Thursday, June 28, 2007

Somalia: Ethiopians soldiers killed in roadside bomb blast in Mogadishu

Somalia: Ethiopians soldiers killed in roadside bomb blast in Mogadishu

Aweys O. Yusuf

Mogadishu 28, June.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
Two Ethiopian soldiers were reported killed so far on Wednesday after an Ethiopian and Somali military convoy hit a roadside bomb near Ramadan Hotel in north of the Somali capital, Mogadishu.

Witnesses said they saw two Ethiopian soldiers who were killed by the blast. The Ethiopians and the Somali soldiers opened fire following the blast which rocked north Mogadishu around 7: 50 A.M. local time, witnesses said.

“They were two military pick-up trucks and a mixture of Somali and Ethiopian troops were onboard. When the bomb blew up four soldiers fell off the second car. Two were wounded and two others were dead,” said a grass seller, who asked to remain anonymous because he was afraid of reprisal.

The witness said the two who died in the blast were Ethiopians, indicating that he was only 10 meters away from the incident area.
Shabelle reporter, Hirabe, who went to the area where the explosion took place, said a large number of Ethiopian troops sealed off the area. He said two shop owners near the scene were also wounded.

Surge of bomb explosions against the government and the Ethiopian forces in Somalia multiplied since the T.F.G. imposed curfew on the volatile city.

Mayor of Mogadishu, Mohammed Dheere, laid blame on what he called foreigners in Somalia supported by the remnants of the Islamic Courts for carrying out the bomb blast in the capital.

Also five civilians were killed and 8 were wounded after unknown gunmen threw two grenades at Somalia military convoy which was passing near Mogadishu’s Bakara market yesterday.

Shabelle Media Network Somalia

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Greg winter's report from Ogadenia

Greg Winter and Jeffrey Gettleman discuss Ethiopia. ..Jeffrey, you’ve been in the Ogaden..., the forbidding territory..

Former Somalia Defense Minister Wounded In A Roadside Bomb Blast.

Former Somalia Defense Minister Wounded In A Roadside Bomb Blast.

Aweys Osman Yusuf

Somalia’s former Defense Minister, Col. Barre Aden Hirale, was wounded in roadside bomb blast on Wednesday. The blast occurred as a convoy carrying the former minister, along with number of Somali entourages, hit a roadside bomb which was remotely detonated, according to Mohammed Abdi Karin an official with Hirale.

The convoy was passing by the outskirt of Bardhere in Gedo province, southern Somalia when the bomb exploded.

His driver was killed in the blast, Shabelle correspondent, Ahmed Salihi , said. Initial reports indicated that the driver lost his two legs
Salihi said the colonel was admitted to a hospital in Bardhere. “But it is expected that he will be flown to Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, for treatment,” he said.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the bomb attack.
Hirale, who was interviewed by Shabelle, Tuesday, said he was determined to be neutral in the clan conflict of Kismayu, where the two major clans clashed on Friday, killing more than 20 and wounding over 40.

He hails from Merahan sub-clan that fighting Somalia president’s Majecteen sub-clan.

The leaders of both clans have been challenging over the management of Kismayu since the T.F.G. backed by its Ethiopian allied troops routed out the Union of Islamic Courts in early this year.

The minister was sacked nearly three months ago after the Somali government blamed him for instigating the tribal incongruity in Kismayu

Sunday, June 24, 2007

OPDOf shibbisuu?

Akka dhagahamutti wallisaa Taaddalaa Gammachuu miseensa OPDO akka tahee fi wareegama sabani keenya gabroonfataa fi ergamtoota isaanii irratti godhaa jiru keessatti tarree saba isaa osoo hin taane diina cinaa akka dhaabbatee dha. Yeroo goototni barattoota Oromoo Fincila Diddaa Gabrummaa finiisnaa turanitti fincila kanatti bishaan naquuf yeroo tokko ergamaa TPLF Abbaa Duulaa Minaasee waliin barattoota University Finfinneetti akka bobba'e himama. Kun xinnoo bubbulus ar'as taanaan namni kun qabsoo sabni keenya gabrummaa of irraa fonqolchuuf godhaa jirutti kan hin amanne, yeroma hunda gabri gooftaa isaaf ergamuu fi buluun uumaa isaa akka tahe kan amanu natti fakkaata.

Odeessaa fi gumgummiin kun dhugaa taanan, ar'a qophii "aadaa" inni gaggeessu irratti qooda fudhaachuun maqaa sabboontotaa kan xurreessuu fi walliftoota sabboontota biyya keessatti rakkoo diinagdee fi kan gabroonfataan irraan gahuun osoo hin jilbeenfatin qabsoo keenyaaf bobaa'aa fi humna tahan akkasumas ummata keenya diinaaf osoo hin jilbeeffatin dhaloota dhufu bilisummaa dhaalchisuuf wareegama baasaa jiruuf kabajaa dhabuu mul'isa.

Gama birootiin Waldaan dargaggoota Oromoo eenyummaa wallisaa Taaddalaa Gammachuu qoratee adda osoo hin baafatin Oromoon akka dibbee isaa dha'u haala aanjeesssuun kanneen jaarmaya kana dursan hawwii malee dandeettii fi ogummaan hogganna kennuu akka ir'atu agarsiisa.

Kanneen" bu'aa fi nagummaa yeroof jedhanii diinaaf bitaman ykn hojjatan bilisummaa fi nagummaan isaaniin hin malu" jedha beekaan tokko.

Joobiraa dha

Somalia: Five bomb explosions rock Mogadishu amid second night-time curfew

Aweys Osman Yusuf

Mogadishu 24, June.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
Explosions rocked the Somali capital, Mogadishu, overnight amid curfew was being observed for the second night. At least 5 blasts occurred in three different districts in the capital.

No casualties have been reported on Saturday morning and the situation is calm.

The explosions coincided with the exact time (7: 00 pm local time) when the night-time curfew was to take effect.

