Sunday, December 18, 2011

Canada’s aid to Ethiopia bankrolling repression, says jailed Canadian’s lawyer

Toronto Star December 18, 2011
 Maintaining that Canadian aid is supporting repression in Ethiopia, human rights lawyer Lorne Waldman has filed an application in Federal Court to block it.
In his application, he is asking that the Canadian government be prohibited from contributing any more development dollars to the African nation to Ethiopia, through the World Bank or the United Nations Development Program.
The application is a last-ditch effort to win the freedom of Bashir Makhtal, a Canadian sentenced in 2009 to life in prison in Ethiopia, the third largest recipient of Canadian official development assistance.
In 2009-2010 Canada provided $168.54 million in development and humanitarian aid to Ethiopia, according to the Canadian International Development Agency’s own reports.
The request for the prohibition of further aid comes on the heels of repeated efforts to win the freedom of Makhtal, a Toronto man who was rendered illegally from Kenya to Ethiopia in January, 2007, kept in prison without access to a lawyer or Canadian consular officials for 18 months, then sentenced to life in prison on terrorism charges.
Makhtal, a former Toronto businessman, had returned to Africa in 2002 to run a used clothing business out of Djibouti, a tiny country between Ethiopia and Somalia on the Horn of Africa. He has been in prison since Dec. 30, 2006, when he was stopped at the Somalia-Kenya border.
The suit states Makhtal “was wrongly accused by the Ethiopian government and was found guilty of being a member of the Ogaden National Liberation Front, an organization seeking independence from Ethiopia of the oil-rich Ogaden region.”
Makhtal has said repeatedly that he does not belong to the organization. His only tie to the organization is a familial one, he has said. His grandfather was one of the co-founders.
Both Makhtal’s family and John Baird, minister of foreign affairs, have repeatedly attested to his innocence. Baird visited Makhtal in prison in Ethiopia and told the family he hoped to win his freedom. There was talk of amnesty from the Ethiopian government, but so far Makhtal remains behind bars in an Ethiopian jail.
“We’re now approaching the 5th anniversary of Bashir’s detention,” Waldman said in an interview with the Star. “We don’t doubt the sincerity of Mr. Baird’s efforts. We had high expectations . . . . But we have no choice but to take action. There have been many times when our hopes have been raised in expectation something would happen, but at this point there is absolutely no indication of any movement on these matters.”
Waldman is arguing in the application that Canada’s assistance program to Ethiopia to fund a variety of national programs is inconsistent with section 4(1) of the Official Development Assistance Accountability Act.
That clause stipulates “official development assistance may be provided only if the competent minister is of the opinion that it (a) contributes to poverty reduction; (b) takes into account the perspectives of the poor; and (c) is consistent with international human right standards.”
Waldman told the Star in an interview that the Canadian government is in contravention of the act because the money Canada is contributing to Ethiopia is being used as “a tool of repression,” rather than uplifting Ethiopian society generally.
Ethiopia has been ruled since 1991 by the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front which has been “repeatedly accused of repression and breaching international human rights,” the application said.
According to Waldman’s application, in the U.S. State Department 2010 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices on Ethiopia there is a long list of human rights abuses, including “unlawful killings, torture, beating, and abuse and mistreatment of detainees and opposition supporters by security forces, especially special police and local militias which took aggressive or violent action with evident impunity in numerous instances.”
As well, the U.S. report points to “poor prison conditions; arbitrary arrest and detention, particularly of suspected sympathizers or members of opposition or insurgent groups; detention without charge and lengthy pretrial detention; infringement on citizens’ privacy rights, including illegal searches, use of excessive force by security services in counterinsurgency operations.”
Waldman’s application also cites a 2011 Human Rights Watch World Report, saying “hundreds of Ethiopians have been arbitrarily arrested and detained and sometimes subjected to torture and other ill treatments by the Government.”
In October 2010, Human Rights Watch issued a report that stated Ethiopia is using international development assistance for state repression, discrimination and violations of civil and political rights. The report pointed to “serious concerns with respect to national programs, funded by CIDA and other international donors.”
Waldman argues that Canadian official assistance, as directed through the World Bank and the UNDP to Ethiopia, is “bankrolling the Ethiopian government’s state repression, and perpetuates the politicized and discriminatory access to government services, including the judiciary.”
“My client Bashir Makhtal is a victim of the repression of this regime,” Waldman said. “In his particular case the Ethiopian judiciary played a role in his imprisonment. It is not impartial and is in the control of the ruling party of Ethiopia. Some of the money from Canada being channeled through the World Bank goes to back government services which would go back to the justice system — the instrument of repression that was used to sentence Mr. Makhtal to life in prison as a result of an unfair trial. It was a kangaroo court and all the reports of the trial support that.
“The Ethiopian government could end the lawsuit tomorrow if they release Bashir,” Waldman said.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Ethiopia: Stop Using Anti-Terror Law to Stifle Peaceful Dissent

