቃቃር፣ ጥርጣሬና ግጭት የሚፈጥሩ እንቅስቃሴዎችን ማድረግ የተከለከለ ነው።

በህዝቦችና ሃይማኖቶች መካከል ግጭትና መቃቃር የሚፈጥሩ ፅሑፎች ማዘጋጀትና ማሰራጨት፣ ትዕይንትና ምልክቶችን ማሳየትና መተግበርም እንዲሁ።

ኮማንድ ፖስቱ የህዝብና የአገርን ሠላምና ደህንነት አደጋ ላይ ይጥላሉ ያላቸውን ማናቸውም የመገናኛ ዘዴዎች መዝጋት እንደሚችልም አስታውቀዋል አቶ ጌታቸው።

አዋጁ ተግባራዊ እንዲደረግባቸው በሚለዩ አካባቢዎች የመሰብሰብ፣ የመሰለፍና፣ የመደራጀት መብቶችም ሊታገዱ ይችላሉ።

አዋጁን የሚተገብሩ አካላት በሁከትና ብጥብጥ የተጠረጠረና የተሳተፈን ሰው ያለ ፍርድ ቤት ትእዛዝ በቁጥጥር ሥር ማዋልም ይችላሉ።

በቁጥጥር ሥር የሚውሉ ዜጎች ተምረው ይለቀቃሉ፣ ወንጀል ፈጽመው የተገኙም በህግ አግባብ ይቀጣሉ።

አዋጁ ተግባራዊ በሚደረግባቸው አካባቢዎች የግለሰቦችን መኖሪያ ቤትና ተሽከርካሪ ያለፈቃድ መበርበር እንዲሁም ሰዎችን ያለምንም ፈቃድ አስቁሞ መፈተሽና መጠየቅ እንደሚፈቀድ ተናግረዋል።

በብርበራ የተያዙ ንብረቶች ወንጀል ከተፈፀመባቸውና ለመፈጸም ከታሰበባቸው ሊወረሱ ወይንም ለባለንብረቱ ሊመለሱ የሚችሉበት ሁኔታ መኖሩንም አመልክተዋል።

በአሁኑ ወቅት የሰዓት እላፊ አለመታወጁን የገለፁት አቶ ጌታቸው፤ ነገር ግን ለህዝብ ይፋ በተደረጉ አካባቢዎች ሊታወጅ እንደሚችል አስታውቀዋል።

ኮማንድ ፖስቱ አደጋ የተጋረጠባቸውና አስፈላጊ ናቸው ያላቸውን መንገዶችና ተቋማት ሊዘጋ ይችላል፤ ለአደጋ ተጋላጭ ለሆኑ ተቋማትም ልዩ ጥበቃ ያደርጋል ነው ያሉት።

አደጋ በተጋረጠባቸው አካባቢዎች የሚገኙ ዜጎችን ደህንነት ለመጠበቅ ሲባል ሰዎችን ለተወሰነ ጊዜ በተወሰ ቦታ የማቆየት እርምጃ ሊወሰድ እንደሚችልም ተናግረዋል።

ሰዎች ለጊዜው በተወሰነ ቦታ እንዲቆዩ፣ ወደ ተወሰነ አካባቢ እንዳይገቡ ወይም ከተወሰነ ቦታ እንዲለቁ ለማዘዝ እንደሚችልም ጠቁመዋል።

አዋጁ ተግባራዊ እንዲደረግባቸው በሚለዩ አካባቢዎች ዜጎች የጦር መሳሪያ፣ ተቀጣጣይ ነገርና ስለት ወይም እሳት የሚያስነሱ ነገሮች ይዞ መንቀሳቀስም የተከለከለ ነው።

ኮማንድ ፖስቱ የአስተዳደር እርከኖች በፈረሰባቸውና በተዳከመባቸው አካባቢዎች ከክልሉና ከህዝቡ ጋር በመተባበር የማቋቋም ስራ እንደሚሰራ ገልጸዋል።

የሚከሰተውን አደጋ ጥልቀት ስፋት መሰረት በማድረግም በመደበኛ የህግ ማስከበር መከላከል የማይመለሱ ከሆነ ተመጣጣኝ እርምጃ ሊወስድ እንደሚችል አስታውቀዋል አቶ ጌታቸው።

የፍሬ ነገርና የሥነ ሥርዓት ህጎች ሊታገዱ እንደሚችሉም አክለዋል።

አዋጁ ተግባራዊ በሚደረግበት አካባቢ የሚገኙ ዜጎች የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጁን ማክበርና ለተፈጻሚነቱ የመተባበር ግዴታ እንዳለባቸው ጠቅሰው፤ ይህን የማያከብሩና የማይተባበሩ አዋጁ በሚፈቅደው አግባብ እንደሚቀጡ ተናግረዋል።

የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጁን ተግባራዊ ማድረግ የሚያስችል ደንብና መመሪያ ይዘጋጃል።