Unknown gunmen threw a grenade at a police station in Karan district, north of the capital, last night.

The district commissioner, Abdulahi Hassan Roble, told Shabelle last night that insurgents targeted the police station with a hand grenade.

“There were no casualties in the explosion and the police arrested two suspects. We do believe that the insurgents were responsible for this blast and other explosions we just heard,” he said.

The blasts also took place in Hawlwdag and NBC neighborhoods in Mogadishu.

Despite the bombings, several police forces were patrolling the main roads and areas in the capital, seizing a number of people who violated the curfew, according some Mogadishu residents.

More than 16 bomb explosions came about in the hot-blooded city since the Somali transitional federal government formally announced that curfew was imposed on Mogadishu on June 22

Shabelle Media Network Somalia

Friday, June 22, 2007

Fighting erupts in Kismayo

Fri. June 22, 2007 08:47 pm.- By Mohamed Abdi Farah. - Send this news article

(SomaliNet) Fresh gun battle between rival soldiers within the Transitional Federal Government has erupted in Somalia’s southern port city of Kismayu on Friday killing seven people and wounding 30 others - as heavily armed Ethiopian forces are heading to Kismayu to go between the warring clans.

The fighting that lasted for four hours in Bulo-Gadud and Gobweyn villages village, near Kismayu went between Sade and Majerten clans of Darod, one of powerful tribes in Somalia.

Both clan soldiers in the government are fighting for the control of Kismayu, 500km south of the capital Mogadishu.

Unconfirmed reports say the soldiers that hailed from Sade clan who now control Kismayu overrun those from Majerten clan, led by Col. Abdirisak Afgadud who was close to the president of Somalia Abdulahi Yusuf Ahmed.

A spokesman for Sade clan who declined to be named claimed that his militia seized six war vehicles from the other side and took hostage their commander Aden Bojar.

There is no independent confirmation on that.

Just in reports say that the fighting still continues as both sides regain reinforcements.

Ethiopian Planes Carpet-Bomb Ogaden Cities

Ethiopian Planes Carpet-Bomb Ogaden Cities

June 21, 2007 Reports reaching our service desk from the provinces of Godey and Nogob confirm carpet bombings carried out by the Ethiopian air force in many
parts of these two provinces.

As confirmed by eyewitnesses, the places carpet-bombed entirely include Abaaqaroow in Godey province, and the towns of Cayuun and Dara-salaam in Nogob province. Confirmed casualties so far number forty civilians who all died as a result of the carpet bombings carried out by the Ethiopian air force.

Our reporters have been dispatched to the areas where the carpet-bombing took place and we plan to detail casualties in our later report filings.

In related news, the Ethiopian military killed in broad daylight and inside the town center teacher Xasan. It is not known the reasons of this broad daylight, extra judicial killing carried out by members of the Ethiopian military deployed in Dhuxun.

--Ogaden Online News

Somalia: A bomb explosion kills five including 4 Somali policemen

Somalia: A bomb explosion kills five including 4 Somali policemen

Aweys Osman Yusuf

Mogadishu 22, June.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
A huge bomb blast was targeted at a Somali police pick-up truck carrying at least 10 government police forces near the main seaport of Mogadishu, the Somali capital, on Friday.

Witnesses told Shabelle that they saw 4 policemen who were bleeding being dragged from the truck which was badly damaged by the strong blast and also ten year old boy dead in the blast.

The explosion occurred amid a large number of Ethiopian troops massed Mogadishu’s biggest market, Bakara, conducting house-to-house search operations.

A curfew is due to be imposed on the whole capital today from 7:00 pm to 5:00 am local time.

Somalia’s national security committee revealed Thursday that a curfew would be imposed on Mogadishu, the Somali capital. The committee which is made up diverse government officials that are under the direct command of Somalia President Abdulahi Yusuf said the curfew was imposed to pacify the volatile capital.

Mohammed Warsame Darwish, the leader of the committee, told journalists in a news conference he held in Mogadishu yesterday that government soldiers were geared up to battle with the insurgents who carry out their hit-and-run attack on the government and Ethiopian bases in Mogadishu overnight.

Unconfirmed reports say the vehicle hit a roadside bomb placed on the roadside near Mogadishu seaport.

No group has claimed responsibility

Clan fighting

Meanwhile fighting erupts in the port town of Kismayu, 500 KM south of the capital, on Friday. Residents told Shabelle that the gun battle is raging between two clans (Puntland and Marehan) in the transitional government.

A witness, who asked to remain unnamed, told Shabelle by the phone that the fighting started in Bulo Gaduud settlement on the outer edge of Kismayu where government troops led by Col. Abdirisaq Afgadud, a relative of Somalia president Abdulahi Yusuf, are based.

“The fighting restated between Abdirisaq’s government troops and Sade (Maerehan) clan militias in the settlement,” the witness said.

Shabelle Media Network Somalia

Friday, June 15, 2007

Qophii Galagala Aadaa Oromoo J

Wallisaa Beekkamaa fi sabboonaan ilmaa oromoo J. Muktaar Usmaan ilmaan Oromoo Washington DC fi naannoo isii jiran sirboota aadaa fi warraaqsaa dhagahamanii hin qufamneen isin gammachiisuuf qophii galgala aadaa Oromoo qopheessee jira. Qophii kana irratti hirmaachuu dhaan maatii, hiriyaa, fi lammii keenya waliin sirboota aadaa Oromootiin akka bashannannu kabajaan isin affeerra

Guyyaa: 06/30/2007

. Bakki: 1610 Colombian Street NW

Unification Church, Washington DC.

Saa'aa: Galagala 8:00 irraa Eegalee



Galatoomaa!

Dhaamsa Jaal Muktaariif

Joobiraa

Ethiopian and Somali government forces come under attack in Mogadishu

Ethiopian and Somali government forces come under attack in Mogadishu

Mohamed Amiin Sheikh Addow

Mogadishu 15, June.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
Somali government forces and their Ethiopian allies have been targeted with two roadside bombs in Somalia’s chaotic capital city today.

