Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Ethiopian government used spyware against dissidents: report



http://www.cbc.ca/radio/popup/audio/listen.html?autoPlay=true&mediaIds=1114847299596


In October 2016 at the Irreecha religious festival in Bishoftu, Ethiopia, at least 55 people were killed in a stampede after police fired tear gas into the crowds. 
The deaths sparked nationwide protests and within days, a different kind of countermeasure got underway: cyberattacks.
The government was very nervous, the population was angry. So it was this time that they tried to hack me.'-  Oromo activist Jawar Mohammed
Given the work activist Jawar Mohammed does with the Oromia Media Network (OMN) and his profile online, he figured he'd be an obvious target, but it was how he was targeted that surprised him.
"When this suspicious email came, I did not open it. I passed it to our IT department. They looked at it, and they suspected it might be spyware," he tells The Current's Anna Maria Tremonti
"We in the media were providing the domestic and international community with updated information from every village. So the situation was extremely intense. The government was very nervous, the population was angry. So it was this time that they tried to hack me."
AFP_GQ90A
Residents of Bishoftu crossed their wrists above their heads as a symbol for the Oromo anti-government protesting movement during the Oromo new year holiday Irreechaa in Bishoftu, October 2, 2016. (Zacharias Abubeker/AFP/Getty Images)
Even before the protests, Mohammed says the government was using different hackers from Russia and China to get into his email and attack OMN's website. 

What made the email suspicious?
Mohammed says the email looked like it came from people he knew. There was also a link provided and when clicked, prompted an Adobe software download.
"That was quite strange so I stopped there and contacted our IT people," he says.
Then the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab that studies surveillance and content filtering on the internet was contacted to investigate this email.  
Computer search engine
Bill Marczak at the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab says rules and oversight regarding lawful intercept are lacking. (Getty Images)
Bill Marczak, senior research fellow at the facility, says upon looking at Mohammed's email, a link that looked like it was going to a website called EastAfro.com, which is an Eritrean online video portal, was not what it seemed.
"When we looked at the link, it actually appeared that someone had registered a website to look like EastAfro.com which was called EastAfro.net. So it was a lookalike website which was our immediate clue that something was suspicious," Marczak tells Tremonti.
A virtual machine in the lab determined that when the link in Mohammed's email was clicked and the software downloaded and installed, "it would have started sending information from the computer back to a server on the internet which is a telltale sign of spyware," Marczak says.
 
Is this illegal?
While it's typically illegal for a private individual to use spyware against someone else, Marczak says when it's a government following this procedure, they can often use local law as a defence.
"But the problem is that governments like Ethiopia and other places, the rules and oversight regarding lawful intercept are lacking," he says.
'We found an IP address traced to Ethiopia.'- Bill Marczak
Marczak says the lab was able to trace a sample of the spyware from Mohammed's email to a fake Adobe Flash update used by computer security researchers who investigate suspicious files.
"We noticed the second sample was signed by this company Cyberbit. And from there we looked at its website and found out that this is the company that claims to sell exclusively to governments," he explains.
The spyware was traced to Ethiopia because the server attached to it had a publicly accessible log file, according to Marczak.
"This is not typically something that you want to have on your spyware server if you're running a secret operation," Marczak says, adding that the company probably forgot that this feature existed.
"The log file showed who was logging in to check the results of the spyware. In other words, who was logging in to download the data that was being uploaded by infected computers, and we found an IP address traced to Ethiopia."
The Current did contact Canada's privacy commissioner, Daniel Therrien, for comment on this story. A spokesperson replied that online surveillance by foreign governments is outside the commission's jurisdiction, and directed The Current's producers to Global Affairs. We contacted that department, but no one got back to us. 
The Current also contacted the Ethiopian embassy in Ottawa. A spokeswoman there said no one was available to speak to this issue today. 

Listen to the full conversation above — including Dmitri Vitaliev, co-founder and director of eQualit.ie, a Montreal-based nonprofit that provides support, training, and digital protection for journalists activists and civil society workers worldwide.

This segment was produced by The Current's John Chipman and Susana Ferriera.

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Champing at the Cyberbit Ethiopian Dissidents Targeted with New Commercial Spy ware

Champing at the Cyberbit Ethiopian Dissidents Targeted with New Commercial Spyware


Thursday, October 26, 2017

Wednesday, September 20, 2017




               The story of Yonatan Tesfaye, a political activist in prison for his FB posts.
                   Source Ethiopian Human Rights Project     http://ehrp.org/


Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Tuesday, September 12, 2017



Former MP said Ethiopian Government is Inviting revolution into the country

The former MP, Mr. Girma Seifu Maru, made the above statement at a public meeting organized by Unity for Human Rights and Democracy, a Toronto-Based advocacy group, and at Hiruth restaurant in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on the weekend. Answering questions raised by participants of the meeting, Mr. Girma said the government of Ethiopia has no option but to resolve all conflicts with open heart in am amicable way. Mr. Girma said “if this country had to be transformed by a means other than violence, the government should open the door for discussion. Otherwise, the Ethiopian people have said no and public wave of protest could resolve the issues.”
 

The former sole opposition member of parliament, Mr. Girma came to Toronto last week to introduce his recently published book, “Yetekeberut” and meet Ethiopians in Toronto and surrounding regions. Mr. Girma’s book was on display at the Ethiopian Day ceremony held on September 9, 2017 at Christie Pits’ Park in Toronto where thousands of Ethiopians came out and celebrated in unison to celebrate the Ethiopian New Year. Mr. Girma was seen signing his new book for patrons. The book talks about Mr. Girma’s experience in the Ethiopian parliament also known as House of Representative, from 2010 till 2015, and it was published last month in Washington, DC. 
    


The panel discussion initially focused on Mr. Girma’s book and experience in the Ethiopian parliament. However, several issues were raised during the discussion including the current political turmoil in Ethiopia, the hopes and challenges to bring democratic changes in Ethiopia, and the things his colleagues and compatriots are doing in Ethiopia. The role of the diaspora was also discussed and Mr. Girma addressed them all. The former MP concluded his statement by saying things could get out of hand the country could lead into chaotic situation unless the government takes the lead and makes concessions. An excerpt was read from Mr. Girma’s book during the panel discussion.

Several Ethiopians attended the meeting that was held on the Ethiopian new year.

Unity for Human Rights and Democracy takes this opportunity to say Happy New Year to all Ethiopians in Ethiopia and around the world.. Unity wishes the New Year to be a year of peace, reconciliation and solidarity. Unity calls upon the government of Ethiopia to act responsibly, release all political prisoners, stop using excessive force to quell protests, and allow opponents the right to protest and organize in a peaceful manner. In short  "Respect the Constitution"

                                                    melkam Addis Amet

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

“What they did on me is the worst. I experienced all the unspeakable rogue things at Maekelawi” Activist Nigist Yirga

Name: – Nigist Yirga Tefera
Age: – 24 years old
Address: – Amhara Regional State, Gonder town Kebele 18
Current situation: – Jailed in Kality prison
The reason why I am jailed: – For participating in peaceful public protests in Gondar of Amhara regional state.
Prosecutor’s official charge against me:- Federal prosecutor charged me and five others with terrorism. Prosecutor indicated in the charge that I was responsible for organizing and leading the Amhara protests in north Gondar having involved in terrorist organizations. Being the 1st defendant among other five on terrorism (Violation of ATP, article 3/4/6) charges brought on me; I am now attending court hearings at the 4th criminal bench of the federal high court Lideta branch.
The following rights violations are committed against me in prison:
1. I was imprisoned in dark and cold room in Maekelawi for days.
2. My families did not know my whereabouts for days
3. I was detained incommunicado for weeks and I am still detained far away from my home town.
4. I used to be called for interrogations at nights.
5. I was harassed, threatened and insulted because of my ethnicity and sex.
6. They made me stand naked in front of male interrogators and mock on my body. They made me bitterly hate the fact that I am born a woman.
7. My suffering during the interrogations includes pulling out of my finger nails.
8. Hair pulling and other similar tortures has also been my day to day experience
9. I am now in Kality prison since prosecutor officially charged me. But the rights violations have not yet stopped here too. Anyone who would like to visit me at Kality is not allowed except fewer people on name list that are available at the prison administrator’s hands. I can only be visited for 30 minutes from 12:00 am to 12:30 am.
I was born in Gondar. I went to school there in Gondar. I have seen the human rights violations and sufferings committed against prisoners at Kality and Qilinto when I came to Addis Ababa to visit relatives and also visit these prisoners who are from Gondar remote areas. I was very touched by what I have seen which I think to stand and speak for these people’s rights is what is expected from me.
Accordingly, I started to participate in public protests to demand the respect of rights. I participated at the July 2016 public protest held in Gondar following the accusation of Colonel Demeke Zewdu, founder of the “Wolkayite Amhara Identity Question Committee”, with murder and terrorism. Wearing a T-shirt with a slogan ‘The Amhara People are not Terrorists!’ I was at the forefront at the demo exercising my constitutionally guaranteed rights of participating at peaceful demonstration.
It is for such peaceful activities that I was kidnapped by the federal police and government security people and thrown to jail in September 2016.
http://ehrp.org/



Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Ethiopia Human Rights Project·Monday, May 8, 2017

ወርሃዊ የኢትዮጵያ ሰብዓዊ መብቶች ሁነቶች -ሚያዝያ 2009
እነደተለመደው በኢትዮጵያ ሰብአዊ መብቶችና የህግ የበላይነት ጉዳይ እየተባባሰ እንጂ እየተሻሻለ አልመጣም፡፡ በወርሃ ሚያዝያ የተከናወኑ ዋና ዋና ሰብአዊ መብት ጋር የተያያዙ ጉዳዪችን በአጭሩ እንዲህ አቅርበናቸዋል፡፡
1. በእነ ጉርሜሳ አያኖ/በቀለ ገርባ የክስ መዝገብ የድምፅ ከምስል ማስረጃዎች ትርጉም ባለመቅረቡ ተከሳሾች እየተጉላሉ ነው
በፌደራል አቃቤ ህግ የሽብር ክስ የቀረበባቸው የኦፌኮ አመራሮችና አባላት የእነ ጉርሜሳ አያኖ መዝገብ ለሚያዚያ 2, 2009 ዓ.ም አቃቤ ህግ በማስረጃነት ያቀረባቸው በኦሮምኛ እና በእንግሊዘኛ ቋንቋ የተሰሙ የድምፅ ከምስል ማስረጃዎችን የኢትዮጵያ ብሮድካስቲንግ ኮርፖሬሽን በፍርድ ቤቱ የስራ ቋንቋ ተርጉሞ እንዲያቀርብ ቀጠሮ ተሰጥቶት ነበር፡፡
ሆኖም እንዲተረጎሙ የተላኩትን 3ት ሲዲዎች ለመተርጎም ሰፊ ጊዜ የሚወስዱ በመሆናቸው እና ባለሙያዎች የስራ መደራረብ ስላለባቸው ፍ/ቤቱ ሌሎች አማራጮችን እንዲጠቀሙ የሚገልፅ በ29/7/2009 ከኢብኮ የተፃፈ ደብዳቤ መቅረቡን ዳኞች በመግለጽ ትርጉሙ እንዳልደረሳቸው አሳውቀዋል፡፡ ይህን ተከትሎም አቃቤ ህግ የእንግሊዝኛና የኦሮምኛ አስተርጓሚ ተፈልጎ ማስረጃው በድጋሚ በችሎት እየታየ እንዲተረጎም ጠይቋል።
ተከሳሾች ግን የትርጉም ስራውን በተመለከተ ተደጋጋሚ ቀጠሮ እየተሰጠ መሆኑ ገልፀው፤ አቃቤ ህግ ሃላፊነቱን እንዳልተወጣና ማስረጃዎቹን በፍ/ቤቱ የስራ ቋንቋ ተርጉሞ ማቅረብ እንዳልተፈለገ ተቆጥሮ ማስረጃው ውድቅ እንዲደረግና በቀረቡ ማስረጃዎች ብይን እንዲሰጥ አመልክተዋል። ተከሳሾች በአቃቤ ህግ ማስረጃዎቹን በአግባቡ ባለማቅረቡ ለከፍተኛ እንግልት እየተዳረጉ ስለመሆናቸውም ለፍርድ ቤቱ ገልጸው ነበር፡፡ ጉዳዩን የሚያየው የፌደራል ከፍተኛ ፍ/ቤት ልደታ ምድብ 4ኛ ወንጀል ችሎት በበኩሉ ከኢትዮጵያ ብሮድካስቲንግ ኮርፖሬሽን (ኢብኮ) የሚመለከተው ሃላፊ ሁለት አስተርጓሚዎችን(አንድ የኦሮምኛ እና አንድ የእንግሊዘኛ ቋንቋ) ይዞ ሚያዚያ 5, 2009 ዓ.ም እንዲቀርብ ጥብቅ ትእዛዝ በመስጠት ሌላ ቀጠሮ ሰጥቶ ነበር፡፡
ሆኖም በዚሁ ቀጠሮ (ሚያዝያ 5/2009) ኢብኮ የድምፅ ከምስል አስተርጓሚ ሳያቀርብ ቀርቷል፡፡ በዚህ ቀጠሮ ከኢብኮ ለምን ትርጉምን እንዳልሰሩ ለማስረዳት የተላኩ የስራ ኃላፊ፣ "ጉዳዩ ሴንሴቲቭ ነው፤ የቋንቋ ብቻ ጉዳይ ሳይሆን የህግ ጉዳይ ነው።" በማለት ለፍ/ቤት ተናግረዋል፡፡
ፍ/ቤቱም ከፍ/ቤት ተልከው የሚሄዱትን ፓስተኞች አልቀበልም እያሉ የተቋሙ (ኢብኮ) ሰራተኞች እንደሚያስቸግሯቸው ጠቅሰው ባጠቃላይ ተቋሙ የፍ/ቤት ትእዛዞችን ከዚህ ቀደም ያልፈፀመበት አግባብ ምክንያታዊ እንዳልሆነ በመናገር ከዚህ ቀደም የሆነውን በማስጠንቀቂያ እንዳለፏቸው ገልፀው ከዚህ በኋላ የሚታዘዘው የማይፈፀም ከሆነ ህጋዊ እርምጃ እንደሚወሰድባቸው ተወክለው ለመጡት ለአቶ ፀጋአብ ተነግሯቸዋል።
በዚህም መሰረት እጅግ ቢዘገይ እስከ ሚያዚያ 18/2009 ባለው ቀን ውስጥ ከኢብኮ የመጡት ሃላፊ ሃላፊነቱን ወስደው የትርጉም ስራው በፅሁፍ እንዲሰራ እንዲያደርጉ እና በፅሁፍ ለፍ/ቤቱ እንዲያስገቡ ፤ እንዲሁም አቃቤ ህግ እና የተከሳሽ ጠበቆች በተተረጎመው ሰነድ ላይ ያላቸውን አስተያየት ከሚያዚያ 18/2009 በኋላ በቢሮ እንዲያቀርቡ ትእዛዝ ተሰጥቷል። ብይኑን ለመስማት ለግንቦት 7/2009 ቀጠሮ ተይዟል።
2. ጋዜጠኛ ጌታቸው ሺፈራው ለ3ኛ ጊዜ ፍርድ ለመስጠት በሚል ቀጠሮ ተሰጥቶበታል (ሚያዝያ 20/2009 )
የነገረ ኢትዮጵያ ጋዜጣ ዋና አዘጋጅ ጋዜጠኛ ጌታቸው ሺፈራው በተከሰሰበት የወንጀል ድርጊት ማስረጃዎችን ሰምቶ ያጠናቀቀው የፌደራሉ ከፍተኛ ፍርድ ቤት ልደታ ምድብ 4ኛ ወንጀል ችሎት በመዝገቡ ላይ የፍርድ ውሳኔ ለማሳለፍ በሚል ብቻ ለ3ኛ ጊዜ ተለዋጭ ቀጠሮ የሰጠው በዚሁ በሚያዝያ ወር ነው፡፡
ፍ/ቤቱ ብይኑን ላለመስራቱ የሰጠው ምክንያት ‹‹ተከሳሹ የካቲት 30/2009 ዓ.ም በችሎት የሰጠው የተከሳሽነት መከላከያ ቃል ከድምጽ ወደ ጽሁፍ ተገልብጦ ከመዝገቡ ጋር አልተያያዘልኝም›› የሚል ነበር፡፡ በዚህም ፍ/ቤቱ ፍርድ ለመስጠት በሚል ለ3ኛ ጊዜ ለግንቦት 16/2009 ዓ.ም ቀጠሮ ይዟል፡፡
3. ዶ/ር መረራ ጉዲና በቀረበባቸው ክስ ላይ ያላቸውን መቃወሚያ አቅርበዋል
በፌደራል አቃቤ ህግ የተለያዩ ክሶች የቀረቡባቸው ዶ/ር መረራ ጉዲና የመጀመሪያ ደረጃ የክስ መቃወሚያቸውን ሚያዝያ 16/2009 ዓ.ም በጽሁፍ አቅርበዋል፡፡ ዶ/ር መረራ ጉዲና ለከፍተኛው ፍርድ ቤት ልደታ ምድብ 19ኛ ወንጀል ችሎት ያስገቡት መቃወሚያ 11 ገጾች ያሉት ነው፡፡
በ1ኛ ክስ ጉዳያቸው በሌሉበት ከሚታየው 2ኛ እና 3ኛ ተከሳሽ ጋር አንቀፅ 238(1) እና (2) ስር በመተላለፍ የተመለከተውን በመተላለፍ የቀረበውን ክስ በተመለከተ፤ ዶ/ር መረራ ከተጠቀሱት ተከሳሾች ጋር ምንም አይነት ድርጅታዊ ቁርኝት ጉዳይ ባለመኖሩ የቀረበባቸው የክስ ጭብጥ ተነጥሎ እንዲታይ በመቃወሚያው ላይ ተጠይቋል።
የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጅ 01/2009 አንቀፅ 2(1) ላይ የተደነገገውን በመተላለፍ ለብቻቸው የቀረበባቸውን 3ኛ ክስ በተመለከተ፤ ዶ/ር መረራ ከየትኛውም የሽብርተኛ ድርጅት ጋር ግንኙነት እንደሌላቸው እና በሽብርተኝነት ከተሰየሙ ድርጅቶች ጋርም ምንም ግንኙነት ኖሯቸው እንደማያውቅ ተገልፇል።
የወንጀል አንቀፅ 486(ለ)ን በመተላለፍ ለብቻቸው የቀረበቸውን 4ኛ ክስ በተመለከተ፤ "የሃሰት ወሬን ለማውራት በማሰብ" በሚል የቀረበው ክስ ሃሳብን በነፃነት ከመግለፅ ጋር የሚያያዝ እንጂ ሃሰተኛ ወሬን መንዛት እንዳልሆነ፤ እንዲሁም በ2006 ተፈፀመ የተባለ ወንጀልን አቃቤ ህግ እድካሁን ድረስ ማስረጃውን ይዞ ማቆየቱ የክሱን እውነትነት እንደሚያጠራጥር በመቃወሚያው ላይ ተጠቅሷል።
በአጠቃላይ በዶ/ር መረራ ላይ የቀረቡት ክሶች በወንጀል ክስ አግባብ መሰረት ተሟልቶ ያልቀረቡ በመሆኑ ሁሉም ክሶች ውድቅ ተደርገው በነፃ እንዲሰናበቱ ተጠይቋል።
የክስ መቃወሚያውን የተቀበለው ችሎት በበኩሉ በቀረበው መቃወሚያ ላይ የአቃቤ ህግን መልስ ለመቀበል ለሚያዚያ 26/2009 ቀጠሮ በመያዝ በዕለቱ መልሱን በጽሁፍ ተቀብሏል፡፡ አቃቤ ህግ በሰጠው መልስም በተከሳሽ በኩል የቀረበው የክስ መቃወሚያ ሙሉ ለሙሉ ውድቅ እንዲደረግለት ጠይቋል፡፡
በተከሳሽ ዶ/ር መረራ ጉዲና የቀረበውን መቃወሚያ እና በአቃቤ ህግ የተሰጠውን አስተያየት መርምሮ ብይን ለመስጠት ፍ/ቤቱ ለግንቦት 25/2009 ቀጠሮ ሰጥቷል።
4. የኢትዮጵያ ሰብዓዊ መብቶች ኮሚሽን በተለያዩ የሀገሪቱ አካባቢዎች የነበሩ ተቃውሞዎችን በተመለከተ የምርመራ ሪፖርት አውጥቷል
የኢትዮጵያ ሰብዓዊ መብቶች ኮሚሽን በ2008 እና 2009 ዓ.ም በሀገሪቱ የተለያዩ አካባቢዎች በተለይም በኦሮሚያና አማራ ክልሎች ተከስቶ በነበረው ህዝባዊ ተቃውሞ ወቅት የደረሰውን ጉዳት አስመልክቶ ያወጣውን የምርመራ ሪፖርት ለህዝብ ተወካዮች ም/ቤት ያቀረበው በዚሁ በሚያዝያ ወር ላይ ነበር፡፡ የምርመራ ሪፖርቱን የኮሚሽኑ ኮሚሽነር አዲሱ ገ/እግዚያብሄር አቅርበዋል፡፡
ኮሚሽኑ ለሁለተኛ ጊዜ ለም/ቤቱ ባቀረበው ሪፖርቱ እንዳመለከተው ተቀስቅሶ በነበረው ህዝባዊ ተቃውሞ ምክንያት በአጠቃላይ 669 ሰዎች ተገድለዋል፡፡ ለተቃውሞዎቹ በመንስኤነት የተቀመጠው በመንግስት በኩል ያለው የመልካም አስተዳደር እጦት ሲሆን፣ ተቃውሞዎችን በማባባስ ደግሞ የተቃዋሚ ፓርቲዎችን፣ ከሀገር ውጭ የሚገኙ የሳተላይት ሚዲያዎችንና ማህበራዊ ሚዲያን ተጠያቂ አድርጓቸዋል-ኮሚሽኑ በሪፖርቱ፡፡
5. የተባበሩት መንግስታት ድርጅት የሰብዓዊ መብት ኮሚሽነር ኢትዮጵያን ጎብኝተዋል፤ በጉብኝታቸው ተቃውሞ ተቀስቅሶባቸው የነበሩ አካባቢዎችን እንዳይጎበኙ ተከልክለዋል
ከሚያዝያ 24-26 ዓ.ም በኢትዮጵያ ጉብኝት ያደረጉት የተባበሩት መንግስታት ድርጅት የሰብዓዊ መብት ኮሚሽነር ዘይድ ራዒድ በጉብኝታቸው ከኢትዮጵያ መንግስት ባለስልጣናትና ከተቃዋሚ ፓርቲ አመራሮች ጋር ተገናኝተው ተነጋግረዋል ተብሏል፡፡
ኮሚሽነሩ በሀገሪቱ ሰብዓዊ መብት አጠባበቅና የሚዲያ ነጻነት እንዲሁም ተያያዥ ጉዳዮች ላይ መወያየታቸው የታወቀ ሲሆን፣ በቅርቡ የህዝባዊ ተቃውሞ ተቀስቅሶባቸው የነበሩ አካባቢዎች (ኦሮሚያና አማራ ክልሎችን) ለመጎብኘት ቢፈልጉም በመንግስት እንደተከለከሉ ተገልጹዋል፡፡ ኮሚሽነር ዛይድ በቅርቡ በኢትዮጵያ ሰብዓዊ መብቶች ኮሚሽን የቀረበውን የምርመራ ሪፖርት በራሳቸው ገለልተኛ ማጣራትና ማረጋገጥም ሆነ አባሪ ማስረጃ ማግኘት አለመቻላቸውን አሳውቀዋል፡፡
6. የዓለም የፕሬስ ነጻነት ቀን ሚያዝያ 25/2009 ዓ.ም ታስቦ ውሏል
በተባበሩት መንግስታት ጠቅላላ ጉባዔ ውሳኔ መሰረት በየዓመቱ ሜይ 3 (ሚያዝያ 25) የሚከበረው የዓለም ፕሬስ ነጻነት ቀን በአለም አቀፍ ደረጃ ተከብሯል፡፡ የኢትዮጵያ ሰብዓዊ መብቶች ፕሮጀክት ዕለቱን አስመልክቶ ባሰፈረው መረጃ መሰረት ኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ ሃሳባቸውን ከመግለጻቸው ጋር በተገናኘ ከአስር በላይ ጋዜጠኞችና ጦማርያን በእስር ላይ ይገኛሉ፡፡ እነዚህም ጋዜጠኛና ጦማሪ እስክንድር ነጋ፣ ጋዜጠኛ ውብሸት ታዬ፣ ጋዜጠኛ ተመስገን ደሳለኝ፣ ጋዜጠኛ ጌታቸው ሺፈራው፣ ጋዜጠኛ ዳርሰማ ሶሪ፣ ጋዜጠኛ ካሊድ ሞሃመድ፣ ጋዜጠኛ ጌታቸው ወርቁ፣ ጋዜጠኛ ኤልያስ ገብሩ፣ ጦማሪ ዘላለም ወርቃገኘሁ፣ እና የኢንተርኔት አክቲቪስት ዮናታን ተስፋዬ ይገኙበታል፡፡
ከእነዚህ በተጨማሪ ሀሳባቸውን በነጻነት በመግለጻቸው ክስ ተመስርቶባቸው፣ ነገር ግን ከእስር ውጭ ሆነው ክሳቸው በይደር ያለ ጦማርያንና ጋዜጠኞች ይገኛሉ፡፡ እነዚህም፡-የዞን ዘጠኝ ጦማርያን በፍቃዱ ኃይሉ፣ ናትናኤል ፈለቀና አጥናፍ ብርሃኔ፣ እንዲሁም ጋዜጠኛ ኤልያስ ገብሩና አምደኛ አምሳሉ ገ/ኪዳን ናቸው፡፡