አዋጁ በመላ አገሪቷ የታወጀ ቢሆንም ተግባራዊ የሚደረግባቸውን አካባቢዎች ኮማንድ ፖስቱ ለሕዝብ ይፋ ያደርጋል።

ምንጭ: ኢዜአ

የጀርመኗ ቻንስለር በአንድ ፓርቲ ቁጥጥር ሥር በዋለ ፓርላማ ንግግር አያደርጉም ተባለ

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የጀርመኗ ቻንስለር በአንድ ፓርቲ ቁጥጥር ሥር በዋለ ፓርላማ ንግግር አያደርጉም ተባለ
– ከተቃዋሚ ፓርቲዎች አመራሮች ጋር ይወያያሉ
በሚቀጥለው ሳምንት ወደ አዲስ አበባ የሚመጡት የጀርመኗ መራሒተ መንግሥት (ቻንስለር) አንገላ መርከል በአንድ ፓርቲ ቁጥጥር ሥር በዋለ ፓርላማ ንግግር አያደርጉም ተባለ፡፡ ምንም እንኳን መንግሥት ቻንስለሯን በፓርላማ ተገኝተው ንግግር እንዲያደርጉ ቢጠይቅም፣ መርከል ግን ‹‹በአንድ ፓርቲ ቁጥጥር ሥር በዋለ ፓርላማ ውስጥ ንግግር ማድረግ ምንም ለውጥ አያመጣም፤›› በማለት ግብዣውን እንዳልተቀበሉት ለማወቅ ተችሏል፡፡
ቻንስለሯ ከእሑድ ጀምሮ ሦስት የአፍሪካ አገሮች የሚጐበኙ ሲሆን፣ በመጀመሪያ ወደ ማሊና ኒጀር ተጉዘው ኢትዮጵያ ሲመጡ ከጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር ኃይለ ማርያም ደሳለኝ ጋር ይገናኛሉ፡፡ በተጨማሪም የአፍሪካ ኅብረትን ይጐበኛሉ ተብሏል፡፡ ቻንስለሯ አዲስ አበባ ሰኞ አመሻሽ ላይ እንደሚደርሱ፣ አብሯቸውም የጀርመን ፌዴራል ጽሕፈት ቤት ባልረደቦች ብቻ እንደሚመጡ ተገልጿል፡፡ ከቻንስለሯ ጋር ምንም ዓይነት የቢዝነስ ልዑካን የማይመጣ ሲሆን፣ ይህም በሎጂስቲክስ ችግር መሆኑ ታውቋል፡፡ ቻንስለሯ ሰኞ አመሻሽ ላይ ከገቡ በኋላ ማክሰኞ በብሔራዊ ቤተ መንግሥት አቀባበል የሚደረግላቸው ሲሆን፣ ከጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር ኃይለ ማርያም ጋር ረቡዕ ይገናኛሉ፡፡
ምንጮች ለሪፖርተር፣ ‹‹ቻንስለር መርከል በአገሪቱ በተፈጠረው ተቃውሞ የፀጥታ ኃይሎች ዜጐች ላይ እየወሰዱት ስላለው አላስፈላጊና ከመጠን ያለፈ ኃይል ከመንግሥት ጋር ይወያያሉ፤›› ከዚህም ባለፈ፣ ‹‹በቁጥጥር ሥር በተከፈተ›› የአገሪቱ የፖለቲካ ምኅዳር ላይ ይወያያሉ ብለዋል፡፡ ቻንስለሯ ከጠቅላይ ሚኒስትሩ ጋር በሚኖራቸው ውይይት ስደተኞችን በተመለከተና ሽብርተኝነትን በመዋጋት ርዕሰ ጉዳዮች ላይ ይነጋገራሉ ተብሏል፡፡
ቻንስለሯ መርከል በአዲስ አበባ ቆይታቸው ወቅት፣ ከተመረጡ የፖለቲካ ፓርቲዎች መሪዎችና የሲቪል ማኅበረሰብ ተወካዮች ጋር ውይይት ያደርጋሉ፡፡ እንደ ምንጮች ገለጻ፣ ቻንስለሯ ስድስት ከሚሆኑ የፖለቲካ ፓርቲዎች መሪዎችና የሲቪል ማኅበረሰብ ተወካዮች ጋር በጀርመን ኤምባሲ ይወያያሉ፡፡ ሆኖም የውይይቱ አጀንዳንና ተሳታፊዎቹ ማን እንደሆኑ ምንጮች ከመግለጽ ተቆጥበዋል፡፡

ቀሪውን ዜና ሪፖርተር ላይ ለማንበብ እዚህ ይጫኑ

Ethiopia blames foreigners for unrest, U.N. experts seek probe

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By Aaron Maasho

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) – Ethiopia accused “elements” in Eritrea, Egypt and elsewhere on Monday of being behind a wave of violent protests over land grabs and human rights that have prompted the government to declare a state of emergency in the Horn of Africa nation.

The unrest has cast a shadow over Ethiopia, whose state-led industrial drive has created one of Africa’s fastest growing economies but whose government also faces criticism at home and abroad over its authoritarian approach to development.

Ethiopia declared a state of emergency on Sunday after more than a year of unrest in its Oromiya and Amhara regions, near the capital Addis Ababa, where protesters say the government has violated their land and other political rights.

“There are countries which are directly involved in arming, financing and training these elements,” government spokesman Getachew Reda said, referring to the protesters, although he added that those responsible might not have state approval.

