"Democracy must be built through open societies that share information" Atifete Jahjaga
Press Freedom, Democracy and Human right
Saturday, September 24, 2016
ኢትዮጵያውያን በጣሊያን ሮም ፓርላማ ፊት ለፊት የሰላማዊ ሰልፍ አደረጉ | ቪድዮ ይዘናል
ዓለም አቀፍ ደረጃ October 3, 2016 በጀርመን ኢምባሲ ደጃፍና እዚያው ጀርመን በርሊን October 2, 2016 ሰላማዊ ሰልፍ ለማድረግ የተላለፈ አስቸኳይ ጥሪ
ዓለም አቀፍ ደረጃ October 3, 2016 በጀርመን ኢምባሲ ደጃፍና እዚያው ጀርመን በርሊን October 2, 2016 ሰላማዊ ሰልፍ ለማድረግ የተላለፈ አስቸኳይ ጥሪ
October 2 2016 በርሊን
የጀርመን መራህት መንግስት አንጀላ መርክል ወደ ኢትዮጵያ ለስራ ጉብኝት ጉዞ አጋጣሚ በማስመልከት
እሁድ ጠዋት 10:00 October 2 . 2016
አድራሻ Willy-Brandt-Str. 1 · 10557 Berlin
የጀርመን መራህት መንግስት አንጀላ መርክል ጽ፨ቤት ፊትለፊት ሰላማዊ ሰልፍ እናደርጋለን
በኢትዮጵያ በንጹሃን ሰላማዊ ዜጎች ላይ እየትካሄደ ያለው አፈና እና ጭፍጨፋ ተጠናክሮ በቀጠለበት በአሁኑ ወቅት ከፍተኛ የለጋሽ አገር መሪ ጉዞ የመጀመሪያ ነው። ለታፈኑት ለሚታፈኑት ለተገደሉት ለሚገደሉት ለታሰሩት ለሚታሰሩት ለተፈናቀሉት ለሚፈናቀሉት ለተጨፈጨፉት ለሚጨፈጨፉት ይህን አጋጣሚ በመጠቀም ኑ በበርሊን ድምጻችንን እናሰማ።
የሚያወግዙትን ዲክታተር ለምን በኢትዮጵያ እንደሚደግፉ ልንጠይቅ እና ልናጋልጥ ይገባል።
ጀርመን
Ethiopians in Ottawa speaks loud – By Eshete Mesganaw
Today in a massive turnout Ethiopians in Canada have showed to the government of Canada their anger and frustrations over the ongoing Human Rights Abuses and political crisis in Ethiopia. The demonstrators, enchanted slogans and mottos which sent a strong message to the government and the public in Canada. They insisted, Canada must not be silent about the ongoing atrocities in Ethiopia. It must speak loud against who abuses Canadian assistance to commit crimes against humanity and genocide. They requested the Government to put pressures on the Ethiopian government to to unconditionally release political prisoners, allow an independent investigation by the United Nations and open up the political space.
It is learned that the massive turnout is an unusual and attended by many peoples from all walks of life. One of the organizer of the demonstration, an activist and coordinator of the Toronto Task Force, Sahelu Bekele has commented that such massive rally is a reflection of the worsening political crisis and brutal crackdowns in Ethiopia. He further urged, since the regime is intensifying its repression, all political parties and social forces in the opposition camp should muster energies and pool their resources to expedite the democratic transformations that all Ethiopian are demanding and anxiously waiting for.
The demonstration have the audience with Honorable Gordon John, member of Parliament, on behalf of the Canadian government. He expressed to the demonstrators that everyone has freedom of expression and free speech. He appreciated the demonstrators for coming to express their concern and informing what is going on in Ethiopia.
The leaders of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, Ethiopian evangelical Church and the Ethiopian Muslims’ representative have urged the people and various groups to work together in unity. A letter addressed to the Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau and to the Parliament were delivered by the company of the organizers and Community leaders.