Monday, April 3, 2017

The Torture Chronicles of Ethiopian Patriot Habtamu Ayalew (in His Own Words)


By Professor Al Mariam

Author’s Note: Following is my translation of the Amharic interview given by Habtamu Ayalew to the Voice of America (VOA), Amharic Program on March 15, 2017 and broadcast on the same day and on March 18 on “Democracy in Action” program. Translation of speech or text often presents some technical problems. Some of them are lexical-semantic; others are grammatical and syntactic. Even more difficult to translate are rhetorical ones involving metaphors and figures of speech. I have aimed for accuracy and meaning in this translation of Habtamu’s words. I have also confirmed with Habtamu and made necessary clarifications to certain statements he made in the interview to ensure the translation accurately represents his intended sense and meaning. Any errors and inaccuracies in translation are exclusively mine. (Full audio of Amharic interview is available HERE.)
This translation and commentary herein have two purposes. First and foremost, my effort here is  aimed at helping Habtamu Ayalew communicate his story and harrowing experiences of torture, humiliation, degradation and all manners of abuse he suffered at the hands of the Thugtatorship of the Tigrean Peoples’ Liberation Front (T-TPLF) to international English-speaking and –reading audience. I hasten to add that Habtamu’s story of personal (and family) suffering is neither unique nor personal. Habtamu speaks, and speaks convincingly and powerfully on behalf of the tens of thousands of political prisoners held by the T-TPLF whose names are known only to their families (if the families are lucky enough not to be told the usual T-TPLF lie, “No such person is held in this prison.”) and God. I discuss the second reason for my effort here in the “Post Script” following the translated text of the interview below.
Among the thousands of torture victims in the hands of the T-TPLF today include: Journalists Eskinder Nega, Temesgen Desalegn, Woubshet Taye, Anania Sorri (recently released) and  political leaders Dr. Merra Gudina, Andualem Aragie, Bekele Gerba and so many others.  A partial list of T-TPLF political prisoners and torture victims with long prison sentences is available HERE.
Who is Ethiopian Patriot Habtamu Ayalew?


Habtamu Ayalew, the former spokesman for the opposition Andenet (Unity) party was arrested on July 8, 2014 and charged with terrorism for allegedly collaborating with the opposition Ginbot 7, which the Ethiopian government has designated a terrorist group. He was detained at the notorious Maekelawi and Qilinto Prisons, where he was subjected to torture and other ill-treatment through denial of access to toilet facilities, a situation that led to him to develop excruciatingly painful hemorrhoids.Much can be said of the young, brilliant and dynamic Ethiopia opposition leader Habtamu Ayalew. Suffice it to present his “biography” as stated concisely by Amnesty International.
Habtamu is one of the few T-TPLF prison torture victims to ever leave Ethiopia alive. He barely managed to survive and tell the harrowing accounts of the horrific torture chambers of the T-TPLF’s notorious Maekelawi and Qilinto Prisons. (For a comprehensive report on the infamous torture chambers of Maekelawi Prison,  see Human Rights Watch report, “They Want a Confession”]. In August 2016, a massive fire broke out at Qilinto Prison, a few kilometers south of the capital, where hundreds of political prisoners are held, killing dozens of prisoners. According to a report in Addis Standard, an eyewitness stated that he saw “armed prison guards shooting indiscriminately at prisoners [in Qilinto Prison] [as] most of them were running frantically to extinguish the fire”. Similarly, 0n November 3, 2005, during an alleged disturbance in Kality prison, another prison a few kilometers south of the capital, which lasted 15 minutes, prison guards fired more than 1500 bullets into inmate housing units leaving 17 dead, and 53 severely wounded.)

Voice of America, Amharic Program interview of Habtamu Ayalew first (part 1) broadcast on March 15, 2017 and (part 2) and on March 18 on “Democracy in Action” program.
Segment introduction by VOA Amharic Program radio journalist Alula Kebede: As we noted earlier in the introduction of this broadcast [of Democracy in Action Program], our guest today is Mr. Habtamu Ayalew. He is the former spokesperson for Andenet (Unity) Party. We will be discussing his 2 years in prison in Ethiopia awaiting trial accused of terrorism and listen to his story of the inhumane treatment, suffering and extreme abuse he suffered during his imprisonment and the present health impact of his abuse in prison. He also explains how the inhumane treatment in prison and during interrogation has resulted in the deaths of  many prisoners and caused extreme health consequences for others who survived.
The program producer and presenter [interviewer] Solomon Kifle requests parental cooperation in keeping children away from listening to this broadcast because of the  extremely shocking revelations in the interview.

PART I OF INTERVIEW AIRED ON MARCH 15, 2017

Solomon Kifle: Begins with Mr. Habtamu’s account of how his abuse in prison began.
Habtamu: So in Ethiopia, it has become a badge of citizenship, a sign of the [civically] aware citizen, the distinctive character of the innocent citizen, to be arbitrarily jailed and killed [by the T-TPLF]. For the longest time, from the beginning of EPRDF [“Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front”] rule [the shell front organization for the T-TPLF], it is well known that being jailed has become a badge of citizenship. For me, since I was held at Maekelawi Prison [July 2014] that notorious and ugly place even to the present day, I was subjected to extremely inhumane treatment and abuse which has wounded not only my body but also my conscience [soul]. (For a comprehensive report on the infamous torture chambers of Maekelawi Prions see Human Rights Watch report, “The Want a Confession].)
Solomon Kifle: Was there a time when you were held alone in solitary confinement? For instance, in total darkness?
Habtamu: Well, at Maekelawi, there are eight holding areas [cell blocks] for prisoners. There are empty basements [under the holding areas] that are extremely cold.  And the person the interrogators select to put in there, they first douse him with water and lock him up in the extreme cold. The cold inflicts extreme injury to your body. Among these awful rooms [cells], there are two that are regarded as extremely horrible. They are particularly considered to be extremely horrible compared to the others. One is No. 7 and the second is No. 8. No. 8 has four separate rooms [cells] to hold one person each. It is so small that you can only stand. There is no room to stretch your hands or legs. It is so narrow, except for sleeping on your back, there is no space to turn to one side or the other. [Habtamu told me the cells in no. 8 were “like a coffin”.] These are extremely hard dark rooms. I was held in cell no. 7. It is a cell where there are between 13-15 prisoners held piled up on each other. The two walls of the cell are next to the latrine that smelled awful. I was in that extremely awful cell for all four months at Maekelawi. The basement of cell no. 7 is flooded [a water tanker] with water [as Habtamu told me the water reaches the ceiling of the basement when flooded and wets the floor and the prisoner’s mattresses and mats in cell no. 7.] On the left and on the right of cell no. 7 and 8 are latrines. On one side is a latrine called “Tawla” and on the other side is a latrine called “Siberia”, both of which share the basement that is flooded with water to torture prisoners. (For a description of “Tawla”, “Siberia” and “Sheraton” cell blocks, click on link HERE.) During the whole time I was there, I remember quite a number of prisoners who were placed in the cold basements for up to 15 days. After prisoners are held in the flooded cold basement for a period of time, they were taken away. I and five others were held in cell no. 7 during the 4 months I was held [at Maekalawi].

Please clik this link for the full story..
http://ecadforum.com/2017/04/03/the-torture-chronicles-of-ethiopian-patriot-habtamu-ayalew-in-his-own-words/ 



Friday, March 17, 2017



For Immediate Release

      The Addis Ababa “Qoshe” Incident, Negligent Homicides by Officials of the Government of Ethiopia


The tragic accident that occurred on March 11, 2017 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia is an example of multiple negligent homicides committed by the Government of Ethiopia. it is with great shock and anger that we received the tragic news of the death of more than a hundred and thirteen people in a landslide at the waste fill site commonly referred to as “Qoshe” in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
t is the second of a series of reckless deaths in Ethiopia over the last six months. The first was the “Irrecha” massacre that occurred on October 2nd, 2016 at the annual Oromo thanksgiving festival in Bishoftu. The deaths of several Ethiopians at both incidents could have been prevented had there been a responsible government that was accountable to the people of Ethiopia. The latest incident is illustrative of the absolute disregard the TPLF/EPRDF government has for the safety and security of its citizens as well as the mismanagement of municipal services.