Diplomats Should Systematically Monitor Terrorism Trials
November 21, 2011
The anti-terror law itself is a huge problem. The international community, especially the European Union, United States, and United Kingdom, should ask the Ethiopian government hard questions about why it is using this law to crack down on peaceful independent voices.
Rona Peligal, deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch
(Nairobi) – The Ethiopian government should cease using its overly broad anti-terrorism law against journalists and peaceful political activists, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International said today.

On November 23, 2011, the trial of 24 people charged with terrorism offenses on November 10 will continue. Those charged include six journalists and two members of the opposition Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJ) party. Sixteen of the 24 are being tried in absentia. Several other terrorism trials of journalists and opposition activists are ongoing.

“The Ethiopian government is exploiting its vaguely worded anti-terror law to crush peaceful dissent,” said Rona Peligal, deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

The Anti-Terrorism Proclamation of 2009 includes an overbroad and vague definition of terrorist acts and a definition of “encouragement of terrorism” that makes the publication of statements “likely to be understood as encouraging terrorist acts” punishable by 10 to 20 years in prison. These provisions mean that critics of government such as journalists and political opponents could be charged for encouraging terrorism, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International said.

The organizations urged the Ethiopian government to facilitate systematic monitoring of the trials by the diplomatic community. The times and locations of hearings have been altered at the last minute at least twice during the ongoing trials. The government should ensure that key information, including location and time of hearings, is available to the public.

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch also urged diplomats stationed in Ethiopia to carry out systematic monitoring of the ongoing terrorism trials and the trials of members of the Oromo political opposition arrested during 2011. This is particularly important in the absence of independent human rights organizations, which the Ethiopian government has effectively banned. While diplomatic representatives have attended several remand hearings and trial sessions of terrorism cases, none were apparently present at the November 10 confirmation of charges hearing, following a last-minute change of location, nor at the subsequent hearing on November 15.

Ethiopia’s foreign partners closely followed a series of trials from 2005 to 2007, in which treason charges were brought following contested elections. The Council of the European Union appointed a full-time trial observer, although the findings of its report were never made public. EU embassy staff monitored these trials on a rotating basis, and a US embassy staff member was also present.

“Diplomats’ systematic monitoring of these trials is essential,” said Michelle Kagari, deputy director for Africa at Amnesty International. “Without the presence of local civil society, diplomats can play a vital role in witnessing whether or not the suspects’ right to a fair trial is respected.”

None of the defendants detained and charged under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation during 2011 had access to a lawyer during the pre-trial period. Three of those charged have complained in court of mistreatment in detention.

Public comments by Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and the government spokesman, Shimeles Kemal, have undermined the defendants’ presumption of innocence, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International said. Their comments might also exert political pressure on the courts in a country where the judiciary lacks independence.

Since June 2011, the Ethiopian government has charged at least 33 people under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation of 2009.

In addition, in 2011, at least 98 members of the two main Oromo political opposition parties, the Oromo Federal Democratic Movement (OFDM) and the Oromo People’s Congress (OPC), have been arrested and charged under the Criminal Code on the basis of alleged involvement with the Oromo Liberation Front, a banned rebel group.

Seven of the people charged on November 10 had previously been charged during the trials that followed the 2005 elections. All had been given presidential pardon. Three of the seven are among the defendants who are now in custody, two others fled the country after their earlier release, and two were already living in exile when they were charged in the earlier cases.

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have long called for the anti-terrorism law to be amended to bring it into line with Ethiopia’s domestic and international legal obligations.

