Saturday 31 May 2014

የመከላከያ ሰራዊት መኮንኖች በአዛዦቻቸው ላይ ውጥረት ፈጥረዋል ጄኔራል አበባው ታደሰን እና የብኣዴን መኮንኖችን ያገለለ ስብሰባ መካሄዱ ጥያቄ አስነስቷል.


ከምኒልክ ሳልሳዊ
mekelakeyaMay 31, 2014 (zehabesha) — በወያኔ የመከላከያ ሰራዊት ውስጥ ውጥረት መፈተሩን ከውስጥ አዋቂ ምንጮች ተሰምቷል:: በወታደራዊ ጥቅማ ጥቅም እና በህገመንግሥቱ ዙሪያ ለተነሱ ጥያቄዎች መልስ የሚሰጥ አካል መጥፋቱ እና ዝም መባሉ ዉስጥ ውስጡን እየተብላላ ያለው የመኮንኖቹ ጥያቄ እንዳይፈነዳ የተሰጋ ሲሆን ከፈነዳ ሰራዊት ለሶስት ቦታ እንደሚከፈል ለምንሊክ ሳልሳዊ ምንጮቹ ጠቁመዋል::
መኮንኖቹ በትምህርት በስራ እና በማእረግ እድገት በቤተሰብ እንክብካቤ በደሞዝ ጭማሪ እና በሕገመንግስታዊ የህዝብ መብቶች ዙሪያ ጥያቄ ያነሱ ሲሆን ወታደራዊ ጥቅማ ጥቅሞች ለአንድ ብሄር አባላት ብቻ ተመድበው እየተሰራባቸው ነው ከተማ ውስጥ ታጥቀው የመሸጉ እና ህዝብን እያጠቁ የሚገኙት የአንድ ብሄር አባላት ናቸው እንዱሁም ከሃገራዊ ጥቅም ይልቅ የፓርቲ ጥቅም እየተስተዋለ ነው: ወታደሩ የጦር ሳይንስን እና ዲሲፕሊን በጎደለው መልኩ እየተስተዳደረ ነው በሰራዊቱ እና በሃገሪቱ ሁሉ ወቅታዊ ጉዳዮችን ሽፋን እና ማዘናጊያ በማድረግ የሙስና እና የዘረፋ መስፋፋት መልስ ሊያገኝ ይገባዋል ጄኔራል መኮንኖች አላቸው የተባለው ንብረት ይጣራ በሃገሪቱ የፖለቲካዊ እና የኢኮኖሚ ጥያቄዎች ሊመለሱ ይገባል የሚሉ እና ተመሳሳይነት ያላቸውን ጥያቄዎች ማንሳታቸው ታውቋል::የመከላከያ አባላቱ በኑሮ ውድነት እና በተቃዋሚዎች ህገመንግስታዊ መብቶች ላይ ያነሱት ጥያቄ አዛዦቹን ያስደነገጠ ከመሆኑም በላይ በአንድ ብሄር ላይ የተመሰረተ አስተዳደር እስከመቼ የሚለውም ጥያቄ መመለስ አለበት በሚል የእግር እሳት እየሆነባቸው ነው::
ይህ ከዚህ ቀደም የተጀመረው እና አሁንም በሰሜን እዝ እና በምስራቅ እዝ የተከሰተው የሰራዊቱ ህገመንግስታዊ ጥያቄ እና የጥቅማ ጥቅም አቤቱታ በመላው ሃገሪቱ ተስፋፍቶ በሁሉም የሰራዊት እዞች ውስጥ ጥያቄው መነሳቱን ምንጮቹ አመልክተዋል:: በተለያዩ ጊዜያት እየተንከባለለ የመጣው ይህ የሰራዊቱ አቤቱታ እጅግ አደገኛ አዝማሚያ እያሳየ ሲሆን በዘረኝነት ላይ የተመሰረተ አስተዳደር እንዲወገድ እና ህገመንግስታዊ መብቶች እንዲከበሩ ጥያቄዎች ገፍተው መምጣታቸው ሲታወቅ ከፍተኛ የሕወሓት ጄኔራሎች በየቀኑ ካለማቋረጥ ምስጢራዊ ስብሰባዎችን እያደረጉ ከመሆኑም በላይ ከየእዙ የሚመጣላቸው ሪፖርት መፍታት የሚቻልበትን ጉዳይ እየተወያየ መሆናቸውን ከዚህ ቀደም ምንጮቹ ገልጸው ነበር::
ሌ/ጄ ሳሞራ የኑስ ጡረታ ወቶ በምትኩ የብኣዴን ሜ/ጄ አበባው ይተካሉ ሲባል ወያኔ በድንገት የመለስ የቅርብ ሰው የነበሩትን እና በአንድ ወቅት የአማር ክልል አቶ አያሌው ጎበዜን ላንቻ አከባቢ በመኖሪያ ቤታቸው ለ3 ወር አግተው ሲያሰቃዩ የነበሩት ሌ/ጄ ዮሃንስ ገብረመስቀልን በማእረግ ሾሞ ሳሞራ የኑስን ለመተካት የሚያደርገውን ሩጫ የብኣዴን አባላት መቃወማቸውን ተከትሎ ጄኔራል አባባውን ጨምሮ የብኣዴን መኮንኖችን ያገለለ የሕወሃት አባላት የሆኑ ጄኔራሎች ብቻ የተሳተፉበት በትግሪኛ የተመራ ስብሰባ መደረጉን ውስጥ አዋቂ ምንጮቹ ተናግረዋል:: በስብሰባው ላይ ቀሪ ከፍተኛ ባለማእረግ መኮንኖች እና የመምሪያ ሃላፊዎች ለምን አልተሳተፉም የሚል ጥያቄ ከአንድ ስማቸው ካልተጠቀሰ ብርጋዴር ጄኔራል መነሳቱን ምንሊክ ሳልሳዊ ምንጮቹ ጠቁመዋል::
ይህ ስብሰባ ዋና አትኩሮቱ የነበረው በብሄር አደና ላይ ሲሆን እንደ ምንጮቹ መረጃ በአማራ እና በኦሮሞ መኮንኖች እየተመራ ያለውን የለውጥ ጥያቄ በማክሸፉ ዙሪያ እንደነበር እና አሁንም በስፋት የሕወሓትን የፓርቲ አቋም የሚቀበሉ እና የጥቅም ተጋሪ የሆኑ ሰዎችን ለመሾም የታቀደ ሲሆን እንዲሁም ከፖለስ ሰራዊት በከፍተኛ የማእረግ ሹመት ወደ ጦር ሰራዊቱ ለማምጣት የታሰበ ሲሆን በወታደራዊ ደህንነት ዙሪያ ሌላ ተጨማሪ ሰልጣኞችን ከፖሊስ ወስዶ በማሰልጠን ወደ ሰራዊት ማዘዋወር የሚሉ ውይይቶች ተካሂደውበታል:: አሁንም ስብሰባው የቀጠለ ሲሆን ተጨማሪ መረጃዎችን እንለቃለን::

Thursday 29 May 2014

Haala yeroo ammaa irratti hubannoo waldaa Hawaasa Oromoo magaalaa Wellington (New Zealand) fi waamicha Oromummaa.


