Sunday, March 31, 2013

PRISONERS OF CONSCIENCE IN ETHIOPIA


y Birtukan Mideksa  aljazeera .com
Although Ethiopia hbirtukan mideksaas its first new prime minister in 17 years – so far, the government has failed to right a long history of wrongs. With prisoners of conscience still languishing in its prisons, Ethiopia must receive the clear message – especially from allies like the United States – that continued human rights violations will not be tolerated.
My journey to become a political prisoner in Ethiopia began as a federal judge fighting to uphold the rule of law. Despite institutional challenges and even death threats, I hoped to use constitutional principles to ensure respect for basic rights.
But, having witnessed firsthand the government disregard for fundamental constitutional rules, I joined the opposition and became the first woman to hold a high-level position in an Ethiopian political party.
Our party – the Coalition for Unity and Democracy – contested the 2005 elections with a multiethnic platform based on economic liberalism and respect for individual rights. As momentum gathered, many hoped change had finally arrived in Ethiopia.
But after early reports showed our party ahead in the polls, the government dashed our optimism by throwing me and my colleagues behind bars and declaring a victory for the ruling party.
When I emerged after 21 months in prison , our party was outlawed and the political landscape had grown increasingly repressive. But we forged ahead, forming the new Unity for Democracy and Justice Party and continuing to advocate for dialogue and non-violent political reform in Ethiopia.
Authorities arrested me again in 2008, claiming that I had mischaracterised the circumstances of my release. But peaceful political activities are not the only way to become a prisoner of conscience in Ethiopia.
Independent journalists face the very real threat of imprisonment in response to their work. Authorities have detained my friend Eskinder Nega eight times over his 20-year career as a journalist and publisher.
After the 2005 elections, Eskinder and his wife – Serkalem Fasil – spent 17 months in prison. Pregnant at the time, Serkalem gave birth to a son despite her confinement and almost no pre-natal care.
Banned from publishing after his release in 2007, Eskinder continued to write online. In early 2011, he began focusing particularly on the protest movements then sweeping North Africa and the Middle Easthailemariyam desalegn.
Eskinder, who does not belong to any political party because of a commitment to maintain his independence, offered a unique and incisive take on what those movements meant for the future of Ethiopia.
Committed to the principle of non-violence, Eskinder repeatedly emphasised that any similar movements in Ethiopia would have to remain peaceful. Despite this, police briefly detained him and warned him that his writings had crossed the line and he could face prosecution.
Then in September 2011, the government made good on that threat. Authorities arrested Eskinder just days after he publicly criticised the use of anti-terror laws to stifle dissent. They held him without charge or access to an attorney for nearly two months.
The government eventually charged Eskinder with terrorism and treason, sentencing him to 18 years in prison after a political trial. Unfortunately, Eskinder is not alone; independent journalists Woubshet Taye and Reeyot Alemu also face long prison terms on terrorism charges.
The legal advocacy organisation Freedom Now, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention – a five-person panel of experts from around the world that consider individual cases – found Eskinder’s continued detention illegal under international law and called for his immediate release.
The UN specifically found that the government prosecuted Eskinder using overly broad terrorism charges because he exercised his internationally protected right to freedom of expression. It also held that procedural violations, such as denying Eskinder access to an attorney for nearly two months, violated his due process rights.
With this unequivocal finding by the UN, the international community can, and must, do more to help Eskinder and his imprisoned colleagues. In particular, the US, which has a close relationship with government in Addis Ababa, must speak out at every opportunity for those who cannot speak out for themselves from behind the prison walls.
Birtukan Mideksa is a fellow at Harvard University’s WEB Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research and a former prisoner of conscience in Ethiopia. 
Follow her on Twitter: @Birtukanmideksa 

