Quantcast
Channel: Bruk – SodereTube
Viewing all 3045 articles
Browse latest View live

Ethiopia anti-government protesters set flower farms ablaze

$
0
0

waneKBA Dutch-run flower farm in northern Ethiopia was among a series of foreign-owned plantations attacked by anti-government protesters as unrest in the country spreads.
A “large group” of people invaded Esmeralda Farms Inc.’s farm 13 kilometers (8 miles) south of Bahir Dar city in the Amhara region on Aug. 29, causing about 7 million euros ($7.8 million) of damage, country manager Haile Seifu said by phone Thursday. Flower farms in the area owned by Israeli, Italian, Indian and Belgian companies were among nine commercial properties damaged in the protests, which continued on Aug. 30, he said.
“They were so aggressive, there were also soldiers who couldn’t control them, so we just ran away, as it’s life or death,” he said from the capital, Addis Ababa. “They came actually at once through our compound, through our fence, through our main gate, so everybody left.”
Start your day with what’s moving markets.

Authorities in Ethiopia have killed more than 500 people since June, according to human-rights groups, to suppress protests by the two most populous groups, the Oromo and Amhara. Analysts say the demonstrations present the biggest challenge to the government’s authority since it came to power a quarter of a century ago. The economy grew faster than any other in Africa over the past two years, International Monetary Fund data shows.
Nigusu Tilahun, a spokesman for the Amhara government, said he wasn’t immediately available to comment, while a call to Communications Minister Getachew Reda wasn’t answered.
Militias Clashing
Militias are also clashing with the army in parts of Gojam and Gondar areas of Amhara, with 10 people dying Wednesday in Metemma on the Sudan border, and four in Debark to the north of Gondar city, said Yared Hailemariam, executive director for the Association for Human Rights in Ethiopia, which is based in Belgium.
The military is also patrolling Bahir Dar and shooting at protesters, he said by phone from Brussels. Unless the government changes its approach, the unrest may worsen, he said.
“In both Oromia and Amhara region people are saying enough is enough,” Yared said. “They are demanding regime change.”


The latest news on protest in Amhara region

VOA – Gov’t killed many in Amhara cities, TPLF affilated businesses, Tigrean attacked in Metema

Ethiopian immigrants in Australia rally for oppressed groups in African nation

$
0
0

ethiopian in australiaSTEPHANIE NEWINGTON, Mercury
August 31, 2016 11:03pm

ETHIOPIAN immigrants have raised concerns for marginalised groups in the African nation at a rally outside Parliament House in Hobart.

Tasmanian Ethiopian Association chairman Dessie Assefa said oppression of ethnic groups by the country’s ruling political coalition, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), created animosity between tribes.

“They are oppressed politically, financially, culturally,” Mr Assefa said.

About 50 people attended the rally today, holding Ethiopian and Australian flags and photographs of the violence in Ethiopia.

About 50 people attended the rally in front of Parliament House. Picture: LUKE BOWDEN
Tasmanian Ethiopian Association secretary Tadiyos Mandefro said the Oromo and Amhara people were the most oppressed groups in Ethiopia.

“People are attacked because of their ethnicity. Our people are in crisis,” he said.

Mr Mandefro said the Oromo and Amhara people are targeted the most.

“We are here to lobby the Tasmanian Government to address the Federal Government to raise these issues with Ethiopia,” he said.

“It is the only way we will be heard.”

Ethiopian immigrant Ayani Wondimagegnew said human rights in his homeland “do not work”.

“[If] people question the government, they are answered with a bullet,” Mr Wondimagegnew said.

Mr Mandefro said the rally was also to help the public understand what was happening in Ethiopia.

“We are members of this community and that allows us to do this [rally] peacefully,” Mr Mandefro said.

In a statement released by Amnesty International, DefendDefenders executive director Hassan Shire said violence against peaceful protesters in the Oromo and Amhara regions was on the rise in Ethiopia.

“Instead of investigating and holding accountable those responsible for rights violations, the government is jailing the few independent human rights defenders left working in the country,” he said.

Stephanie Newington is a journalism student at the University of Tasmania.