Waldaa Hawaasa Oromoo Wellington, New Zealand | Caamsaa 29, 2014
Nuti Oromoonni biyya New Zealand magaalaa Wellington jiraannu biyyaa fi mirga umamaa sarbamuu ummata keenyaa irraa kan ka’e dararaan motummaa abbaa irree Ethiopia ummata keenya irraan gahaa jiru hedduu nu dhukkubsa. Keessattu dhiheenya kana maqaa ‘Integrated Addis Ababa master plan’ jedhun Lafaa fi Magaaloti Godinaa addaa Oromiyaa jala jiran magaalaa ‘Addis Ababa’ ykn Finfinnee jala galchuuf motummaan abbaa irree kun karoora karoorfate mormuun hiriira nagaa barattoonni guutuu Oromiyaa keessaatti bahaniin ajjechaan, reebichi fi hidhaan barattootaa fi ummata Keenya irratti raawwatee fi raawwachaa jiru hedduu nu laaleessa. Haa ta’uti Barattoonni fi Ummaatni Keenya kabajamuu mirga abbaa biyyummaa keenyaaf jeettanii gotummaan motummaa abbaa irree dura dhaabbachuun keessan hedduu nu boonse.
Akkasumas maqaa ‘Integrated Addis Ababa master plan’ jedhamu kanaan Oromiyaa iddoo lamattti muruuf karoorri motummaa abbaa irree kanaan hujii irra oolfamuuf deemu hedduu nu yaaddeesse. Sababaan isaas jireenya biyya Oromoo Oromiyaa fi Oromummaa dhabamsiisuuf waan fuulleeffateefi. Walumaagalatti maqaa ‘Integrated Addis Ababa master plan’ jedhamu kanaan wareega qaaliidhaan adeemsa Bilisummaa fi Walabummaaf godhamaa Jiru keessatti mirgoota haga ammaa arganne haquuf kan aggaamame ta’un isaa hedduu nu yaaddeessa.
Sagantaa motummaa abbaa irree kana irratti mormii qaban hiriira nagaa bahun sagalee isaanii waan dhageessisaniif qofa ajjeechaa, reebinsaa fi hidhaa barattotaa fi ummata keenya irratti raawwatme nutis biyya jirrutti hiriira nagaa bahuun sagalee mormii dhageessifanneerra. Lubbuu Lammii keenyaa harka motummaa Abbaa irreetti dabree fi Lammii keenya motummaa kanaan dararaan irra gahaa jiru walitti qabamuun gaddaan yaadanneerra. Miidhaa Oromiyaa keessatti Lammii Keenya irra gahaa jiruu haga tokko yeroofis ta’u hadhaadhiyyuuf haga humna keenyaa maallaqa walitti qabaa jirra. Haa ta’uti biyya dhablummaa, bara braan ajjeechaa fi dararaa motummaa abbaa irree kanaan nurra gahu furmaata maayyii itti gochuuf maaltu mala isa jedhu yeroo lama walitti deebine mari’anne. Marii keenya kana booda murtiilee irra geenyee fi waamicha Lammii keenyaaf qabnu akka itti’aanutti dhiheessina;
A) Ummatni keenya Bilisummaa isaa gonfatee Oromiyaa Walaboomte keessa jiraachuuf qabsoo karaa Nagaa, qabsoo hidhannoo, fi qabsoo biyyoota alaatti godhamu waliin qindeessun gaggeessun murteessaa ta’uu hubanne. Keessattuu Oromiyaa keessatti qabsoon hidhannoo gaggeeffamu qindomina haaraan jabaatee utubamuun hedduu murteessaa ta’uu Isaa hubanne. Haluma kanaan qabsoo kallattii sadeenin karaa Nagaa, Hidhannoo fi biyyoota alaatti gaggeeffamu irraa qooda fudhachuuf murteeffanne,
B) Qabsoo kallattii sadeen olitti tuqneen gaggeessuuf dinagdeen qooda guddaa akka qabu hubanne. Haaluma kanaan buusii dhaabbataa gaaddisa Jaarmayaa Hawaasaa qabnu jalatti bufachuuf murteeffanne,
C) Nuti Oromoonni Oromiyaa ala jirru Beekkumsa, Sagalee fi Dinagdee qabnu waaltaa tokkko jalatti yoo qindeeffanne irra bu’a qabeessa ta’u isaa hubanne. Haaluma kanaan sadarkaa duraatti Oromoon biyya dhablummaa fi gidiraan Oromiyaa keessatti Lammii Keenya irra gahaa jiru kan isinitti dhagahamu hundi naannoo jirtanitti akka ijaaramtan kabjaa Oromummaatin waamicha isiniif dhiheessina. Itti aansunis Jaarmotin Hawaasaa Oromiyaa ala jiran hundi agobara tokko jalatti walitti dhufnee akka ijaaramnu waamicha Oromummaa insiniif dhiheessina. Isa kana milkeessuf carraaqqin Oromoo hundaa murteessaa ta’uyyu keessattu akkuma falmaa Oromiyaa keessatti gaggeeffamaa jiru adda durummaan abdii Keenya kan ta’an Qeerron gaggeessaa jiran Qeerron Oromiyaa ala jirtanis adda durummaan gaggeessun dirqama seenaan isin irra kaahe ta’uu hubattani dirqama kana akka baatan kabajaa Oromummaatin waamicha isiniif goona,
