Thursday, April 22, 2010

ETHIOPIA-Another "landslide victory" for the ruling minority clique





ETHIOPIA-Another "landslide victory" for the ruling minority clique

Sophia Tesfamariam

"… If voting made any difference it would be outlawed…"-Emma Goldman

In a few weeks, on 23 May 2010, Ethiopians will be going to the polls hoping that, this time, the minority regime led by the Horn menace Meles Zenawi will respect their wishes and not steal their votes. Unfortunately, the odds are stacked up against the people of Ethiopia and they will once again be
disappointed. Considering the pre-elections actions taken by the minority regime and its partners, the outcome is not hard to predict: the minority regime will run unchallenged, and will win 99.9% of the votes in Ethiopia´s 2010 elections. "The ruling party, EPRDF has won both the by-election of the
House of Peoples Representatives and local election in a landslide victory", is what Meles Zenawi´s hand picked National Electoral Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) will announce on 21 June 2010.



It should be recalled that after Meles Zenawi´s regime stole the 2005

elections, spontaneous protests broke out across the country. The minority

regime and its security forces chose to respond with violence and force.

Over 200 innocent Ethiopians were gunned down in cold blood and over 40,000

were detained for voting the regime out of office. Having been warned of

avoiding a repeat of the 2005 post elections violence by its handlers, the

regime in Ethiopia has decided to take actions ahead of the elections. Upon

the advice of his handlers, he has taken all actions to "clear the deck" and

prevent any real challenge to his rule and most of all, avoid a repeat of

the deadly and very embarrassing violence and massacres that unfolded

following the "flawed 2005 elections".







In preparation for the 23 May 2010 Ethiopian elections, the lawless regime,

Washington´s "staunch ally" in the Horn of Africa region, has engineered the

2010 election outcome through institutional means in an attempt to give it

an imprimatur of legitimacy. In addition to the harassments, intimidations

and murder of potential candidates and opposition supporters, the regime has

instituted laws to muzzle critics, the media and even elections monitors and

observers.







The minority regime and the hand picked National Election Board of Ethiopia,

and the Ambassadors of the Ethiopian Partners Group, "brokered" the various

"Code of Conducts" that are part of the regime´s scheme to rig the 2010

elections. The EPG must know that elections can be rigged, not just by

miscounting votes, stealing and destroying ballots, but also by unfair

administration of the electoral laws. Without an independent judiciary and

an independent Election Board the people of Ethiopia have no recourse and

are essentially being told to accept the outcome and shut up, go home, and

consider themselves lucky to have been participants in the election, and

lived to tell about it.





The regime and its handlers have come up with three documents-Code of

conduct for Observers, Code of conduct for the press and a Code of conduct

for political parties. The objective is quite clear. It is Meles Zenawi´s

way of using the law to silence his critics, prevent substantive discussions

on Ethiopia´s economic, social and political issues and deprive the

Ethiopian people and their representatives a voice in the upcoming

elections. It is the minority regime´s 2010 instruments designed to

criminalize dissent. Of course if that doesn´t work, there is lethal arsenal

ready to be used upon his orders.







Considered by the State Department to be a "front-line state" in the war on

terrorism, Ethiopia´s counterterrorism cooperation with the United States

has yielded an increase in U.S. military assistance and arms sales since

Sept. 11, 2001. Humvee military vehicles sold to Ethiopia by the United

States for counterterrorism operations were used by the government to fire

on civilian protestors during the riots that followed the May elections and

during which 200 people were killed.







Seeking to avoid the messy ballot-stuffing often associated with the rigged

2005 elections, the minority regime has refined its tactics. The opposition

has been neutralized, sidelined and weakened. Meles has kept potential

opponents at bay by imprisoning, exiling and even killing them. Even

candidates from his home region of Tigray are not spared. For instance,

Aregawi Gebreyohannes, a Tigrayan candidate for parliament was stabbed to

death by intruders in his home. Another Tigrayan candidate was badly beaten

by armed men in another part of the northern Ethiopian region. Both men had

recently been arrested in connection with their political activities.







Woizero Birtukan Medeska, president of the Unity for Democracy and Justice

Party went from being an ordinary judge to becoming one of Meles Zenawi´s

famous political prisoners. Judging from the statements made by Ethiopian

women at a recent demonstration held by Ethiopians in Washington, DC,

Medeska remains a symbol of the Ethiopian peoples struggle for democracy and

justice. Meles Zenawi who is determined to keep his nemesis off the

political stage and out of the 2010 elections ordered the re-arrest of

opposition leader in 2008 and she has been sentenced to life in prison.







Five prominent opposition political activists were also sentenced to death.