Mendenew full Ethiopian movie

Israel Foreign Ministry: Avoid Ethiopia

$
0
0

isr2
The Foreign Ministry issued a warning against visiting Ethiopia, as regional violence continues to escalate.
Orli Harari, 01/09/16 15:11
The Foreign Ministry issued a warning on Thursday against traveling to Ethiopia, while skirmishes intensify around Amhara.

From the beginning of August, the Amhara and Oromia regions of Ethiopia have been rife with protests, which led to violent clashes between protesters and security forces. In the cities of Gondar, Bahir Dar, and Debre Tabor, hundreds have been killed and injured.

Yesterday, as the security situation around Ethiopia’s centers continued to worsen, Ethiopia announced a state of emergency in the Amhara province. Officials fear that the regional violence will spread to Oromia.

The Foreign Ministry recommends avoiding the Amhara and Oromia regions entirely.

The ministry’s statement also warned visitors against attending public gatherings and protests, and to remain vigilant. Traffic may be disrupted, as well as telephone and internet services.

The ministry also pleaded with Israeli citizens to not go within ten kilometers of the Ethiopia-Eritrea border, nor the Ethiopia-Sudan, Ethiopia-Kenya, and Ethiopia-South Sudan borders. It emphasized that any such action is a person’s private decision, and there is no Israeli law preventing such a visit.

Heyab full Ethiopian movie

Interview with the Journalist who wrote Dr. Birhanu’s article on New York Times


Ethiopia protests: African Union calls for restraint [BBC]

$
0
0

The African Union has called for restraint in Ethiopia where anti-government protests have continued for several months.

In a rare statement on the situation, the AU called for dialogue between all parties involved.

It said deaths had been reported and business disrupted.

A Dutch-owned flower company in Ethiopia said protesters burned down its entire farm earlier this week, causing more than $11m (£8m) worth of damage.

Human rights groups say at least 500 people have been killed and thousands arrested since the protests began.

Tikur Fikir drama part 109

Tikur Fikir drama part 110

VOA – Amhara people are being massacred “We buried 20 people”, Tigrian attacked for not supporting the protest

Efeta program September 2, 2016

Reeyot with Dr Merara Gudina Part 1 Fri 01, Sept 2016

Ethiopia: Death Toll, Tension Rise Following PM Hailemariam’s Orders for Military to Take Measures in Amhara Region

$
0
0

ural1Addis Standard
Several people are reported to have been killed in various parts of the Amhara regional state in Northern Ethiopia, where an ongoing protest by the people is intensifying. The VOA Amharic service quoted a resident in Debarq yesterday that four people were when security officers fired live bullets at protesting civilians.

Over the last few days several reports on social media indicated a rising death toll following security crackdown against a stay-at-home protests in Bahir Dar and Gonder, the region’s capital and a historic city visited by thousands of tourists respectively. Pictures coming from many cities and towns in the region also show protesting citizens, burning tyres and roadblocks. Reports also indicate that up to 50 civilians were killed in the past one week only.

Tensions are on the rise following a statement given to state owned media by Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn in which he announced that he has ordered the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) to intervene to control the situation in the region, home to the second largest ethnic group in the country. In his speech PM Hailemariam blamed Ethiopia’s “outside enemies” for being the instigators to disrupt the country by providing “radicals with sacks full of money.” He further stated that the government will use “its full forces to bring the rule of law” into the region.

A day prior to PM Hailemariam’s statement, Sheger FM, a private radio based in Addis Abeba, reported that the regional state has requested a military intervention by the Federal government. Talking to the station, Nigusu Tilahun, the regional government’s Chief spokesperson, conceded that lives were lost in the recent protests but declined to give numbers. As a result of intensifying protests, the regional government requested the intervention of the federal army, Sheger FM quoted the spokesperson.

Accordingly reports indicate that the region is now divided into five zones and is placed under a military command.

We pay for the panels, you just pay for the lower energy bill. Go solar with no enrollment, install, or system costs. Get your free quote now
Pictures circulating around social media show heavy artillery moving towards the state capital Bahir Dar, 550 North of Addis Abeba, and the nearby town of Gondar where the recent wave of #Amharaprotests originated late last month. Addis Standard could not independently verify the authenticity of those pictures. Internet is shut off in the whole region while locals fear government sanctioned phone call monitoring.