ርዕዮት ዓለሙ ሁለተኛ ዲግሪዋን እንዳትማር ተደረገች


/ፍኖተ ነፃነት/ ጋዜጠኛና መምህርት ርዕዮት ዓለሙ የርቀት ትምህርት እንዳትማር መከልከሏን የዜና ምንጮቻችን አስታወቁ፡፡  የርዕዮት አለሙ ቤተሰቦችም የዜናውን ትክክለኛነት አረጋግጠዋል፡፡ለፍኖተ ነፃነት የደረሰው መረጃ እንደሚያመለክተው፣ ርዕዮት እንደማንኛውም እስረኛ ሁለተኛ ዲግሪዋን ለመስራት ህንድ አገር በሚገኘው የሂንድራ ጋንዲ ናሽናል ኦፕን ዩኒቨርሲቲ አስፈላጊውን ክፍያ ፈፅማ ብትመዘገብም ማረሚያ ቤቱ መጀመሪያ ከፈቀደ በኋላ ፖለቲካል ሳይንስ እንደምትማር ሲታወቅ ክልከላ ደርሶባታል ፡፡
የርዕዮት አለሙ እጮኛ ጋዜጠኛ ስለሺ ሀጎስ ስለጉዳዩ ጠይቀነው በሰጠን ምላሽ የርዕዮት ከዘጠኝ ወራት በፊት ትምህርቷን መቀጠል እንደምትፈልግ ለማረሚያ ቤቱ በማመልከቻ ጠይቃ እንደነበር አረጋግጧል፡፡  “ እኛ ለቱቶርና ለፈተና አንወስድሽም ግን ዩኒቨርሲቲው ፈታኝ ልኮ የሚፈትንሽ ከሆነና ቱቶር የሚሰጥሽ ከሆነ መማር ትችያለሽ የሚል ምላሽ በቃል ተሰጥቷታል፡፡ እኛም የዩኒቨርሲቲው ወኪል ከሆነው ቅ/ማርያም ዩኒቨርሲቲ ኮሌጅ ጋር ጋር በመነጋገር ቃሊቲ ድረስ ፈታኝ ለሚላክበት ተጨማሪ አበል ለመክፈል ተስማምተን ምዝገባ አከናውነናል፡፡” በማለት የሚያስረዳው ስለሺ ሀጎስ ማረሚያ ቤቱ መስማማቱን ካረጋገጡ በኋላ ከሀያ ስድስት ሺብር በላይ ከፍለው ምዝገባውን እንዳከናወኑ ለፍኖተ ነፃነት ተናግሯል፡፡
በርዕዮት በተሰጠው ውክልና መሰረት የመማሪያ ሞጁሎች ይዞ ወደ ቃሊቲ ያቀናው እጮኛዋ ስለሺ ሐጎስ እንደሚናገረው በማረሚያቤቱ የነበረው ሀላፊ የምትወስዳቸውም የፖለቲካ ሳይንስ ሞጁሎች ርዕስ ካነበበ በኋላ አናስገባልህም ተብሏል፡፡
ከክልከላው በፊት ሁለት የማይታወቁ ሰዎች የሂንድራ ጋንዲ ናሽናል ዩኒቨርሲቲ ወኪል ወደሆነው ቅ/ማርያም ዩኒቨርሲቲ ኮሌጅ በመሄድ “የርዕዮትን ሞጁል አምጡ” ማለታቸውን ጨምሮ የገለፀው ጋዜጠኛ ስለሺ በማረሚያ ቤቱ ክልከላ እንዳዘነ ለፍኖተ ነፃነት ተናግሯል፡፡
ስለጉዳዩ የሚያውቁት ነገር እንዳለ በፍኖተ ነፃነት የተጠየቁት ወላጅ አባቷ ጠበቃ ዓለሙ ገቤቦ በሰጡት መልስ “ እውነት ነው፤ አንቺ እንድትማሪ አንፈቅድም ብለው ከልክለዋትል፡፡ በመሠረቱ አንድ በህግ ጥላ ስር ያለ እስረኛ ቀዳዳ እየተፈለገ መብቱን መንፈግ ተገቢ አይደለም፡፡ ምዝገባው ሲደረግና ሂደቶቹ ሲከናወኑ ፈቅዶ ትምህርቱ ሲጀመር መከልከል ተገቢ አይደለም፡፡ ችግሩን መፍታት የሚችል አካል ካለ አመልክተን ትምህርቷን የምትቀጥልበት   መንገድ  እንሞክራለን፡፡” ሲሉ መልሰዋል፡፡
ርዕዮት በቅርቡ ይቅርታ ጠይቃ እንድትፈታ በሽማግሌዎች ተጠይቃ ምንም ባልፈፀምኩት ወንጀል ይቅርታ አልጠይቅም የተፈረደብኝን ፍርድ እስር ቤት እጨርሳለሁ ብላ እንቢ በማለቷ ተደጋጋሚ አስተዳደራዊ በደል እየተፈጸመባት ይገኛል፡፡ በጡቷ ላይ በተፈጠረባት ህመም ወደ ጥቁር አንበሳ ሆስፖታል ሪፈር ብትባልም መኪና የለም አጃቢ አልተገኘም በሚል ምክንያቶች ህክምናው መስተጓጎሉ ይታወሳል፡፡
source; sileshihagos.wordpress.com

Friday, March 29, 2013


United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced the appointment of Tegegnework Gettu of Ethiopia as Under-Secretary-General for General Assembly and Conference Management, replacing Jean-Jacques Graisse of Belgium.

