Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Xalka Kali ah Somalia U hayn Waa Sidan.










Ethiopia: Warar Xog. ogaal ah lagu kalsoon yahay, ayaa sheegaya in ethiopia ay rabto in somalia loo kala qaybiyo , Gobale federal ah, Iyo, Waqooyi galbeed somalila la Magac baxay somaliland In Ethiopia iyo Kenya ay aqoon sadaaan.

Dalka Ethiopia Ayaa horaantii sanadkan waxaa sameeyay, Gudi uu oo magac darey, Khabiiradaa siyaasada somalia Ee danaha qaranka ethiopia ku bad baadi karto, khabiiradaas ayaa madax waxaa ka ah, Wasiir dowlada arrimaha dibada Dr Alemu Tekede , Inta kalo ah Jenrals ka tirsan ciidanka qaranka, Iyo masuuliyiin ka tirsan parlamenka , ayaa waxaa soo hordhigeen qorshahan oo ah sidan.


1- In Ethiopia aqoonsato somaliland, Aqoonsi Caalami ahna ooga raadiso,


2- In Ethiopia somalia kale u kala qaybiso Gobalo ana lahyn awood mulatari oo federeal ah, Puntland, Juboland Hawiye land, Raxanwaynland.


3- In Ethiopia dhulka Somalada ogadeniya laga xayiraa qaybaha somalida kale , xaga is dhex galka , ganacsiga bulshada.


Arintaan ayaa wararka wariyaha ku sugan adiss ababa shegayaa in la hor dhigaay masuuliyiin ka tirsaan, Waqooyi galbeed somalia, lamagac baxay Somaliland , Masuulyiin ka tirsan Puntland, Iyo Madaxda Dolwda u sareeyaa Cabdulaahi yusuf Iyo geedi,


Riyaale kaahin oo ah ku Maxada ismaamulka somaliland Aayaa qorshahaas soo dhaweeyay, Kuna diirsaday waxaan Gurigaa adiss aba looga yaqaan, Prime minister palace Casho loogu sameeyay habeenkii halkaas laga wad hadlay in ciidan garaya ilaa 7000 keeni doona koonfur , ciidankaas caawiyaa Ethiopia,, Madaxwaynaha jamuuriya federalka Somalia Cabdulaahi yuusuf Axmed ayaa arrintaa Gaashanaka ku dhuftay caro kala so tagay magaalada Adiss Ababa.


source: Girma waldo






COLEMAN MEETS WITH YEMENESE AMBASSADOR TO DISCUSS SOMALI REFUGEE CRISIS


October 30th, 2007 - Washington DC - As ranking member of the Senate Subcommittee on Near East Affairs Senator Norm Coleman today met with the Ambassador of Yemen, Mr. Abdul Wahab Al-Hijri, to discuss the humanitarian situation of Somali refugees in Yemen. Yemen is the primary destination for Somali refugees who cross the Gulf of Aden to escape the highly volatile situation in their home country.
The UN estimates that there are approximately 100,000 Somali refugees residing in Yemen, with thousands of others making the attempt to cross the Gulf of Aden, which often results in human smuggling and other dangers posed by poorly constructed and overcrowded boats. “Today I met with Ambassador Al-Hijri to discuss the humanitarian situation of Somali refugees fleeing to his country,” said Coleman.
“This issue is a very high priority for me, as I have heard very troubling reports about the treacherous conditions faced by Somalis who cross the Gulf of Aden and the many deaths associated with these journeys. The dangers they face include becoming victims of human trafficking and enduring perilous conditions as they travel across the sea, which has led to a situation in which hundreds of deaths have occurred this year.” “The humanitarian situation of Somalis that actually arrive in Yemen is also very difficult, as demonstrated by reports of poor conditions at the refugee camps,” added Coleman. “It was important to me to raise my deep concerns for the Somalis crossing the Gulf of Aden to the Ambassador, who was very receptive to my comments. I also expressed my appreciation to the Ambassador for Yemen’s compassionate policy of granting refugee status to all Somalis that arrive on its shore. This has allowed many Somalis to escape the dangers that currently plague parts of Somalia. I pledged to work with the Ambassador and his government to try to better address the issue of Somali refugees in Yemen, and am very encouraged by his openness to such cooperation.”