High officials of the OLF party were accused of trying to "overthrow the

government" and for attempted secession (legal under Article 19 of the

Ethiopian Constitution). The accused included several prominent Oromo

businessmen and politicians. Amongst the accused is Bekele Jirata, General

Secretary of the Oromo Federal Democratic Movement (OFDM). According to

statements attributed to Asfaw Angatu, an MP from the opposition Oromo

People´s Congress (OPC), 18 OPC members preparing for the elections were

arrested. Prominent opposition leaders such as Berhanu Nega have been forced

to remain in exile, sentenced to death in absentia by the regime´s kangaroo

courts.







The minority regime also has a new "anti-terrorism law". The law provides

broad powers to the police, and harsh criminal penalties can be applied to

political protesters and others who engage in acts of nonviolent political

dissent. Some of its provisions appear tailored less toward addressing

terrorism and more toward allowing for a heavy-handed response to mass

public unrest, like that which followed Ethiopia's 2005 elections.

Ethiopia's new anti-terror law contains provisions that will impact the

media by making journalists and editors potential accomplices in acts of

terrorism if they publish statements seen as encouraging or supporting

political protests.





Professor Beyene Petros, deputy chairman of organizational affairs at the

Forum for Democratic Dialogue in Ethiopia (FDDE), a coalition of eight

opposition bodies said:







"…When elections approach, the government activates different strategies to

incriminate our candidates, to discourage them from running in the

elections…Twenty-four of our potential candidates are facing various forms

of harassment, including imprisonment…"-







For his part, Merera Gudina, leader of a party representing the Oromo

people, Ethiopia's largest ethnic group said:







"…The EPRDF is trying to be both the referee and a player. If you are both

the referee and a player, who is going to win is clear from the beginning…"-







The minority regime has resorted to blackmail, lies and rumors to embarrass

and isolate popular candidates. Lidetu Ayalew, leader of the Ethiopian

Democratic Party, accused the minority regime´s officials in his devoutly

Christian district of trying to discredit him by spreading false rumors he

had converted to another religion. There are credible reports about

potential voters in other villages and towns being intimidated and

blackmailed. Ethiopian children are deprived schooling, farmers are denied

fertilizer and seeds, and peasant families are denied food aid for backing

the opposition.







Voice of America on 8 April 2010 in its post "Silence Not Golden in

Ethiopia" said:







"…Following the jamming of the Voice of America's radio broadcasts in

Ethiopia's dominant Amharic language for the last four weeks, the government

there appears to now have turned its attention to VOA's Internet service in

the East African nation. Numerous reports have been received that VOA's

website is unavailable inside Ethiopia, where individuals both inside and

out of Africa often turn when they cannot get a radio signal…While a friend

and supporter of Ethiopia, the United States nevertheless cannot remain

silent on such actions and censorship, which run counter to the country's

constitution. It is watching with great interest and encourages all parties

there to act responsibly during the election campaign. An election cannot be

run under the guise of democratic process if all candidates cannot

participate freely and state their case or if political news is suppressed…"







As the Amharic saying goes…ina min yiTebes?







What is it that VoA expects from the poor Ethiopian people? What can they do

when they have been boxed in the corner by Meles Zenawi´s rules,

regulations, codes of conduct, not to mention the armored vehicles, tanks,

humvees and other deadly instruments that have been given to him by his

handlers to subdue, intimidate and kill them? VoA must know that in

Ethiopia, with the help of Meles Zenawi´s handlers, the 2010 elections, like

the three previous ones, will "run under the guise of democratic process"

despite the fact that all the "candidates cannot participate freely and

state their case" and the "news is suppressed". VoA must know that the

minority regime that depends on donors for over 70% of its national budget

does not have the financial or any other capacity to carry out these

expensive and excessive activities on its own.





VoA must know that it is foreign governments, such as the United States and

the United Kingdom, that have colluded in eroding civil liberties and

democracy in Ethiopia. They have chosen to appease Meles Zenawi as he

committed genocides in Gambela, Ogaden and Oromia regions of Ethiopia,

invaded and occupied and made excuses for Meles Zenawi´s reign of terror, as

he served their interests in the region. Donors have knowingly let Meles

Zenawi´s thugocracy use donor funds (which are fungible) to commit genocides

and other international crimes against the people of Ethiopia.











Who is providing Meles Zenawi´s genocidal mercenary regime with the

diplomatic, financial, political and military shield and support it needs to

carry out the international crimes against the people of Ethiopia, to

violate international law and the UN and African Charters, to military

occupy sovereign Eritrean territories, including Badme? Who is shielding the

regime from being punished for its violation of Somalia´s sovereignty and

territorial integrity and the massacre of over 20,000 innocent Somalis and

the displacement of over 3.5 million during its two year long aggressive war

of invasion and occupation? Who is diverting attention away from the

minority regime´s crimes committed in Somalia and elsewhere in the region?

