“Nations cannot realize
the full promise of independence until they fully protect the rights of their
people,” Barrack Obama, president of the United States, said on tour to Kenya
and Ethiopia last year. This is ironic, because on that trip he failed to criticize
human rights abuses by the Ethiopian government, which he hailed as
“democratically elected”.
Ethiopians are
very familiar with the government's attempts to oppress any opposition. The
Tigrayan People's Liberation Front (TPLF) government took power in 1991. All
opponents are persecuted as terrorist collaborators.
Today, Ethiopia
stands as a nation in contempt of human rights. According to the Committee to
Protect Journalists, Ethiopia has the second highest number of journalists
forced into exile between 2010 and 2015 after Syria.
Evidence of the
denial of freedom of expression includes the arrest and incarceration of Zone 9
bloggers in 2014. Their name is a reference to the eight divisions of the
infamous Kaliti Prison — suggesting that Ethiopia as whole is effectively the
jail's ninth division. The arrest of the bloggers for publication of news and opinion
pieces that were critical of the government and its repressive entourage
exposed the country's non-existent due process.
Last June,
Andargachew Tsige, the secretary-general of Ginbot 7, a group banned for
allegedly advocating the armed overthrow of the Ethiopian government, was
deported to Ethiopia from Yemen while in transit to Eritrea. This transfer
violated international law prohibiting sending someone to a country where they
are likely to face torture.
Tsige has been
detained without access to family members, legal counsel or consular
representation, which he is entitled to as a British citizen. His detention
location, to date, is unknown.
Terrorizing
those who publically criticize the government's endeavors, however, is not
limited to media outlets. In April 2015, peaceful protests in Oromia over the
government's planned expansion of the Addis Ababa municipal boundary were met
with excessive force, including shootings. Many protesters perished, while
others continue to be detained without charge.
Protest against
displacement from land and family is not new to Ethiopia.
Under the
“villagisation program” 1.5 million rural people have been relocated under the
guise of improving their access to basic services. One example of this forced
displacement is in the Gambella region, for which relocation was accompanied by
insufficient compensation and consultations, and violence including beatings
and arbitrary arrests. This was just in the first-year of the “villagisation
program”.
In subsequent
years, 200,000 indigenous persons from 240,000 hectares of land in the lower
Omo Valley were displaced without compensation or consultation, due to the
government's development of sugar plantations. The clearance of land, sold to
foreign interests, year-in year-out has lined the pockets of the government,
without regard for the region, or the Ethiopian people in general.
Inherent in this
inculcating of terror, is the need to maintain the status quo. This is evident
in the landslide victory in June 2015 of the ruling party and its insipid
allies. The Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front, a rebrand of the
TPLF, overwhelmingly ejected the only opposition parliamentarian from office.
“This result was
completely expected, there is no multi-party system in Ethiopia. It's just
fake,” said Taye Negussie, a sociology professor at Addis Ababa University.
President
Obama's visit to Kenya and Ethiopia was to whitewash a continent.
US collaboration
with the TPLF, a party that has expelled all opposition and is dedicated to a
reign of pure terror, has a long history — Obama and three of his predecessors
have visited.
The people in
the Horn of Africa can live in harmony and in peace, and flourish through the
development of a stable region, without the need for foreign interference.
The mission to
oust the oppressive regime in Ethiopia, is aimed to stop a culture of fear and
suspicion, especially if we want to enter into a serious problem-solving
dialogue.
We need to be
united participants of the political process and not the subjects of a
repressive and terrorizing government, to address our problems genuinely and
solve them definitively.
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