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The
18th session of the African Union Assembly of Heads of State and
Government.
The
18th ordinary session of the Assembly of Heads of State
and Government of the African Union was held in Addis Ababa, January
29th-30th, under the theme "Boosting
Intra-African Trade". It was preceded the previous week by the 20th
ordinary session of the Executive Council, January 26th-27th,
and the 23rd ordinary session of the Permanent
Representatives’ Committee, January 23rd- 24th.
The first business of the Summit was the election of Dr. Yayi Boni,
President of the Republic of Benin, as Chairman of the African Union
for 2012. The Assembly then moved on to exchange views on issues
affecting intra-African trade. It took note of the Action Plan to
fast track the establishment of a continental free trade area. This
had been proposed by the Commission and endorsed by the 7th
Conference of African Ministers of Trade at a meeting in Accra in
November 2011. The Assembly decided to establish a Committee of
seven Heads of State and Government (representing the Regional
Economic Communities) to conduct a study of the challenges and
achievements in relation to four priority areas: institutional
framework, infrastructure, sources of finance and the concept of the
market, covering free movement of people, goods and services. The
outcome of the study, which the Committee will conduct in
collaboration with the AU Commission, will be presented to the Heads
of State and Government during the next Summit in July, in Lilongwe,
Malawi.
It was noted that the promotion of peace and security continued to
be the central focus of the efforts and activities of the
Commission. The Assembly acknowledged that the year 2011 had been
exceptionally difficult for the African Union with particular
reference to the popular uprisings in North Africa. In this
connection, the Assembly welcomed the initiative of the Commission
to organize a consultation on the outcome of the assessment mission
on the security fallout from the crisis in Libya. It also requested
the AU Peace and Security Council to convene a meeting on the
situation in the Sahel. On Somalia, the Assembly expressed
satisfaction over the progress made in the peace and reconciliation
process, and the Heads of State welcomed the steps being taken to
strengthen AMISOM and TFG forces. They called upon the TFIs to
demonstrate the required unity of purpose and commitment to the
achievement of lasting peace and reconciliation in Somalia.
The Assembly also held extensive discussions on the destructive role
the Eritrean Government continues to play in the sub-region. The AU
Commissioner for Peace and Security and IGAD Member States briefed
the Assembly on recent developments including the adoption of UN
Security Council Resolution 2023 (2011) of December 5th,
under which further sanctions were imposed on Eritrea to prevent it
using the “Diaspora Tax” and revenue from the mining sector as
financial sources to continue its destabilization of the Horn of
Africa. The Assembly welcomed the adoption of Resolution 2023 by the
UN Security Council. It further welcomed the Communiqué issued by
the 309th meeting of the AU Peace and Security Council
which underscored the need to ensure the full implementation of this
and other relevant resolutions and called upon member states to
carry out adequate measures to fully implement the provisions of
these resolutions. The Assembly urged the State of Eritrea to fully
comply with these resolutions and desist from its destabilizing
activities in Somalia and in the region.
The Assembly approved the election of ten new members for the Peace
and Security Council. They will serve a two-year term beginning in
March. Djibouti, which has been representing the Eastern Africa
Region in the Council, together with Kenya and Rwanda, since 2010,
was re-elected for another two-year term while Tanzania will take
over from Rwanda. Kenya continues as a member of the Council until
March next year when its three-year term comes to an end.
With regard to the election of the Chairperson and Members of the
African Commission, the Heads of State and Government decided to
postpone the election to the next ordinary session of the AU
Assembly, in July 2012. Neither of the candidates for the post of
Chairperson, Dr. Jean Ping or Mrs. Dlamini-Zuma was able to obtain
the required two-thirds majority in the voting. The present members
of the Commission will now continue until July and in the meantime
the Assembly decided to establish an Ad-hoc Committee of Heads of
State and Government to address issues related to the next election.
At the 16th ordinary session of the Assembly of Heads of
State and Government, held in January last year, it was decided to
celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Establishment of
the OAU on May 25th next year in Addis Ababa. In this
connection, the Assembly declared 2013 the year of Pan-Africanism
and African Renaissance. The Assembly therefore requested the AU
Commission to coordinate activities for an inclusive and
participatory process of reflection on the last 50 years of effort
towards African Unity.
Prime Minister Meles, as the current Chairperson of NEPAD Heads of
State and Government Orientation Committee (HSGOC), presented
a report on the 26th Meeting of the Committee, held on
January 28th in advance of the Summit. Following the
recommendations of the HSGOC, the Assembly approved the Programme
for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA) and the
Institutional Architecture for its implementation (IAIDA). In
addition, as Coordinator of the Committee of African Heads of State
and Government on Climate Change (CAHOSCC), Prime Minister Meles
also briefed the Assembly on the outcome of the 17th
Conference of Parties of the UN Framework Conference on Climate
Change (COP 17), held in Durban, South Africa, last December. The
Assembly commended the members of CAHOSCC and Prime Minister Meles
for their successful efforts to preserve the Kyoto Protocol and for
operationalization of the Green Climate Fund. The Assembly
reiterated the importance for Africa to speak with one voice as the
key to success. It called upon member states to continue to do so
not only at the next climate negotiations, scheduled to be held in
Qatar later this year, but also in other international fora
including the UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20),
scheduled to be held in June in Brazil.