Certainly, it is not the Ethiopian people.







Allow me to share an excerpt from Michael Klare and Cynthia Arnson´s well

researched 1981 paper "Supplying Repression", published by the Institute for

Policy Studies. Klare and Arnson wrote:







"…U.S. firms and agencies are providing guns, equipment, training, and

technical support to the police and paramilitary forces most directly

involved in the torture, assassination, and abuse of civilian

dissidents…Rather than sitting in detached judgment over incidents of abuse

occurring elsewhere the United States stands at the supply end of a pipeline

of repressive technology that extends to many of the world's most

authoritarian regimes…The US is the world's leading supplier of police and

prison hardware, the leader in "what can best be called the international

repression trade," supplying many of the worst human rights violators…"







VoA must know that it is the US trained and supplied military and police

that are charged with imposing "order and stability" and it is the United

States that gives Ethiopia over 1 billion dollars in aid every year. So why

cry foul now and feign concern for the people of Ethiopia? VoA is barking up

the wrong tree. If US officials choose to look the other way and make

excuses for the lawless regime, what is it that the Ethiopian people can do?







When the minority regime announced that it was going to jam the Voice of

America´s (VoA) Amharic service program, Johnnie Carson, the US Assistant

Secretary of State for African Affairs downplayed the regime´s threats.

Meles Zenawi said that the VoA was "engaging in destabilizing propaganda,"

and shamelessly compared it to Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines,

the Rwandan station whose inflammatory broadcasts helped stoke the 1994

genocide. It wasn´t the jamming that bothered Carson; it was the comparison

to Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines that was "distressing". There

are members of the Ethiopian opposition who believe the jamming of the VoA

and the consequent US-Ethiopian row are no more than a staged drama. Judging

from Carson´s comments, they may be right.





The people of Ethiopia are suffering and desperately want change, but the

2010 elections will not bring them the change they need, or can believe

in…Just more of the same. More lies, more deceptions, more hunger, more

pain, more suffering etc. etc. Under Meles Zenawi´s brutal genocidal

minority regime, despite the massive and continuous food, financial, and

military aid provided by its handlers, the people of Ethiopia are hungry,

malnourished and sick. The actual purchasing power of the Ethiopian worker

has been declining for the last 18 years and despite the professed

"impressive GDP growth rates" (11% according to Meles Zenawi and his

handlers):





§ About 40 % of the population lives below the international poverty line of

$1.25 per day.







§ The United Nations Development Program places Ethiopia´s Human Development

Index (HDI) at 0.414, which gives the country a rank of 171st out of 182

countries.







§ According to UNICEF, preventable diseases and malnutrition kill 500000

Ethiopian children every year.





§ 49% of the population is undernourished.







§ In 2009, the World Food Program (WFP) assisted almost ten million people

in Ethiopia.







The 2010 Ethiopian elections, instead of being a step toward restoring

democracy in Ethiopia, will have the exact opposite effect.





In the international arena, there will be no punitive actions taken against

the mercenary leader for his regime´s numerous violations of international

law and the international crimes he is committing, or for the "undemocratic"

actions in Ethiopia, and Meles Zenawi knows that. There will be a lot of

talk, but no actions. When it is all said and done, there will be statements

from his handlers, rebuking the "opposition" and calls will be made to "join

the parliament" and work for changes from within, and of course the US and

its allies will hail Ethiopia´s "free and fair" elections and the spread of

"democratization" of Africa.







Johnnie Carson and his team at the Bureau of African Affairs will keep

repeating US policy for the Horn of Africa and extol profound concern for

"human rights", "the raising of the living standards", "development" and

"democratization" of Africa etc. etc. but what happens on the ground (by

design), will be the exact opposite.. The regime´s million dollar lobbyists

and unscrupulous lawmakers with business and other interests in Ethiopia,

his skirted friends at the Pentagon, UN and the Bureau of African Affairs

will all work to ensure the diplomatic, financial, political and military

shield and support for the genocidal, flip flopping, mercenary minority

regime in Ethiopia will remain unchanged. According to a Reuters, Meles

Zenawi´s dominance is bolstered by a general sense that the West "would be

comfortable with Meles staying on - as long as he remains a loyal ally in

the volatile Horn of Africa and liberalises his potentially huge economy."





For his part, like his predecessors, the mercenary, street smart Prime

Minister of Ethiopia wrongly believes that his foreign trained and equipped

security apparatus will make his minority regime the only decisive political

force in Ethiopia..forever.


Meles Zenawi ought to know better and learn from history.


The rule of law will prevail over the law of the jungle!

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