Getachew told a news conference the six-month nationwide state of emergency had been declared to better coordinate security forces against “elements” intent on targeting civilians, infrastructure and private investments.

A panel of seven United Nations experts called on Monday for an international investigation into the violence in Ethiopia, which rights groups say has killed about 500 people, a figure the government says is exaggerated.

“The scale of this violence and the shocking number of deaths make it clear that this is a calculated campaign to eliminate opposition movements and silence dissenting voices,” Maina Kiai, a U.N. rights rapporteur, said in a statement.

Last week, protesters damaged

Read More Here:

Ethiopia’s PM admits that ‘49%’ have been left without a voice

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Ethiopia’s Prime Minster Hailemariam Desalegn has admitted that the voices of nearly half the population have not been heard in the country’s parliament, the AFP news agency reports.

The statement comes after an unprecedented wave of anti-government protests culminating in Sunday’s declaration of a six-month state of emergency.
He was speaking after meeting Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Ethiopia’s President Mulatu Teshome spoke on Monday about changing the voting system.
Currently, Ethiopia has a first-past-the-post constituency system and in last year’s election the governing coalition and its allies won every single seat.
 AFP quotes Mr Hailemariam as saying:  
“We have 49% of voices who are not represented in the parliament even though they have voted for the opposition, because of the electoral system.”

The protests in the Oromo and Amhara regions of the country have in part been about alleged political and economic marginalisation.

Source: BBC update. 


Ethiopia PM seeks to ‘reform electoral system’ after protests

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Addis Ababa (AFP) – Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said Tuesday his government wants to reform an electoral system which has excluded the opposition, in response to months of bloody protests.

Hailemariam met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel just days after declaring a six-month state of emergency following a protest movement against his one-party regime, which is accused of marginalising the country’s largest ethnic groups.

“We want to reform the electoral system so the voices of those who are not represented can also be heard in the parliament,” Hailemariam said.

“Because of this electoral system 51 percent of votes is enough to win all the seats.”

Under Ethiopia’s current system, Hailemariam’s ruling coalition took every one of the 546 seats in parliament during last year’s election.

His regime currently faces its biggest challenge in the 25 years since coming to power.

When he succeeded Ethiopia’s former Marxist rebel-turned-leader Meles Zenawi, who died in 2012, Hailemariam said he was committed to opening up the country’s political system to allow more space for opposition parties.

However international rights organisations regularly criticise his government for cracking down on dissenting voices, keeping a stranglehold on the media and intimidating the opposition during election campaigns.

“Our democratisation process is still nascent. It’s fledgling… We want to go further in opening up political space and engagement with civil society groups,” said Hailemariam.

Merera Gudina, chairman of the opposition Oromo Federal Congress,

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United States 2018 DV Lottery Registration opend

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The United States diversity visa lottery 2018 DV Lottery registration start on the State Department Web site according to the official DV Lottery website. 
The 2018 Diversity Visa program (DV-2018) is now open. The entry submission period for DV-2018 is from 12:00PM EDT (GMT -4) on October 4, 2016 to 12:00PM EST (GMT -5) on November 7, 2016. The entry form will only be available for submission during this period and this period only. 

Entries will NOT be accepted through the U.S. Postal Service.

 DV Lottery applications must conform to the State Departments strict requirements to qualify for the 2018 DV Lottery. The DV-2018 DV program must be submitted electronically at www.dvlottery.state.gov

The office also noted that there is no change from previous year regarding eligibility.

BBC World Service To Start Broadcast in Amharic, Afaan Oromo and Tigrinya

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The BBC World Service will launch 11 new language services including Amharic, Affaan Oromo and Tigrinya as part of its biggest expansion “since the 1940s”, the corporation has announced.

The expansion is a result of the funding boost announced by the UK government last year.

The new languages will be Afaan Oromo, Amharic, Gujarati, Igbo, Korean, Marathi, Pidgin, Punjabi, Telugu, Tigrinya, and Yoruba.

The first new services are expected to launch in 2017.

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Like BBC Amharic on Facebook

African languages:

  • Afaan Oromo: Language of Ethiopia’s biggest ethnic group
  • Amharic: Ethiopia’s official language
  • Tigrinya: The main working language of Eritrea, along with Arabic. Also spoken in Ethiopia
  • Igbo: An official Nigerian language. Also spoken in Equatorial Guinea
  • Yoruba: Spoken in south-western Nigeria and some other parts of West Africa, especially Benin and Togo
  • Pidgin: A creole version of English widely spoken in southern Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea

Asian languages:

  • Gujarati: Native to the Indian state of Gujarat but found around the Indian subcontinent and the world
  • Marathi: From the Indian state of Maharashtra, including India’s commercial capital Mumbai
  • Telugu: Huge numbers of speakers, like many Indian languages, primarily in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana
  • Punjabi: One of the world’s most populous languages, it is widely-spoken in Pakistan and parts of India
  • Korean: Spoken in North and South though the dialects have diverged. Pop culture slang and foreign loan words are notably more common in the South

“This is a historic day for the BBC, as we announce the biggest expansion of the World Service since the 1940s,” said BBC director general Tony Hall.

“The BBC World Service is a jewel in the crown – for the BBC and for Britain.