The Summit itself was preceded by the inauguration of the new AU
Conference Center and Office Complex, built with the assistance of
China. The ceremony took place in the presence of Mr. Jia Qinglin,
Chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference, and several Heads of State and Government.
Prime Minister Meles, in a statement he delivered on the occasion,
indicated that “the new headquarters of the continental
organization, which has been the center of the struggle for the
African renaissance, is a symbol of the rise of Africa”. In his
speech to the Assembly of the AU Mr. Jia Qinglin gave a message of
congratulations from the President of the Peoples Republic of China,
Mr. Hu Jintao. He also noted the importance of upholding peace,
stability and development, and the need to fully respect the efforts
of African countries to resolve African issues themselves. He spoke
of the importance of promoting China Africa friendship, increasing
coordination on regional and international issues, raising the level
of economic cooperation, expanding people-to-people relations and
enhancing the building up of the China African Forum. In conclusion
he noted the friendship of China and Africa was “as solid as the
towering Mount Kilimanjaro and as vibrant as the Yangtse River and
the Yellow River.”
There were, of course, numerous bilateral meetings on the margins of
the Assembly of Heads of State and Government both between member
states and with other delegations observing the Summit.
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The Deputy Prime
Minister and Foreign Minister meets a US delegation…..
A
US government delegation was led by the Deputy Secretary of State,
William J. Burns, accompanied by Assistant Secretary of State for
African Affairs, Johnnie Carson, the Special Assistant to the
President and Senior Director for African Affairs at the White
House, Grant Harris, the US Special Envoy to Sudan, Ambassador
Princeton Lyman, the U.S Special Representative to Somalia,
Ambassador James Swan and U.S Agency for International Development’s
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Africa, Raja Jandhyala. The
delegation held discussions on bilateral and regional issues of
mutual interest with Prime Minister Meles and with Deputy Prime
Minister and Foreign Minister Hailemariam. The talks with Ato
Hailemariam focused particularly on recent developments in North and
South Sudan and issues of security and political development in
Somalia. The Deputy Prime Minister underscored the importance of
solving the difference between Sudan and South Sudan with the issue
of the oil pipeline as a key to maintaining peace and security in
the region. Mr. Carson and Ambassador Lyman applauded Ethiopia's
efforts to mediate and congratulated Ethiopia on the professional
job being done by the Ethiopian peacekeeping force in Abyei. On
Somalia, both sides agreed on the importance of keeping developments
in the security track linked with the political track. It was noted
that civilian administrations operating in liberated areas should be
able to provide basic services to the population. Both parties also
agreed on the importance of identifying spoilers of the Somali peace
process for possible individually targeted sanctions. They agreed to
continue to work together to support the TFG to bring a lasting
peace to the Somali people.
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….And
Iran’s Foreign Minister
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Hailemariam met Iranian
Foreign Minister, Ali Akbar Salehi on Sunday. Discussions centered
on strengthening bilateral relations, on consolidating
people-to-people relations and economic cooperation. Mr. Ali noted
that Iran had recently donated ten 45 seat tourist autobuses and
expressed Iran’s interest to participate in the insurance and
banking sectors in Ethiopia. The 5th Ethio-Iran joint
commission meeting had been held in Addis Ababa and he invited the
Deputy Prime Minister to attend the next meeting in Teheran. On
multilateral relations, the Iranian Foreign Minister regretted that
Iran-Africa relations had not reached the desired level despite the
establishment of the Iran-Africa Forum two years ago. He emphasized
Iran’s commitment to revitalize the Forum and to work in such
strategic areas as mining, health, pharmaceutical, agriculture,
politics and culture. Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam took the
opportunity to thank Iran for the donation of the autobuses. He said
that Iran has a lot of expertise in infrastructure, railway, energy
and geothermal production which could contribute significantly to
Ethiopia’s ongoing development efforts through loans, grants, and
technology transfers. He said that investment in the financial
sector could be considered in the future and in the meantime invited
Iranian investment in agriculture where there was huge unused
potential in Ethiopia. The two ministers also discussed the regional
problems and in particular the situation in Sudan and Somalia. Ato
Hailemariam encouraged the Iranian Foreign Minister to provide
support for capacity building in Somalia to complement recent
political gains with economic assistance. Iran has already allocated
25 million dollars for water projects in Somalia.
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister, Ato Hailemariam also had
a number of other meetings to discuss issues of bilateral and
regional concern, These included the Deputy Prime Minister of
Turkey, the Foreign Minister of Luxemburg, and the Vice-Foreign
Ministers of Russia and Italy. The State Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Ambassador Berhane also met with the Vice-Foreign Ministers
of Norway and Finland and the Head of the European Union Delegation.