D) Dhaabbileen Oromoo maqaa Oromootin dhaabbattani jirttan hundi garaagarummaa isin giddu jiru dhiphisuudhaan rakkoo yeroo ammaa  Uummanni Oromoo keessa jiru fi fuldureen Oromummaa fi Oromiyaa balaa jala jiraachuu Hubattanii Oromummaa fi Oromiyaa Walaba taate ijaaruu irratti akka waliin dhaabbattan kabajaa Oromummaatiin isin gaafanna,
E) Waggaa tokko dura ABO- Shanee Gumii fi ABO – Qaama Cehumsaa adda fotoqquu isaanitiif sababaalee ta’an furmaata itti gochun walitti deebi’anii ABO tokkicha waliin ijaaruuf waliigalle jedhanii labsuun ni yaadatama. Labsiin kun qabsoo laaffate deebisee jabeessa abdii jedhuun Oromoota gammadan keessaa nutis tokko. Haa ta’uti waliigalteen kun yeroo gabaabaa keessatti xumurama jedhamee hogganoota gara lameeninu irra deddeebi’ame ibsamus haga ammaa xumura otoo hinargatiin jira. Haalli  kun dararaa ummata keenya irra gahaa jiruu fi tattaaffii diinni Oromummaa fi Oromiyaa dhabamsiisuf godhaa jiru waliin yeroo madaallu hedduu nu gaddisiisas nu yaaddessas. Kanuma irraa ka’un hogganni gara lameenuu akkuma ibsa keessan duraa keessatti waadaa sentanitti hatattamaan mooraa ABO iddoo tokkotti akka deebiftan kabajaa Oromummaatin isin gaafanna. Akkasumas hoggana bara dheeraaf qabsoo kana keessatti qooda fudhachaa turtaniif jaalalli fi kabajaan isiniif qabnu ol’aanaa ta’us qabsoo Bilisummaa fi Walabummaaf goonu qindomina haarawaan gaggeessun keessattu qabsoo hidhannoo jabeessun hedduu murteessaa akka ta’e isinis akka hubattan ni amanna. Kanaaf akkuma gaafa dargaggummaa keessanii qabsoon isin kaadhimmatte har’as qabsoon hidhannoo hoggana Dargaggummaa qabu humna haarawaan utubamuu feesisa. Isinis  kana hubattanii ba’aa hogganummaa yeroo dheeraaf ofirratti baadhattan Dargaggotti akka dabarsitan kabajaa Oromummaatin isin gaaffanna. Nuti karaa keenyaan qabsoo karaa hidhannootin godhamu daran jabeessuu irratti tattaaffii godhamuuf qooda nurraa eeggamu gumaachuuf qophii ta’uu keenya ibsaa Lammiin keenya marti milkaayina kanaaf akka waliin dhaabbannu kabajaa Oromummaatiin waamicha isiniif gonna,
F) Oromoonni bulchiinsa Oromiyaa keessatti sadarkaa adda addaattti tajaajila kennaa jirtan, miseensoonni fi hogganoonni OPDO, miseensonni Humna Polisa Oromiyaa fi miseensonni waraana  biyyaa  kanneen murannoodhaan dorsisa, hujii irraa ari’amun, hidhamuuni fi ajjeechaan gara jabiinaa Halagaa biyya keenya qabatee jirun nurra gahuu mala jettanii otoo hinsodaanne of kenniinsaan  karaa adda addaatiin Sabaa fi Biyya keessaniif dhaabbattan kabajaa Oromummaa isiniif qabna. Akkasumas warri isinitti fakkaatee yokan dantaa yerootiif jettanii diina Ummata keessanitti rorrisaa, qabeenya biyya keessanii saamaa, Oromummaa fi Oromiyaa balleessuf hojjataa Jiru wajjin dhaabbattan haa turuu haa dafuu Halagaan har’a waliin dhaabbattan qabsoo Sabni keessan tokkummaan godhuun akka buqqa’u hubattanii yeroon isin Ummata keessan wajjiin dhaabbattani mirga abbaa biyyummaa Oromoo deebisuuf falmattan amma Jenna. Asirratti makmaaksa Oromoo kan Qotiyyoolee sadeen Adii, Diimaa fi Gurraachaa isin yaadachiisuu feena. Bineensi Qotiyyoo Adii dura nyaate Diimaa ittiaansee Gurraachas hinhambisne. Humna Qotiyyoolee sanii bittinneesse dabareen nyaachuuf tokkoo isaaniitti waan firoome haa fakkaatu malee Bineensaaf sadeenuu Foonuma nyaatamu qabani. Alagaan har’a biyya Keenya harkaa qabus Oromoo hunda ija tokkoon akka ilaalu hubadhaa. Dabareedhaan nu nyachuuf yoo ta’e Male Oromoo kamiifu mararfannoo akka hinqabne hubadhaa. Kanaafuu kabajaa umamaan qabnu gonfanne biyya keenya irratti nagaa fi qananiin jiraachuuf nutis akka Oromootti waliin dhaabbannee akka falmannu kabjaa Oromummaatin waamicha keenya isiniif dhiheessina.