“As we move towards our centenary, my vision is of a confident, outward-looking BBC which brings the best of our independent, impartial journalism and world-class entertainment to half a billion people around the world.

“Today is a key step towards that aim.”

‘Relevant as ever’

The plans include the expansion of digital services to offer more mobile and video content and a greater social media presence.

On Wednesday the BBC launches a full digital service in Thai, following the success of a Facebook-only “pop-up” service launched in 2014. … Read More on BBC News

U.S. Embassy Statement on Visa Issuance on Ethiopia

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AddisNews: U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia released a statement on the visa issuance in Ethiopia after a spread of rumors on social media as visa issuing limitation has been placed.

Following the Donald Trump’s executive order blocking refugees and citizens of seven mostly Muslim countries from entering the U.S. rumor has been spreading U.S. Embassy is issuing only few numbers of visas due to the limitation by the new U.S. government order.

U.S. Embassy Statement on Visa Issuance on Ethiopia [Press Release]

We would like to clarify the most recent developments regarding U.S. visa issuance in Ethiopia.   Rumors that limitations have been placed on the issuance of visas in Ethiopia are false and we continue to process visa applications as usual.

Applicants whose visa expired less than 12 months ago are eligible to reapply through the interview waiver program, although they will be subject to the same rigorous security screening and may need to appear for an interview if requested by a consular officer.

All other applicants between the ages of 14 and 79, with the exception of certain classes of official visas, must apply in person.   Foreign nationals from the seven countries subject to restrictions under Executive Order 13769, which did not include Ethiopia, may also continue to apply for visas as usual as the State Department has complied with the federal court order barring enforcement of several provisions of the Order.

We will provide further updates if new information becomes available.  The Department of State is committed to facilitating legitimate travel while ensuring the security of U.S. borders and the American people.

Additional information on the visa process can be found at travel.state.gov.

Ethiopia-Sudan Border Development Conference Starts on Thursday

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Ethiopia-Sudan border development conference kicks off on Thursday

February 14, 2017 (KHARTOUM) – The 18th session of the conference on development of the joint Sudanese-Ethiopian borders will be held on Thursday in Mekelle, capital of Ethiopia’s Tigray region, said governor of Gadaref State.

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A road leading to Ethiopia-Sudan border (Photo Jamminglobal.com)

The two-day conference, which is held alternately between Sudan and Ethiopian regions, will discuss issues pertaining to farming in the joint borders, trade exchange and smuggling.

Governor of Gadaref State Mirghani Salih Sid Ahmed told the official news agency SUNA, that the conference would be held with the participation of the border states of Gadaref, Blue Nile, Sennar and Kassala from the Sudanese side and Benishangul-Gumuz and Amhara regions from the Ethiopian side.

He pointed that his state has completed its arrangements to participate in the conference, saying they would seek to retrieve the agricultural lands confiscated by Ethiopian farmers..

According to the governor, Gadaref state delegation will focus on issues to promote bilateral ties between the two countries besides ways to enhance trade exchange particularly after establishing the free-trade zone at Al-Galabat border area.

Sid Ahmed added that their delegation would raise the issue of preventing Ethiopian farmers from growing Sudanese lands according to the 2004 agreement between the two countries.

Farmers from two sides of the border between Sudan and Ethiopia used to dispute the ownership of land in the Al-Fashaga area located in the south-eastern part of Sudan’s eastern state of Gedaref.

Al-Fashaga covers an area of about 250 square kilometers and it has about 600.000 acres of fertile lands. Also there are river systems flowing across the area including Atbara, Setait and Baslam rivers.

Sudan and Ethiopia agreed in 2004 to demarcate the 1,600 km-long border after tension over the distribution of disputed land to Ethiopian farmers following the intervention of the Ethiopian army to clear some Sudanese villages on the border.

However, the Ethiopian opposition accuses the ruling party of abandoning Ethiopian territory to Sudan.

Also, the border between the two countries is considered a major passageway for illegal migrants and human trafficking activities.

Ethiopia and Sudan are engaged more and more in joint economic projects particularly on the border areas for the benefit of the people from the two sides.

In the past, Sudan worked for a tripartite regional cooperation including Eritrea but the border conflict between Asmara and Addis Ababa prevents for the time being such realization.

Source: Sudan Tribune

 

Dr. Richard Pankhurst: The Great Friend of Ethiopia

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Dr. Richard Pankhurst

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By Indrias Getachew

For most readers of Addis Tribune Dr. Richard Pankhurst is a very familiar name. He has been a regular contributor of features on various periods and aspects of Ethiopian history for the past six years. He is one of the steadfast pillars of this publication and we believe that this tribute is long overdue.

Although he is not an Ethiopian by birth or citizenship I believe that his contributions to our country are so extensive and enduring that he is deserving of some sort of honorary Ethiopian title. His career in Ethiopia has entered its fifth decade. Unlike most non-Ethiopian historians researching and writing on Ethiopia, Dr. Pankhurst lives and works in Ethiopia. He even named his son after one of his heroes, the Ethiopian patriot Ras Alula. He has adopted Ethiopian causes and pursued them with admirable commitment and impressive tenacity. He is constantly drawing attention to international injustices committed against Ethiopia, injustices that can be compensated for even today. A simple example is his efforts alongside other concerned individuals to put pressure on the Italian government to return the Axum Obelisk taken during the Fascist Occupation, and which now stands in Rome. I doubt there would be much objection to granting him honorary Ethiopian citizenship!