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Strengthened
relations between Ethiopia and China
The
Chairperson of the National Committee of the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), Mr. Jia Qinglin, visited
Ethiopia from January 26th – 29th. He came at
the invitation of the Ethiopian government and to attend the opening
of African Union’s 18th ordinary Summit of Heads of State
and Government and the inaugural ceremony of the new African Union
Commission Conference Center and Office Complex, the gift of the
Chinese peoples to Africa.
The Conference Center was inaugurated on Saturday and Mr. Qinglin
acknowledged it as the “latest symbol of China-African friendship”,
a theme which he elaborated on in his speech to the African Union
Summit. At the inauguration of the building “this magnificent new
headquarters of our continental organization”, Prime Minister Meles
spoke of China with “its amazing re-emergence and it commitments for
a win-win partnership with Africa [as] one of the reasons for the
beginning of the African renaissance.” Over the past decades, he
said, China Africa cooperation has gone from strength to strength.
“The future prospects of our partnership are even brighter. It is,
therefore, very appropriate for China to decide to build this hall –
the hall of the rise of Africa, this hall of African renaissance and
the adjoining office building for us. I am sure I speak for all of
you when I say to the people and government of China, thank you so
very much. May our partnership continue to prosper.”
During his visit, Mr. Qinglin and his delegation held talks with
senior Ethiopian government officials led by Prime Minister Meles to
discuss bilateral issues. The two sides exchanged views on future
high level visits between the two sides and deepening economic
cooperation, The Chinese side announced further assistance to
Ethiopia with a 100 million Yuan grant and another 100 million Yuan
free interest loan. The two also discussed strengthening
people-to-people cultural exchanges and agreed to reinforce their
multilateral cooperation in areas such as the solidarity and
stability of the East Africa region and of Africa in general. On the
wider economic front, the talks covered the defining moments of the
current global economic downturn and the role that China can play in
lifting Africa away from the effects of this development.
On
Saturday, Ethiopia and China signed five economic and technical
cooperation agreements and two memoranda of understandings. The
agreements covered further strengthening of the existing bilateral
cooperation between the two countries
in a number of
areas: Providing Grant and Interest Free Loans; Cooperation in
Railway, Sugar Production and Telecommunication Development;
Currency Swaps and Payment Mechanisms between the Export-Import Bank
of China, the National Bank of Ethiopia and the Commercial Bank of
Ethiopia; and promotion of Small and Medium Enterprises. The
Memoranda of Understanding covered Cooperation in Financial Services
in RMB between the Ministry of FED and the Export-Import Bank of
China.
During
their visit the Chinese delegation also visited Chinese investments
in the Eastern Industrial Zone which is being built near Dukem to
the south of Addis Ababa. One of the companies installed there is
the Huajian Shoe Factory. It set up its factory within three months,
and it now produces 3,000 pairs of shoes daily for the US and Europe
markets. Factory officials said they now use leather that has been
produced locally, and the factory now employed 260 Ethiopians.
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Ethiopia-Norway
agreement on voluntary return of asylum seekers
Ethiopia and Norway signed an agreement in Addis Ababa concerning
the voluntary return of rejected asylum seekers in Norway on January
26th. The agreement was the result of a long process of
negotiations that has been going on for nearly a decade. Since the
agreement was signed there have been a number of rumours about the
agreement and misinformation disseminated particularly in the
Diaspora and among those in Norway in regard to what was agreed
between the two parties. Certain pronouncements and press statements
given to the Norwegian media by various agencies, including those
who derive their livelihood from “defending the rights of asylum
seekers” have contributed to the confusion. It has become necessary
to provide the accurate facts for those concerned about the
agreement and others who profess to be doubtful about the principles
and intentions of the Ethiopian government in entering into this
agreement.
The main elements or principles of the agreement are
that:
1.
1. The signed Memorandum of
Understanding lays down the basis for a closely coordinated, phased,
dignified and humane process of assisted return for Ethiopian
nationals residing in Norway. This is primarily in respect to
voluntary return and to the importance of a safe and dignified
return and sustainable re-integration into their communities in
Ethiopia.
2.
2.
The agreement is to be applied only in respect to Ethiopian
nationals whose nationality is ascertained by the competent
Ethiopian authorities, who have been staying temporarily in Norway
and whose request for refugee status or a residence permit has been
properly considered, but rejected through due process of law in
Norway, and those who may opt for voluntary return to Ethiopia after
a final negative decision by the competent Norwegian authorities on
their asylum claims.
3.
3.
The agreement can also be applied to those rejected asylum seekers
who have no protection or compelling humanitarian needs to justify
prolongation of their stay in Norway, but who nevertheless continue
to refuse to avail themselves of the option of voluntary return and
who may be ordered to leave Norway as an option of last resort.
In other words, this agreement bears no relationship to the way
rumour and misinformation has construed it. This is an agreement
entered into by the Ethiopian government and Norway to allow for the
return of rejected asylum seekers from Norway, primarily on the
basis of voluntary decisions by returnees and not by forced
departure. In fact, it paves the way for a safe, dignified, phased
and humane assisted return process, operating essentially on a
voluntary basis.