Contact(s):Leroy Coleman, (202) 224-5641

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Child hunger 'crisis' in Ogaden



Child hunger 'crisis' in Ogaden
Elizabeth Blunt BBC News, Addis Ababa


Aid agencies have been sounding the alarm for monthsA humanitarian disaster is now imminent in Ethiopia's Somali region of Ogaden, a report says, just two months after the UN warned of acute food shortages.
Ethiopia's Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Agency says the situation is critical, with over 20% of children in the Ogaden acutely malnourished.
Rebel attacks and military counter insurgency operations have disrupted food supplies for months.
In August, the UN said emergency food aid was needed for 600,000 people.
This latest report, prepared with technical assistance from the aid agency Save the Children is the first attempt to measure the effects of the current situation on young children in the Ogaden.

See detailed map of Ogaden
It follows reports submitted to the government last month by both Medecins sans Frontieres (MSF) and the UN, which also sounded the alarm.
Famine looming
The Ethiopian government had promised to ensure that the food and medical needs of the people in the region were met in collaboration with UN agencies and other partners.

Ogaden suffered badly in 2000 following drought
But by the time the children were assessed in early September, over 20% of under fives were already found to be acutely malnourished and 1.5%, severely acutely malnourished - a term which indicates the kind of listless children with wasted arms and legs found in famine situations.
This, the report says, indicates a critical nutritional status situation, which is something short of a humanitarian emergency but could very quickly turn into one without immediate action.
The report scrupulously avoids allotting blame but shows how natural and man-made causes have combined to put these children in danger.
Rains and rebels
The area of Fiq where the assessment teams carried out their work was already impoverished and short of food even before the upsurge in rebel attacks this year and the army operation which followed.
The Ethiopian army has been accused by Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) separatists of operating a food blockade and causing a man-made famine.
The rains in Fiq have been poor for the past two years and there is little pasture for the animals.
Now security operations have disrupted normal commercial food supplies and made men in particular afraid to travel to places where they might be able to buy.
Prices of grain have doubled, while the price of livestock - people's main source of income - has halved.
Even those with money, the report says, have no easy access to food and an urgent response is needed to ensure that the children in these areas survive.
In early September MSF warned that a disaster was looming in the region and complained it had been denied access by the government in Addis Ababa.
Later the same month a UN fact-finding mission found a "pervasive climate of fear" in Ogaden and called for an independent investigation into abuses of civilians.
The ONLF was founded in 1984 and is fighting for independence from Ethiopia, complaining of discrimination by the central government against the region's Somali-speaking nomads.

source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7069818.stm

Ethiopia faced with tough decisions in Somalia



Ethiopia faced with tough decisions in Somalia
Published 10/30/2007 - 7:49 a.m. EST
Slide Show PM Meles Zenawi at a press conference in Addis Ababa


Despite the swift collapse of the Islamists forces
almost ten months ago, Addis Ababa remains in an awkward position as the transitional Somali government’s Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Ghedi recently resigned from his post. Analysts say Ethiopia has various cards to play in Somalia since it has a range of partners, but almost all of the moves will end up displeasing another Ethiopian ally in the anarchic Somalia. At the center of it all is the breakaway Somaliland region in the north that is seeking UN recognition. Supporting Somaliland is often seen as the best solution in Addis Ababa as well as in Nairobi, since even a non-Islamist stable central government in Mogadishu can end up seeking the much feared irredentism policies in the long term. Also, Somaliland’s staunch cooperation with Ethiopia against the ONLF rebels is seen to give Somaliland the edge over Puntland. Meanwhile, Puntland is the biggest source of man power for Ethiopian troops and for the pro-Ethiopia but weak transitional government of President Abdullahi Yusuf. Thus the tangled situation makes it a challenge for Addis Ababa to fully support Somaliland, as Hargeisa also battles pro-Puntland militias to take over disputed territories in the north. Some sources are stating that Ethiopia is trying to diversify away from its overdependence on Puntland and on President Abdullahi Yusuf, by seeking a more powerful anti-Islamist Hawiye leadership in Mogadishu. This indirectly helps bring balanced clan representation in the TFG while at the same time giving Ethiopia a non-Darood powerful ally in the south as Ethiopia eventually seeks to strengthen its ties with Somaliland.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Ethiopia's 'own Darfur' as villagers flee government-backed violence