The #Amharaprotests began in late July when security forces tried to arrest leaders of the Wolkayit committee, a committee formed by the people of Wokayit to find solutions related to the border and identity questions of the Wolkayit community.

In the last few days tens of thousands of citizens in several cities and towns in Gojam and Gonder areas of the region have come out to the streets to protest the government. In what many see as the ultimate test of the ruling EPRDF protesters are also showing solidarity with the #Oromoprotests which began in Nov. 2015.

In the weekend of 6-7 August region wide protests both in Amhara and Oromia regions were met by violent crackdown by security forces. It’s reported that more than 100 civilians were killed in that weekend only, according to Amnesty International. In Bahir Dar only, more than 30 people were killed when a security guard opened fire at protesters. The government disputes that number. The stay-at-home protests in Bahir and Gonder followed the deadliest weekend, however in the last few days that too turned violent when security forces began breaking into houses in an attempt to force citizens and businesses to stop the stay-at-home protests.

Some reports claim that attacks against government institutions and party owned and affiliated businesses were witnessed in some cities and towns. There are also reports that young men and women are being arrested en mass by security forces.


Fire blazes Kilinto High Security Prison [Capital Ethiopia, Reporter

$
0
0

klinto1

Capital Ethiopia

Unknown number of people were injured from a fire that broke out in the Kilinto High Security Prison today. Seven fire trucks and two ambulances responded to the blaze. Until we went to the printing press three fire fighters were hurt battling the blaze. According to eyewitnesses inmates and guards were also injured by the fire. The fire is now under control.

Ethiopian Reporter

fireklinto1በአዲስ አበባ ቂሊንጦ ማረሚያ ቤት የተነሳ ቃጠሎ በማረሚያ ቤቱ ላይ ከፍተኛ ጉዳት አደረሰ፡፡

ቃጠሎው የተነሳው ከጠዋቱ ሁለት ሰዓት ተኩል እንደሆነ የገለጹት የሪፖርተር ምንጮች፣ የአዲስ አበባ የእሳትና ድንገተኛ አደጋ አገልግሎት ከረፋዱ አራት ሰዓት በኋላ መድረሱን ይገልጻሉ፡፡ አካባቢው በፌዴራል ፖሊስ አባላት በፍጥነት ተከቦ እንደነበርም ምንጮቻችን ገልጸዋል፡፡ ወደ አካባቢው ከአደጋ ጊዜ ሠራተኞች በስተቀር ማንም እንዳይጠጋ በፀጥታ ኃይሎች የተከለከለ ሲሆን፣ የአደጋው መነሻ ከእስር ቤቱ ካፌ የተነሳ እሳት መሆኑን ምንጮች ገልጸዋል፡፡ እሳቱ ከካፌው በመነሳት ዞን ሦስት የሚባለው የእስረኞች ክልል ድረስ ደርሶ እንደነበር ምንጮች አክለው ገልጸዋል፡፡

የአዲስ አበባ እሳትና ድንገተኛ አገልግሎት የአደጋ ጊዜ ሦስት ሠራተኞች ጉዳት እንደደረሰባቸው ታውቋል፡፡ በእስረኞች ላይ የደረሰ ጉዳት ስለመኖሩ ሪፖርተር በማጣራት ላይ ይገኛል፡፡

በእሳት ቃጠሎ ወቅት በአካባቢው የተገኙ የፌዴራል ፖሊስ አባላትና የማረሚያ ቤቱ የጥበቃ ሠራተኞች፣ እስረኞችን ለማስፈራራት ወደ ሰማይ ሲተኩሱ እንደነበር ምንጮች ገልጸዋል፡፡

ቂሊንጦ ማረሚያ ቤት ከሚገኙ እስረኞች መካከል የኦሮሞ ፌዴራሊስት ኮንግረንስ አመራር የሆኑት አቶ በቀለ ገርባና አቶ ደጀኔ ጣፋ፣ የሰማያዊ ፓርቲ የቀድሞ አመራር አቶ ዮናታን ተስፋዬ፣ ጋዜጠኛ እስክንድር ነጋና ሌሎች ይገኙበታል፡፡

Ethiopia: “If you give false testimony, we will kill you.” Former political prisoner about police interrogation

$
0
0

AlJazeera

Ethiopia protests: Opposition wants prisoners freed

As demonstrations continue, opposition tells Al Jazeera that jailed protesters of all backgrounds should be released.