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The first political
consultation meeting between Ethiopia and Egypt
On
Monday, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Hailemariam Desalegn met with Egypt’s Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Mohamed Kamel Amr for their first political consultation
meeting. Prior to this, senior officials of both countries met on
January 27th to review and evaluate implementation of the
agreements signed between the two countries during the fourth round
of the Joint Commission held in Cairo on September 14th
-16th last year. The Ministers discussed the status of
the implementation of the action plan aiming to endorse bilateral
relations in all areas. They exchanged views on the development of
bilateral relations and expressed their satisfaction with the
outcome of the implementation agreements signed between them over
the past few months. They also noted with appreciation the positive
development in relations, and the progress made in joint projects
and developmental programs, particularly in the fields of health,
capacity building, water resources and irrigation, tourism and
agriculture as well as diplomatic training and investment. The two
parties emphasized their willingness to sign additional agreements
in mining and for a national research institute of astronomy and
geophysics. They agreed to activate the Cooperation Protocols signed
at the 3rd joint Ministerial Meeting, and reaffirmed
their commitment to sustain the pace of development and cooperation
in all fields.
The ministers welcomed the establishment of the Egyptian Ethiopian
Technical Advisory Committee on water resources and irrigation and
the convening of the Panel of Experts from Egypt, Ethiopia and the
Sudan on the Grand Renaissance Dam as positive steps towards
achieving the overall objective of building confidence between among
the three countries. They also exchanged views on regional political
and security issues in Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan, reaffirming
the Kampala Agreement as a viable option to bring lasting peace,
security and stability in Somalia.
Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam said that bilateral relations were
on the right track and stressed the need to continue their joint
political discussions. It was agreed that the next joint political
consultation should take place in July. Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr
said that Egypt wanted to consolidate further its relations and
cooperation with Ethiopia. It was, he added, keen to establish wider
investment and trade ties and was planning to set up an Egyptian
industrial zone in Ethiopia in the near future. He also underlined
that any government in Egypt would respect the agreements that had
been signed between Egypt and Ethiopia.
Meanwhile, Egypt’s Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation said
that the Panel to study the impact of the Grand Renaissance Dam
should be convening in Addis Ababa by the end of the week for a two
day meeting when it will be choosing two international water and
social science experts as members of the Panel. At an earlier
meeting in Khartoum, it chose two experts in the fields of dam
construction, mega reservoirs and the environment. The full Panel is
due meet later this month in Cairo to start its assessment. It is
expected to work for six to nine months before presenting its
recommendations to the three governments on any positive or negative
factors and on means to handle their impact.
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The British Foreign Secretary visits Mogadishu
Britain’s Foreign Secretary, William Hague, paid an
unexpected visit to Mogadishu on Thursday, and he took the
opportunity to appoint a new British Ambassador to Somalia, the
first since 1991, though the envoy will be based in Nairobi until
the embassy can be established. Speaking of his visit to Mogadishu
and the forthcoming London conference (February 23rd),
Mr Hague noted that one of the key objectives of the conference was
to strengthen co-operation in counter-terrorism and to disrupt
terrorist networks and financing. "We need to step this up. We are
not complacent about it," Mr Hague said. Mr. Hague met with
President Sheikh Sharif at the presidential palace in Mogadishu. He
praised AMISOM troops for forcing al-Shabaab militants out of the
city but warned that much of the south remained in the hands of the
militants. Mr. Hague’s visit is another sign of growing
international confidence in the improving security situation, at
least in Mogadishu. The UN special envoy to Somalia has moved the
UN Political Office for Somalia back to Mogadishu after an absence
of 17 years. Representatives from more than 40 nations have been
invited to the London conference, and Mr. Hague said in a
statement: “The conference will seek to generate a more effective
and concerted international approach outside Somalia that addresses
the root causes of the conflict; and a new political process inside
Somalia that meets the needs of all Somalis.” The international
community at last appears to have understood that the chaos of
Somalia is not just a regional problem but has morphed into piracy
that threatens global trade, terrorism that threatens regional even
global security and a famine that threatens the lives of hundreds
of thousands of people. It has finally realized that containment of
Somalia is no longer an option, that a solution must be found.
Meanwhile
Prime Minister Meles has said that Ethiopian troops will stay in
Somalia until AMISOM forces replace them to avoid creating a power
vacuum that might allow a resurgence of Al-Shabaab. Ethiopian
forces aided TFG allied forces in capturing the town of Belet Weyne,
30 kilometers from the border on December 31st driving
out Al-Shabaab. The Prime Minister said that Ethiopia expected
AMISOM troops to fill in the gaps before Ethiopian troops withdrew
and “so at this stage there is no rush for us to withdraw before
AMISOM troops have come in.” The Prime Minister added that Ethiopia
was willing to expand its operations, in conjunction with TFG
forces, beyond Belet Weyne, but only if the Somali government asked
for backing. Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Hailemariam
has indicated that Ethiopia might consider advancing to Baidoa if
circumstances necessitated it.