By Steve Bloomfield in Bosasso
Published: 17 October 2007


Early one June morning, in Kamuda, a village of 200 families in the remote Ogaden region in eastern Ethiopia, 180 soldiers announced their arrival by firing guns in the air.
The village, they said, had been providing food and shelter for the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), a separatist rebel group . As the villagers froze in horror, the soldiers plucked out seven young women, all aged between 15 and 18, and left.
The following morning the youngest girl was found. Her body, bloodied and beaten, was hanging from a tree. The next day a second girl was found hanging from the same tree. A third suffered the same fate. The others were never seen again.
Shukri Abdullahi Mohammed, 48, a mother of seven children, lived in Kamuda. As she describes the fate of the seven girls – "the most beautiful girls in the village" – she tightens her headscarf around her neck to indicate the way they were killed. "I will not forget it," she says.
Days later, a 12-year-old boy from the same village was kidnapped by soldiers and gang-raped. Every night, soldiers would knock on doors looking for women to rape. "I did not want to wait until it happened to my family," said Mrs Mohammed. They left Kamuda and made their way across the porous border with Somalia, before travelling a further 300 miles by foot to the hot and humid port town of Bosasso.
About 100 Ethiopians are now arriving here every day. Their stories reveal the brutality of Ethiopia's hidden war, a brutal counter-insurgency that some aid officials believe has parallels with Darfur. Some estimates put the number of people displaced by the violence at 200,000 already.
According to accounts from refugees, Ethiopian troops are burning villages, raping women and killing civilians as part of a systematic campaign to drive them from their homes. They reported dozens of villages destroyed and accused the Ethiopian government of forcibly starving its own people by preventing food convoys reaching villages and destroying crops and livestock.
A former Ethiopian soldier who defected from the army said how he had been ordered to burn villages and kill all their inhabitants. He said the Ethiopian air force would bomb a village before a unit of ground troops followed, firing indiscriminately at civilians. "Men, women, children – we killed them all," he said.
"We were told we were fighting guerrillas – the ONLF," he said. "But we were killing farmers – they were not ONLF."
Those who managed to escape are living in a series of ramshackle refugee camps on the edge of Bosasso. Their shelters are made from pieces of cardboard and old rags, scraps of plastic sheeting and rusting corrugated iron.
Sat outside the shelters, on the grey expanse of dust and stone, voices overlap as refugees list the villages that have been destroyed. Kor u Celista, Gallaalshe, Fooldeex, Yoocaalle – places that were all once home to hundreds of families, now abandoned and empty, the huts burnt to the ground.
Abudllahi Shukri Mohammed, 30, a cattle herder from Dega Bur province tells how he was forced at gunpoint to work as a porter for a group of 300 soldiers. They took his 18 cows and made him and five other nomads carry heavy loads. After three long days marching through the Ogaden, Mr Mohammed tried to escape.
"They caught me and started beating me. They kicked me in the head and hit me with the back of their guns." With his right arm he motions the steady, repetitive smack of the guns against his body. His left arm lies limp on his lap. He has been unable to move it since the attack, his fingers fixed in an ugly formation.
"They beat me for two hours," he says, "then I fell unconscious. They thought I was dead so they left me."
Ethiopia claims it is defending itself against an insurgency launched by the ONLF in a region that has long been marginalised.
It claims villagers have been giving the fighters shelter and food. Analysts say Ethiopia has been attempting to reduce that support by emptying the countryside. Thousands have been moved to towns heavily controlled by the military. Anyone left in the villages is considered a possible ONLF supporter.
The Ethiopian military is not the only destructive force in the region. The ONLF launched its most daring assault in April. The group attacked a Chinese oil installation in Abole, killing nine Chinese and 65 Ethiopians.