One of the two explosions which were minutes only apart has targeted an Ethiopian military convoy which was passing near Sanca square in north Mogadishu while the second targeted a Somali police convoy which was driving by Afarta Jirdino square.

Residents in the neighborhood have confirmed Shabelle Media Network that two police officers got wounded in the later attack while it is also reported that Ethiopian forces have also suffered casualty.

Forces from the transitional federal government of Somalia have cordoned off the area of the attacks and are carrying out search operations.

There are reports that many people in the area have been arrested.

These attacks coincide with as Ethiopian forces and their Somali allies carry out army search operations in the capital and massive cache of weapons have been seized during those operations.
.

Shabelle Media Network Somalia

Somali MP accuses Ethiopian forces of robbery

Somali MP accuses Ethiopian forces of robbery

Mohamed Amiin Sheikh Addow

Mogadishu 15, June.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
Osman Ali Hassan Atto, a member of Somalia’s transitional parliament has accused Ethiopian forces who searched his home in Mogadishu of robbing him around four thousand US Dollars.


In an exclusive interview with Shabelle Radio, Mr. Atto has confessed that the Ethiopian forces found weapons in his house but he angrily accused the troops of taking other valuable items from his house including a large sum of Money.

“It is true that Ethiopian troops found weapons in my house during their search but they also took money in cash such as 369,000 US dollars, four thousands Emirates Dirham, a large number of jewelry for my wife, valuable watches of mine and Thuraya satellite phones and they tore all my bags” said Atto in his interview with Shabelle Radio.

The Somali MP pointed out that all those incidents are violations against his status of being a member of Somali parliament and also against his Somali citizenship and the charter of the Somali transitional government.

Osman Ali Atto called the presence of Ethiopian troops in Somalia as against the wishes of the Somali people.

The fury accusations of this MP came after the transitional federal government of Somalia displayed to the journalists a huge cache of weapons seized during a joint army search operation by its forces and their Ethiopian allies.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

London student’s jungle war escape led to ‘rendition’ trap

From
June 10, 2007

London student’s jungle war escape led to ‘rendition’ trap

A BRITISH student who was caught up in fighting in Somalia has described how he fled for his life only to be arrested as a suspected Al-Qaeda member and then rescued by a British consul from a secret operation to transfer terrorist suspects to Ethiopia for interrogation.

Reza Afsharzadagen, 25, from north London, was among hundreds of refugees forced to flee battles last December between Islamic radicals who had seized power in Mogadishu, the Somali capital, and Ethiopian soldiers trying to install a rival United Nations-backed government.

After dodging bombs from American warplanes deployed in support of the Ethiopians and trekking through jungle for 13 days, Afsharzadagen reached safety in Kenya. But there he was detained as a suspected terrorist and questioned for nearly a month without being charged.

He and three other British Muslims who were arrested - Shahajan Janjua, Hamza Chent-ouf, and Mohammed Ezzoueck, all from London - were eventually returned home and cleared of any suspicion of terrorist activity after the intervention of the Foreign Office.

But more than 85 other captives who had fled Somalia were flown back to the war zone and later interrogated for weeks at a prison in Ethiopia. Among those transferred were women, and children as young as seven months old, who were alleged to be from the families of militants.

The mass transfers in East Africa were the first case to come to light of an “extraordinary rendition” - the covert transfer of terrorist suspects to other countries for interrogation - involving children.

Afsharzadagen’s account, in an interview for Channel 4’s Dispatches programme tomorrow, emerged as arguments about the rendition programme intensified. The Council of Europe reported last Friday that the CIA had run secret prisons in Poland and Romania. The CIA said such claims were biased and distorted, and insisted it had operated lawfully.

Yesterday the Association of Chief Police Officers was accused by the human rights group Liberty of “spin” after it concluded in a separate inquiry that there was no evidence that British airports had been “used to transport people by the CIA for torture in other countries”.

Afsharzadagen says he travelled to Mogadishu last September after the radical Islamic Courts Union drove out war-lords who had ruled for 15 years. The US and other governments warned that the regime was establishing an extreme form of Islamic rule, sheltering Al-Qaeda members and creating jihadist training camps.

Some preachers in British mosques were urging young Muslims to travel to Somalia to help the Islamists. Afsharzadagen, who completed a computing degree at London Metropolitan University, claimed he had gone partly in search of “adventure” and partly to do voluntary work, teaching young Somalis computer skills.

When he arrived, he said, he found people revelling in their freedom to walk around the city for the first time in years without fear. “It wasn’t like the Taliban in Afghanistan,” he said. “There were women working and walking on the streets.”

Within three months, troops from Ethiopia entered Somalia with the aim of replacing the Islamic Courts Union with a government of national unity. As the bombs began to fall near Mogadishu, Afsharzadagen and many other foreigners fled.

Travelling south with convoys of refugees, he met the other Britons for the first time and they took a boat towards the Kenyan border. “It was like a big canoe - when we arrived we had to swim ashore - that’s when I lost all my money,” he said.

For several days they hid in the jungle as they watched US helicopters and warplanes seeking out Al-Qaeda fugitives and listened to the bombing. “We felt we were being hunted down.”

One morning Afsharzadagen woke to the sound of gunfire and explosions nearby. He was separated from his friends as they fled towards the Kenyan border. “I just got up and ran. I left my passport. I left my food rations. Everything.”

By the time the gunfire had died away he was lost in the jungle with 30 people, mostly strangers. As they trudged through the bush in search of help, they drank from puddles. By the 13th day many were close to collapse. Then someone heard a cock crow, indicating a settlement nearby.