With about 1,200 staff at the UN headquarters in New York and 2,200 world wide,including the conference management staff at the UN offices at Geneva,Vienna and Nairobi DGACM is the largest department in the secretariat.

Mr. Gettu, who has been the Assistant Secretary-General and Regional Bureau Director for Africa in the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) since 2009, has more than 30 years of increasingly responsible management experience in the development field, at both the national and international levels, having worked in academia, Government and the private sector. He brings to his new position analytical skills and proven operational capacity, on the ground and at Headquarters, to manage complex organizational structures and effectively to lead large departments in challenging environment.

He notably served as Chief of Staff and Director of UNDP’s Executive Office in New York, and was United Nations Resident Coordinator/UNDP Resident Representative in Nigeria until 2006. Before 2003, Mr. Gettu was country director for Southern Africa and the Indian Ocean countries as well as Acting Resident Representative in Liberia and Sierra Leone. He also served as Senior Economic and Political Adviser at the UNDP Africa Bureau in New York.

During his academic career, Mr. Gettu was a Fellow at Columbia University and Assistant Professor and Lecturer at the University of Rochester in New York. He also taught at Hunter College and Addis Ababa University. He also worked as Senior Adviser in Ethiopia’s Ministry of Planning and Economic Development and in the private sector.
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced  the appointment of Tegegnework Gettu of Ethiopia as Under-Secretary-General for General Assembly and Conference Management, replacing Jean-Jacques Graisse of Belgium.

With about 1,200 staff at the UN headquarters in New York and 2,200 world wide,including the conference management staff at the UN offices at Geneva,Vienna and Nairobi DGACM is the largest department in the secretariat.   

Mr. Gettu, who has been the Assistant Secretary-General and Regional Bureau Director for Africa in the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) since 2009, has more than 30 years of increasingly responsible management experience in the development field, at both the national and international levels, having worked in academia, Government and the private sector. He brings to his new position analytical skills and proven operational capacity, on the ground and at Headquarters, to manage complex organizational structures and effectively to lead large departments in challenging environment.

He notably served as Chief of Staff and Director of UNDP’s Executive Office in New York, and was United Nations Resident Coordinator/UNDP Resident Representative in Nigeria until 2006. Before 2003, Mr. Gettu was country director for Southern Africa and the Indian Ocean countries as well as Acting Resident Representative in Liberia and Sierra Leone. He also served as Senior Economic and Political Adviser at the UNDP Africa Bureau in New York.

During his academic career, Mr. Gettu was a Fellow at Columbia University and Assistant Professor and Lecturer at the University of Rochester in New York. He also taught at Hunter College and Addis Ababa University. He also worked as Senior Adviser in Ethiopia’s Ministry of Planning and Economic Development and in the private sector.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Can Ethiopia and Eritrea finally find peace?


After years of hostility between the countries, Ethiopia's new prime minister explains why he is willing to start talks.
 Last Modified: 08 Dec 2012 10:50



The Horn of Africa is one of the most important strategic locations in the world. Control the area, and you control the Red Sea, critical for global trade connecting Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia.

But border disputes between regional arch-rivals Eritrea and Ethiopia - which have been running ever since Eritrea broke free from Ethiopia in 1991 - threaten the stability of the area.

Eritrea won independence from Ethiopia after a 30-year struggle that is considered to be among the continent's longest and most bitter.

The animosity between the two sides frequently spills over into neighbouring countries like Somalia and Kenya.

No Ethiopian leader has held talks with Isaias Afewerki, the Eritrean president, since the end of their bitter border war in 2000, during which at least 70,000 people died.
 
That is, until now.

Hailemariam Desalegn, the new Ethiopian prime minister who has been in office for only three months, says he is willing to talk to the Eritrean president.