 

Recorded Ethiopian history, the story of one of the earliest civilizations in the world, spans several millennia. The stele at Axum are some of the more conspicuous evidences of this rich past. The undisputed fact of an ancient civilization that has evolved and come down to modern times in all its richness and diversity is one of the principle sources of immense pride for all Ethiopians today. Things pass, events take place and time marches on. The fast-paced, often only forward-looking character of our modern twentieth century (approaching twenty first century) lives, the past is forgotten all too easily and it might be tempting to discount the value of historians. I believe that quite the opposite is true; historians are an indispensable part of modern society, and in Ethiopia they play a particularly important role. They remind us of who we were and where we came from, which is the only true way of understanding where we stand now. Our history is probably the best indication of how we should (and how we should not) proceed. We need many more historians to provide us with as much analysis and truth about the past such that our history is not hijacked and manipulated to further the political aims of individuals or groups; groups that, as evidenced by modern Ethiopian history, often do not have the ultimate best interests of Ethiopia in mind as they pursue their respective agendas. The general discourse needs to be much broader and accessible to a larger public. And in this regard the achievements of Dr. Richard Pankhurst are indeed impressive.

Since the 1970’s the international perception of Ethiopia has been by and large defined by the tremendously vicious repercussions of the Revolution and the ensuing Red Terror, and the ghastly images of famine in the 1980’s. From my own experiences as a student in the United States I know that, at least in the US, there is very little knowledge of this, our ancient land. In fact most people are truly amazed and fascinated when they find out that the Ethiopia they associate so quickly with drought, famine, violence, and war, is actually the repository of such a unique history, of such brilliant cultures, traditions, and heritage that endure to this day.

Dr. Richard Pankhurst has authored or co-authored twenty two books on Ethiopia. He has either edited or compiled an additional seventeen. Over the past four and a half decades Dr. Pankhurst has produced several hundred articles on Ethiopia that have appeared in numerous academic journals throughout the world, and in magazines and newspapers. His most accessible writings are probably his articles for Selamta, the magazine of Ethiopian Airlines, and his newspaper articles for Addis Tribune, which are all available in the on-line archives of the paper. Dr. Pankhurst’s writings have presented Ethiopian history, culture, and tradition not only to academics and students of history, but also to a wide spectrum of readers, both Ethiopian and non-Ethiopian.

Dr. Richard Pankhurst was born in London, the son of the renowned Ethiopian activist E. Sylvia Pankhurst. His mother was one of the more vocal anti-Fascist activists in Europe during the 1920’s and 1930’s. Her anti-Fascist activities led her to take interest in Ethiopia. Speaking about his mother Dr. Pankhurst stated, “She saw the aggressive militaristic character of Fascism and was involved in anti-Fascist movements, regarding Italy as the first victim. She was involved in something called ‘Friends of Italian Freedom.’ Then the Wal-Wal incident was being followed in 1934 by the shipment of Italian troops to Eritrea and Somalia. She saw that Ethiopia would be the second victim and she wrote to lots of newspapers in defense of Ethiopia … urging that the League of Nations should be stronger, should have teeth to establish proper sanctions that really would stop the aggression. She wanted to see the Suez Canal closed, she wanted the sanctions to include petrol. Mussolini later admitted to Hitler that if the League of Nations had extended sanctions to cover petrol, as he said, ‘I would have had to abandon Abyssinia in a week.’ By 1936 she begun to feel that it was no good writing articles to newspapers because as the international situation changed people would no longer be interested in Abyssinia … and would move on to something else. So she founded a newspaper called New Times and Ethiopia News to concentrate on the question of Ethiopia.”

This early exposure to Ethiopia through the activities of his mother led to a general interest in Ethiopia as a whole. Dr Pankhurst recalls, “I knew the children of Hakim Workneh, who was the Ethiopian Minister in London, and later when the first Ethiopian students came to Britain after the war, the liberation, I knew many of them. I had friends such as Mengistu Lemma, Afewerk Tekle, Habte Bahru, Michael Imru … and when I finished my studies at the London School of Economics, having visited Ethiopia once, I decided to come and teach.”

Dr. Pankhurst received his Ph.D. in Economic History and moved to Ethiopia in 1956 and began teaching at the University College of Addis Ababa. In 1962 Dr. Pankhurst founded the Institute of Ethiopian Studies, located on the grounds of Addis Ababa University, and was the first Director of it. This is perhaps one of his more prominent contributions to Ethiopia as the Institute continues as the foremost center of research and learning on Ethiopia in the world today. I asked Dr. Pankhurst about the Institute, and after suggesting that I speak with the current Director he explained, “The Institute consists of three things: the Institute Library, which is the largest library on Ethiopia in the world… Then there is the Museum which has a remarkably good ethnological collection plus the best collection of Ethiopian art in the world… The third thing is a small research unit with people doing research of whom I am one. The Institute also processes foreign visitors, scholars. It gets their visas, letters of introduction, and so forth.”