Kenya’s
Minister of State for Defence, Yusuf Haji, in Addis Ababa for the
AU Summit, said that Kenyan military operations were proceeding
smoothly. He claimed Kenyan and TFG forces and allies were
capturing additional territory almost every day. “Al-Shabaab right
now are on the run, they are in disarray.” Mr. Haji said they were
no longer a challenge “because they are no longer a formation of
troops, they are fighting guerrilla war.” Nevertheless, he
emphasized, while the Kenyan troops have air power and the
necessary equipment, the AMISOM forces in Mogadishu needed
helicopters, body armor and additional ammunition to enable them to
hunt down Al-Shabaab groups. It was necessary to keep up the
momentum to deal a decisive blow to Al-Shabaab to put it out of the
way. “We need more troops because we have to go outside the areas
that we know” and follow Al-Shabaab fighters wherever they go.
Increasing the size and support for AMISOM will depend on the UN
Security Council which is expected to consider a resolution in
advance of the UK’s London Conference on Somalia on February 23rd.
The Secretary-General is due to report shortly to the Council on
the new strategic concept recently endorsed by the AU Peace and
Security Council for the next phase of AMISOM.
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Time for some
fact-checking at the New York Times?
In the New York Times (January 28th)
Nicholas Kristoff, in a column entitled “What’s he got to hide?”,
claims he had been pursuing Ethiopia’s Prime Minister for several
days at the World Economic Forum at Davos to try and ask him about
“a worsening pattern of brutality in Ethiopia.” He said that Meles
refused to see him. I doubt if Prime Minister Meles (who was only
in Davos for a day in any case) was bothered either way by a
columnist of the NYT, but he surely wouldn’t want to see a
journalist who made no effort to get his facts right, didn’t do any
research on the subject, and was content to merely repeat
allegations from Human Rights Watch which have been comprehensively
rubbished by NGOs, international agencies, donors and others.
HRW’s last report on Gambella was
based on a handful of interviews, most done outside the region as
the footnotes admit, and got both facts and figures wrong. With its
usual flawed methodology, it also refused to question the
credentials of its interviewees and other sources or query their
political affiliation. Kristoff also quotes from an earlier HRW
report to claim that the government “uses foreign food to punish
critics”. Well, actually it doesn’t, as other reports investigating
this allegation conclusively demonstrated. None of the NGOs and
international agencies, nor the donor’s Development Assistance
Group (DAG), nor any of the embassy personnel from a dozen or more
countries who have travelled in these areas and investigated these
claims, have managed to come up with anything to support them. On
investigation, HRW’s allegations simply don’t hold water, nor does
its defence of criticisms which has been limited to the rather
feeble and simplistic - “This finding is inconsistent with Human
Rights Watch’s field research.”
Yes, certainly, it is possible to find
some individuals who feel hard done by in the massive Productive
Safety Net Program, which provided aid for 6.3 million people last
year, or the Protection of Basic Services programs. Equally, in a
program organizing the voluntary movement of 20,000 households in
the last few months, one or two were, not surprisingly,
dissatisfied with what they found on arrival in their new homes. In
one or two cases there were also problems with water supplies and
delays in the provision of facilities. No one denies it but to jump
from this to sweeping allegations about large scale denial of food
aid to people who may have voted for the opposition, the deliberate
use of food aid for political purposes or massive forced
resettlement, for none of which anyone can provide evidence, is
lazy and poor journalism.
Kristoff’s failure to check his facts
is not confined to HRW’s allegations. He quotes the editor of a
paper who left (not fled) Ethiopia for the US in 2009. The paper
wasn’t closed down by the government. It was shut down by its three
editors after they had all left the country, and it was only once
outside that they alleged they had been forced to flee the country.
All have now been granted asylum in the US or the UK. Kristoff
refers to another journalist facing charges, claiming his true
crime was to call on the government to allow free speech and end
torture. No it wasn’t. Eskinder’s ‘crime’ was to call for the
overthrow of the government and for support to opposition
organizations involved in terrorist activities in Ethiopia. And
Ethiopia has been an-all-too-often target for terrorist activity.
It was only last month that five tourists were deliberately
murdered by an Eritrean-backed organization from across the border
in Eritrea, and others kidnapped.
Kristoff starts off his piece with
typical journalistic exaggeration about the apparent sufferings of
the two Swedish journalists in prison in Ethiopia and now serving
what are certainly very tough sentences after admitting illegally
crossing into the Ogaden area of the Somali Regional State. Not
surprisingly, Kristoff harks back to the case of his colleague,
Jeffery Gettleman, who went into the same area in 2007 and claimed
to have found a pattern of torture and rape by Ethiopian security
forces before being expelled after a few days. Gettleman’s
“evidence” for his claims was exclusively provided by the
Eritrean-backed opposition group he was travelling with. It was a
group which, inter alia, slaughtered 74 men, women and children
working at an oil exploration camp, together with 9 Chinese
workers, many died in their beds, indiscriminately killed in the
attack in April 2007. Over the years, this group has been
responsible for the murder of thousands of civilians who opposed
them, as well as government officials and police; they have blown
up civilian buses and other vehicles, planted land mines on
pastoralist routes and burnt villages. These are the people Martin
Schibbye and John Persson went into the region with, and despite
Kristoff’s claims, they weren’t ‘bravely’ trying to investigate
human rights abuses, they were sneaking in illegally (as they
admitted) to try and dig up some dirt on a Swedish oil company.