The current government, which came to power 26 years ago, with a promise to curtail past misdeeds and injustices, neither provided an alternative solution nor minimized the waste hazards this landfill posed.  This man-made disaster could and should have been avoided. The government had been warned by several institutions that the landfill was unsafe.  However, the government continued to use the dumping site. The tragic incident was worsened by the reluctance of the regime to take responsibility and declare national mourning. Some of the federal and municipal authorities even tried to blame on the victims.

The Prime Minister’s statement was untimely, as well as non-comforting to the bereaved families. It is an act of a tyranny to suppress millions of voices for freedom and justice. Further, many individuals are still missing and the number of deceased continues to rise.  Ethiopians are in a deep state of national sadness and mourning. While conveying our deep sympathies and heartfelt condolences to the affected families and the people of Ethiopia, the Unity for Human Rights and Democracy also would like to seize this opportunity to request the government of Canada to put pressure on the government of Ethiopia to initiate an independent investigation by the United Nations into the incident that led to the killing of more that hundred and thirteen residents of the landfill.

unity for Human Rights and democracy on behalf of its members and Torontonians extends it condolence to the families of the victims and all those affected by this negligent tragedy. Unity has also organized a Day of Mourning where members of unity and Torontonians at large to explore ideas  supporting the families of the victims.

The date is Saturday, March 18, 4:30-7pm at 2050 Danforth Avenue (Hiruth Restaurant), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Unity for Democracy and Human Rights

March 17, 2017


Wednesday, March 8, 2017

United States Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016

Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom from:Share


a. Arbitrary Deprivation of Life and other Unlawful or Politically Motivated Killings

There were numerous reports the government and its agents committed arbitrary and unlawful killings. Security forces used excessive force against protesters throughout the year, killing hundreds. The protests were mainly in Oromia and Amhara regions. A March 14 report from the independent Ethiopian NGO Human Rights Council (HRCO) covering 33 districts in Oromia from November 2015 to February 20 described more than 100 extrajudicial killings. On June 10, the government-established EHRC reported to parliament that it counted 173 deaths in Oromia, including 28 of security force members and officials, and asserted security forces used appropriate force there. The EHRC also asserted Amhara regional state special security had used excessive force against the Kemant community in Amhara Region. The EHRC did not publicly release its report. On August 13, HRW estimated security forces killed more than 500 protesters.
On August 6 and 7, security forces reportedly killed approximately 100 persons in response to demonstrations in major cities and towns across the Oromia and Amhara regions. Political opposition groups reported government forces killed more than 90 protesters in Oromia. The Amhara regional government reported seven deaths; other sources reported more than 50 were killed in Amhara Region.

b. Disappearance

Individuals reportedly arrested by security forces as part of the government’s response to protests disappeared. In a June report on the government’s response to Oromo protests, HRW reported hundreds of persons were “unaccounted for” including children.
Due to poor prison administration, family members reported individuals missing who were in custody of prison officials, but whom the families could not locate.

c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment

Although the constitution and law prohibit such practices, there were reports security officials tortured and otherwise abused detainees.
In its June report, HRW reported security force members beat detainees, including minors. Security force members used wooden sticks, rubber truncheons, and whips to do so. According to the report, several students stated they were hung by their wrists and whipped, four said they received electric shocks to their feet, and two had weights tied to their testicles. Several female detainees reported security force members raped them. The report stated, “Most of the individuals interviewed by HRW who were detained for more than one month described treatment that appeared to amount to torture.”
Mistreatment reportedly occurred at Maekelawi, official detention centers, unofficial detention centers, police stations, and in Kilinto federal prison. There were reports police investigators used physical and psychological abuse to extract confessions in Maekelawi, the federal crime investigation center in Addis Ababa that often held high-profile political prisoners. Interrogators reportedly administered beatings and electric shocks to extract information and confessions from detainees. HRW reported abuses, including torture, that occurred at Maekelawi. In a 2013 report, HRW described beatings, stress positions, the hanging of detainees by their wrists from the ceiling, prolonged handcuffing, pouring of water over detainees, verbal threats, and solitary confinement. Authorities continued to restrict access by diplomats and NGOs to Maekelawi, although some NGOs reported limited access.
The United Nations reported that during the year (as of December 20) it received one allegation of sexual exploitation and abuse against Ethiopian peacekeepers for an incident alleged to have occurred during the year. The allegation, against military personnel deployed to the UN Mission in the Republic of South Sudan, was investigated by the Ethiopian government and found to be unsubstantiated.

Prison and Detention Center Conditions

Prison and pretrial detention center conditions remained harsh and in some cases life threatening. There were reports that authorities beat and tortured prisoners in detention centers, military facilities, and police stations. Medical attention following beatings reportedly was insufficient in some cases. Prisoners died in fires.
The country had six federal and 120 regional prisons. During the state of emergency, effective since October 8, the government announced detention centers in Awash, Ziway, and Dilla and stated suspects could be detained at various police stations in Addis Ababa. There also were many unofficial detention centers throughout the country, including in Dedessa, Bir Sheleko, Tolay, Hormat, Blate, Tatek, Jijiga, Holeta, and Senkele. As part of the government’s response to the protests, persons were also detained in military facilities, local administration offices, and makeshift government-owned sites.
A local NGO supported model prisons in Adama, Mekelle, Debre Birhan, Durashe, and Awassa; these prisons had significantly better conditions than those in other prisons.
Pretrial detention often occurred in police station detention facilities, where conditions varied widely, but reports indicated poor hygiene and police abuse of detainees.
Physical Conditions: Authorities sometimes incarcerated juveniles with adults. Prison officials generally separated male and female prisoners, although mixing occurred at some facilities.
Severe overcrowding was common, especially in prison sleeping quarters. The government provided approximately nine birr ($0.40) per prisoner per day for food, water, and health care, although this amount varied across the country. Many prisoners supplemented this amount with daily food deliveries from family members or by purchasing food from local vendors. Other reports noted officials prevented some prisoners from receiving food from their families. Medical care was unreliable in federal prisons and almost nonexistent in regional ones. Prisoners had only limited access to potable water. Water shortages caused unhygienic conditions, and most prisons lacked appropriate sanitary facilities. Many prisoners had serious health problems but received little or no treatment. There were reports prison officials denied some prisoners access to needed medical care. In 2012 the Ministry of Health stated nearly 62 percent of inmates in jails across the country experienced mental health problems due to solitary confinement, overcrowding, and lack of adequate health-care facilities and services.
The June HRW report on government response to Oromo protests stated detainees reported overcrowding, inadequate access to food and water, and solitary confinement, including in military camps. The report stated men and women were not held in the same cells in most locations, but children were detained with adults.
Fires in prisons occurred in Gondar in December 2015, in Ambo on February 19, in Debretabor on September 1, and, on September 3, at Kilinto Prison where at least 23 inmates died.
Visitors of political prisoners and other sources reported political prisoners often faced significantly different treatment compared with other prisoners. Allegations included lack of access to proper medication or any medical treatment, lack of access to books or television, and denial of exercise time. In at least one case, when such complaints were openly raised in a court of law, the presiding judges referred the complaints to the prison administration, which had already refused to look into the complaints.
Administration: Due to the lack of transparency regarding incarceration, it was difficult to determine if recordkeeping was adequate. There were reports prisoners mistreated by prison guards did not have access to prison administrations to complain. Prisons did not have ombudspersons to respond to complaints. Legal aid clinics existed in some prisons for the benefit of prisoners, and at the regional level had good working relations with judicial, prison, and other government officials. Prison officials allowed detainees to submit complaints to judicial authorities without censorship. Courts sometimes declined to hear such complaints.
The law permits prisoners to have visitors. According to the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation (ATP), a lawyer is permitted to visit only one client per day, and only on Wednesdays and Fridays. Authorities allegedly denied family members access to persons charged with terrorist activity. There were also reports authorities denied the accused visits with lawyers or with representatives of the political parties to which they belonged. In some cases police did not allow pretrial detainees access to visitors, including family members and legal counsel.
After the September 3 fire in the federal prison at Kilinto, attorneys reported visitation for several prisoners was restricted to closely prison visits by family members only. Conversations could not touch on subjects such as trials, politics, and allegations of abuse. This was reported in the prisons in Kilinto, Shewa Robit, and Ziway. These restrictions also applied to political prisoners.
Officials permitted religious observance by prisoners, but this varied by prison, and even by section within a prison, at the discretion of prison management. There were allegations authorities denied detainees adequate locations in which to pray. Prisoners could voice complaints regarding prison conditions or treatment to the presiding judge during their trials.
Independent Monitoring: During the year the International Committee of the Red Cross visited prisons throughout the country as part of its normal activities. The government did not permit access to prisons by other international human rights organizations.
Regional authorities had allowed government and NGO representatives to meet with prisoners without third parties present. By September such allowances were severely curtailed, however. Prison officials reportedly denied access to prisoners for civil society representatives and family members, including in undisclosed locations. The government-established EHRC, which is funded by parliament and subject to parliamentary oversight, monitored federal and regional detention centers and interviewed prison officials and prisoners in response to allegations of widespread human rights abuses. An NGO continued to have access to various prison and detention facilities around the country.

