Thursday 1 January 2015

| Gizaw Tasissa (PhD):- The Soweto (South African) Students Uprising for Freedom and Justice; Implications to the 2014 Oromo Students Uprising for Freedom and Justice

By Gizaw Tasissa (PhD)
EDUCATION FOR FREEDOM
The Soweto (South African) Students Uprising for Freedom and Justice
Implications to the April 2014 Oromo Students Uprising for Freedom and Justice
It is always desirable to get rid of suppression, but it is no not without pain and sacrifices to achieve it and attain freedom, because the battle is between those with provisional power to mobilise resources of the oppressed against the oppressed themselves and power less but authentic majority without power. There cannot be resistance without prevalence of suppression.
It goes without saying that human right is not decided by alien body, but it is a natural right one deserves and upholds. Despite this, sometimes it is compromised by laws enacted by governments in the interest of the public and against the interest of the public too. The former is legitimate as far as it is justified by the partaking of the stakeholder while the latter is a characteristic of suppression enacted by suppressors of different modes, the major ones being political, racial and colour discrimination.

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