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Heavily Armed ENDF Soldiers Deployed In Amhara Region To Crash Protesters: Radio, Activists
Ethiopia : Amhara region intensifies uprising against TPLF, several killed by regime forces
By Engidu Woldie
ESAT News
August 30, 2016
The blue skies over the city of Bahir Dar were covered in smokes on Monday, on this deadly day of protest against TPLF oligarchy, as people in the Amhara region of Gondar and Gojam intensified their defiance against the Tigrayan minority rule. Trails of smokes were rising all day into the skies of the city of Bahir Dar as protesters burnt tires on the streets and set ablaze businesses affiliated with the regime as well as houses of officials and spies of the regime.
Several towns and localities in the Amhara region were declared free of the control of the TPLF regime and the people in these areas have established their interim administration and security led by religious figures and elders.
In Gondar, between Hamusit and Wereta, on a bridge called Gumara, 7 members of the federal police and 4 farmers were killed in a gun battle on Monday. Four people were also reportedly killed by regime forces in Simada.
The stay-at-home protest in Bahir Dar turned into a street protest when regime forces attacked a group of vigilante youth who were raising funds and helping the poor in the city. The residents then took to the streets and burned tires and attacked businesses affiliated with the regime. At least four people were shot and killed by regime forces in Bahir Dar on Monday and several others were wounded.
Main roads connecting Bahir Dar, the political and business hub of northern Ethiopia and the seat of the Amhara regional government, were closed on Monday and gunfire could be heard all day, according to sources who spoke to ESAT. High ranking officials of the region and their families flew to Addis Ababa on Monday, according to a source who spoke to ESAT.
Details are scanty but in Tis Abay, in a place called Genji, 30 kms from Bahir Dar, armed farmers have engaged regime forces in gun battle.
In Meshenti town, two horticultural farms were set on fire by protesters, turning the flower fields into ashes. One
person is feared dead in Meshaenti in Monday’s protest. The town of Merawi declared itself free from the TPLF rule as local officials and police have left the town. Protesters burnt the houses of the officials and police as well as businesses affiliated with the TPLF.
Similarily, in Dangla, protesters burnt houses and businesses belonging to the local administrators and search by the protesters into the house of a notorious police known for his cruelty found that he has hidden 50 quintals of sugar, 50 containers of edible oil as well as 4 weapons. Residents set the officer’s house and vehicle on fire. Also burnt to the ground was a house belonging to a member of the TPLF who shot and injured several people.
In Gondar, Amba Giorgis, residents stopped a truck loaded with 500 cases of beer, dump the beer and used the plastic cases to block the highway. Two trucks carrying 32 cattle were also stopped at Amba Giorgis. The trucks were let go after the residents confiscated the cattle. The beer and cattle trucks were targeted by the protesters as the businesses belong to the regime business empire.
In Belesa, armed farmers in 11 buses were heading to Maksegnit to back up the residents of the town who were under attack by regime forces. A standoff ensued and continued for hours on Monday when regime forces stopped the buses.
North Gondar, South Gondar, West Gojam, Awi and East Gojam are areas in the Amhara region that were freed from TPLF control over the weekend. Protesters in theses towns and localities have replaced the regime flag with the Ethiopian flag.
The regime meanwhile sent over 2000 Agazi Special Forces to the Amhara region over the weekend to squash the ongoing protest. The people in the Amhara region were alerted on the coming of the forces and they have blocked main highways reaching several towns in the region.
What began few weeks ago as a protest against the forceful incorporation of the people of Wolkait, Tegede and Telemt, and their land into the Tigray region has now grown into a demand for the removal of the brutal regime in Addis Ababa, where Tigrayans control every aspect of the lives of the people. Protesters in Amhara and Oromo regions demand for the end of a complete domination of the country by one ethnic group that represents only 5% of the population.
At least 700 people in the Oromo region and 200 in the Amhara have been brutally murdered by TPLF forces.
From: http://www.borkena.com/2016/08/30/ethiopia-amhara-region-intensifies-uprising-against-tplf-several-killed-by-regime-forces/
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Ethiopia on the Precipice: The Regime’s Armor Has Been Pierced
As Feyisa Lilesa crossed the finish line to win silver for Ethiopia in the men’s marathon on Sunday, he crossed his arms above his head in solidarity with the protests currently rocking his home country. This is only the most visible act on world stage of the anti-government movement gaining steam in Ethiopia and one that has kept Lilesa from returning home after the Rio Olympic games for fear of official retaliation.