In an exclusive interview with Talk to Al Jazeera he explains: "If you ask me 'Do you want to go to Asmara [the Eritrean capital] and sit down and negotiate with Isaias Afewerki?', then I will say 'yes'."

When asked if there was a real opportunity to forge closer links between the two countries following the death of Meles Zenawi, the former Ethiopian prime minister, in August, Desalegn answered: "My predecessor Meles Zenawi had asked for more than 50 times even to go to Asmara and to negotiate with Isaias Afewerki.

"The most important thing for us is fighting poverty. The most important thing for us is having regional integration. If we two, we do that, it will be much more productive."

Desalegn also talks about how he plans to move Ethiopia and the region forward.

ወጣቷ ኢትዮጲያዊ በቺካጎ ተገደለች


የ18 ዓመቷ ወጣት ሙና አሊ በአሰቃቂ ሁኔታ ተገድላ መገኘቷ ታውቋል። ከወላጆቿ ጋር የምትኖረው ወጣት ሙና በሴን ሃይ ስኩል የሁለተኛ ደረጃ ትምህርቷን በማጠናቀቅ ዘንድሮ <ሔሮልድ ዋሽንግተን > ኰሌጅ የመጀመሪያ አመት ተማሪ እንደነበረች ታውቋል። ማርች 9 ቀን በጓደኞቿ ፓርቲ ላይ ለመገኘት ከምሽቱ 9፡00 ሰዓት ከቤት እንደወጣች ሲታወቅ ..በዛው ምሽት ከመኖሪያ ቤቷ ሁለት ብሎክ አለፍ ብሎ በሚገኝ አፓርትመንት ውስጥ ከሌሊቱ 1፡30 ተገድላ ሬሳዋ መገኘቱ ተጠቁሞዋል። አንዳንድ ወገኖች እንደተናገሩት ወጣቷ ጥርሷ እንደወለቀ፣ ፊቷ እንደተቧጨረና አንግቷ አካባቢ በገመድ የመታነቅ ነገር እንደታየ ገልፀዋል። ወጣት ሙና ተገድላ የተገኘችበት ሕንፃ ውስጥ መጥፎ ባህሪ ያላቸው ሰዎች እንደሚኖሩ ሲጠቆም፤ ፖሊስ ምስጢራዊውን ግድያ በማጣራት ላይ መሆኑን ከመግለፅ ውጭ ምንም ያለው ነገር የለም። የሟች ወላጅ አባት አቶ አብዱልሰላም አሊ ፥ « ከባድና አስቸጋሪ ነው» ሲሉ በሃዘን ለጋዜጠኞች ተናግረዋል።
ከሁለት ወር በፊት በተመሳሳይ ሁኔታ የ19 ዓመት ወጣት ኢትዮጲያዊ መገደሉና አሁንም ይህ ሁኔታ መደገሙ አነጋጋሪና አስደንጋጭ ሆኗል። ለሙና ቤተሰቦችና ወዳጆች ፈጣሪ መፅናናትን ይስጣቸው! Araya Tesfamariam

Monday, March 18, 2013

Ethiopia needs 45 years to achieve poverty levels equivalent to those Nigeria has now


The end of the Third World? New study shows world poverty could be eradicated in 20 years