Press and Media Freedoms: The state of emergency prohibited listening to, watching, or reporting information from Ethiopian Satellite Television (ESAT) and Oromo Media Network.
Independent journalists reported problems using government printing presses. Access to private printing presses was scarce to nonexistent.
In Addis Ababa, nine independent newspapers and magazines had a combined weekly circulation of 70,711 copies. Four independent monthly and biweekly magazines published in Amharic and English had a combined circulation of 21,500 copies. State-run newspapers had a combined circulation of 85,500 copies. Most newspapers were printed on a weekly or biweekly basis, except state-owned Amharic and English dailies and the privately run Daily Monitor. Addis Standard magazine temporarily suspended the print edition of its publication soon after the state of emergency was declared.
Government-controlled media closely reflected the views of the government and ruling EPRDF. The government controlled the only television station that broadcast nationally, which, along with radio, was the primary source of news for much of the population. Six private FM radio stations broadcast in the capital, one private radio station broadcast in the northern Tigray Region, and at least 19 community radio stations broadcast in the regions. State-run Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation had the largest broadcast range in the country, followed by Fana Radio, which was reportedly affiliated with the ruling party.
The government periodically jammed foreign broadcasts. The law prohibits political and religious organizations and foreigners from owning broadcast stations.
Violence and Harassment: The government continued to arrest, harass, and prosecute journalists. As of mid-December, at least 12 journalists remained in detention.
In December 2015 police detained Fikadu Mirkana, who worked as news anchor and senior reporter for Oromia State TV. He was released in April.
In December 2015 authorities detained journalist Getachew Shiferaw, editor in chief of a web-based opposition-affiliated newspaper. On May 19, authorities charged him with terrorism and his trial continued at year’s end.
The trial of two journalists affiliated with Radio Bilal whom authorities arrested in February 2015 and charged with terrorism continued at the Federal High Court.
Censorship or Content Restrictions: Government harassment caused journalists to avoid reporting on sensitive topics. Many private newspapers reported informal editorial control by the government through article placement requests and calls from government officials concerning articles perceived as critical of the government. Private sector and government journalists routinely practiced self-censorship. Several journalists, both local and foreign, reported an increase in self-censorship, especially after the October 8 implementation of the state of emergency. The government reportedly pressured advertisers not to advertise in publications that were critical of the government.
National Security: The government used the ATP to suppress criticism. Journalists feared covering five groups designated by parliament as terrorist organizations in 2011 (Ginbot 7, the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), the OLF, al-Qaida, and al-Shabaab), citing ambiguity on whether reporting on these groups might be punishable under the law.

Internet Freedom

The government restricted and disrupted access to the internet. It periodically blocked social media sites and internet access in areas of Oromia and Amhara regions, especially during protests. At times the government blocked access throughout the country. There were credible reports the government monitored private online communications without appropriate legal authority. State-owned Ethio Telecom was the only internet service provider in the country.
On June 7, parliament passed the Computer Crime Proclamation. There were concerns its provisions were overly broad and could restrict freedom of speech and expression. This included, for example, a provision that provides for imprisonment for disseminating through a computer system any written, video, audio or any other picture that incites violence, chaos, or conflict among people, and another provision that provides for a prison sentence for intimidation.
In July officials blocked social media sites for days across the country until the national school examination concluded. The government stated blocking these sites was necessary to provide for an “orderly exam process.” In May the national exams were reportedly leaked on social media, causing the government to postpone the exams.
On August 6 and 7, the government imposed a nationwide internet blackout.
The state of emergency regulations included prohibited agitation and communication to incite violence and unrest through the internet, text messaging, and social media.
Starting in early October, the government shut down mobile access to the internet in Addis Ababa, most parts of Oromia Region, and other areas. Wired access to several social media and communication sites were also denied. These included social media sites, including Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Skype, WhatsApp, and Viber, news websites such as the Washington Post and the New York Times, and many other sites, including foreign university homepages and online shopping sites such as Amazon.
The government periodically and increasingly restricted access to certain content on the internet and blocked numerous websites, including blogs, opposition websites, and websites of Ginbot 7, the OLF, and the ONLF, and news sites such as al-Jazeera, the BBC, and RealClearPolitics. Several news blogs and websites run by opposition diaspora groups were not accessible. These included Ethiopian Review, Nazret, CyberEthiopia, Quatero Amharic Magazine, and the Ethiopian Media Forum.
Authorities monitored telephone calls, text messages, and e-mails. Authorities took steps to block access to Virtual Private Network providers that let users circumvent government screening of internet browsing and e-mail. There were reports such surveillance resulted in arrests. According to the International Telecommunication Union, 11.6 percent of the population used the internet in 2015.
In March 2015 Citizen Lab, a Canadian research center at the University of Toronto, reported on attempts in 2014 to infect the computers of U.S.-based employees of ESAT with spyware. ESAT is a diaspora-based television and radio station. According to Citizen Lab, its research suggested involvement of the government and that the attacker may have been the Ethiopian Information and Network Security Agency.

https://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?year=2016&dlid=265254#wrapper


Friday, February 3, 2017


                                   Unity for Human Rights and Democracy (UHRD)
                    National Reconciliation and Reclaiming Ethiopia: Obang Metho's Way
  


We dare to say that Obang Metho's idea of National Reconciliation is fundamental in the current fight against tyranny in Ethiopia. Without it, although we may have the chance to climb up the political ladder, we will never bring definite stability. The history of the ruling political party in Ethiopia, Tigray Peoples Liberation Front a.k.a., Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), is a testimony.
The TPLF/EPRDF succeeded in toppling the military regime. However, it replaced it with a cruel and strong autocratic regime that only represents minority ethnic group.     As an activist for change in Ethiopian politics, Mr. Obang has repeatedly and consistently hammered this message of reconciliation to his audiences. His foresight, patience and faith in non-violent struggle are amazing and make his style an exception among the political breeds.
According to Mr. Obang, who made an appearance at a public meeting in Toronto, on the eve of the 2017 New Year, the best course of action would be to go for a national Reconciliation among politicians and activists. In the absence of a roadmap that defines the future of the nation any radical change may bring unwanted desires.
The 1974 Ethiopian revolution and subsequent episode of bloodshed during the red terror is a major example that tells us to put a caveat for our engagement.    In his recent address to the Ethiopian community gathered at Hirut Restaurant, in Toronto, Canada on December 31st, 2016, Mr. Obang added that reclaiming Ethiopia requires adamant opposition to any kind of ethnic politics that divides the nation. He stressed to his audience that any change without the full participation of all Ethiopians would result in a repetition of the same mistake as the current ruling party is doing.    The current predicament, as per Mr. Obang, is partly attributed to the failure of the TPLF/EPRDF to heed popular discontent. He expressed his concern about the tacit inclination of some political parties to addressing the national problem in the same way as the EPRDF did, i.e. by approaching the political problem along ethnic lines. He strongly believes that is wrong. Ethiopians should reclaim Ethiopiawinet (being Ethiopian first) rather than remaining divided along ethnic lines.  

Most opposition political parties are very vocal in terms of criticizing the current constitutional arrangement as divisive because it is established along ethnic lines. Criticizing alone does not bring about any change. Lasting peace needs more civic engagement and the need to respect human rights regardless to race and ethnicity. Accordingly, Obang called all Ethiopians to be very

critical about any political ideology that promotes division and instability. As Ethiopians, we share both the good and the bad historical past.    The important thing is to build on our present shared values and "forgive and forget" the past. That is only possible through National Reconciliation and reclaiming Ethiopia as our own nation. The ethnocentric approach to governance concentrates power in Ethiopia to certain ethnic groups. Some national opposition parties seem to have admitted to this fact.    Obang further said the values we share as Ethiopians by far transcends from the one that separate us. Therefore, it is only political willingness and good faith that are needed to have a forum for Reconciliation to bring lasting peace in Ethiopia. Of course, we should also not compromise on our Ethiopiawinet. We should not give up our Ethiopiawinet for the sake of appeasing ethnocentric groups.
A principled approach is what is needed. Reclaim an Ethiopian identity and die with it. Changing the principles of Ethiopian identity for the sake of political expediency will only destroy our Ethiopian identity.  Hence, stick to Ethiopia and reclaim Ethiopiawinet while being open for reconciliation.    