This wasn’t a display of courage; it was, at the very least, quite
frankly stupid. Defending them certainly suggests double standards
are at work.
The sentences might seem harsh, but
Kristoff might have considered the whole issue of terrorism, and
the response to it, in states which have suffered extensively from
terrorism over a number of years as Ethiopia has, facing several
terrorist groups armed and funded by a neighboring state. The
atrocities seldom reach the international press, possibly because
foreigners are seldom involved. No one reports on the dozens
regularly killed or kidnapped along the Ethiopian Eritrean border
by Eritrean-backed and organized opposition movements or the many
hundreds killed and maimed by the ONLF in the Ogaden.
In his blog, Kristoff does wonder
whether it is “parochial when we journalists focus on other
journalists in trouble”. His answer is to claim that journalists
are essentially the only way to provide accountability in a country
like Ethiopia which he claims has no reliable institutions to look
after human rights and create checks and balances, hasn’t a free
election system, independent courts and so on. Actually it does
have an Office of the Ombudsman and a Human Rights Commission, it
does have an independent judiciary and it has held successful
multi-party elections in 2005, 2008, and 2010. The failure to note
any of this certainly begs a few questions about the behaviour of
journalists even those writing for the New York Times (though its
record of accuracy has been called into question in the past
occasionally, hasn’t it?). It also and most importantly reinforces
the necessity for getting the facts right and checking the
allegations, claims and the political affiliations of one’s
sources.
Kristoff claims he doesn’t want to see
foreign aid cut off, because it is saving lives. Well and good, but
in that case he shouldn’t be producing ill-informed, inaccurate
articles which will be used by the people who supplied the
information to try and induce exactly that aim. Almost all the
comments on Kristoff’s blog were opposition supporters
disinterested in the accuracy of his reporting and only interested
in mindlessly insulting his targets. To allow oneself to be used in
this way is lazy and incompetent: it certainly doesn’t inspire
confidence in these incoherent and fallacious musings.
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No
sign of any policy changes by Eritrea’s “Big Brother”
In
the late nineteenth century, when the once mighty Ottoman Empire
was in a state of collapse, its rapidly failing health gave rise to
the phrase “The Sick Man of Europe”. Its bleak situation was in
sharp contrast to the economic prosperity and political strength
that prevailed in the rest of Europe. Today, in 21st
century Africa, many countries are moving forward on the path of
economic growth and political stability, while there is one notable
exception moving in the opposite direction. That country is
Eritrea. No other country in our continent today is more eligible
for the unflattering designation of the” Sick Man of Africa” than
Eritrea.
The country’s record of the past 20 years speaks for itself.
Economically speaking, under normal conditions of governance,
Eritrea could do much better. It certainly has the potential to
become a far better place in which to live. However, governance in
Eritrea today is far from being normal. The country is run by one
of the most repressive regimes in the world, a regime that controls
everything. The result is that it is a country that is going
nowhere politically or economically.
Nothing much is happening in Eritrea by way of economic activity.
Whatever small-scale industry existed in the past has deteriorated
to a point of virtual disappearance, partly due to lack of any
market. The reality of the agricultural sector is incapable of
matching the government’s exaggerated propaganda about food
self-sufficiency. Tourists are not stampeding to visit what is
widely seen as a pariah state. Local levels of saving are
insufficient to provide the capital accumulation required for
investment. This might suggest the need for an aggressive
investment promotion policy, but taking such action to launch any
proactive measure to attract foreign direct investment is in itself
a concept that is totally alien to the Eritrean government. The
problem is compounded by the dwindling levels of remittances
provided by expatriate Eritreans. Nevertheless, their support to a
significant section of the Eritrean population remains critical to
the economy as a whole.
There is one partial exception to the economic gloom- the mining
sector. There have been some promising mineral discoveries and last
year the Canadian company Nevsum brought the Bisha gold project
into production. However, it remains far from clear how much this
will be allowed to impact on the economy as a whole. President
Isaias has already warned the population at large not to expect too
much from mineral development. At the same time, and of much
greater concern, perhaps, are the stories of virtual slave labour
that are coming out of the mining areas, with the use of national
service conscripts forced to work in the mining industry for
virtually no wages. Many of the thousands of refugees who cross the
border every year into Sudan or Ethiopia have horrific stories to
tell about their treatment in the mines, and elsewhere.
The political situation could hardly be worse. Eritrea is a
one-party state. The name of the party, PFDJ (Popular Front for
Democracy and Justice), is, in fact, a complete misnomer. There is
neither democracy nor justice in Eritrea, nor, it might be added,
is the Front popular. Indeed, the party has lost whatever popular
appeal it once had and in strict political parlance it cannot even
be called a “front”. The country has no constitution, no elective
parliament, and the National Assembly carries out no real activity.
No elections are carried out, there is no genuine system of
justice, and there are no private newspapers of any kind. In
Eritrea, listening to gospel songs is a serious offence and playing
Ethiopian music is a punishable crime. It is one of the few
countries in the world today where prominent citizens including
ministers can be detained in secret locations for more than ten
years without ever appearing in court, let along facing a judge and
with their whereabouts unknown to relatives, Red Cross officials or
anybody else.