Ethiopia tightens its grip on media ahead of 2015 elections.


images_2May 28, 2014 (World News Publishing Focus) — “The current regime follows this pattern: immediately before elections, they start to muzzle every critical voice,” protests Endalk Chala, a co-founder and member of the Ethiopian blogging collective called “Zone 9” – a proverbial reference to Ethiopia’s situation beyond the eight zones that divide the notorious Kaliti prison, where many journalists and political prisoners are kept behind bars.
While pursuing his doctorate in the United States, Endalk recently saw six of his colleagues arrested along with three independent journalists on April 25 and 26. The detainees face charges related to accepting assistance from a foreign human rights group and “inciting violence” through social media, though no formal charges have been filed. The youngest of the collective, 25 year old Atnaf Berahane, was reportedly tortured during police investigations.
Launching their blogging collective in May 2012, the Zone 9 members had visited fellow journalists in jail and advocated for the respect of the constitution and against censorship through several online campaigns. “Our language was highly polished and polite. We did not want to provoke the government and invite them to arrest us, because we wanted to remain outside the prison and work a little bit so that we could start a discussion,” explains Endalk.
But pressures to silence the bloggers escalated; even after they decided to go offline in September 2013, they claim to have been followed. Their decision to re-engage with the online platform sparked an ultimate backlash: “In April we met and decided that even though we stopped, these people were still targeting us. So we decided to write again and wrote a comeback blog. We gave our reasons for our disappearance to the public. Then exactly three days later, all of them were detained.”
Only a month later on 26 May, Elias Gebru, the editor-in-chief of Ethiopia’s leading independent magazine Enqu, was arrested for publishing an opinion piece on the controversial Aanolee Martyrs memorial monument. Elias Gebru, who was a vocal advocate for the rights of jailed journalists, was denied the right to bail pending further investigation.
As the 2015 general elections approach, the recent arrests send a ruthless reminder to those critical of the regime led by the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). The country’s record for jailing journalists during such periods does not fare well. In the immediate aftermath of the 2005 elections, more than 20 newspapers were closed, and journalists arrested and convicted on charges such as treason and inciting violence.
The International Press Institute (IPI) notes in a 2008 Watch List Report that since the 2005 elections, “there has been a steadily deteriorating relationship between the private media and the government leading to a complete breakdown in relations.” During the late Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s rule, CPJ reported that more than 70 newspapers were forced to close because of government pressure.
Since Prime Minister Zenawi’s death in August 2012, the government’s stance has remained unchanged in its intransigence towards the media. However, there is an atmosphere of growing unrest under Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, who assumed office until the end of Zenawi’s term in 2015. Endalk observes that “Since the death of the late Prime Minister Zenawi you can see that people have started to complain, and there is this public demonstration that was impossible before, because he was so controlling and established this system. But after his death, it is a blow to the system.”
Recent demonstrations have been met with brutal violence. Student protests in late April over the new master plan to expand the capital in the Oromia region claimed nine lives in clashes with government forces according to official figures, while other sources have reported up to 40 deaths in all regions. Given tight restrictions on independent media however, it has been difficult to monitor and report on these events. Human Rights Watchstated how “the recent crackdown in Oromia highlights the risks protesters face and the inability of the media and human rights groups to report on important events.”
“When you work as a journalist here you have to expose many things: there is the human rights issue, you can talk about those who are still in jail… And when you report on such critical issues it is obvious the authorities are not happy,” comments Dawit Kebede, editor of the online journal Awramba Times, which used to run as a newspaper from 2008 to 2011. In reporting the student protests in Oromia, Dawit deplored how hard it is to gain access to government officials and opposition groups to investigate issues on the ground and ask questions beyond official statements.
Dawit Kebede, a 2010 Committee to Protect Journalists International Press Freedom Awardee, was among those journalists detained in the aftermath of the contested 2005 elections. After spending nearly three years in prison each on charges of “inciting and conspiring to commit outrages to the constitutional order,” he was released in 2007 on a presidential pardon, amid strong international pressure from the United States and the United Kingdom.
The absence of a respectful discourse between the ruling party and opposition groups has created a heavily polarised media environment where private media struggles to report on its own terms. “Such polarisation has created a certain kind of media. You have to be either pro-government or you have to be against the government. Our political culture means that you have to be either 0 or 100, there’s no 50,” observes Dawit. “When you choose to exercise a profession with such political polarisation one way or another that could be a cause to be labelled as anti-government, to be labelled as a terrorist, and to be labelled as someone who commits high treason.”
On the other hand, Endalk comments how journalism is often perceived by those in power as government reporting, creating a “development ideology” effectively using their media: “when you are a journalist you have to build a very good image, build a country brand, not to tarnish the image of the country by talking about bad things, by talking about lack of good governance. This would tarnish the image of the country and the government. So when you are being told to do so you are forced to be an activist.”
Legislation has further institutionalised control of the media and has been used to override existing norms regulating the media in Ethiopia in the name of security and stability. The Mass Media and Freedom of Information law ratified in July 2008 legalised certain restrictive practices, allowing prosecutors to summarily stop any publication deemed a threat to public order or national security, and increasing the punishment for defamation (CPJ 2008). The number of journalists in jail or sentenced in absentia rose especially after the passing of the Anti-Terrorism Law in 2009, which warns that anyone who publishes information that could incite readers to commit acts of terrorism risks being jailed for between 10 to 20 years.
While the jailing of journalists and political opponents has drawn local and international outcry, overt political interference has also been accompanied by a series of measures to thwart independent media and alternative views. A recent CPJ blog notes for example how a draft distribution system could subtly but effectively silence any critical publication ahead of May 2015 elections, according to local journalists “they aim to ensure that private newspapers and magazines are distributed through one company with links to the ruling party.”
In a country where elections have come to be seen as instruments of political control rather than devices of liberalisation, the media strategy employed so far does not fare well for press freedom and the ability of local media to report on critical issues such as human rights violations. The regime has not only sought to contain potential destabilising effects of the media, but has also crafted a system highly in tune with the government’s developmental rhetoric. With China emerging as a new ally and a “model” for a particular kind of media strategy, the Ethiopian government might not be so inclined to adopt press freedoms espoused by its traditional Western donors.
But in using repressive tactics in a highly polarised environment, it has also forced many journalists to become more entrenched in their activism, as they continue to push for more open discussions on democratic values and media freedoms. As Endalk notes, “You have to be very patient with the process and even though there are no platforms visibly available for Ethiopians to express their views, we still need to fight.”

Wednesday 28 May 2014

People of Sidama Globally Marks the 12th Anniversary of Looqqe Massacre.