Obang also addressed the gathering on the current political situation in Ethiopia, the state of emergency and how the international community reacted to the political crisis. He answered questions on the issues raised by the participants and his presentation was short and fascinating. He recently refocused his organizational activities in line with the new reality and accordingly has unveiled his new budget demands.
The meeting Mr. Obang held in Toronto successfully went per initial plans of having a fund-raising event which turned out to be also a forum for getting volunteers. Mr. Obang's calm and reassuring manner were visible throughout the discussion. It earned him a respect even from most detractors and ethnic nationalists. Obang's theory of National reconciliation and peaceful resistance may redeem the lost confidence that all Ethiopians dream to see it in our leaders.  

Unity for Human Rights and Democracy, January, 2017


Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Analysis: Ethiopia: The slow death of a civilian government and the rise of a military might

Image result for ethiopian tank
Addis Abeba, Jan. 24/2017 – To the media’s keen observation, the immediate cause that triggered Ethiopia’s recent nose-dive into the unknown began when, on November 12, 2015, the residents of Ginchi, a small town some 80 Kms South West of the Capital Addis Abeba, took to the streets demanding authorities in Oromia regional state, the largest and most populated regional states to which Ginchi is a part, to halt a move to give a football pitch to private investors.
What followed was a year-long incessant public protest against the ruling EPRDF at a scale never seen in its quarter-century rule. It was unprecedented in many ways than few, but something that the government thought would be easily put down using brutal interventions both by the region’s and the federal’s security apparatus. That was until the hitherto region-wide protests, dubbed #OromoProtests, were joined, nine months later, by yet another unparalleled anti-government protest in the north, home to the Amhara regional state, the second largest regional state in the federated Ethiopia, and was dubbed #AmharaProtests.