Source:http://www.okayafrica.com/op-ed-2/ethiopia-on-the-precipice-oromo-protest/
Thursday, August 18, 2016
Ethiopian anti-government protests set to continue
Since November 2015, Ethiopia has been experiencing a wave of anti-government protests unleashed by fears by the Oromo people that the government was planning to seize their land. Hundreds of people have been killed.
In early August, anti-government demonstrations rocked the Oromia and Amhara regional states of Ethiopia. Thousands of demonstrators went on to the streets calling on the government to stop killing protesters, release those arrested, implement political reform, and respect justice and the rule of law. However, the response from government security forces, which used live ammunition against protesters, led to the death of about 100 unarmed people.
Although the government security apparatus reported that the demonstrations had been contained, "the current political situation has become volatile. Things are fast changing and developments have become increasingly unpredictable," according to analyst Tsegaye R. Ararssa. Activists are said to be busy devising alternative methods of protest that range from weakening government institutions through staying at home and not operating businesses to organizing a Diaspora-based "grand solidarity rally."
Change of tactics
In the town of Gondar in the state of Amhara, where the first demonstration took place, residents resorted to a new mode of protest - staying at home. A resident of the town, talking on condition of anonymity, told Deutsche Welle that from last Sunday to Tuesday the streets were deserted. Workers stayed at home and stores remained closed.
Asked why the public had opted for this type of protest, the man said "it is clear that society has demanded an answer from the government, but the response was one of bullets in return, so the public decided to launch a stay-at-home strike."
For Tsegaye, this peaceful method of protest demonstrates "a complete rejection of the regime by the people. It also blunts the regime's false claims that the protests were violent. The stay-at-home protest is an indication of the increasing maturity of civil disobedience in Ethiopia."
Internet restrictions
Residents in both the Oromia and Amhara regions say that it is becoming increasingly difficult to get an internet connection and access to social media tools has been blocked. "The only way to get through is by using proxy servers," one resident of Gondar told DW.
In a recent interview with Al Jazeera, Ethiopia's Communications Affairs Minister Getachew Reda claimed that that social media had been used "to churn out false information after false information, mostly seditious remarks, trying to agitate people against security forces and also against fellow brothers and sisters." The administration therefore decided to gag "the kind of vitriol running over social media," he said.
However, political pundits argue that the state move to censor the internet places a strain on political discourse and the sharing of information. Despite the fact that the country has less than three percent of internet access, there are growing numbers of news and opposition websites which the regime is notorious for blocking.
Aid from the West
The Ethiopian government receives some 3.5 billion dollars (3 billion euros) annually from international donors and has remained a key strategic partner of the West, particularly the US and the EU, in the 'war against terror.' However, analysts argue this financial support has been toughening the regime's resolve to silence dissenting voices. The western approach of tiptoeing around human right violations in the country and its continued support for the regime has been stirring up anger among sections of the public.
Tsegaye says that US and EU "support of the regime - which they know is clearly undemocratic - is the very cause of the state terrorism we observe in the region."
A recent editorial in The Washington Post argues that the Obama administration, beyond releasing their "deeply concerned” statements, should put pressure on the regime to allow for “credible investigation into the killings." Following the demonstrations in the two regions, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, urged the Ethiopian government to "give access to international observers in the affected areas to establish what really happened."
In an interview with DW, Ravina Shamdasani, spokesperson for the commissioner, said restrictions on internet access, the blocking of social media and lack of civil society organizations in the country have made it difficult to verify reports of deaths and casualties.
Mohammed Said, public relations officer with Ethiopia's Communications Affairs Office, told DW that the government had its own system of checks and balances and the country's own Human Rights Commission was doing its job in investigating and publicizing the human rights situation in the country.
For analyst Tsegaye, this shows that the regime "is still in denial of the injustice its policies have resulted in." The Ethiopian government now has the opportunity to change its approach - otherwise, Ravina said, "if the situation is left to fester, there will be more outbursts, more unrest, more protests and perhaps more violence."