On May 24, 2002, 69 Sidama civilians killed and around 250 wounded when they met with the regimes killing machine at a peaceful and non-violent demonstration in Hawassa protesting the regimes decision to remove the administrative right of the capital Hawassa from Sidama to the federal government
USPFJ urges the Sidama people to forge unity with like-minded peoples, nations and nationalities to fight the current regime and bring those responsible for masterminding the massacre of the Sidamas, the Oromos, the Ogadenia, Gambela and other civilians to justice.
USPFJ urges the Sidama people to forge unity with like-minded peoples, nations and nationalities to fight the current regime and bring those responsible for masterminding the massacre of the Sidamas, the Oromos, the Ogadenia, Gambela and other civilians to justice.
By United Sidama Parties for Freedom and Justice (USPFJ)
Press Release
Since 1890s, the Sidama nation has endured various massacres of unimaginable scales most of which had genocidal intents. Time and again, the civilians of the Sidama people as a nation were deliberately targeted and slaughtered by the successive northern led regimes for no apparent reasons, but for demanding their fundamental rights. The most worst and abhorring crime against humanity in recent memory among the others is the May 24, 2002’s massacre of Sidama civilians at Looqqe village. This particular massacre is entirely peculiar & inhumane crime ever committed against the Sidama nation by the successive rulers for the fact that for the first time in Ethiopian Empire’s history the empire had a legal document known as Constitution which guarantees nations and nationalities of the country to peacefully and non-violently demand their rights without being criminalised and punished for their peaceful actions; regardless of which the Sidama civilians were slaughtered in broad day light. On May 24, 2002, the regime has indiscriminately massacred hundreds of Sidama civilians who’re demanding their rights with the manner which is stated in its constitution in black and white. The civilians were inhumanely responded with live ammunition of the regime’s army.
The Sidama civilians who sought justice were told that bullet is the only justice the current regime can give to Sidama nation. The Sidama civilians who were massacred were unequivocally shown that the current regime isn’t there to protect their rights, but to keep the repressive regime in power with all possible means. The Sidama nation as others oppressed nations demanded their rights in a civilised manner to be responded with barbarism only comparable with medieval time witch hunts and their inhumane killings. To add anguish to their already harrowing situations, the families of the Sidama civilians’ massacre victims were obliged to collect the bodies of massacre Sidama civilians on the third and fourth day of post Looqqe massacre after being coerced to sign consent stating that the killed Sidama civilians were responsible for their own death.
The late PM Meles Zenawi has assigned Melese Marimo (who has voted for Sidama civilians massacre on the eve of their killing to lead his fake so called independent investigation to please its Western donors who have demanded him to do so with international pressure resulted from Sidama Diaspora campaign), the action equivalent to laughing at slaughtered Sidama civilians. Over 15, 000 Sidama civilians were indiscriminately imprisoned after the aftermaths of Sidama Looqqe massacre and remained in jail for months and others are still languishing in prisons. Among the confirmed 69 Sidama civilians massacred on the day, several dead bodies were left to be devoured by hyenas as the families of massacred Sidama civilians’ were disallowed collecting the bodies of their beloved ones. Over 250 civilians were seriously injured.
On May 24, 2014, the Sidama nation with its friends at global level marked the 12th commemorative anniversary of this, one of the darkest days in Sidama nation’s history as a day of utter sorrow.  The cause for which the Sidama civilians were slaughtered remain unanswered as are those who have premeditated, ordered and the massacre, monitored the reactions of the Sidama nation remain at large. The Sidama life become much worse than it was during pre-Looqqe massacre. The regime deliberately and systematically impoverishes the nation. The regime, which is unable to address the democratic rights of its citizens can’t have moral authority to stay in power. All possible means of peacefully resolving matters and bringing those responsible to independent justice for the massacre of civilians remain remote.
Besides, the USPFJ urges the current regime to stop its inhuman actions to Sidama nation and stop the current killing of Oromo civilians who have demanded their constitutional rights. We also urge the current regime to abide to international covenant on protecting the fundamental rights of citizens and bring those are responsible for masterminding the massacre of the Sidamas, the Oromo, the Ogadenia, Gambela and  other civilians to an independent justice observed by internationally recognised institutions.
Finally, we also urge the Sidama nation to push with their constitutional demands to its political and socio-economic rights both independently and forging unity with likeminded peoples, nations and nationalities.
We salute the Sidama heroes and heroines who have paid ultimate sacrifices with their precious life for the just cause of the Sidama nation. We also solemnly promise that we never rest until justice is being served on behalf of the cause for which you have sacrificed your lives and until those who have massacred you are brought to justice. At this very critical moment for the Oromo nation whose civilians are recently being slaughtered demanding similar rights, we also send once again our heartfelt condolences. The situation in all regions is dire. We are witnessing the fact that on daily basis the regime is slaughtering civilians in all regions; thus unity at this critical moment is paramount. We also send our condolences to the families of the massacred civilians in various regions of the Country.
Our unforgotten Looqqe massacre victims, your soul may rest in peace and we never forget your sacrifices!! The Oromo civilians who have been recently massacred, may your soul rest in peace. The civilians of others nations and nationalities who have been massacred in all regions, may your souls rest in peace as we never stop the fight until justice is being served on behalf of all victims!
United Sidama Parties for Freedom and Justice (USPFJ),

Friday 23 May 2014

Ethiopia crackdown on student protests taints higher education success.


Western backers of the Ethiopian education system should not ignore reports of violent clashes on university campuses
By Paul O’Keeffe
Oromia, Ethiopia, where at least three dozen people were reportedly shot dead by security forces during student protests
Oromia, Ethiopia, where at least three dozen people were reportedly shot dead by security forces during student protests
May 22, 2014 (The Guardian) — Over the past 15 years, Ethiopia has become home to one of the world’s fastest-growing higher education systems. Increasing the number of graduates in the country is a key component of the government’s industrialisation strategy and part of its ambitious plan to become a middle-income country by 2025. Since the 1990s, when there were just two public universities, almost 30 new institutions have sprung up.
On the face of it, this is good news for ordinary Ethiopians. But dig a little deeper and tales abound of students required to join one of the three government parties, with reports of restricted curricula, classroom spies and crackdowns on student protests commonplace at universities.
Nowhere has this been more evident than in Ambo in Oromia state. On 25 April, protests against government plans to bring parts the town under the administrative jurisdiction of the capital, Addis Ababa, began at Ambo University. By the following Tuesday, as protests spread to the town and other areas of Oromia, dozens of demonstrators had been killed in clashes with government forces, according to witnesses.
As Ethiopia experiences rapid economic expansion, its government plans to grow the capital out rather than up, and this involves annexing parts of the surrounding Oromia state. An official communique from the government absolved it of all responsibility for the clashes, claiming that just eight people had been killed and alleging that the violence had been coordinated by a few rogue anti-peace forces. The government maintains that it is attempting to extend Addis Ababa’s services to Oromia through its expansion of the city limits.
However, Oromia opposition figures tell a different story. On 2 May, the nationalist organisation the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) issued a press release that condemned the “barbaric and egregious killing of innocent Oromo university students who have peacefully demanded the regime to halt the displacement of Oromo farmers from their ancestral land, and the inclusion of Oromo cities and surrounding localities under Finfinnee [Addis Ababa] administration under the pretext of development”. The Addis Ababa regime dismisses the OLA as a terrorist organisation.
While news of the killing of unarmed protesters has caused great concern among many Ethiopians, there has been little coverage overseas. The government maintains strict control over the domestic media; indeed, it frequently ranks as one of the world’s chief jailers of journalists, and it is not easy to come by independent reporting of events in the country.
Nevertheless, the government’s communique does run contrary to reports by the few international media that did cover the attacks in Ambo, which placed the blame firmly on government forces.
The BBC reported that a witness in Ambo saw more than 20 bodies on the street, while Voice of America (VOA) reported that at least 17 protesters were killed by “elite security forces” on three campuses in Oromia. Local residents maintain that the figure [of those killed] was much higher.
These reports, while difficult to corroborate, have been backed up by Human Rights Watch, which issued a statement saying that “security forces have responded [to the protests] by shooting at and beating peaceful protesters in Ambo, Nekemte, Jimma, and other towns with unconfirmed reports from witnesses of dozens of casualties”. One university lecturer said he had been “rescued from the live ammunition”, and that it was the “vampires – the so-called federal police” who fired on the crowds.
The Ethiopian government likes to trumpet its higher education system to its western aid backers as a crowning success of its development policy. As billions in foreign aid are spent annually on Ethiopia, the west must be more cognisant of the fact that this money helps reinforce a government which cuts down those who dare to speak out against it.
Inevitably, continued support for such an oppressive regime justifies its brutal silencing of dissent. Yes, the higher education system has grown exponentially over the past 15 years but the oppression and killing of innocent students cannot be considered an achievement. Any system which crushes its brightest should not be considered a success.