Following these protests, which by then have shaken almost two-thirds of the country and have claimed the lives of hundreds of Ethiopians, in mid-August 2016, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn announced that he had given an order to the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) to intervene in Amhara regional state to control the spiraling anti-government protests.  In his announcement, Prime Minister Hailemariam asserted that the government would use “its full forces to bring the rule of law” into the region.
As one catastrophic event continued to lead to another, a ministerial cabinet meeting of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (FDRE), chaired by Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, declared a state of emergency throughout the country effective as of Oct. 08, 2016.
The state of emergency was declared as an immediate remedy to control intensified anti-government protests particularly in Oromia regional state that followed a mass death of civilians at the annual Irreecha festival on Sunday, Oct. 2nd.  (A hysteric stampede was caused as a result of security officers’ act of firing live ammunition and rubber bullets into the air, as well as teargas bombs in the middle of major parts of a gathering of millions.)
By all reviews so far, the declaration of the six months state of emergency is nothing short of a free pass to the ever militarized security apparatus of the regime to brutally put down increasing dissent by the public.
Already, the “full force” that Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn referred to in mid-August was in full display for nine months in most parts of the country, making one fact crystal clear – the civilian government led by a grand coalition of four parties and five smaller proxies, has continued to heavily rely on its military and intelligence might to engage with the public.
This is further aggravated by none other than the sheer fact that the last 26 years have been marred by a systematic gradual deterioration (and in most instances) demise of independent institutions (both state and non-state in nature) that were initially incorporated into the body politics of the country in the advent of EPRDF as a governing coalition.
The slow, tragic death of a multi-party parliamentary system
In the general elections held in May 2015, the fifth since EPRDF assumed power in 1991, the incumbent and its affiliates have unashamedly won all the 547 parliament seats, putting the final nail on the coffin of a prospect of a multi-party parliamentary system. In the preceding election, held five years earlier, the Parliament had a single representation from the opposition. A closer look at the opposition’s presence in the national parliament over the years demonstrates a country in regress.
In the first election after the passing of the Constitution in 1995, the EPRDF and its affiliates had managed to win 471 seats while 75 seats were gone to opposition parties mostly from peripheral regions such as Somali, Gambela, Benishagul-Gumuz, and Harari as well as a people who ran independently.  In the next election in 2000, which registered a 90% voter turnout, according to the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) , EPRDF had increased its seats in the Parliament by 10 to 481 while members from several opposition parties took 53 seats. Thirteen seats went to independents.
In the highly contested, yet much disputed 2005 election, which was marred by allegations of vote rigging that followed deadly riots, (and which is considered, rightly, as the turning point in Ethiopia’s contemporary political moment) official results put EPRDF’s win at 327 seats, while the two major opposition parties, the Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD) and United Ethiopian Democratic Forces (UEDF) won 161 seats collectively, the largest share of opposition seats in the country’s history.
Girma Seifu had been the only opposition member in the 2010 Parliament representing his party, Unity for Justice and Democracy Party (UJD). Girma finds it difficult to recognize the parliament “back then or even before” as a properly functioning institution. “You got to see heated debates sometimes but that was attributed to the [few] opposition [party members] who had seats. For members of EPRDF, however, the parliament was a place where it threw its inconsequential members just to raise their hands and agree on whatever is said by the high priests of the party,” Girma tells Addis Standard. “The senior members, those with real power, ran the government. Some were in the parliament of course, but some were not,” he said during an interview. Whatever is decided at the party headquarters is poured down to the Parliamentarians and “they accept without blinking an eye.” One hardly sees the checking and supervision of the government’s actions that is expected from them, according to him.
Ezekiel Gebissa, a Professor of History and African Studies at Kettering University in Flint, Michigan, agrees. “It would be a misnomer to suppose that there was ever a functioning parliamentary system in Ethiopia. Since 1995, elections have been held and governments have been formed every five years. However, the formal government structure has not functioned independently of the party structure. The government is simply the party’s instrument of control,” he told Addis Standard.  “The actual governing structure is the party structure. The federal arrangement was only a scheme used to feign power decentralization and deny responsibility for when things go awry.”
According to him, the EPRDF coalition members, created by the TPLF during its advance on Addis Abeba, are ostensibly the governing party in their respective regions. “But they were never independent of the Executive Committee of the EPRDF which is in turn closely controlled by the TPLF cabal.”
Discourse on a deathbed: From non-existent opposition to suffocating political space
One of the glaring aspects of political reality in today’s Ethiopia is one that is often exploited by the EPRDF: absence of a well-organized opposition bloc that can offer an alternative policy to the discontented public. While several parties are incubated, from time to time, more often than not, their very existence is known to the public during election years. In the 2015 election, for example, 47 Political parties, including the incumbent, have participated by fielding a total number of 1828 candidates.
Some go as far as pointing their fingers at the opposition bloc’s own mismanagement of its problems as the root cause of its failure. The oppositions are not only fragmented, they say, but also spend much of their time and energy on inter-party squabbles.
For Ezekiel, this “is a tortured argument” because “as a matter of historical fact, the failure of state-building in Ethiopia has always been the refusal of the ruling elite to share power with competing forces. Just as its predecessors, the EPRDF has refused to share power in any meaningful way with the representatives of the disenfranchised.”
To make his point clear Ezekiel states as an example the year 1991, when members of the TPLF and Oromo Liberation Front, OLF, came out triumphant against the militarist Derg and vowed to construct a decentralized federal state together.  But once securely ensconced in power, the TPLF felt no need to share power and ousted the OLF, which eventually ended up designated as a terrorist organization by Ethiopia’s parliament.
For Girma the prime responsibility for the country’s lack of well-organized opposition bloc lies within the regime itself, which, “with its irrational laws that it passes as it sees fit hampers the growth of any dissent in the country.”  “Take [the national electoral board] for example; as it happened to my party [during the run up to the 2015 election], one day you wake up from your sleep and you find out that your party is taken over by a bunch of rascals, and the NEBE, without having any mandate whatsoever decides the party is theirs, not yours,” he says.
As the government continues to jail, to force into exile and intimidate “the best and the brightest in politics, it is weakening not only the opposition but also the discourse itself. Thus, with no outlet or means of expressing their dissent, the people choose the last resort, public demonstration.”
The series of restrictive laws that were adopted by the parliament, argues Ezekiel, have made it impossible for opposition parties to form, recruit members, and organize. And, according to him, the EPRDF makes no secret that it must continue to rule without opposition on the basis of the following reasons: it takes longer than one election cycle to bear fruit; it is the only guarantor of Ethiopia’s unity and stability; it is the only defense against genocidal civil war, and it has the right to rule indefinitely because it has removed a brutal dictatorship. “It is only the government that can open up or close off the political space. No one else can be culpable of decimating the political opposition and civil society institutions. It is axiomatic.”
Furthermore, in the wake of the fateful 2005 election, the EPRDF has taken measures that would stiffen the rules of procedure in the parliament, thereby limiting the discursive space even within the EPRDF-dominated parliament in which a member of the Parliament is not urged to make his or her points for not more than three minutes. This was followed by a series of legislations constraining freedoms that are instrumental for the construction of a democratic system. Among them, the most infamous ones were the Freedom of Mass Media and Access to Information Proclamation (Proclamation N0. 590/2008), the Anti-terrorism Proclamation (Proclamation No. 652/2009), and the Charities and Societies Proclamation (Proclamation No. 621.2009).
As the government’s intolerance of dissent became crystal clear, self-censorship has become the new normal among journalists and other writers who could otherwise contribute to the flourishing of critical discourse. This was further degraded by the blocking of several websites (perceived to be in opposition to the regime in power), and jamming of other press/media outlets, including those based outside of the country.
Civil societies that were engaged in the cultivation of a democratic culture and the promotion of human rights were also forced to change either their focal areas or left out to play a negligent role on issues essential to the country’s political health. Institutions like Inter Africa Group, a civil society which played a pivotal role in organizing debates on various issues in the run-up to the 2005 election, have receded from the public eyes and seem to be lingering in oblivion.
Despite that, however, “the news of the death of civil society institutions in Ethiopia is premature,” argues Ezekiel. “They have gone under, but not dead,” so if the government is courageous enough to allow civil society institutions to operate freely and within the confines of a reasonable regulatory framework, they will flourish again. The problem is, “the government knows these institutions can be effective” thus “it wants to reduce them to an instrument of coercion and control to perpetuate itself in power.”
But Ezekiel still sees hope in indigenous institutions which can somehow play the role of civil societies, for instance, in terms of conflict resolution which work “to resolve conflicts at the local level or even step in to govern for a while. In the Oromia region, the Abba Gadaa institutions could play the role of mediation to resolve the impasse or even serve as a caretaker in situations where a civil administration has collapsed.”
Damning reports, government dismissals
One such institution that is deeply affected by the Charities and Societies Proclamation is the Human Rights Council (HRCO). Founded in 1991, the Council vows to work towards building a democratic system, promote rule of law and due process, and encourage and conduct human rights monitoring.
“In earlier times, the HRCO used to issue frequent reports on various human right issues often confronting the regime for its misdeeds,” says Girma. “But now they don’t have the same capacity they had once; because of EPRDF’s restrictive rules they can’t raise enough funding, the result of which is a debilitated capacity to move around the country and see what is going on first hand.” But the pressure doesn’t end there; as of late, the council has fallen under the spell of government forces. In the months of July and August 2016, the Council has reported that four of its members were detained in Oromia and Amhara regions, measures that it believes were related to the members’ monitoring and documentation of the crackdown against the protests in these regions. Among them was Tesfa Burayu, Chairperson of the council’s West Ethiopian Regional office, who was detained at his home in Nekemte, Oromia.
In its report, Respect the people’s Right to Demonstrate! Stop the Violence by State Security Forces!” , focusing in North Gonder zone of the Amhara Regional state, and which was on Sep 06 2016, the Council urged the government to stop the violence against protesters and condemned the violence by security forces, including killings, and arbitrary detention of citizens for exercising their constitutional rights.
But the government has always reacted in the same manner for reports like this; it often undermines the level of severity, it denies any wrong doing on its part and it even blames “outside forces,” “those who hate to see Ethiopia’s growth” and “neoliberal ideologues” for being behind damning reports. It also has its version of a similar institution, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission, EHRC, which is often used to directly counteract against reports by other independent institutions.
However, unlike the report EHRC, HRCO’s report was widely distributed by a group of other civil society organizations including the East and Horn of African Human Rights Defenders Project, the Association for Human Rights in Ethiopia (AHRE), Amnesty International, the Ethiopia Human Rights Project (EHRP), Front Line Defenders, and the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH). Unfortunately, most of these institutions are now allowed to open offices in Ethiopia.  
Their actual absence from the ground gives the government in Ethiopia the unbridled opportunity to vehemently deny any of the reports produced by them. Take for example Ethiopia’s response to the report by the HRW released in mid-June 2016. The then chief spokesperson of the government, Getachew Reda, dismissed the report stating that an organization far removed from a presence on the ground has no mandate to issue an accurate account of the human rights situation in Oromia. He then argued the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission, has issued its own report which recognized the death of only 173 people in Oromia and declared it “proportional”.
Partial police, politicized military
In theory, the police in Ethiopia, which includes the Ethiopian Federal Police Commission (EFPC), is constitutionally mandated, among others, to prevent and resolve conflicts, strengthen the federal system, uphold federal-regional relations in the country, and maintain good relations, peace and tolerance among different religions and beliefs.  The Regional Police Commissions, Community Police Offices throughout the country, and law enforcement apparatus established under Federal government bodies like the Ethiopian Revenue and Customs Authority (ERCA), the Federal Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (FEACC) and the Federal Prisons Administration Commission (FPA) are also constitutionally mandated to be politically impartial and loyal only to the country’s supreme law, the Constitution. The Federal Police Proclamation No. 720/2011, for instance, asserts that the commission shall “maintain and ensure peace and security of the public and the state by respecting and ensuring the observance of the Constitution.” However, in practice, like in all authoritarian countries around the world, their loyalty is to the political party in power.
The police, in Ethiopia, together with the army, are instruments of a government that always appears to be keen to resort to its prowess to resolve political crises of any kind as is manifested by Prime Minister Hailemariam’s recent claim that his government “has ample capacity” to subdue the rising tide. This stems from EPRDF’s origins. “TPLF, which is the architect of the entity we call now EPRDF is essentially a militaristic group to its bones,” says Girma. “The group has never walked past its history. It has never evolved into being a civilian party. Beneath the surface, it’s all guns and armors.”
Girma’s sentiments were shared by Ezekiel. “From its guerilla days, the TPLF had a party army whose commanders acted as diplomats, administrators, judges, and social workers,” Ezekiel says. After assuming power to reconstruct a state on the verge of collapse “the Front installed its military leaders and political commissars as ministries, ruling party’s officials, heads of business organizations and top leaders of the new national defense force. In this respect, the reconstructed state was essentially a military government whose political power depended entirely on the gun.” Even after the parliamentary system was put in place and elections were conducted to form a representative government, the military’s influence has always been enormous, Ezekiel asserted.  More often than not, “the military has been called in to deal with the opposition. The [ENDF] isn’t just a politicized military; it has been a militarized civilian government since the EPRDF’s accession to power. The military has always been politically connected. And its engagement in economic activities as an institution has made it economically powerful. The military has a stake in politics.”
Now, with a state of emergency to contain the widespread protests all over the country, the governing structure is in crisis, argues Ezekiel. “What remains intact is a politically connected, heavily armed and economically powerful military. [The government’s] institutional interests are in danger. It has to use force to protect them. But force will breed more instability and the use of more force. Another cycle of collapse and reconstruction, and a perpetually failing state.”
As Ethiopians look at what is to follow anxiously, the incumbent, spoiled by the respite brought by its excessive military deployment in the name of the state of emergency, is busy conducting what it called “deep reform” in order to address the grievances. It is also busy showcasing the boom in infrastructure; a topic the government always gave precedence to the people’s well-being.
But Girma (who was interviewed for this piece before the state of emergency was declared) likes to speak prudently about what to expect; “there is what I hope to happen, say in the next six months,” he said in September 2016, “which is the government would truly understand the severity of the problems it and the country are facing. I would like to see the government taking drastic measures up to declaring a transitional period in which all the stakeholders both inside and outside the country are invited to participate. The military can be part of this transition,” he said. However, “what I think would actually happen is far from this. It’s in EPRDF’s nature to falsely believe that it has managed the situation whenever protests subside. Buying time is what it strives for. But the protests are coming back again more ferociously.” Given how things evolved since then, Girma’s statement comes as an alarming forecast. AS

Graphic Design: Addis Standard
http://addisstandard.com/analysis-ethiopia-the-slow-death-of-a-civilian-government-and-the-rise-of-a-military-might/