In 1968 The Society of Friends of the Institute of Ethiopian Studies was formed to raise money to purchase the extensive collections at the Institute. “The Institute was acquiring plows and tables and baskets for the museum which could be done at very low cost, then suddenly he (the curator) found vast numbers of icons and manuscripts and crosses coming on the market and were being exported, taken by tourists, foreign visitors, diplomats, and so forth and ending up in the auction houses of Europe. Faced with that situation we established the Society of Friends of the Institute to raise money – because for these artistic items you can’t just buy them for five birr as you would a plow, for example. We needed bigger money, and of course we could only buy a tiny fraction of what was going on the market … but what we wanted to do was to build up representative collections of Ethiopian icons, manuscripts, crosses, and so forth, so that we could see the evolution of these things – the majority would go out of the country, we couldn’t control that, but at least we would have a few things so that Ethiopia wouldn’t end up a cultural desert with all the antiquities coming out of the country. We would be able to show in the museum something, and indeed we built the finest collection of Ethiopian art in the world at the Institute Museum. And we are still trying to do that because in the last three or four years a new crisis has developed with large numbers of things being taken out of the country.” The Society of Friends holds regular lectures on a variety of topics which are open to the public.

Dr. Pankhurst worked as director of the Institute until 1972/73. He stayed on at the University doing research and teaching until in 1976, following the Ethiopian revolution, Dr. Pankhurst and his family left Ethiopia and returned to England. During his decade back in England Dr. Pankhurst worked as librarian at the Royal Asiatic Society. He and his family returned to Ethiopia in 1986. He has been conducting research at the Institute of Ethiopian Studies since, and is an adviser and resource person for graduate students at the University. Dr. Pankhurst is currently in the process of updating his book on the “Social History of Ethiopia,” which ends with Emperor Teodros, to include more recent times. He is also going through his mother’s papers with the intention of writing something on the period in which she was involved.

As a constant champion of causes Ethiopian, Dr. Pankhurst has earned the respect and admiration of many in Ethiopia and abroad. Further to his active participation in the National Committee for the return of the Axum Obelisk, Dr. Pankhurst is currently among a group of concerned professionals forming a national committee for the return of treasures looted by the British Expeditionary Force sent to free British Prisoners from Mekdella in 1868. Speaking about the Mekdella loot Dr. Pankhurst stated, “it seems to me that because Teodros had a dispute with the British Government this does not justify the looting of Mekdella…. For example, if when the British and Americans were involved in Iraq, if they had started looting Iraq at that time, bringing back treasures, the whole world would have cried out against it because moral views have changed. We now have to look at the Mekdella situation with these moral views. And I feel that in the same way that African countries won their territorial independence, they should also win their looted articles taken abroad.” Discounting the argument that these items might be safer, or better taken care of in England, Dr. Pankhurst quickly points to the fact that Windsor Castle, where some off the items are stored, almost burned to the ground several years back.

Dr. Richard Pankhurst has become a prominent establishment in his own right in Ethiopia. We are fortunate to have him here and look forward to more products of his research and endeavors.

A Collection of Essays by Dr. Richard Pankhurst

Ethiopia Across the Red Sea and Indian Ocean

You can contact Dr. Pankhurst at Pankhurst@telecom.net.et

Contact Indrias at Indrias@hotmail.com

Opposition Leaders Dr. Merera Gudina, Berhanu Nega and Jawar Mohammed Charged with Terrorism

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Dr Merera Gudina, leading opposition figure in Ethiopia and Chairman of the Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC), Jawar Mohammed a popular Oromo activist and Executive Director of the Oromia Media network and Chairman of armed opposition party Ginbot 7 Berhanu Nega,  also charged with terrorism by Ethiopian government prosecutors.

Dr. Merera Gudina is accused of meeting anti-government elements during a European tour last year. He was twice denied bail by the courts as the police continued to gather evidence for charges.

Gudina, during his last appearance in court vehemently denied any terrorism allegations and said that he had spent his life teaching against the ideals of violence and terrorism.

Second defendant Dr.Berhanu Nega, leader of the opposition Patriotic G7, and 3rd defendant Jawar Mohammed, head of OMN Television and a prominent Oromo activist, are also charged in absentia under the same file as Dr. Merera Gudina. But the two only share details of offenses listed in the first of the four separate charges in the same file.

The charge of terrorism as brought by police prosecutors varies from the government’s position which said he was arrested for flouting sections of the current state of emergency imposed in October 2016.

Ethiopian security forces arrested the Gudina shortly after his arrival in the capital Addis Ababa on December 1 from Belgium. Together with other activists and the Olympic athlete Feyisa Lelisa – he met with Members of the European Parliament on 9 November 2016.

Ethiopia is currently under a six-month state of emergency imposed to quell spreading anti-government protests in the Oromia and Amhara regions of the country. The protests which started in November last year continued into this year.

Since January 2016 the human rights situation in Ethiopia has not improved at all. Human Rights Watch reports that security forces have killed more than 500 people during protests over the course of 2016.

The government reported mass arrests of persons believed to be behind the protests, some are to be released whiles others will be arraigned before the courts on offences of destroying private and public property.

The Command Post administering the curfew says relative peace has returned to the country. There are issues also surrounding communication access with slow internet in most parts of the country. Some European countries have lifted their travel advice for Ethiopia with the ‘return to peace.’