Paul O’Keeffe is a doctoral fellow at La Sapienza University of Rome, where he focuses on the higher education system in Ethiopia

Wednesday 21 May 2014

Diaspora speaks for deliberately silenced Oromos.

Ethiopian government responds to UN review

By Amy Bergquist, The Advocates for Human Rights
7May 20, 2014 (Twin Cities Daily Planet) — When students in Ethiopia started protesting last month against the Ethiopian Government’s proposal to annex territory from the state of Oromia to facilitate the expansion of the capital city Addis Ababa, diasporans mobilized to show their solidarity. As federal “Agazi” security forces cracked down, opening fire on peaceful protesters, placing students on lock-down in their dormitories, and conducting mass arrests, Oromos around the world staged rallies and hunger strikes to raise international awareness and to call on the governments of the countries where they live to withhold aid and put pressure on the Ethiopian Government to respect human rights.
In the first three posts in this series, I discussed the Oromo diaspora’s mobilization to shed light on the human rights violations on the ground, the sharp criticism the government of Ethiopia faced during the Universal Periodic Review on May 6, and the steps the Oromo diaspora in Minnesota is taking to show solidarity and press for accountability in Ethiopia. This final post tells some of the stories of Oromos in the diaspora who have spoken with friends and family on the ground in Oromia about events over the past three weeks, and also covers the Ethiopian government’s formal response to the UN review and offers some suggestions for next steps.
Not “voiceless,” but deliberately silenced by Ethiopian government
“We need to be a voice for the voiceless” has been a common refrain from the diaspora. But in my view, the students and others who are protesting in Ethiopia are far from voiceless. They have been bravely marching, placing their lives and academic careers on the line, to express their opposition to the government’s “Integrated Development Master Plan for Addis Ababa.” In the words of 2004 Sydney Peace Prize winnerArundhati Roy, “there’s really no such thing as the ‘voiceless.’ There are only the deliberately silenced, or the preferably unheard.”
The government controls the media and telecommunications in Ethiopia, effectively placing a stranglehold on open debate and criticism of the government. Historically, efforts by western media, including CNN, to cover events on the ground in Ethiopia have been stymied. The government’s repression and intimidation also create obstacles for independent journalists trying to cover the story from outside the country. I spoke with one U.S.-based reporter who covers the Horn of Africa, and he explained that when he tried to confirm casualty reports, hospital personnel in Ethiopia refused to speak to him, fearing for their jobs.
omn-main-logoThe Oromia Media Network (OMN), a Minnesota-based satellite news network that has been covering the student protests, offering commentary, and dedicating attention to the diaspora response, reported that on May 2, the Ethiopian government blocked access to its website, and on May 13, began jamming OMN’s satellite transmission. Oromos in Ethiopia have turned to the OMN Facebook page, urging, “Please send us a new frequency.”
The Ethiopian government even attempts to silence social media. One Oromo messaged me on Facebook from an internet cafe in Addis Ababa, but he said that he didn’t feel safe going into too much detail, fearing that the government or people in the cafe were monitoring his communications.
He’s not being paranoid, and the OMN experience is nothing new. The government has used its monopoly control over telecommunications to conduct surveillance of regime opponents, as well as to block websites of opposition groups, media sites, and bloggers. Speaking of bloggers critical of the Ethiopian government, since The Advocates for Human Rights launched this blog series on May 5, I’ve been pleased to see a huge spike in visitors from Ethiopia. We’ve had over 700 views from Ethiopia, and so far there’s no sign that the government is blocking access to The Advocates Post. We’ll keep our fingers crossed.
On May 5, I had a conversation with an Oromo in London who had just spoken with his sister, who the day before had fled to Addis Ababa from Madawalabu University in Bale Robe. She reported that the military had started beating students who were demonstrating at the university. She told her brother that students were unable to get the word out because cell phone and internet service had been turned off. She saw forces kill one student, but feared that there were more casualties. She was able to share the news with her brother only because she had fled 430 kilometers (267 miles) to the capital, where the phones hadn’t been shut off.
New reports that Ethiopian government is inciting inter-ethnic violence
I’ve read reports on social media that the Ethiopian government is provoking inter-ethnic violenceby spreading false reports of attacks and planned attacks. With no independent media, it’s safe to conclude that any reports on official media outlets in Ethiopia reflect the government’s efforts to shape perceptions of reality. When a vacuum exists where independent media should be, rumors—some likely fed by the government—can create fear and misunderstanding.
Flags of the Oromo and Ogaden people were on display at the May 9 rally in St. Paul, Minnesota
Flags of the Oromo and Ogaden people were on display at the May 9 rally in St. Paul, Minnesota           
Outside Ethiopia, diasporans are actively combating efforts to divide opposition voices along ethnic lines. At the three-day rally at the Minnesota State Capitol in the United States, flags of the Ogaden ethnic group were proudly displayed beside Oromo flags. One of the chants was “Oromo, Ogaden, united, we’ll never be defeated!” And Oromos in the diaspora are urging their compatriots to target their protests at the Ethiopian Government, rather than at members of particular ethnic groups.
Diaspora ties are a lifeline for getting the word out
Right: Federal “Agazi” security forces at Jimma University, where some of the first student protests took place. Photo credit: @mt21bmn, twitter.
The Ethiopian government is incapable of eradicating the close ties between the Oromo diaspora and Oromos in Ethiopia, and those ties have become a lifeline to get the word out. Here’s just some of what I’ve heard:
  • One Oromo family living in Minnesota has been sponsoring a student who attends Ambo University, helping his family cover his tuition and fees. On May 1, the Minnesota family received a tragic call. The student had been peacefully protesting with his friends and dormitory roommates when police opened fire, gunning him down. The friends called his family in Oromia to report that he had been killed, and the family called the sponsors in Minnesota to share the sad news. The report from the student’s friends was critical, because the government hadn’t released the young man’s body to his family.
  • Another Oromo had spoken with family members who directly witnessed events in Ambo. They reported seeing at least 30 student protesters killed. They also told of many local, Oromo police officers refusing to participate in the violence, and most of those officers were taken to jail en masse. Another Oromo reported a similar situation for Oromo police officers in the town of Nekemte.