“The anti-terror law itself is a huge problem,” Peligal said. “The international community, especially the European Union, United States, and United Kingdom, should ask the Ethiopian government hard questions about why it is using this law to crack down on peaceful independent voices.”

Thursday, November 17, 2011


  PRESS RELEASE
 We, members of Unity for Human Rights and Democracy Toronto are shocked to hear of the death of Yenesew Gebre, a 29-nine year old Ethiopian teacher from southwest Ethiopia who set himself on fire on Friday, November 11, and died on Monday November 14 in the town of Dawro, Waka, Southern Ethiopia, after confronting government officials at a public meeting.

It gives heartbreaking testimony to the unbearable pain he and others have suffered under the brutal and oppressive rule of the Tigrean Peoples Liberation Front under the leadership of Meles Zenawi for the past 20 years. We strongly believe every life is a God-given gift and one life lost is one too many. As advocates of a peaceful struggle for democracy and justice, this stands for upholding the human and civil rights of all people regardless of ethnicity or other differences. When one Ethiopian is hurt, we are all hurt.

Mr. Yenesew Gebre is not just some unknown Ethiopian; he is one of us and has a name. He is the son, brother, uncle, best friend, teacher or valued colleague of others who also have names. We are sure his absence in this world will be deeply grieved by all of them and our thoughts and prayers are with them at this time. He is part of our greater Ethiopian family and together, we mourn the loss of his life. He is one of the many Ethiopians who have been deprived of his life.
The Canadian government has spent hundreds of millions of Canadian tax payers’ money supporting the regime in Ethiopia.  Particularly, in the past decade millions of dollars were spent to revitalize the justice system in Ethiopia, which today is in total collapse. The regime of Meles Zenawi, uses the justice system as a tool to intimidate political opponents. Political motivated trials in the past also indicate that, the judiciary in Ethiopia is neither independent nor impartial. In the last twenty years no person accused of an offence in relation to his political activities has received a favourable ruling. Simply put, the justice system is manipulated controlled and directed by the regime.
According to Ethiopian Satellite Television (ESAT) sources, Yenesew was very angry at the injustice the people were subjected at the hands of ruling party officials. It also appears that Yenesew had been fired from his teaching position due to his political views and unswerving stand against human rights violations, tyranny and oppression. As Canadians it hurts us a lot to see our government supporting and more, sending Canadian Tax payer’s money to a dictator that does not respect basic Human rights.
We, members of Unity for Human Rights and Democracy, demand Canada review, more clearly stop its financial support to the regime of Mr.Mels Zenaw, and raise the issue of an immediate political reform in Ethiopia.
Our condolence goes to the family and friends to Yenesew Gebre.

Yousuf Omer
President
November 18, 2011



Friday, September 16, 2011

The Regime of Meles Zenawi in Ethiopia is incarcerating opposition party leaders, and Democracy activist, using the draconian anti-terrorist law

The Honorable John Baird
Minister of Foreign Affairs
125 Sussex Drive
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0G2
September, 17, 2011

Dear Minister Baird

Re: The Regime of Meles Zenawi in Ethiopia is incarcerating opposition party leaders, and Democracy activist, using the draconian anti-terrorist law. The latest Victims are Legendary Ethiopian Film actor/comedian Debebe Eshetu, Journalist Eskender Nega. 