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Gunfire And Road Block In Ethiopia – U.S. Embassy Warning Citizens To Avoid Traveling

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US Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopian issued a travel warning to it’s citizens to avoid Babile and Harar areas due to intense fighting including gunfire. Read below the full excerpt of the Embassy message.

U

Security Message for U.S. Citizens: Main road blocked by security forces between the cities of Babile and Harar

By U.S. Embassy Ethiopia | 10 August, 2017 | Topics: Security & Emergency Messages

 United States Embassy Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Security Message for U.S. Citizens:  Main road blocked by security forces between the cities of Babile and Harar

August 10, 2017

The U.S. Embassy is aware of reports that the main road from Addis Ababa to Jijiga has been blocked by security forces between the cities of Babile and Harar due to intense fighting including gunfire.  Ethiopian Defense Force troops are arriving in the area, and the road is not passable.  The Embassy recommends that U.S. citizens avoid travel between Babile and Harar at this time.  As always, review your personal security plans; remain aware of your surroundings, including local events; and monitor local news stations for updates. Maintain a high level of vigilance and take appropriate steps to enhance your personal security.

For further information:

Ethiopia Travel Warning – United State Issued Travel Warning In Ethiopia

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U.S. Embassy Released Ethiopia Travel Warning

The Government of Ethiopia has demonstrated its ability and willingness to restrict or shut down internet, cellular data, and phone services, impeding the U.S. Embassy’s ability to communicate with U.S. citizens in Ethiopia and limiting the Embassy’s ability to provide consular services. Additionally, the Government of Ethiopia does not inform the U.S. Embassy of detentions or arrests of U.S. citizens in Ethiopia.

Avoid demonstrations and large gatherings, continuously assess your surroundings, and evaluate your personal level of safety. Be aware that the government may use force and live fire in response to demonstrations, and that even gatherings intended to be peaceful can be met with a violent response or turn violent without warning. U.S. citizens in Ethiopia should monitor their security situation and have contingency plans in place in case you need to depart suddenly.

Given the unpredictable security situation, U.S. citizens in Ethiopia should have alternate communication plans in place, and let family and friends know that communication may be limited while you are in Ethiopia. The Department of State strongly advises U.S. citizens to register your mobile number with the U.S. Embassy to receive security information via text or SMS, in addition to enrolling in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP).

 

source: U.S. Embassy

Ethiopia to Ban Foreign Adoptions, According to New Bill

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Ethiopia-AdoptionsOctober 14, 2017 – A new draft bill has been written to amend the existing revised family code proposed the elimination of specific articles granting foreigners the right to adopt Ethiopian children, according to the Reporter. According to a document issued by the Ethiopian Prime Minister Office, the latest draft bill has been designed based on the new National Child Protection Policy, endorsed by Ethiopian Council of Ministers.

The policy was designed with the objective that orphans, vulnerable children, as well as unaccompanied children should grow with discipline only in their homeland honoring their culture and tradition among their community. It also says they should benefit from locally available care and support, and enjoy access to rehabilitation services. Therefore, they should either be adopted locally, or supported by a guardian family, tutor or help them to reunite with biological parents or relatives.

The existing proclamation states that the principle of adoptive filiation may be created by an agreement between a person and a child. It also states that an adopted child shall, for all intents and purposes, be deemed to be the child of the adopter.

However, due to problems especially with foreign adopters, over the past few years the issue of adoption has been stirring heated debates among various members of the community, including MPs. It is to be recalled that MPs have repeatedly grilled the former minister of women and children affairs regarding the status of a number of Ethiopian children that had been adopted by foreigners over the past two decades.

In particular, inability by biological parents to trace their children and adoptees being denied a chance to communicate with their biological parents have been major issues that have been echoed in parliament.

In order to address these challenges and to replace the existing Family Code (The Revised Family Code Proclamation No. 213/2000) with a new policy, a new draft bill was tabled before parliament with a view to banning adoption by foreigners, according to documents reviewed by The Reporter. Hence, the provision which is stated on Article 193 would be repealed fully while paragraph (d) of Sub-Article (3) of Article 194 is to be erased upon revision and further scrutiny by the Women and Children Affairs Standing Committee.

Meanwhile, it was learnt that pending adoption-related court cases by foreigners would be settled as per the old stipulation, according to the draft bill.

In a related development, during parliamentary session Tuesday, MPs unanimously approved the restructuring of standing committees as well as the establishment of two new standing committees that would enable the house “effectively” enhance its check and balance roles.

The newly created standing committees are Democracy, Human Rights and Administrative Affairs Standing Committee and Undertakings Affairs Standing Committee (to oversee customs and revenue) that would enable the house oversee matters under their purview.

Source: Reporter

 

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Ethiopia trip offers encounters with rare animals

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A cabin at Bale Mountain Lodge overlooks the mountains.  (Bale Mountain Lodge)  A cabin at Bale Mountain Lodge overlooks the mountains. (Bale Mountain Lodge)
Tim Johnson Special to the Star

BALE MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK, ETHIOPIA-At first, it’s little more than a flash of fur, just a blot on the far side of the road, trotting hard and moving fast.