Eritrea’s current international standing has hit an all-time low.
Its relations with most of its neighbors and its regional
organization are exceptionally poor. Its interaction with aid
organizations has always been acrimonious and is now virtually
non-existent. On its own evaluation the Eritrean government appears
proudest of the long list of wars it has initiated and the troubles
it has stirred, and continues to stir, in the Horn of Africa. It
has made it clear it does not regret the several border incidents
it provoked with Sudan in the mid 90’s; it feels no shame at having
crossed the Red Sea to pick a fight with Yemen in 1996; it still
tries to deny it started the bloody war with Ethiopia in 1998, even
though it was unequivocally identified as the culprit by the Claims
Commission established under the Algiers Agreement; in total
defiance of corresponding UN resolutions calling on it to withdraw
its forces, it is sitting on the areas of sovereign Djiboutian
territory which it invaded in 2008.
The regime has also pursued its destructive agenda of trying to
destabilize Ethiopia and other countries in the region by using
funds from other sources with an interest in such an agenda.
Indeed, it is hard to find a dissident group, an armed insurgency
or a terrorist organization in the Horn of Africa that does not
enjoy the hospitality and sponsorship of the Eritrean government.
Eritrea is one of the best friends of Al-Shabaab, an organization
that openly admits that it is affiliated to Al Qaida. Numerous
killings and kidnappings of innocent people and widespread
destruction of property in Ethiopia, in Uganda and in Kenya have
been committed by groups that are trained, armed and instructed by
the Eritrean regime. It is not surprising that it has earned the
dubious distinction of being a regional trouble maker, but despite
this its president and his regime have chosen to live in denial and
self-deception. They appear to believe that their actions can be
washed away by simple denials. Indeed, Eritrean government
officials show considerable nerve, and a very thick skin,
continuing to deny the undeniable and defend the indefensible.
Eritrea is run by a ruthless dictator, whose errant demeanour
distinguishes him from other African leaders. He spends most of his
time plotting the destabilization of his country’s neighbors. When
not involved in this, he orders his propaganda machinery to
organize marathon interview sessions for him. The views he
expresses in those interviews are bizarre. Universally accepted
principles such as parliamentary democracy, free press, the rule of
law, accountability and transparency are no more than western
theatrical performances for which he has no appetite. Instead he
harangues his audience about the country’s economic progress,
freedom, plentiful food supply, all of which have been achieved
through “self-reliance”, and none of which actually exist. These
bogus achievements in fact only exist in the realm of propaganda.
They have nothing to do with the reality of Eritrea today.
The line between fact and fiction in Eritrean government statements
has become so blurred that the only way to understand the regime
and its president is through the looking-glass of George Orwell.
Many of the characters in George Orwell’s political satire, “1984”,
fit all too neatly into Eritrean politics of today. There is a Big
Brother, who sees and hears everything (complete with dark eyes and
moustache!), the Ministry of Plenty (Miniplenty) whose job it is to
churn out grossly exaggerated production figures and deceive people
into thinking that their standard of living is rising when in fact
it is falling, the Ministry of Truth (Minitrue) which is charged
with the task of controlling information, to rewrite history and
align it with Big Brother’s statements, and the dreaded Ministry of
Love (Miniluv) which persecutes, tortures and kills Big Brother’s
opponents.
The most depressing aspect of Eritrea today is to see how far the
regime has been able to get away with so much. The countries of the
Horn of Africa have been relentless in appealing to the
international community to take the necessary action to force
Eritrea to become a law-abiding nation. The African Union, the
United Nations, IGAD and other international organizations have
made it clear to Eritrea on several occasions that its behavior is
completely unacceptable. An investigation by the UN Monitoring
Group found plenty of incriminating evidence linking the Eritrean
regime to destabilization activities and terrorist organizations in
the Horn of Africa. The result is that the UN Security Council has
slapped Eritrea with sanctions passed under Resolutions 1907 and
2023. Eritrea has ignored it all. Its leader and his government
have chosen to live in denial and continue to make the lives of its
neighbors difficult. Last month’s killing of five tourists and
kidnapping of others in the Afar region of Ethiopia, very close to
the border with Eritrea, is a glaring manifestation of the regime’s
disdain for the sanctions already imposed for its behavior. It is
apparent that there is need for more effective sanctions, properly
applied, that will convince the Eritrean government that its rogue
activity entails real consequences. Ethiopia certainly hopes this
will happen, and happen soon. Failing that, it will be obliged to
consider exercising its legitimate right of self-defense in
accordance with international law.
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News
and Views
Sudan and South Sudan agree to resume talks
Substantial efforts were made by IGAD
member states and by the African Union during the AU Summit over
the weekend to encourage Sudan and South Sudan to continue their
negotiations on oil and other outstanding issues. Last week South
Sudan rejected any resumption of talks with Khartoum unless the
ships carrying the oil impounded by Khartoum were released.