  • I spoke in person with an Oromo who has a personal connection to Ambo University. He requested that I not share the nature of that connection, for fear that it would place people in danger. A few days after the shootings, he heard from friends in Ambo that people had just discovered three bodies of protesters who had been discarded in the woods adjoining the university.
  • I spoke with another Oromo living in the United Kingdom who said he had been following the situation in Oromia closely through social media. He spoke with his family in Bale Robe on May 5, who reported that on May 2, they saw security forces haul away two trucks full of student demonstrators. People in Bale Robe don’t know where the students were taken. And his family also reported that in a village nearby Bale Robe, villagers had risen up because of the crackdown on students, prompting security forces to take over the village on the night of May 1 and beat the villagers. One pupil who fled to Bale Robe had reported what had happened. Another Oromo living in the United States reported that 40 people who were injured at Madawalabu University and in Bale Robe were hospitalized, some in critical condition. He also reported that federal security forces were searching homes in neighboring villages to try to hunt down students who had participated in the protests.
  • A Minnesotan Oromo told me that her cousin, an agriculture student at Alemaya University, reported that he was not allowed to leave the dorm to go back to his family. Oromos in Minnesota heard similar reports from students at Haramaya University, who reported that they were being detained in their dormitory rooms and were not allowed to leave. One Oromo reported that on May 7 police forcibly dispersed a protest by high school students in Haramaya and arrested 15 students.
  • One Oromo in the diaspora has forwarded me a steady stream of graphic photos of victims, along with photos from protests, notices at universities in Oromia cancelling classes, and a document from the mayor of Addis Ababa cancelling a request for a protest. One notice from the administration at Asella medical school called for an emergency meeting to try to prevent a protest planned by students and staff. He reported that the students and staff rejected the call and decided to go ahead with the protest as planned. In Nagelle, he reports, 47 students were arrested after they asked school administrators for permission to stage protests.
  • A college teacher who had previously been jailed for over two years after being swept up in mass arrests reported via email that people in western Oromia had fled to the bush to save their lives. He said that there was a great deal of tension in the capital city as students at Addis Ababa University were gearing up for another round of protests.
  • One Oromo in the diaspora reported that 26 students from Addis Ababa University had been confirmed as arrested, and that hundreds of students were leaving campus because of harassment from security forces.
  • Another person on the ground sent some encouraging words: “I am hearing [about] the protest going on in Minnesota by [the] Oromo diaspora, it is very energizing. Please help and stand by us. Please don’t be silent in this tough time.”
  • One Oromo in the diaspora reported that he had learned from credible sources on the ground that “the crackdown against Oromo students has intensified.” On May 14, three protesters from Wollega University were killed and over 200 wounded by security forces in Nekemte Najjo, in western Oromia. On May 15, 152 protesters were wounded in the western Oromia town of Najjo, and large numbers were injured in the nearby town of Gorii. On May 16, nine students in Adama were expelled for life, and eight more were barred from school for five years. Nine students were detained and their whereabouts was unknown.
  • Another Oromo diasporan reported hearing from friends who had fled their universities but were afraid to go home, fearing that the Agazi forces would arrest and torture them. “We are in the forest with no food, no shelter, only suffering. We can’t imagine going home because if we did, we’d die.”
These communications between people on the ground and the diaspora could come at great risk. “Intercepted emails and phone calls have been submitted as evidence in trials under the country’s flawed anti-terrorism law.” This fear is palpable to diasporans who are receiving the news. One of the Oromo diasporans who contacted me cautioned that if I were to use his real name in this blog post, his family back in Ethiopia would “be in big danger within 24 hours.”
Remote monitoring can help manage the overwhelming flow of information
Despite these risks, there has been a steady flow of photos and videos on social media showing protest footage, as well as injured protesters, broken-down dormitory room doors, and even graphic images of people who have been killed. Some individuals in the diaspora and diaspora websites have been compiling this information, and the new #OromoProtests website has emerged as both an information portal and a mobilizing tool for diasporans and allies.
But as the U.S.-based reporter I spoke with observed, there is a lot of information in circulation, but it’s hard to “triangulate” it to verify the journalistic “Five Ws.” Late last week, Ethiopian Satellite Television (ESAT) confirmed diaspora reports that federal security forces killed at least three Wollega University student-protesters and have detained hundreds of students.
The Advocates has received several requests for assistance from the Oromo diaspora about how to keep track of information in a systematic way:
We in the diaspora are so overwhelmed with information about arrests, wounding and deaths coming out of Ethiopia. But we do not seem to have institutions that are tracking, documenting, and sharing this information in an appropriate manner. [Do you have] any suggestions for models or examples we can use to set something up just temporarily until we find some more reliable way of managing information?
Remote monitoring is challenging, but critical when human rights violations occur in places like Ethiopia. Our remote monitoring chapter in Paving Pathways for Justice & Accountability: Human Rights Tools for Diaspora Communities, offers some suggestions and resources. And our chapter on additional monitoring tools identifies other tools, like the Ushahidi open-source software, which was first deployed to map and document user-generated reports of violence after the 2007 elections in Kenya.
Grilling at the UN: The Ethiopian Government responds
The Ethiopian Government’s delegation to the Universal Periodic Review on May 6, 2014, chaired by State Minister of Foreign Affairs Berhane Gebre-Christos
The Ethiopian Government’s delegation to the Universal Periodic Review on May 6, 2014, chaired by State Minister of Foreign Affairs Berhane Gebre-Christos
My second blog post in this series highlighted the May 6 Universal Periodic Review of Ethiopia at the United Nations. Two days later, the UN issued its report of the UPR working group on Ethiopia, which serves as the Government of Ethiopia’s formal response to the review. In the report, the government identifies recommendations it accepts and others it rejects, as well as a few it wants until September 2014 to think about. Here’s how the Ethiopian Government responded to the recommendations I highlighted in that second post:

Tuesday 20 May 2014

Oromiyaa Keessa Ilmaan Oromoo Mana Hidhaa Garagaraa Keessatti Dararamaa Jiran.