Key Western Ally Ethiopia Descends into Violence

Sunday, August 14, 2016
Thursday, July 14, 2016
Ethiopia blames Eritrea for the unrest; conflicting reports on the exact number of loss of lives
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
Ethiopia’s Security Agency Says One Surrendered In Gonder Protests, At Least 5 Civilians Killed So Far
Ethiopia’s Security Agency Says One Surrendered In Gonder Protests, At Least 5 Civilians Killed So Far
13-7-2016
As the Gonder protests mark a second day, Ethiopia’s National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) today said that one among the two run away protest leaders in Gonder has surrendered to the Region’s police, according to the State Television, EBC.
The Station also reported that at least five civilians and a number of security personnel have so far died.
One among the two wanted run away suspects is known as Colonel Demeke Zewedu, who had served the current government during the initial years and had fought back government securities, who went to his house to detain him. Government media said he left few government security officers dead before he fled.
Today’s report did not mention whether it was Demeke or another person who reportedly surrendered to police however, Ethiopian netizens from the region are reporting that Demeke managed has not been yet caught.
Yesterday in a statement read on State Television, the Ethiopian government had announced that three key officers of the Ethiopian National Intelligence and Security Service and Federal Police Counter-Terrorism Joint Taskforce, have been killed and five more wounded in North Gonder, Ethiopia when they attempted to arrest the suspected members of, what it called, “a terrorist and anti-peace organisation that is backed by the Eritrean government and a third country.”
The report added that the suspected individuals have no agenda and peaceful stance.
According to reports, hotels belonging to the ruling TPLF/EPRDF Front and their affiliates have been destroyed by the protesters.
Ethiopia Diaspora media outlets have reported that the Gonder Protest was sparked after the government started detaining members of the Welkait Amhara Identity Committee. At least four members of the Committee have reportedly been detained so far. Colonel Demeke is one among the few members, who have resisted detention and continued to fight with government forces.
The Committee is composed of people, who advance the voice of Welkait people, who claim that they are members of the Amhara ethnic group, when the government and the Tigre Region Administration says they belong to Tigre region.
The Committee members have represented the Welkait people officially at a national level attending meetings with government ministers.
Diaspora based media outlets are reporting that at least 20 people have died so far since the Gonder Protest began.
The Radio of the opposition Arebegnoch Ginbot 7 Movement reported few hours ago that the conflict has escalated and spread to smaller areas and districts of Gonder. The Radio reported that the Ethiopian government has used heavy weapons to disperse protesters. Several civilians including a five year old boy have been killed. Colonel Demeke Zewedu is reportedly engaged in an armed fight against the government forces. At least 13 armed government forces have killed today by the local people and several wounded, according to the Radio. Vehicles with government registration plate and two more Selam Buses, four military vehicles owned by the EFFORT business conglomerate of TPLF/EPRDF, have been burned down by the protesters; boutiques, shops and hotels including Florida and Atse Bakafa Hotels were also gutted by fire, the Radio reported.
The protest today had a violent nature compared to yesterday around the City Centre of Gonder and towns.
source:http://debirhan.com/?p=10004
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
Gonder Protests
Gonder Protests
#Ethiopia | ሰበር ዜና#ESAT | Breaking News, @NeaminZeleke @EngiduWoldie @CNN @BBCWorld @ESATtv @BBCAfrica pic.twitter.com/TXOCVfMWqk— Natnael Mekonnen (@NatnaelMekonne7) July 12, 2016
#Ethiopia | #AmharaProtests #HappeningNow @CNN @BBCAfrica @ESATtv @NeaminZeleke pic.twitter.com/SlMzWbHoHs— Natnael Mekonnen (@NatnaelMekonne7) July 12, 2016
የህዝባዊ ወያነ ሃርነት ትግራይ ጉጀሌ መንግስት ንብረት የሆነው ሰላም ባስ በጎንደር ወጣቶች አማካኝነት ተሳፋሪዎቹን በማስወርደ በ እሳት አጋይተውታል። @NeaminZeleke pic.twitter.com/fQbrFdrfls— Natnael Mekonnen (@NatnaelMekonne7) July 12, 2016
#Ethiopia | 4 people & 3 security officers have been killed #Gondar Automatic gunfire are being heard @BBCAfrica pic.twitter.com/Y7QpmcPl1s
— Natnael Mekonnen (@NatnaelMekonne7) July 12, 2016