  • Poverty levels in Nepal, Rwanda and Bangladesh have dropped 
  • Report predicts some of the poorest countries in the world could see acute poverty eradicated within 20 years 
World poverty is shrinking and developing countries are becoming less poor according to a new study by Oxford University. 
Nepal, Rwanda and Bangladesh were the 'star performers' of the 22-country study carried out by the  Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI), followed by Ghana, Tanzania, Cambodia and Bolivia. 
The report predicts that some of the poorest countries in the world could see acute poverty eradicated within 20 years. 
The department measured poverty by using a new term called the Multidimensional Poverty Index, or MPI.
It measures the intensity of different deprivations that poor people face including nutrition, education and sanitation and not just income.  
Researchers have devised a new term for measuring poverty called the Multidimensional Poverty Index which is shown along the bottom of the graph. The lighter bar shows the original MPI and the darker bar shows the current MPI
Researchers have devised a new term for measuring poverty called the Multidimensional Poverty Index which is shown along the bottom of the graph. The lighter bar shows the original MPI and the darker bar shows the current MPI
If people are deprived in a third or more of ten indicators, the global index identifies them as 'MPI poor'. 
The study was carried out by Dr Sabina Alkire and Dr Jose Manuel Roche.
Dr Alkire said: 'Using this measure, we found that reductions in intensity – the percentage of deprivations people experience at the same time – were strongest in relatively poorer countries, such as Ethiopia, Malawi and Senegal.'
In some countries, if progress continues at the same rate, current generations may see the end of acute multidimensional poverty. 
If people are deprived in a third or more of ten indicators, the global index identifies them as 'MPI poor'
If people are deprived in a third or more of ten indicators, the global index identifies them as 'MPI poor'
For example, if the study’s 'star' countries, Nepal, Rwanda, and Bangladesh, continue to reduce poverty at the current rate, they will halve MPI in less than 10 years and eradicate it in 20.
However, the future for other countries does not look as positive. 
‘At the current rate of reduction, it will take Ethiopia 45 years to halve multidimensional poverty; in other words, to achieve poverty levels equivalent to those Nigeria has now,’ said OPHI’s Dr José Manuel Roche, who calculated the predictions.
‘Based on the same assumptions, it will take India 41 years and Malawi 74 years to eradicate acute poverty as measured by the MPI. 
'But we hope that by providing a more complete and balanced picture, these measures will help spur the eradication of multidimensional poverty.’
Improvements: Nepal did the best in areas like nutrition and child mortality
Improvements: Nepal did the best in areas like nutrition and child mortality
Nepal did the best in areas like nutrition, child mortality, electricity, improved flooring and assets.
Rwanda showed the biggest improvement in sanitation and water, and Bangladesh did best in improving sanitation and school attendance.  
The MPI can also be broken down to reveal the varying rates of progress in different regions of a country or among different social groups. 
For example, in Nepal, although it had an outstanding overall performance, three of the 13 regions lagged behind the rest of the country, with no statistically significant reduction in MPI poverty. 
By contrast, Rwanda and Bangladesh achieved significant reductions in both the scale and intensity of multidimensional poverty in every one of their regions.
‘This ability of the MPI to reveal inequalities at a regional level, as well as between social groups, makes it a vital tool for policymakers,’ said Dr Suman Seth, one of OPHI’s research team. 
‘The global MPI allows us to compare people’s poverty and see in what ways they are deprived, in order to address these interconnected deprivations and target interventions more accurately.’
The release of the report on changes in poverty over time follows the publication of the MPI in the UN Development Programme's Human Development Report 2013. 
In 2013, OPHI found that a total of 1.6billion people are living in multidimensional poverty - more than 30 per cent of the combined populations of the 104 countries analysed. 
It is the first time research has tracked overlapping deprivations in health, education and living standards.

Ethiopia 'blocks' Al Jazeera websites


Traffic to English and Arabic websites has plummeted since the network aired coverage of protests in August last year.


Al Jazeera’s English and Arabic websites are reported to have been blocked in Ethiopia, raising fresh fears that the government is continuing its efforts to silence the media.

Though the authorities in Addis Ababa have refused to comment on the reported censorship, Google Analytics data accessed by Al Jazeera shows that traffic from Ethiopia to the English website had plummeted from 50,000 hits in July 2012 to just 114 in September.

Traffic data revealed a similar drop for the Arabic website, with visits to the site dropping to 2 in September from 5,371 in July.

A blogger, who cannot be identified for his own safety, said Ethiopian censors had been targeting Al Jazeera since the Qatar-based network began airing coverage of ongoing protests against the way in which spiritual leaders are elected in the Horn of African nation.

The steep decline in web traffic began on August 2 last year, the same day that Al Jazeera Mubasher aired a forum with guests denouncing the government's "interference" with Muslim religious affairs, and three days after Al Jazeera English published an article detailing deadly ethnic clashes between two of the country's southern tribes.

Attempts by Al Jazeera to get an official response from authorities failed.

Poor track record

Ethiopia is ranked 137 out of 179 surveyed nations on the latest Press Freedom Index of Reporters Without Borders (RSF), an international advocacy group for press rights.

Both RSF and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) have tied Ethiopia's deteriorating media environment, in part, to a 2009 anti-terrorism law that has been used to jail 11 journalists since its ratification.

"The usage and practice of this law is illegal. It has a clause that makes whoever writes about so-called terrorist groups, which are mostly normal opposition groups, a terrorist," CPJ's East Africa Consultant Thom Rhodes told Al Jazeera.