It was that attack which sparked the fresh counter-insurgency – a fierce scorched-earth policy. In the Ogaden's main towns, Jijiga and Gode, the prisons are overflowing. "They are arresting anyone who they think might have a connection with the ONLF," says one human rights worker in Bosasso. "Some are being killed if the security forces don't believe they are telling the truth."
Human rights investigators are gathering evidence of widespread use of rape, with women reporting gang-rapes by up to a dozen soldiers. In some villages, men have been abducted at night, their bodies dumped in the village the next morning.
While in Darfur, aid agencies have been able to establish camps and provide humanitarian support, they have been blocked from setting up operations in the Ogaden. The International Committee of the Red Cross has been thrown out and Medicins Sans Frontieres has also been prevented from working. Journalists trying to enter have also been banned – those that have tried have been promptly arrested.
A UN team was allowed into the Ogaden last month to investigate allegations of abuse by Ethiopian troops. Its report was not made public but the team called for an independent inquiry.
But while Khartoum's counter-insurgency in Darfur has been described by the US as "genocide" and by the UN as "crimes against humanity", international condemnation of Ethiopia has, so far, been limited. Indeed, the US has given its backing to Ethiopia. America's top official on African affairs, assistant secretary of state, Jendayi Frazer, visited one town in the Ogaden last month.
On her return to Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa, she criticised the rebels and said the reports of military abuses were merely allegations. "We urge any and every government to respect human rights and to try to avoid civilian casualties but that's difficult in dealing with an insurgency," she said.
America sees Ethiopia as its principal Horn of Africa ally in the "war on terror". The US gave tacit approval for Ethiopia's Christmas invasion of Somalia which ousted the Union of Islamic Courts.
It also provided logistical and technical support for the operation and continues to help co-ordinate a response to the insurgency in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, which seeks to destabilise the transitional government, propped up by Ethiopia.
The US provides some $283m (£140m) in military and humanitarian aid to Ethiopia and has trained its military – one of the largest and strongest in Africa.
The Ogaden has become the latest flashpoint in a broader conflict in the Horn of Africa. On one side is Ethiopia and the weak transitional government of Somalia, on the other is Eritrea and two insurgent groups, the ONLF and the Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS).
From West's favourite leader to grave-digger of democracy
Sat between a beaming Tony Blair and Sir Bob Geldof, Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi, could hardly have wished for a stronger endorsement. The launch of Mr Blair's Commission for Africa report in March 2005 in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa, enhanced Mr Meles's position as the British Government's – and the West's – favourite African leader.
Handpicked by Mr Blair to sit on the commission, Mr Meles was viewed as the man to lead the "African renaissance". He was seen as a leader committed to development and democracy.
But within two months of the commission's report being published, Mr Meles's star began to fade. Huge street protests erupted in Addis Ababa in May 2005 following a general election which both the government and opposition claimed they had won. Security forces opened fire on protesters, killing 193 people, and thousands of opposition supporters and leaders were arrested.
More than 100 opposition leaders were put on trial for treason while the police crackdown intensified. Text messages, which had been used to organise the demonstrations in 2005, were banned. The next time Mr Meles and Mr Blair found themselves sat next to each other, at a summit in South Africa, the stiff body language and the lack of eye contact between the pair underlined the deterioration in the relationship.
Britain still gives Ethiopia £130m in humanitarian aid each year – more than any other African country. Like the US, Britain has tried to retain a relatively close relationship with Ethiopia – one of its few allies in a volatile Horn of Africa.http://http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/article3067244.ece