Its auburn coat standing out against the lunarlike landscape, the small animal pauses just for a moment, turns to face us, mouth set in what looks like a toothy grin, and eyes our Land Cruiser’s sleepy band of travellers. Then, in a moment, it dashes off before we can scramble for our cameras, running at a steady pace up and over a ridge, out of sight. By the time we spill clumsily out of the vehicle and walk with our sleep-stiffened joints across the frozen ground to where it once stood, that lone wolf is long gone.

I’ve just seen the Abyssinian red wolf — the world’s most endangered canine. With a habitat that’s now largely limited to the high plateau of Ethiopia’s Bale Mountains National Park — a forbidding, otherworldly place some 4,000 metres above sea level — estimates vary on how many of these wolves remain, but everyone agrees it’s a few hundred, at most.

Cousins of both coyotes and jackals, some experts peg their population at fewer than 300, and dropping fast. I’m here to spot as many as possible, as well as a wide variety of other strange creatures that thrive in the rarefied air of this remote corner of Ethiopia.

With various ecosystems and altitudes packed into one park, the roughly 2,000-square-kilometre Bale Mountains National Park provides opportunities to view some of Africa’s most unusual animals, including the endemic big-headed mole rat, mongoose, jackal, honey badger, black-maned lion and the mountain-adapted leopard.

Arriving here after a long drive, 400 hard km down from the capital, Addis Ababa, with Australian-based Peregrine Adventures, we overnight in the nearby city of Goba.

Rising early, we wind up to the Sanetti Plateau in our hardy Land Cruisers, passing the tree line and entering Africa’s largest uninterrupted high-altitude zone. We skirt frozen ponds and spot one of Ethiopia’s highest peaks — Mount Tullu Dimtu, which rises almost 4,400 metres — and quickly enjoy that fleeting glimpse of the wolf. Before descending into more hospitable climes on the other side, where we stop for a pleasant hike through green pastures and forest to a waterfall, we tarry in Rira, a bustling, ramshackle village inside the park, where we buy a few supplies and stop to snap some photos with the residents.

Soon we’re sitting down for lunch at Bale Mountain Lodge, which is set in a valley below a craggy ridge. Unlike more heavily tourist parts of Africa, safari lodges are rare in Ethiopia, but this one, built in 2014, is aiming to place visitors in the heart of the animal action.

The only wolf in Africa, the Abyssinian is facing extinction. According to the Ethiopian Wolf Conservation Programme, which is headed by an Oxford University zoologist, four consecutive rabies outbreaks — the most recent in 2014 — have precipitated a sharp drop in numbers, with the total population plummeting as much as 75 per cent since the early ’90s. Solutions aren’t easy; transplanting the village of Rira outside the park would be difficult, and moving the vast herds owned by local, rural pastoralists, harder still.
Read More Here

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Ethiopia: ‘Red Terror’ war crimes trial begins at The Hague – BBC News

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Ethiopia Red Terror war crimes trial begins - Mengistu hailemariam

Ethiopia: ‘Red Terror’ war crimes trial begins at The Hague

An Ethiopian soldier stands inside the Martyrs Memorial to the "Red Terror" at the Holy Trinity Church in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on 24 February 2004.

Eshetu Alemu is accused of ordering the execution of 75 people during Ethiopia’s “Red Terror”

Image copyright Getty Images

The war crimes trial of an aide to Ethiopia’s former communist ruler has begun in the Netherlands.

Eshetu Alemu, 63, is accused of ordering the execution of 75 people during Ethiopia’s “Red Terror” purges in the late 1970s.

The former aide to then ruler Mengistu Haile Mariam is also accused of torture and inhumane treatment. He denies all the charges against him.

More than 300 victims have been named in four war crimes charges.

Ethiopia has sentenced him to death in absentia.

Prosecutors allege that Alemu, a dual Ethiopian-Dutch national, was a henchman for Mengistu in the north-west Gojjam province.

As his trial opened at a domestic court in The Hague, Eshetu Alemu said that prosecutors had “the wrong person”.

“I was really shocked when I heard what prosecutors are accusing me of doing, that I could behave like that as a human being. I deny the charges against me,” he told the four judges.

The Mengistu regime and the Red Terror

The former Ethiopian Head of State Mengistu Haile Mariam addresses the summit of the Organization of African Unity on 1 December 1987

Mengistu Haile Mariam governed Ethiopia between 1977 and 1991

Image copyright Getty Images 

 

Marxist strongman Mengistu Haile Mariam ruled Ethiopia between 1977 and 1991 following the overthrow of Emperor Haile Selassie in 1974.

There was significant repression under his communist regime. This became known as the “Red Terror”.

Mengistu was ousted in 1991 after a series of revolts by insurgent groups. He then fled to Zimbabwe where he still resides.

In 2007, Mengistu was found guilty in absentia of genocide.

In a statement, prosecutors said that Alemu “allegedly ordered the killing of 75 young prisoners” in a church.

The bodies were then dumped in a mass grave, they said.

Alemu is also accused of “arbitrary detention and cruel and inhuman treatment of civilians and fighters who had laid down their arms” .

It is alleged that he tied prisoners up, suspended them in mid-air and beat their bare feet with sticks.

It is expected that a number of his alleged victims will give evidence during the trial.

READ MORE HERE ON BBC

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