"Now it's got to the point that the law is being used to label those in the Muslim community conducting peaceful protests to defend their right to choose their spiritual leaders as terrorists. It's a sad state of affairs."

CPJ says Ethiopia is the second-highest jailer of journalists in Africa after neighbouring Eritrea, were seven journalists are currently detained.

Both the RSF and CPJ have expressed concern over reports that the country has begun using much more sophisticated online censorship systems over the last year, including ones that can identify specific internet protocols and block them.

Since Ethiopia's government owns the sole telecommunications provider in the country, Ethio Telecom, it allows authorities to tightly control internet freedom.
Ethiopia 'blocks' Al Jazeera websites


Traffic to English and Arabic websites has plummeted since the network aired coverage of protests in August last year.


Al Jazeera’s English and Arabic websites are reported to have been blocked in Ethiopia, raising fresh fears that the government is continuing its efforts to silence the media.

Though the authorities in Addis Ababa have refused to comment on the reported censorship, Google Analytics data accessed by Al Jazeera shows that traffic from Ethiopia to the English website had plummeted from 50,000 hits in July 2012 to just 114 in September.

Traffic data revealed a similar drop for the Arabic website, with visits to the site dropping to 2 in September from 5,371 in July.

A blogger, who cannot be identified for his own safety, said Ethiopian censors had been targeting Al Jazeera since the Qatar-based network began airing coverage of ongoing protests against the way in which spiritual leaders are elected in the Horn of African nation.

The steep decline in web traffic began on August 2 last year, the same day that Al Jazeera Mubasher aired a forum with guests denouncing the government's "interference" with Muslim religious affairs, and three days after Al Jazeera English published an article detailing deadly ethnic clashes between two of the country's southern tribes.

Attempts by Al Jazeera to get an official response from authorities failed.

Poor track record

Ethiopia is ranked 137 out of 179 surveyed nations on the latest Press Freedom Index of Reporters Without Borders (RSF), an international advocacy group for press rights.

Both RSF and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) have tied Ethiopia's deteriorating media environment, in part, to a 2009 anti-terrorism law that has been used to jail 11 journalists since its ratification.

"The usage and practice of this law is illegal. It has a clause that makes whoever writes about so-called terrorist groups, which are mostly normal opposition groups, a terrorist," CPJ's East Africa Consultant Thom Rhodes told Al Jazeera.

"Now it's got to the point that the law is being used to label those in the Muslim community conducting peaceful protests to defend their right to choose their spiritual leaders as terrorists. It's a sad state of affairs."

CPJ says Ethiopia is the second-highest jailer of journalists in Africa after neighbouring Eritrea, were seven journalists are currently detained.

Both the RSF and CPJ have expressed concern over reports that the country has begun using much more sophisticated online censorship systems over the last year, including ones that can identify specific internet protocols and block them.

Since Ethiopia's government owns the sole telecommunications provider in the country, Ethio Telecom, it allows authorities to tightly control internet freedom.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Hailee Araya: Representing wealth of musical talent


Hailee Araya is a 22 year old Ethiopian Swedish singer songwriter based in Miami, and both of her parents are from Ethiopian decent. Her music blends Roots, Rock, and Reggae and her vocals sound like Jennifer Lopez.
Hailee was attracted to music from a very early age and quickly learned the piano, which she played for several years and still uses to composes her songs.
Hailee comes from a socially conscious family and she and her grandmother started a charity in Ethiopia in 1998 called Project Abel, named after her little brother who Hailee considers to be ‘kindness personified’. The purpose of Project Abel is to bring people together to buy their own groceries for 10 dollars, create a cooked packaged meals and then distribute the food to the needy.
Although her grandmother passed away from hepatitis C, Hailee continues to run the charity. As Hailee learned from her grandmother: ‘the only way to lessen sorrow is to help others’ – this positive message is at the heart of Hailee’s charity work and her music.
Hailee has performed in several festivals, including the Uppsala Reggae Festival in 2009.
Her first official single ‘rid you of my love’ (written and performed by Hailee Araya, produced by Paul Kastick) is released 20 December 2011.
For more info visit her website
Video: Hailee Araya – Rid you of my love