The villagers gave them honey but Kenyan soldiers who turned up lashed out with kicks. “Some were telling us, ‘You’re Al-Qaeda, we’ve finally caught you’.” From the nearby town of Kiunga, where officers from Kenya’s counter-terrorism unit were waiting, they were flown to Nairobi, where they were held in crowded communal cells.

Afsharzadagen said he was asked if he had handled weapons or trained in a terrorist camp. “I said I hadn’t. But they would tell me, ‘You’re lying’.”

Requests to see a British diplomat were refused, but eventually Afsharzadagen and the others were taken to a hotel to meet some officers from MI5. The first one called himself Richard.

“He told me he was here to help me. But it wasn’t true. I knew they were there to trap us,” he said.

After returning to their cells, the Britons’ hopes of going home rose briefly when they were moved to the airport. Then they noticed cars and lorries carrying other prisoners.

Handcuffed and blindfolded, they were flown instead to an unknown city in Somalia and handed over to Ethiopian soldiers who locked them in a dark cell teeming with cockroaches.

But after two days, an official told them they were leaving. At the top of a flight of stairs, Afsharzadagen was introduced to a British consul who had flown to Somalia to bring them out. An RAF plane took them from Kenya to Britain. No evidence was found of any terrorist connection to them.

For the other prisoners, including an American, a Frenchman and three Swedes, the ordeal was far from over. They were moved to Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, for interrogation. Among the 85 transferred, according to flight manifests, were at least 11 women accompanied by 11 children.

One of them was a 25-year-old Tanzanian, Fatma Chande. After her release she alleged the police in Kenya had threatened to strangle her. “They tried to make me admit my husband was a member of Al-Qaeda,” she claimed.

“When we arrived at the airport, we were handcuffed and our headscarves were pulled down over our eyes. The men were hooded. The children were crying all the time saying, ‘We want to go home’.”

The prisoners transferred to Ethiopia were questioned by Americans. “They’ve concealed their role, but you can assume the Americans were behind all these renditions,” said a senior western diplomat in Nairobi. “By sending prisoners to Ethiopia, they had a convenient place to interrogate people.”

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Ogaden National Liberation Front denies VOA report

Ogaden National Liberation Front denies VOA report


The Voice of America (VOA) recent report citing unnamed sources alleging that Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) has entered into a coalition with political entities in Somalia is far from reality and well within the realm of fantasy.

For nearly two decades, the TPLF regime has been engaged in an deliberate effort to misrepresent our struggle to the international community in a bid to divert attention from the legitimate grievances of the people of Ogaden. This misrepresentation has included efforts to portray the ONLF as a religious organization instead of a nationalist organization and TPLF statements aimed at leaving the impression that the scope of our military operations extend beyond Ogaden.

The ONLF wishes to make clear to the international community that we are not, have not been and will not be a party to the ongoing conflict in Somalia as a matter of policy and principle. In that regard, the ONLF is not, has not been and will not be a part of any coalition with political groups in Somalia. The only coalition that the ONLF is a proud member of is the Alliance for Freedom & Democracy (AFD). The foundation of the ONLF policy toward Somalia is that Somalia should be left to the Somalis and that the Ethiopian army should immediately and without condition, pull its troops out of Somalia.

The TPLF regime will have to face the reality that they must deal with the legitimate representatives of the people of Ogaden and abandon their failed military strategy in Ogaden and ongoing brutal crackdown against our civilian population. The TPLF must accept direct talks with the ONLF in a neutral country and in the presence of a third party arbiter with no pre-conditions placed on either side if there is ever to be a just, comprehensive and lasting solution to the conflict between the people of Ogaden and successive Ethiopian governments.

The TPLF must also accept the call for an all inclusive conference made by the member organizations of the Alliance for Freedom & Democracy (AFD)

------------
URL of the VOA report:
http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-06-08-voa39.cfm
The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF

On Meles interview

Haromaya) In the recent interview with Jonathan Dimlbey of the Teachers TV, the prime minister of Ethiopia, Meles Zenawi, has reaffirmed that he would not seek office during the next election. Meles had made similar statements in the past but had never been materialized. What makes this round of statement more likely to be true is the fact that Meles has faced increasing pressure from his own ruling party, the Tigrean People Libration Front (TPLF), to step down. Inside information has conformed to this writer that several members of the Politburo of TPLF have advised Meles that he must step down for the sake of reviving the party’s image as a democratic organization.

This recent announcement by the Mr. Zenawi has led many people to speculate about who his successor is going to be. The speculation and rumor has created intense debate among supporters of the Zenawi’s government. The Tigrean community in particular is divided along two lines in this debate. Hardliner Tigrean nationalists have insisted that the next prime minster must be a member of TPLF while moderates have continued to advocate for appointing a non-Tigrean in order to give credibility to the administration and to silence the opposition group that are protesting against Tigrean domination of Ethiopian politics.

The former argues that in the face of mounting pressure against the Tigrean leadership, and the continuing defection of non-Tigreans from the government, it is becoming impossible to trust a non-Tigrean holding a key government position. They fear that, even though they appoint a trusted individual from one of the three members of the TPLF-controlled coalition, Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), the individual might align with opposition groups of his own ethnicity. They support their argument by referring to recent defections of once highly trusted military commanders and high ranking officials, mostly from Oromo ethnic group.

The later argues that appointing a Tigrean would further increase the tension and suspicion against the Tigrean ruling elites and validates to the international community the allegation that Ethiopia is fully run by Tigreans. They believe that it is necessary to appoint a non-Tigrean while putting a system that enables for a greater TPLF control. According to this group, this model would work because the prime minister would be surrounded by Tigreans who would serve as advisors and security personnel. They also believe that even though Zenawi officially steps down, he would still remain closely involved in all decision making process as an advisor.

However, those who advocate for appointment of a non-Tigrean seem to be dominating the debate. Even though the Tigreans in Diaspora and the elites in Mekele and Addis are as apprehensive about appointing a non-Tigrean to the prime ministerial position, they seem to be convinced that it is absolutely impossible to retain power under Tigrean domination unless a non-Tigrean is appointed to give a semblance of change and real democracy.