We, members of Unity for Human Rights and Democracy Toronto, would like to bring to your attention the recent unjust imprisonment of leading political figures and journalist in Ethiopia under a false pretext of terrorism. The detained include two Swedish journalists and three local journalists, three prominent leaders of the largest opposition alliance “Mederk,” the famous actor, director a human right activist and alumni of York University Debebe Eshetu, Journalist Eskender Nega, Mr. Bekele Gerba, Mr. Olbana Lelisa, Mr. Amdualem Arageie and 29 other members of opposition parties. It should be recalled as you are very aware with the case of Mr. Bashir Makthal which he is still languishing in prison.
The draconian anti-terrorist law, under which Mr Eshetu and others are held, has been proclaimed since 2009. This law was opposed by the international and local human right organizations including the government of Canada. The legislation purposely employs wide vague and misleading definitions of terrorist and terrorism and is tailored to be used against any person the government targets for any other cause. For instance the legislation criminalized “thinking of supporting” an organization which the regime deems terrorist. Save as this instance, thinking unaccompanied by any manifest action has never been used as a sole element of a criminal offence in any other jurisdiction. The nature of the law and its recent application therefore strongly indicate that, the law is lest related to terrorism and is mainly aimed at suppression of decent.
Before the recent crackdown and following the proclamation of the draconian legislation the regime has organized seminars for all levels of the judiciary. During these seminars, judges were told in no uncertain terms, that the anti-terrorist law is to be enforced stringently with no lenience shown to any one accused under it. Similarly political motivated trials in the past also indicate that, the judiciary in Ethiopia is neither independent nor impartial. In the last twenty years no person accused of an offence in relation to his political activities has received a favorable ruling. Simply put, the justice system is manipulated controlled and directed by the regime.
These and many other particulars hence constrained us to conclude, Mr Eshetu and others will not be tried on facts and laws but have already been convicted by the regime and trials will only serve to give an air of legality  to the sham process. Considering the above facts and circumstances and Canada’s unwavering support for democratic reforms and rule of law in Ethiopia we implore upon you and your good office to consider taking the following majors.
To express your concern to the regime of Mr. Meles Zenawi, officials and their diplomatic missions here in Canada.
To denounce the illegal detentions and inhuman treatment of prisoners and request their   unconditional release.
To condition, Canada’s assistance on a meaningful democratic reforms that includes the opposition parties, and make a serious consideration withholding the assistance if the regime refuses to address these flagrant injustices.

Sincerely,

Yousuf Omer
President

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

ADDIS ABABA - Security men on Wednesday arrested prominent Ethiopian journalist Eskinder Nega and opposition party leader Andualem Aragie. They were both taken to Makelawi Prison in handcuffs at different times in the afternoon, witnessed said.Eskinder and Andualem were earlier around 8:30 am seen conversing over coffee with two other UDJ members at a cafeteria near the opposition party's headquarters, a UDJ press release reported.

Acclaimed as a widely read journalist whose weekly columns appear on Ethiomedia.com on Fridays, Eskinder has been writing articles critical of the government of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi whose high-handed rule has often been denounced by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, among others. Andualem, a young, charismatic opposition leader whose oratorical skills shot him to prominence in the run-up to the overwhelmingly-rigged 2010 elections, had served nearly two years in prison following the ill-fated 2005 elections in which security forces killed at least 193 protesters.
Eskinder Nega, whose courage and unbending spirit is the envy of every opposition leader who would like to beat brutal thugs hands down, was also a prison inmate during the 2005 nationwide crackdown that led to the shutting down of the independent press, including three newspapers that Eskinder used to edit. He was held in solitary confinement for several months, and bears a dislocated shoulder due to torture. He is the husband of award-winning journalist Serkalem Fassil.
The government has targetted prominent journalists and opposition leaders as a pre-emptive strike at what observers say fears of public unrest due to an economic crisis compounded by an inflation that has soared over 40 percent in recent weeks.
Earlier last week, police arrested Debebe Eshetu, a veteran actor and opposition activist, and charged him under a new anti-terror law for having alleged ties to Ginbot Sebat, an opposition group outlawed in Ethiopia. Two opposition party officials and two journalists were also arrested under the anti-terror law, which human rights groups say is a smokescreen the government uses to crush dissent.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Toronto Declaration of Unity of Purpose Organizers | May 9, 2011

Unity Is Power!
Regardless of our differences in language, culture or religion, all the panelists agree the power of unity. All also see the need for a united front against Meles’s tyranny and total economic domination of Ethiopia. The panellists saw the need for putting a stop to the Woyane-driven genocide being committed in places such as the Ogaden and Oromia. Furthermore, the panelists emphasized the need for a united front against Western indifference to what the Meles regime is doing in Ethiopia.
Toronto Panel Discussion Resolution
Agreed on the need to acknowledge the past, but also the need to forgive and move forward for the sake of Ethiopia's Unity.
In order to build unity within the disparate communities in Ethiopia, the panelists believe that the unity must be based on the restoration of the inalienable right for all Ethiopians to decide their own destiny.
The panelists believe that such unity could be achieved based on trust amongst the disparate communities. Such unity must also be enhanced through constant communication amongst the groups in order to guard against mistrust and suspicious that the Meles regime would certainly create. Finally the panelists emphasize the need for pooling resources to achieve the common objectives.
While the panelists were buoyed by the large crowd that attended in today’s gathering, they believe that our differences should be viewed as strength instead of a liability that Meles’s administration has made it and exploited it to its advantage.
Sincerely,
Alo Aydahis, Jawar Mohamed, Mohamed Hassan, Abebe Belew, and Obang Metho
May 7, 2011 Toronto, Canada