Addis Ababa – An opposition leader in Ethiopia has demanded that “political prisoners” be freed as anti-government protests continued to rage in one of Africa’s most populous countries.

ETHIOPIA PROTESTS

Protests in Oromia started in November last year when the government announced a plan to expand the capital – a city-state – into the surrounding Oromia region.

Many Oromos saw that as a plan to remove them from fertile land. The scheme has since been dropped, but the unrest spread as demonstrators called for the release of prisoners and for wider freedoms.

In the Amhara region, demonstrations began over the status of a district – Wolkait – that was once part of Amhara but was incorporated into the neighbouring Tigrayan region more than 20 years ago. Those demonstrations have also since widened.

The governing Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front last month rejected a United Nations request that it send in observers, saying it alone was responsible for the security of its citizens.

The government, a close security ally of the West, is often accused of silencing dissent, even blocking internet access at times. At elections last year, it won every seat in the 547-seat parliament

The call was made by Tiruneh Gamta, a leader of the Oromo ethnic group, from which the biggest number of protesters come.

According to the New York-based Human Rights Watch, at least 500 people have been killed since unrest began in November.

Thousands have also been arrested, rights groups say, and many have not been heard from since they were detained.

“We want all political prisoners, regardless of any political stand or religion or creed, released from jail. Together with this, we need democratic rights,” Gamta told Al Jazeera.

The government has denied that violence from the security forces is “systemic” and pledged to launch an independent investigation, blaming opposition groups inside and outside of the country and what it called “anti-peace” elements for the chaos.

Al Jazeera interviewed a woman who said she was arrested while on her way to a market. A protest had been taking place close to the market, she said.

After a night in a jail cell, she and 30 other people were ordered onto a bus and told not to look outside, she said. Seven hours later, she said, they arrived at a camp.

“At the camp, they put us in a cell. Then the next day, they ordered us out for what they said was exercise,” the woman, who requested anonymity, told Al Jazeera.

“They beat us as they ordered us to exercise, and when we got tired, they continued to beat us. I tried to do what they said, but I couldn’t, so they beat me more. Even when I was running, they were beating me all over my body.”

Interrogation was carried out regularly to wear the detained down, the woman said.

“Five or six policemen interrogated each one of us every day. They kept threatening us. They said if you give false testimony, we will kill you.”

Protests that started in November among people from the Oromo ethnic group have spread. Demonstrators from the Amhara region have also started to demand greater political and economic rights.

The Oromo and Amhara are the two biggest ethnic groups in Ethiopia. Both accuse the government of being dominated by members of the Tigrayan ethnic group, which makes up about six percent of the population.

Government promised accountability

Government leaders have said they communicate with opposition groups to listen to their grievances. They also promised that police found guilty of abuse will be held to account.

“We will do whatever it takes to make sure such things do not happen, and if they do happen, the people are not left unaccounted for,” Getachew Reda, a government spokesman, told Al Jazeera.

Members of the opposition, though, say they have heard similar reassurances before.

In the latest bout of unrest earlier this week, protesters attacked foreign-owned businesses, according to the owners of a flower firm.

The Dutch company said crowds of people in the Oromia and Amhara regions torched flower farms as they targeted businesses with perceived links to the government. Flowers are one of the country’s top exports.

Esmeralda Farms said its 10-million-euro investment ($11.1m) went up in smoke this week in Bahir Dar city and that several other horticulture companies were also affected.

Heyab full Ethiopian movie

Read all the tweets about Amhara Protest

$
0
0


AmharaResistance

Veteran EPRDF leaders talk about rent seeking, corruption, reform in the party

Viewing all 3045 articles
Browse latest View live