The next controversial question was from which ethnic group the non-Tigrian future prime minister should be appointed from. By virtue of their sheer number as well as their domination of opposition politics, a PM from the Oromo or Amhara ethnic groups were considered and intensely debated upon among the Tigrean elites. Those who advocate for an appointment of an Amhara justify their position by pointing to two crucial differences between Amharas and Oromos within the EPRDF. They believe that the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM) leadership has shown better loyalty to the TPLF- leadership than the Oromo People Democratic Organization (OPDO). This claim is supported by the apparent high rate of defection from OPDO compared to that of ANDM. The figures show that the Oromo defectors outnumber the Amhara defectors in the ratio of 20:1. Prominent and once highly trusted Oromos who served TPLF have defected and most have joined Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) - one of the most formidable rivals to TPLF. A number of Oromos who once were instrumental in establishing TPLF rule in Oromia state have either defected or rendered persona non grata or have been assassinated by TPLF security forces for opposing further consolidation of state power into the hands of Tigreans. These include former Oromian president Hassen Ali, former Ethiopian president Negasso Gidada, House of Federation Speaker Almaza Meko, former security chief Yonathan Dibissa, and most recently a highly decorated military leader, Brigadier General Kemal Gelchu, who defected along hundreds of Oromo soldiers in his unit and joined the OLF. Brigadier General Kamal Gelchu is now appointed as the general commander of Oromo Liberation Army which has recently allied with the Ogaden National Liberation Army in the fight against the government of Ethiopia in Eastern Front. Therefore they argue that appointing an Oromo to a prime ministerial position could bring disastrous consequences to the Tigrean domination of Ethiopia. Hence appointing an Amhara is much safer than appointing an Oromo since ANDM has not been plagued by defections as much as the OPDO did. During the past 16 years of TPLF domination of Ethiopia, only Tamirat Layine from the top leadership in ANDM fell out with TPLF leadership. Even this fall out is not due to political reasons but conflicts over their respective share of personal property that was embezzled from Ethiopian peoples.

Those who advocate for appointing an Oromo present the following argument. They believe that the most challenging opposition to the Tigrean domination comes from Oromo nationalists, especially from members and sympathizers of OLF. They also understand that such strong opposition from Oromo emanated due to the obvious marginalization of the Oromos from the country’s social, economic, and political process. They argue that, being the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, appointing an Oromo as a prime minster would convince the international community that indeed there is democracy and proportional power sharing in Ethiopia. They also emphasize that the ever increasing uprising in Oromia region can subside if an Oromo prime minister is appointed thereby depriving OLF and Oromo nationalists their claim that Oromos do not have fair share within the Ethiopian system. Accordingly, the international community would be deceived into believing that, in a country where a third of the parliament is controlled by “Oromos” and where the prime minister is an “Oromo”, it would not convince anyone if anybody claims that Oromos have been oppressed. In this system, any human rights violation will be perceived as if it has been committed by Oromos against Oromos; therefore TPLF won’t be blamed. Therefore, this group advocates that the best way to maintain Tigrean hegemony and legitimize their rule is by appointing an Oromo as the next prime minister. To minimize the risk of betrayal and probable alliance of the person with OLF, the group suggests that all remaining key positions such as security, military and advisory positions be filled with nationalist Tigreans who will keep the power of the prime minister in check at all times.

Even though consensus has more or less been reached about appointing a non-Tigrean, the Tigreans are yet to agree whether to appoint an Oromo or Amhara although those who advocate for appointment of Oromo seem to have dominated the debate.

Therefore the TPLF politburo has created an exploratory committee led by Sibehat Nega, a founding member of TPLF, along with Professor Medhine Tadesse, one of the prominent Tigrean scholars, and Prof. Kinfe Abraham the president of the International Institute for Peace and Development (Ethiopia)-a Tigrean think-thank group, to investigate and recommend potential non-Tigrean successors to Meles Zenawi. The investigation is aimed at collecting detailed information about ideologies and affiliations of individuals in their social and political networks.

The Nominees

Top leaderships of the ANDM and OPDO have been the focuses of this exploratory committee. The contenders from the Executive Committee of ANDM were Tefera Walwa, Min. of Capacity Building, and Addisu Legesse, deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development. These two individuals have been involved in TPLF for almost two decades. Both were once members of the Ethiopian People Revolutionary Party (EPRP) but defected to TPLF in early 1980s to establish the Ethiopian People Democratic Movement that was later converted to ANDM to fit into the EPRDF’s ethnic quota appropriation. Mr. Walwa is the most loyal non-Tigrean, but had some personal conflict with hardliner Tigrean nationalists. Addisu Legesse, who was born in Hararghe and fluent in Afan Oromo, is a more pragmatic Amhara with proven loyalty to Meles Zenawi. He was the person who saved Meles Zenawi from the hardliner Siye Abraha’s conspiracy during the 2001 TPLF internal crisis. Mr Legesse betrayed Siye’s group by informing Meles about the proposed coup. Therefore even though some Tigrean nationalists still see him as a traitor, he has the full backing of Meles. Both Walwa and Legesse are chained to the top TPLF leadership through marriage and financial dealing.

From the OPDO side, Abadula Gemeda, Kuma Demeksa and Girma Birru were the leading contenders. Abadula, former minister of defense and the current president of Oromia regional state, is unquestionably the most loyal Oromo person to the TPLF leadership. However his lack of education and increasing unpopularity as well as the claim by some Oromos about him not being an Oromo has forced the explanatory committee to see him less favorably. Kuma Demeksa- former president of Oromia and the current Minister of Defense- had bad as well as good things going for him. The bad is that he took side with Siye’s faction during the TPLF internal split and was sacked from his position by executive order from Meles. The good thing is that by laying low and never complaining about Meles’ action, he was able to get sympathy from Mr Zenawi who later appointed him as a Minster of defense last year. Meles even made an honest remark when he nominated him to the parliament saying that “Teshrom Yalakorefe” meaning “the one who did not get disappointed even when fired”. Girma Birru, the Minster of trade and Industry is considered by far the most eligible candidate with significant resume in loyalty and ability. He is a well educated economist and had never showed sympathy toward the oppressed Oromos and unlike some other OPDO leadership he never mentioned or questioned the Tigrean domination of Ethiopian politics and economic outlets.

