January 8, 2013
WASHINGTON, DC - The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has foiled a murder plot on award-winning journalist Abebe Gellaw.
The Ethiopian Satellite TV (ESAT) said on
Tuesday the suspects were under FBI investigation.
No further details were available.
Award-winning journalist Abebe Gellaw in May
last year chanted defeaning slogans that condemned Ethiopia's late dictator
Meles Zenawi, who died in mysterious circumstances in a Brusese hospital.
The suspects under investigation were not
identified, and no one knows whether they were TPLF undercover agents sent for
the mission to the US or hired-to-kill mercenaries in the US.
The Historic Act: May 18, 2012
Abebe Gellaw, an award-winning journalist on
May 18 struck Prime Minister Meles Zenawi like a lightning by raining down
defeaning chants that condemned the long time dictator.
Once struck, Meles drooped his head over his
slumped body at a high-level Symposium on Global Agriculture and Food Security
opened by none other than US President Barack Obama.
Obama had left but senior US officials,
including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, were there when Abebe committed
the act at the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington, D.C.
The heroic act triggered an immediate
celebration within the Ethiopian Diaspora on the one hand, and anger and
resentment in the Meles Camp whose security agents made death threats against
Abebe Gellaw.
Meles was ironically lecturing about food
security when Abebe, the independent satellite TV (ESAT) program host and
producer, brought the sky crushing down on Meles, telling the startled audience
"Freedom before food!"
Abebe chanted many times with a defeaning
voice: "Meles Zenawi is a dictator! Free Eskinder Nega! Free Political
Prisoners! Food is nothing without freedom! Meles has committed crimes against
humanity! We Need freedom! Freedom! Freedom!" His voice was so powerful he
brought the conference hall to a screeching halt.
Meles has never been humiliated from such
proximity as he lives surrounded by an army of gun-totting security guards that
keep civilians at bay.
"By humiliating Meles with such patriotic
act," one analyst said, " I think Abebe has broken the ice, and more
acts of patriotism would haunt the dictator till his final days in power."
But a nearby Meles security guard threatened
Abebe, "We will kill you!" Abebe told police that one of the security
guards of Meles had threatened him with death.
An act reserved only for the hero, Abebe's
action speaks volumes about the political repression and frustration that has
engulfed Ethiopia for over two decades.
Abebe first challenged Meles Zenawi at a World
Economic Forum in May 2010 in Tanzania, when he grabbed the mike and asked a
lecturing Meles why was then Ethiopia starving under his rule?
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