Sunday, May 8, 2011

ቶሮንቶ በበቃ ተጠመቀች፤ ከተለያዩ ማህበረሰብ የተወጣጡ ኢትዮጵያዊያን የተሳካ ስብሰባ አካሄዱ

በተክለሚካኤል አበበ
ቅዳሜ ሜይ 7 ቀን በካናዳ የንግድ ከተማ፡ ቶሮንቶ ከተለያዩ ማህበረሰብ የተወጣጡ ኢትዮጵያዊያን ተናጋሪዎችና ተሳታፊዎች የነበሩበት የተሳካ የበቃ ንቅናቄ ስብሰባ ተካሄደ። ተጋባዥ እንግዶቹም አብሮ የመስራትና የጋራ ዓላማን የሚያሳይ የአቋም መግለጫ አወጡ። በዚህ ስብሰባ ላይ በመቶዎች የሚቆጠሩ የኦጋዴን የአፋርና የኦሮሞ ብሄረሰብ አባላትና ሌሎች ኢትዮጵያዊያንም የተገኙ ሲሆን፡ በመጨረሻም፡ ኢትዮጵያ አንድ ነች፡ አንድነታችን ግን በተለያዩ ማህበረሰቦች የተገነባ አንድነት ነው፡ እንዲሁም በዚህች ኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ የሰውነት የተፈጥሮ መብታችንን አስቀድሞ ማስከበር ከምንም በላይ ቅድሚያ የሚሰጠው ነገር ነው ሲሉ የአቋም መግለጫ አውጥተዋል።