Therefore Addisu Legesse, and Girma Birru, has been the most favored from ANDM and OPDO, respectively.

A credible inside informant from the Tigrean side has confirmed that the committee has strongly recommended Girma Birru to be the next prime minister. The recommendation also seems to have been accepted by Meles Zenawi. Girma Biru, even though he was a latecomer to OPDO, has served Meles Zenawi with utmost loyalty. Girma is an economist and a bureaucrat who served under the previous Ethiopian regime, the Derg, at a ministerial position. According to the TPLF politburo, some of the qualifications that made Girma Birru the most favored candidate are that he has no affiliations with any Oromo opposition political party and has no nationalistic sentiment like many OPDO members. His long resume has also convinced the committee that his involvement with Derg and later on with TPLF is driven by personal and material gains rather than any political ambition. Unless there is a drastic change in Girma’s behavior and affiliation that might force the politburo to reconsider their earlier exploratory results, we will be seeing more of him on TV, radio and trips to foreign countries as a sign of his preparation to assume his new position.


So What?

This recent move by the TPLF politburo and Mr. Zenawi to appoint an Oromo as the next prime minister will undoubtedly generate a lots discussion among those who follow the politics of Ethiopia and the region. I would argue that the move is crucial for TPLF and is a tactical maneuvering by the Tigrean elites. It is an acknowledgement to the fact that the most significant opposition against the Tigrean hegemony is coming from Oromo population. Unlike the short-lived Amhara opposition groups following the contested 2005 election, the Oromos have sustained an ever increasing diplomatic, political and military pressure against TPLF. While legally functioning Oromo political parties such as Oromo National Congress (ONC) and Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement (OFDM) have publicly challenged and peacefully exposed the regimes’ gruesome actions in Oromia, OLF has stepped up its military and diplomatic pressure. The current victory of OLF in infiltrating the Ethiopian army ranks and files has permanently disabled TPLF ability and reliance on Oromos as machinery of war. Similarly OLF’s, pragmatic move in forming the Alliance for Freedom and Democracy (AFD) along with other opposition groups has, for first time, enabled the party to be increasingly trusted and embraced by non-Oromo peoples in Ethiopia. Consequently it deprived TPLF the ability to divide and rule non-Tigrean peoples of Ethiopia. Hence, in the mind of the Tigrean elites, appointing an Oromo as the next prime minister would help them to get back on track.

From the Oromo nationalists’ perspective, appointing Girma Birru or any other Oromo as the next prime minister would not affect the Oromo people positively or negatively. They argue that the Oromo people struggle isn’t about having an Oromo president or prime minister. The struggle, they say, is about dismantling the system of oppression and exploitation- it is about creating a condition that would allow the Oromo to determine their fate without external pressure. According to a prominent Oromo scholar from Addis Ababa University, this is not the first time Oromos have been appointed to leadership of Ethiopia. Teferi Bent was a president of Ethiopia between 1974-77, but nothing changed for Oromos during his rule. The empire continued to be dominated by Amharas. Teferi himself was murdered when he started to show disapproval of the killing of Oromo scholars and leaders such as Tadesse Birru and Haile Fida. Similarly Dr. Negasso Gidada who served as ceremonial president of Ethiopia under TPLF confessed that he did practically nothing for the Oromo people except prolonging the reign of TPLF. Then this scholar argues that appointing Girma Birru as prime Minster would not serve the Oromos as long as the system of governance remains under Tigrean control.

To the question whether the latest move could weaken the Oromo opposition groups, by legitimizing TPLF’s claim of democracy, a leader of one of the Oromo political parties here in Addis argued that as long as the government continue to harass, imprison and kill Oromo students, scholars and farmers, there will be impossible to slow down Oromo struggle let alone stop it.

Finally several critical questions remain unanswered. Would the Tigrean elites make final decision to take the risk of appointing an Oromo to such a key position? Could this risk taking adventure help legitimize Tigrean hegemony as they dream? Could Girma Birru remain loyal to TPLF or make historic decision, and join his fellow ex-OPDO members such as Almaz Meko, Yassin Hussein, Hassen Ali, and Gen Kemal Gelchu, and surrender state power to join Oromo nationalists? These are all question that time and only time can answer.






*The writer is a staff member of Ethiopian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and can be reached at [email]faisaldc@yahoo.co.uk[/email]

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Press watchdog slams Somalia media shutdown

Thursday the 7th of June, 2007



Press watchdog slams Somalia media shutdown

MOGADISHU, June 7 (Reuters) - A press freedom watchdog on Thursday condemned the Somali government's closure of three independent broadcasters accused of supporting terrorism, saying the authorities' allegations were unproven.

HornAfrik, Shabelle and Koranic radio station IQK were shut down on Wednesday for the second time in six months on charges of supporting terrorism, violating the freedom of the press and opposing the Horn of Africa nation's interim government.

"The authorities hbave silenced important, independent voices on the basis of unsubstantiated accusations," Joel Simon, head of the Committee to Protect Journalists, said in a statement.

"We call on the Somali transitional government to allow these broadcasters back on the air immediately."

The broadcasters were temporarily closed when similar accusations were made in January, just weeks after the Somali government and its Ethiopian military allies seized the capital Mogadishu from a rival Islamist movement.

The latest shutdown came amid a virulent rebellion blamed on remnants of the Islamist group who have vowed to wage an "Iraq-style" insurgency against the government and Ethiopians.