Ethiopia Presents Human Rights Action Plan






Photo




by Marthe Van Der Wolf Ethiopia has unveiled its first Human Rights Action Plan, with the goal of ensuring human rights in the East African country. Activists have long complained about the Ethiopian government's record of quashing political dissent and freedom of expression. The Ethiopian government presented a draft Human Rights Action Plan on Thursday to discuss with stakeholders such as the United Nations, civil societies and development partners. Musa Gassama, the regional representative of the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, said the plan does not introduce new laws for Ethiopia. “What is new is to bring all these laws that we talk about, putting them together and analyzing them and seeing what actions could be taken to make sure that these laws are bringing benefit to the people,” he said. The plan includes nearly 60 recommendations to cover gaps in sectors such as education, health and culture. Ethiopia’s Minister of Justice Berhan Hailu explained that gaps have also been identified in the justice sector. “We need a lot of proclamations and also guidelines for the protection of the rights of the people, for the accused persons, for the persons in prison and so on," Hailu said. "For example, we have mentioned in the document the importance of a guideline on the use of force by the police.” International organizations such as Human Rights Watch criticized Ethiopia’s election to the U.N. Human Rights Council in 2012. The country has one of the world's highest numbers of journalists in jail, while leaders of peaceful Muslim demonstrations have been arrested and many opposition leaders are prison on charges of terrorism. In addition, Ethiopia has not signed several international human rights treaties, such as the Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and their Families, the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Minister Berhan said Ethiopia is making progress when it comes to ensuring human rights, despite the criticism: “Those who don’t want to realize or to recognize this kind of progress might say that there is no good performance in human rights in Ethiopia, but we are doing our level best and the people of Ethiopia are now benefiting a lot, but we have gaps now," he said. "In order to fill the gaps we have to work hard; we have to plan it, like the kind of plan that we have presented today.” The Human Rights Action Plan will be sent to parliament for adoption this week, and is scheduled to be implemented over the next three years.

የኢትዮጵያ ሙስሊሞች በመላው አገሪቷ እያደረጉት ያለው ሰላማዊ ተቃውሞ ዛሬም ቀጥሎ ውሏል



15 mar 2013

የአዲስ አበባው አንዋር ጸጥ እረጭ ብሏል::----አንዋር መስጂድ ጭር! ወፍ የለም!!! ኑር መስጂድ በህዝብ ተጥለቅልቅዋል::----የደሴ ሜጤሮ መስጂድ ከፊል ትዕይንት ድምፃችን ይሰማ----አርሲ ዶዶላ መስጂድ ከፊል ትዕይንት---በአዲስ አበባ አንዋር መስጂድን ጭር አድርጎ የመዋል መርሃግብር መሰረት በርካታ ሙስሊሞች በአንዋር ፋንታ ኑር መስጂድ የሰገዱ ሲሆን ኑር መስጂድ ከወትሮው የተለየ ከፍተኛ ቁጥር ያለው ህዝብ ሰግዷል፡፡----በጎንደር ቅዳሜ ገበያ በሚገኝው ታላቁ መስጅድ የመስባስብ ተቃውሞ ድምፃችን ይሰማ----ዲላ ቢላል መስጂድ በተቃውሞ ላይ ድምፃችን ይሰማ----አላባ መስጂድ በተቃውሞ ላይ ድምጻችን ይሰማ--የዝምታ ተቃውሞው በኮምቦልቻ ከወትሮው በተለየ ከፍተኛ ቁጥር ባለው ሕዝብ ተከናውኗል፡፡----

Being Black Is No Joy for Somalians and Ethiopians in Yemen



Being Black Is No Joy for Somalians and Ethiopians in Yemen

RNW March 2013


The black man on the bus, they pat him on the head and push him in the back. They make jokes about his pronunciation of the name of the market he is going to. He sits still, waiting for the humiliation to pass.

A Somali man gets beaten at the bus station because he allegedly stole something. He doesn’t fight back, but cries. Passersby look the other way.

Minutes later, a woman is ignored by the bus driver because he doesn’t want Africans onboard. She patiently waits for the next bus.

One only has to use public transport in Sana’a, Yemen’s capital city, for a day or two to realize that being black here is no joy. There are no official numbers, but Yemen is home to hundreds of thousands of African immigrants. Most come from Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea as refugees and non-refugees both.

“A cultural thing”

According to Fouad Alalwi, head of the Sawa’a Organization for Anti-Discrimination, “It is a cultural thing in this region to treat non-citizens who are poor like this. People think that they bring criminality, although this has never been proven.”