ONLF rebels say they killed 250 troops Reuters | October 23, 2007

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Ethiopia's Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) rebels said further fighting with security forces in the nation's remote east had brought the number of government soldiers killed to more than 250.
The Ethiopian government has been denying ONLF reports of mass casualties as falsehoods spread by their foreign-based supporters. No independent verification has been possible.
Facing several insurgencies in remote areas, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's government has waged an unprecedented offensive against the ONLF after they killed 74 people during a raid on a Chinese-run oil exploration field earlier this year.
In its latest "military communique" on a flareup over the weekend, the ONLF said fighting continued on Sunday, a day after it reported killing 140 government soldiers in an attack targeting a visiting senior official.
"Battles continued for a second day ... in Ogaden with TPLF regime (government) casualties rising to over 250 killed and an unconfirmed number wounded," it said in the statement sent by email to foreign media on Tuesday.
"Thus far, 13 TPLF regime officers including a colonel and a captain have been killed in battles around Wardheer during the last two days. The ONLF has in its possession the military IDs of many of those officers."
The group, which wants more autonomy in its arid region on the border with Somalia, said it had also destroyed 12 military vehicles during a counter-offensive that 1,500 government troops mounted in response to Saturday's rebel attack.
The ONLF said it had surrounded a large number of Ethiopian troops, and urged them to surrender. ONLF casualties were "light given the scope of the engagements," it added.
Ethiopian officials were not immediately available for fresh comment on the latest ONLF statement on Tuesday.
[Later in the day, the Voice of America quoted Ethiopia's dictator Meles Zenawi as denying a previous ONLF report that a senior government official who was visiting the area fled by a helicopter. Meles said his advisor, Abai Tsehaye, was with him when ONLF was reporting the story. The prime minister said the local people, and not the army, were the ones battling against the rebels.]
During the year, both sides have variously reported hundreds of deaths, and accused the other of terrorising the population.
But with aid groups and journalist effectively barred from the worst-hit areas, independent checks on death-tolls have been impossible. A U.N. mission that went to the region in September did, however, call for a probe into reports of abuses.
Ethiopia accuses the ONLF, which is thought by analysts to number several thousand gunmen, of being terrorists supported by arch-foe and neighbour Eritrea.


source: Reuters

ONLF Press Release on Congressional letter President Bush

ONLF Press Release on Congressional letter President Bush

Oct 26, 2007
O.N.L.F Press ReleaseOctober 26, 2007
The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) has had a consistent and long standing policy welcoming direct negotiations with the regime currently in power in Ethiopia provided that such negotiations are held in a neutral third country with the presence of a neutral third party arbiter of international standing with no preconditions placed on either party.
In that context, the ONLF welcomes the appeal made by several members of the United States House of Representatives and Senate requesting the President of the United States to instruct the United States Department of State to facilitate negotiations between the ONLF and the regime currently in power in Ethiopia. The ONLF, on behalf of the people of Ogaden, welcomes the concern and commends the leadership of these representatives of the American people.
The Ethiopian regime has shown that, left to its own devices, it will continue to pursue a war it can not win in Ogaden characterized by a policy of collective punishment tantamount to genocide. As such, the international community bears a moral responsibility to intervene in order to hold this regime accountable for its actions.
The United Nations in particular bears a responsibility to act on the recommendations of the recent humanitarian fact finding mission to Ogaden which called for an “independent investigation” into human rights abuses in Ogaden.
As the legitimate representatives of the people of Ogaden, the ONLF stands ready to partner with the United Nations and members of the international community who seek to alleviate the suffering deliberately imposed on our people by the Ethiopian regime as well as those genuinely seeking to find a just, lasting and comprehensive political solution to the Ogaden conflict.Click here to read the Congressional letter to President Bush———————————–Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)