በስብሰባው የመጀመሪያው ተናጋሪ የነበሩት፡ ከታላቁ የአፋር ብሄረሰብ የወጡት አቶ አሎ አይደሂስ፡ ሕወሀት/ኢህአዴግ በማሳ ውስጥ እንደበቀልና፡ እህሎቹን እንደሚያቀጭጭ አንድ አላስፈላጊ ዛፍ ነው ሲሉ መስለውት፡ አንድ ላይ አይቀመጡም፡ አይወያዩም፡ ብሎ ያስቀመጠን ተቃዋሚዎች ዛሬ ግን ባንድ ላይ መሰብሰባችን እጅግ እንዳስደሰታቸውና ወደፊትም መቀጠል እንዳለባቸው ተናግረዋል። በመጨረሻም ይህ ዛፍ መርዘኛ ስለሆነና እህሎቹን ስላቀጨጫቸው ከስሩ ለመነቀልና በአገራችን ፍትህና ርትእ ለማስፈን አብረን መስራት እንዳለብን አሳስበው ንግራቸውን ደምድመዋል።
ሁለተኛው ተናጋሪ ከኦጋዴን ማህበረሰብ የወጡት አቶ መሀመድ ሀሰን፡ እድሜ ልካችንን በማይረቡ ነገሮች ስንጨቃጨቅ ከምንኖር ይልቅ፡ የቋንቋ አንድነት፡ የሀይማኖት አንድነት፡ የአስተሳሰብ አንድነት፡ ሰይሆን የ“የምክንያት ወይንም የአላማ አንድነት (Unity of Purpose)” አንድነት ፈጥረን፡ አገራችንን እያጠፋ ያለውን ስርአት ማስወገድ አለብን ብለዋል። ሕወሀት/ኢህአዴግ ላለፉት አመታት በተለይም በኦጋዴን አካባቢ ከፍተኛ የሆነ እልቂት ሲፈጽም ገና ለገና ተገንጣይ ቡድኖች ናቸው ብሎ በማሰብና በመፍራት፡ በውጭ የምንገኝ ኢትዮጵያዊያን በሙሉ በኦጋዴን የተፈጸመውን የዘር ማጥፋት ወንጀል ተቃውመን በአንድነት አለመውጣታችን እጅግ እንደጎዳን ገልጸው፡ አሁንም ወያኔ ለምእራባዊያን የሚሸጠውን የፈጠራ ፖለቲካ ተባብረን ካልደመሰስነው በስተቀር፡ ርስ በርሳችን ስንባላ ያቺ የምንወዳት አገር ልትጠፋ እንደምንችል አሳስቦ፡ የጋራ ዓላማ ይዘን እንድንንቀሳቀስ አሳስቧል።
ሶስተኛ ተናጋሪ የሆነው አቶ አበበ በለውም፡ አሁን የስራ ጊዜ ነው፡ ጠላቶቻችን እያንዳንዱን ሰዓት አፈናም ይሁን ዝርፊያ በስራ ያሳልፉታል፡ እኛ ግን እስካሁን ከወሬ ደረጃ እንዳላለፍን ገልጾ፡ ኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ ያንዱ ብሄር ችግር የዚያ ብሄር ብቻ ሳይሆን የሁሉም ኢትዮጵያዊ እንደሆነ በማሳሰብ የአብሮ መስራትን አስፈላጊነት ገልጿል።
አራተኛው ተናጋሪ ወጣት ጃዋር መሀመድ ሲሆን፡ ወጣት ጃዋር፡ በኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ ዴሞክራሲን በማስፈን፡ የመፈረካከስ አደጋን ለማቆም ህዝቡና ተቃዋሚ ፖለቲከኞች ማድረግ ስለሚገባቸው ነገሮች ተናግሯል። ጃዋር፡ አሁን ባለው ሁኔታ ተቃዋሚ ፖለቲከኞች ህዝቡን ቀድመው መሄድና ማስተባበር ካልቻሉ፡ ህዝቡ ራሱ ቀድሞ በመተባበርና አብሮ በመስራት፡ በኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ የፍትህና ስርአት ለውጥ እንዲመጣ፡ እንዲተጋ አሳስቧል። አሁን ባለው ሁኔታ ፖለቲከኞች ደጋፊ እናጣለን በሚል ፍራቻ የተነሳ ተፈራርተውና ተራርቀው እንደሚገኙ ገልጾ፡ ነገር ግን በመተማመንና በመተባበር ለመስራት፡ የአንድነትም ይሁን የነጻነት አራማጆች፡ ጽንፈኛነታቸውን ትተው ወደመሀል በመምጣት ነገሮችን አስታርቀው የመሄድ ባህል እንዲያዳብሩ ግድ እንደሚል ተናግሯል።
በመጨረሻም አቶ ኦባንግ ከራሱም ልምድና ከአገራችን ወቅታዊ ሁኔታ አንጻር ሰፊ ማብራሪያ አሰምቶ፡ ሁላችንም ነጻ ካልወጣን አንዳችንም ነጻ እንደማንወጣ፡ ከብሄራችንም በፊት ሰውነታችን መቅደም እንዳበት አሳስቦ የአብሮ መስራትን አስፈላጊነት አበክሮ ገልጿል። አቶ ኦባንግ ጠላታችን ይሄ ብሄር ወይንማ ያኛው ብሄር ሳይሆን፡ ስርአት እንደሆነ ገልጾ፡ ያንን ስርአት ለመጣል እንድንታገል አደራ ብሏል።
በመጨረሻም “አንድነት ሀይል ነው” በሚል መፈክር የተጀመረው ስብሰባ፡ አምስቱም ተናጋሪዎች በጋራ ባወጡት “አንድነት ሀይል ነው” እንዲሁም መለያየት በቃ መግለጫ ተጠናቋል። በዚህ ስብሰባ ላይ ከታየው የህዝብ ስብጥር በተጨማሪ፡ የስብሰባው አስተባባሪና የመድረክ መሪ አወያይዋ፡ ወይዘሮ ፋሲካ ወልደሰንበት አስደናቂና አስደሳች የአወያይ ሚና ተጫውታለች። ተመሳሳይ ስብሰባና የበቃ እንቅስቃሴ በሚቀጥለው ሳምንትም የሚቀጥል ሲሆን፡ ዶ/ር ወንድሙ መኮንን፡ ዶ/ር ቡሻ ታአና አቶ መስፍን ተፈራ ንግግር በቶሮንቶ እንደሚያደርጉ ታውቋል።