QEERROO
QEERROO
Ibsa Qeerroo Bilisummaa Oromoo
Caamsaa 20, 2014, Finfinnee
FDG Ebla 2014 Ka’een Walqabatee Oromoonni 2390 Ta’an Mannneen Hidhaa Adda Addaa Keessatti Dararamaa Jiru. 1700 ol Ammoo Bakka Buuteen Isaanii Hin beekamne. Hidhamuu Jeeffamuu fi Bakka Buuteen Dhabamuu Oromoof Mootummaan Wayyaanee Itti Gaafatamaa
Dha!!
Gabateen Armaan Gaditti Argamu FDG Ebla 2014 Oromiyaa Keessatti Qabatee Mirga Abbaa Biyyummaa Gaafachuu Irratti Mootummaa Wayyaaneetiin Hidhamanii Jiran Oromiyaa fi Sadarkaa Federaalaatti Baayina Namoota Mana Hidhaa Keessatti Dararrii Guddaa Keessa Jiranii fi Yeroo Ammaa Nuuf Birmadhaa Jedhanii Iyyachaa Jiran.
Oromoonni 2390 ta’an kun manneen hidhaa armaa gadii keessatti haalaan dararamaa jiran fi kanneen 1700 ta’an bakka buuteen wallaalames dabalatee hatattamaan akka gadhiifamanii fi gaaffiin mirgaa Oromootaa deebii gahaa argachuu akka qabu Qeerroon Bilisummaa gadi jabeessee dhiheessa.

African camels show MERS virus more widespread than believed.


Mystery disease: a man wearing a mask at a camel market in al-Thamama, Saudi Arabia. Photo: Reuters
Mystery disease: a man wearing a mask at a camel market in al-Thamama, Saudi Arabia. Photo: Reuters
May 20, 2014, Geneva (The Sydney Morning Herald)The deadly respiratory virus that has spread from Saudi Arabia around the world was found in camels in Nigeria, Tunisia and Ethiopia, showing the pathogen is more widespread than previously known.
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, or MERS-CoV, was found in almost all blood samples taken from 358 dromedary camels in Nigeria and 188 camels in Ethiopia, according to a study published online by the Emerging Infectious Diseases journal. In Tunisia, MERS-CoV was found in 54 per cent of adult camels, and in all of the animals from one southern province.
The findings add to previous studies that have found the virus in camels in Spain’s Canary Islands and Egypt, as well as in several nations on the Arabian Peninsula, and suggest that there may be undiagnosed human cases in Africa, researchers from the Netherlands wrote in the study.
The blood samples were collected between 2009 and 2011, suggesting the virus was circulating well before 2012 when the first human case was identified, they said.
“The possibility exists that MERS-CoV illness occurred before its discovery in 2012 and that such infection has been overlooked in the areas with evidence for virus circulation among animals during the past 10 years,” the authors wrote in the journal, published by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
MERS has sickened at least 614 people, killing 184 of them since 2012, according to the World Health Organisation. While most of the cases and deaths have been in Saudi Arabia, there have been infections in Europe, Africa, Asia and the United States. All cases are linked to people who live in or have travelled to the Middle East, or who were exposed to someone who did.
The WHO’s emergency committee last week decided against declaring MERS a global health emergency, citing the lack of evidence for sustained human-to-human transmission. Most of the infections have been because of poor infection-control practices in hospitals, the WHO said.
MERS causes fever, cough and shortness of breath, leading in severe cases to respiratory failure, organ failure and death. People with weakened immune systems such as the elderly and those with diabetes, cancer or chronic lung disease are most at risk. There is no vaccine and no specific treatment.
The potential route of transmission from camels to humans isn’t well understood. Many cases of the illness have occurred among camel herders and people who visited camel farms or consumed unpasteurised camel milk.
The virus belongs to the same family of pathogens as SARS, which killed about 800 people worldwide after first appearing in China more than a decade ago.
Saudi Arabia expects millions of Muslims from around the world to perform the annual Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina in early October. The WHO doesn’t recommend any travel restrictions related to MERS, though Saudi Arabia has suggested that pilgrims over 65 years or under 12, and pregnant women, refrain from the journey.

Monday 12 May 2014

#OromoProtests Solidarity Hunger-Strikers Hold a Mock Funeral in Front of the Minnesotan State Capitol for Slain Oromo Students and Civilians in Oromia


Photo – Mother’s Day in Little Oromia (Minnesota): An Oromo mother in Little Oromia weeps over the sample coffin during the Mock Funeral held in front of the Minnesotan State Capitol by the #OromoProtests Solidarity Hunger-Strikers for the Oromo students and civilians massacred by the TPLF Ethiopian regime. (Photo Date: May 11, 2014)
Mother’s Day in Little Oromia (Minnesota): An Oromo mother in Little Oromia weeps over the sample coffin during the Mock Funeral held in front of the Minnesotan State Capitol by the #OromoProtests Solidarity Hunger-Strikers for the Oromo students and civilians massacred by the TPLF Ethiopian regime. (Photo Date: May 11, 2014)
May 11, 2014 (Gadaa) – #OromoProtests Solidarity Hunger-Strikers at the Minnesota State Capitol held a mock funeral to honor and remember the more than 50 unarmed Oromo students and civilians murdered by the TPLF Ethiopian regime in April 2014 while peacefully rallying against the implementation of the Addis Ababa Master Plan and for the institutionalization of the special interests of Oromiyaa over Finfinnee. The hunger-strike has been held since Friday evening (May 9, 2014) and is expected to last tonight (May 11, 2014).
The sample coffins for the slain Oromo students and civilians were draped with the Oromo struggle (or Oromummaa) flag.
Among those killed by the TPLF Agazi Federal Military-Police include:
- Ababa Kumsa – Wallega
- Abdi Kamal – Guder Junior Secondary School
- Abdisa Nagasa – Wallega
- Endale Desalegn (or Temesgen) – Ambo High School
- Falmata Bayecha – Jimma 5th yr Medicine
- Galana Adaba – Jimma 3rd yr Governance
- Getachew Daraje – Jimma 3rd yr Governence
- Getahun Jirata – Guder Junior Secondary School
- Gexe Tafari – Wallega
- Gurmu Damxoo – Guder Junior Secondary School
- Hussen Umar – Jimma
- Israel Habtamu – Jimma
- Kumala Guddisa – Guder Junior Secondary School
- Tadesse Gashee – Ambo Liban Macha Junior Secondary School
- Tashome Dawit – Wallega
- Zabana Barasa – Jimma 3rd yr Governance (or Oromo Folklore)
May they rest in peace.

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Hunger Strike Continues:
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