Dozens of guerrilla attacks have rocked the seaside capital, spreading fear and confusion.

HornAfrik has accused the government -- chaotic Somalia's 14th attempt at central rule since 1991 -- of intentionally firing artillery shells at its offices during battles with the insurgents. The government denies it.

AlertNet news is provided by

Ethiopia Faces Ethnic Fallout from Somalia Intervention

By Andrew McGregor
Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi


During the month of May, Ethiopia faced a series of attacks from its own ethnic-based rebel groups. The attacks come as a consequence of its invasion of Somalia last December, as the groups are attempting to take advantage of the Ethiopian army's entanglement. The U.S.-backed government of Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi now faces a new phase of armed resistance in the Muslim Ogaden region, which occupies nearly a third of modern Ethiopia and is home to four million ethnic Somalis. The recent discovery of substantial oil and mineral resources in the Ogaden region has complicated an already long-standing dispute over the territory's status. In the Ogaden, China and Malaysia are intent on reproducing their success in dominating Sudan's oil industry.

The Coptic Christian Amhara and Tigrean ethnic groups form 40% of Ethiopia's population and have traditionally formed the power base for the Ethiopian government. Zenawi's Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) is the leading element in the coalition government, known as the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). In May 2005, the EPRDF reassessed the results of a general election in which the regime was apparently defeated. The recount resulted in an EPRDF majority, and opposition to the result was ruthlessly repressed. Opposition forces regularly point out that most senior government positions are in Tigrean hands, even though Tigreans represent only six percent of Ethiopia's population of 75 million.

Political violence has afflicted the Ogaden region since its conquest by Ethiopia in the late 19th century. Ethiopia is determined to avoid a repetition of the Ogaden War of 1977-78, which began when Somali dictator Siad Barre committed four mechanized brigades in support of ethnic-Somali separatists in the Ogaden. An airlift of military equipment and aircraft from the Soviet Union and the deployment of 10,000 Cuban regulars allowed the Ethiopians to repel the invasion after more than a year of intense fighting. Today, the armed resistance is led by the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF).

The Ethiopian government's presence in the Ogaden has been almost entirely military in nature since its conquest, with little effort extended to develop the region. Ogaden human rights groups complain of the brutal military rule that has disrupted traditional social systems and devastated the local economy (Ogaden Human Rights Committee, Press Release, April 29). The government has also been accused of mismanaging local wildlife resources, exploiting limited water resources and allowing the charcoal industry to raze the region's forests. The people of the Ogaden have also been denied a voice in the development of promising mineral and petroleum deposits. Contracts are negotiated in Addis Ababa, and the exploration companies arrive with large detachments of government troops. Last November, Swedish oil company Lundin Petroleum was warned by the ONLF that its exploration activities in the Ogaden were "both unrealistic and unwelcome." The ONLF advised foreign exploration companies that Ethiopia does not control the Ogaden and that their security guarantees are worthless (Afrol News, November 14, 2006). Malaysia and India, likewise, have oil exploration firms active in the Ogaden region.

On April 24, the ONLF's "Dufaan" commando unit attacked a well-guarded Chinese-managed oil exploration site near Obala in the northern Ogaden region, resulting in the deaths of 65 Ethiopian soldiers. Nine Chinese workers were killed while a further seven were abducted "for their own safety," but released a week later (ONLF Communiqué, April 24). After the attack, Ethiopia's parliament blamed the ONLF's backers in Asmara, accusing the Eritrean regime of engaging in "international terrorism activities" (Ethiopian News Agency, May 10). According to rebel sources, the ONLF followed up its oil-field attack by taking the town of Kefalo on May 15 (http://www.oromoliberationfront.org).

The ONLF accuses Prime Minister Zenawi of currying favor from Western states by presenting himself as an ally in the "war on terrorism" and by suggesting that the ONLF has ties to al-Qaeda. The ONLF denies using terrorism, emphasizing that the movement restricts itself to attacking only legitimate targets of the regime.

The ONLF has entered into an alliance with the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) to confront "Abyssinian colonialists." Unlike the Somalis of the Ogaden, the indigenous Oromos have mixed with their Amharic neighbors since the 17th century. Today, Oromos can be found in all parts of Ethiopia and many modern Ethiopians are at least part Oromo. Not all Oromos support the creation of an independent "Oromia"—the Oromo People's Democratic Organization remains part of the EPRDF ruling coalition. With nearly equal numbers of Coptic Christian and Muslims (and a small Protestant minority), the Oromo movement is nationalistic rather than religious in character. The OLF encourages all of Ethiopia's disparate opposition groups to join a new umbrella group, called the Alliance for Freedom and Democracy.

Rebel reports claim that a joint OLF/ONLF operation in the Ogaden's Warder province killed 82 government soldiers and wounded a further 75 during six days in May (Voice of Oromo Liberation, May 17). The Ethiopian government denied these reports, describing them as simple attempts to gain media attention (Daily Monitor [Addis Ababa], May 23).

Ethiopia is following an ambitious long-term project to become a major East African energy supplier through oil exports, to construct five major hydroelectric dams and to provide a connection between the North African and South African power grids. In the meantime, the Zenawi government depends on U.S. support for its survival. The armed resistance has perceived a window of opportunity, as a large number of Ethiopian troops and military resources remain engaged in Somalia and are unable to withdrawal without the arrival of a larger African Union peacekeeping force than the 1,500 Ugandans already deployed.

Despite the TPLF regime's characterization of opposition movements as "terrorist" in nature, neither the ONLF nor the OLF appear on the U.S. or EU lists of designated terrorist organizations. These movements have been joined in their opposition to the regime by other ethnic-based opposition groups, including the Afar National Democratic Front, the Tigray People's Democratic Movement (TPDM) and the Ethiopian People's Patriotic Front (Amhara). The TPDM claims to have inflicted 127 Ethiopian government casualties in a May 7 battle in the Tigrean homeland in northwest Ethiopia (Voice of the Broad Masses of Eritrea, May 12). Many of these groups receive support from the TPLF's enemies in Eritrea.