“They see them as a burden for society, and for Ethiopians there is also a historical explanation,” he adds.

The history Alawi refers to goes back to Christianity’s start, when the country was invaded a number of times by Ethiopians. They tried to Christianize the Yemeni population, but were eventually kicked out.

Yemenis became one of the first Muslims, though a large group of Ethiopians stayed behind and became slaves – a practice that may influence how some Yemenis perceive Ethiopians today.

Societal schizophrenia

The schizophrenic thing is that Yemen seems much more hospitable than other, much richer, countries in the region. Churches are accepted so long as they are not publicly visible.

What’s more, Yemen has a generous attitude towards refugees; Somali refugees are automatically given asylum status. But once in the country, the newcomers find the streets not so welcoming.

“What you see in the street are reactions from people who are frustrated they do not have jobs or a good house,” says Alalwi. But he emphasizes that it is a small minority of Yemenis who behave this way towards immigrants.

“Educated people wouldn’t do this, and it is against Islam, which teaches us that all are equal, black or white,” he says.

Racism is not often discussed in Yemen. Organizations like Sawa’a mainly deal with government discrimination of minorities rather than focusing on everyday racism.

But this doesn’t seem so surprising in a country that faces an ocean of problems. In fact, some of those problems may compound the resentment towards black immigrants. Unemployment rates are sky-high and immigrants are frequently accused of taking away scarce jobs from locals.

In a paper on migration to and through Yemen from 2007, country expert Marina de Regt writes that poor Yemeni women told her they prefer begging to doing domestic work.

The latter has low social status and is often considered impossible because it would break with the traditional gender segregation (women working in the home of unknown men).

Not a single Yemeni friend

Some Yemenis believe that Ethiopians are promiscuous and more likely to have AIDS. “Many Yemenis say that our men snatch their women,” says Tigist Addisi, an Ethiopian woman who has been living in Yemen for 18 years, working long hours as a cleaner.

“They say that [Yemeni] women now go out, smoke sheesha and wear pants because of us.”

After all nearly two decades here, she does not have a single Yemeni friend. But she is used to it. Addisi sticks to her own people, sends her daughter to an Ethiopian school and prays daily to an enormous poster of Jesus Christ.

“They always ask me why I am a Christian,” Addisi says. On Fridays, she dresses in white to go to her Orthodox church. “I hurry through the streets,” she explains. “When people ask me where I am going, I say I am going to school.”

Making Ethiopian coffee in her small basement room in a flat building in Sana’a, she explains: “Almost every day people say I am a dog, they ask what I am doing here and [say] that we have changed their country.”

But she also admits: “In Ethiopia we do not treat the Arabs very well eithe

የቀድሞው ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር መለስ ዜናዊ አደርገውት የነበረውን የመጨረሻ ስብሰባ ቃለጉባኤ


ኢትዮ ሚዲያ ፎረም (ኢ.ኤም.ኤፍ) የቀድሞው ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር መለስ ዜናዊ አደርገውት የነበረውን የመጨረሻ ስብሰባ ቃለጉባኤ ነው ያለውን ዶክመንቶች እንዲህ አቅቧል፡፡ የሞሀ ገጽ ከኢ.ኤም.ኤፍ ውጪ ዶክመንቶቹ የጠቅላይ ሚኒስትሩ የመጨረሻ ስብሰባ ቃለጉባኤ ስለመሆናቸው ገለልተኛ ማረጋገጫ አላገኘችም፡፡ — የቀድሞው ጠቅላይ ሚንስትር መለስ ዜናዊ አድርገውት የነበረው የመጨረሻ ለሊት ስብሰባ (10 photos)

የኢትዮጵያ ሙስሊሞች በመላው አገሪቷ እያደረጉት ያለው ሰላማዊ ተቃውሞ ዛሬም ቀጥሎ ውሏል


የኢትዮጵያ ሙስሊሞች በመላው አገሪቷ እያደረጉት ያለው ሰላማዊ ተቃውሞ ዛሬም ቀጥሎ ውሏል፡፡ የዛሬው ተቃውሞ መመሪያ ተቃውሞን በዝምታ በመግለፅ ላይ እንደነበር ድምፃችን ይሰማ አስታውቋል፡፡ — የዝምታ ተቃውሞ (6 photos)