Zenawi is currently faced with a dilemma: with no sign of AU reinforcements for Somalia, his U.S. sponsors are demanding that the Ethiopian army remain in Mogadishu despite the desperate need for these troops at home.

James Town Foundation (Global Terrorism Analysis)

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Somalia: Ethiopians kill one civilian after roadside explosion

Somalia: Ethiopians kill one civilian after roadside explosion
Sun. June 03, 2007 03:19 pm.- By Mohamed Abdi Farah.

(SomaliNet) A remote controlled roadside bomb was targeted on a convoy carrying Ethiopian soldiers in north of Mogadishu, Somalia capital on Sunday and there is no immediate casualty on the Ethiopians.

An explosion was heard around ex-control crossroads in Huriwaa neighborhood, north of Mogadishu early this morning at about 6:40 am local time as Ethiopian military convoy was passing there.

Soon after the explosion which sent a huge cloud of smoke into the sky, the Ethiopians opened fire on all directions, killing a passerby and wounding a number of others near the area. They have started door to door search for suspects.

“We woke up with deafening sound of blast, I tried to find out what happened but I could not reach the area as it was sealed off by heavily armed Ethiopian soldiers,” Ismael Abdi, local resident told Somalinet.

I don’t know he said if any of the Ethiopian soldiers were hurt in the blast.

Some reports say that the explosion missed the target. No one was arrested for the latest explosion and no group has yet claimed the responsibility for the attack.

Meanwhile, in separate incidents, three persons including a policeman were killed in Mogadishu for the last 24 hours by unknown armed men.

The police man was shot dead in Bakara market in south of the capital while two civilians were slain in Yaqshid and Hodan neighborhoods in Mogadishu overnight.

The Ethiopian forces helped the interim government troops defeat the Islamic Courts Union late December last year.

Ever since the seizure of the control in whole the country five months ago, the transitional government and its allies of Ethiopians and Ugandans became targets of low level attacks by insurgents.

A suicide car bomb kills seven outside the home of Somalia primer

A suicide car bomb kills seven outside the home of Somalia primer

Aweys Osman Yusuf
Breaking News
Mogadishu 03, June.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
At least seven people have been killed and dozens wounded after a suicide car bomb was detonated outside the entrance of Somalia prime minister’s home in north of the capital on late Sunday afternoon.

Witnesses said suicide bomber who was driving a pick up truck packed in explosives was making his way in the premier’s house when he was intercepted by the guards.

“The truck suddenly blew up killing several guards and wounding a large number of people,” said a Somali officer in of the prime minister’s office who spoke to Shabelle on the condition of anonymity.

He said he saw the pieces of dead bodies that numbered six. “We are still busy collecting the pieces of the dead bodies. But I tell you this was a suicide bomber,” he said.

The prime minister was in the house when the blast occurred. He said, “The premier is fine and safe.”

Contingents of Somalia and Ethiopian military troops have been deployed in the area immediately.

Shabelle Media Network Somalia

Friday, June 1, 2007

Somalia: AU seeks Nato air support in Somalia

Aweys Osman Yusuf

Mogadishu 31, May.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
Nato allies are studying a request from the African Union to provide air transport for its troops in Somalia, an alliance official said on Wednesday.

"We are seeking military advice on how to respond to the request. There is an intention among allies to help," said the official of an AU request he said Nato received in recent days.

The official said he understood the support would be similar to that provided to AU peacekeepers in Sudan's Darfur region, where Nato planes have since 2005 helped troop reinforcements and rotations.

The Nato official said he understood the AU wanted help "relatively quickly". The request had been passed to the Nato Military Committee made up of national defence chiefs, who will draw up proposals for how Nato could help.

Somalia has been in anarchy since warlords kicked out dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.
Ethiopian troops are helping the government fight an insurgency but say they will leave when the AU force is at least half its planned strength of 8 000.

At present the AU force is made up of just 1 600 Ugandans. Other African nations have been wary of sending more soldiers, especially after four Ugandan peacekeepers were killed two weeks ago by a roadside bomb targeting their convoy.

Nato's air-transport mission in Darfur was launched in July 2005 and was its first operation on a continent previously off limits to the Western military alliance.

It says it has provided air transport to 24 000 AU peacekeepers and civilian police officers since then, as well as providing training and other logistical support. It is exploring long-term cooperation options with the AU.

(Reuters)

Aweys Osman Yusuf

Mogadishu 31, May.07 ( Sh.M.Network)
Nato allies are studying a request from the African Union to provide air transport for its troops in Somalia, an alliance official said on Wednesday.

"We are seeking military advice on how to respond to the request. There is an intention among allies to help," said the official of an AU request he said Nato received in recent days.

The official said he understood the support would be similar to that provided to AU peacekeepers in Sudan's Darfur region, where Nato planes have since 2005 helped troop reinforcements and rotations.

The Nato official said he understood the AU wanted help "relatively quickly". The request had been passed to the Nato Military Committee made up of national defence chiefs, who will draw up proposals for how Nato could help.

Somalia has been in anarchy since warlords kicked out dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.
Ethiopian troops are helping the government fight an insurgency but say they will leave when the AU force is at least half its planned strength of 8 000.

At present the AU force is made up of just 1 600 Ugandans. Other African nations have been wary of sending more soldiers, especially after four Ugandan peacekeepers were killed two weeks ago by a roadside bomb targeting their convoy.

Nato's air-transport mission in Darfur was launched in July 2005 and was its first operation on a continent previously off limits to the Western military alliance.

It says it has provided air transport to 24 000 AU peacekeepers and civilian police officers since then, as well as providing training and other logistical support. It is exploring long-term cooperation options with the AU.

(Reuters)