South Sudan shut down most of its oil production in protest after
Sudan seized oil to compensate for what it said were unpaid transit
fees following a dispute over costs. AU proposals to break the
deadlock have so far failed to get agreement. On Tuesday,
however, Thabo Mbeki, chairman of the AU High Level Implementation
Panel (AUHIP), was able to announce that the two sides had agreed
to start talks again on February 10th. He said the panel
had talked to President Salva Kiir and to President Al-Bashir and
they had agreed to continue the negotiations. Oil is perhaps the
most immediate problem, but other major issues include the meeting
of the joint political alliance and security mechanisms to discuss
security issues relating to both countries, the steps necessary to
demarcate the border and resolve the outstanding problems
concerning the disputed border areas including Abyei, and the
matter of citizenship and nationality to regularize the position of
southerners in the north and northerners in the south as the agreed
interim transitional period ends in two months. Mr. Mbeki urged the
two countries to return to negotiations in a new spirit of good
neighborliness. It will be needed. Yesterday,
President Salva Kiir
warned of renewed conflict with Sudan if the negotiations do not
include a deal on other key issues, including Abyei. Any agreement
South Sudan would consider signing must be comprehensive and cover
all the outstanding issues, he said. UN Secretary-General, Ban ki-Moon,
said at the weekend that the tension between Sudan and South Sudan
and the row over the oil had become a major threat to regional
peace and security.
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The
International Organization for Migration (IOM) Report 2011
The latest IOM Report
“Communicating Effectively About Migration” examines the state of
migrants across the world. Launched by IOM Director General,
William Lacy Swing, on the margin of the AU Summit, Deputy Prime
Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ato Hailemariam gave a
keynote address stressing the importance of launching the report at
a time when migrants are increasingly suffering from distorted,
unbalanced and uninformed perceptions and attitudes of the public
both in their countries of origin and their countries of
destination. The challenges they face are overwhelming, often
life-threatening. Migrants, in particular women and children, are
vulnerable to human trafficking and often unfairly portrayed as a
threat to local resources. Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam
underlined the need for governments, civil societies, international
organizations and the media individually and collectively to play a
constructive role in addressing these wrong perceptions. He
emphasized the need to make populations aware of the positive
impact migrants have on the countries where they live and work. The
Deputy Prime Minister noted Ethiopia had a long-standing tradition
of hospitality towards foreigners. It always welcomed those seeking
assistance, shelter and refugee from violence and natural
calamities. It currently hosted some three hundred thousand
refugees mainly from neighboring countries. They included 35,000
Sudanese who had fled from violence in the South Kordofan and Blue
Nile States, half of whom have recently returned voluntarily to
their homeland in Blue Nile State under the auspices of the IOM.
The Deputy Prime Minister reiterated Ethiopia’s readiness to
continue to collaborate closely with the relevant international
agencies and donor community in providing assistance to all those
who needed it. He also took the opportunity to thank the IOM for
its assistance to Ethiopian nationals who had been stranded in
Libya and Yemen in organizing voluntary repatriation programmes and
providing transport, shelter, food and medical assistance.
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Ethiopia
opens a new Honorary Consulate in India
On Tuesday, Ethiopia officially opened a
new Honorary Consulate office in the city of Chennai in the
presence of government officials, business leaders and chamber
representatives. Ethiopia’s Ambassador to India, Gennet Zewde, said
the new office would be able to encourage Ethiopia to attract
business and investment in priority sectors such as textiles,
leather, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, manufacturing and automobiles
as these areas found in abundance in Chennai. Ethiopia offered
ample opportunities for investment in these areas and in dairy
products and tourism and the Ambassador noted that Ethiopia’s
Tourism Minister would be visiting India next week to promote the
benefits of investment in Ethiopia’s tourism sector. She emphasized
that the World Bank, the IMF and the Economist had all forecast
that Ethiopia would be the third fastest growing economy in the
world this year after China and India. Ethiopia, she said, is a
developing economy planning to transform its economy from an
agricultural to an industrial basis in order to join the middle
income economies in the next decade or so. Ambassador Gennet also
noted that a number of Indian firms were already involved in
agriculture, leather and leather products, mining and manufacturing
in Ethiopia. India in fact was one of the major sources of foreign
investment in Ethiopia, and would have a significant contribution
in lifting Ethiopia to another level. The Ambassador also mentioned
that Chennai would soon be connected directly by flights to
Ethiopian cities; already there was a cargo connection to Addis
Ababa. The new Honorary Consul for Ethiopia in Chennai, Manikam
Ramaswami, described Ethiopia as the fastest growing country in
Africa, very safe with near zero violence, transparent policies,
cost-free transaction administration and good locations. Above all
it had India-friendly people and was a favorite destination for
Indian investors. He said the key objective of establishing the
consulate was to develop the bilateral relationship by promoting
trade and investment in Ethiopia. Meanwhile, the second Ethio-India
foreign office consultations convened in Addis Ababa last week with
a view to further expanding already excellent relations both at
bilateral and multilateral levels. Ethiopia has been invited to the
India-Africa Technology Ministerial Conference taking place in
India March 1st – 2nd and to the India-Africa
Trade Ministers’ Conference to be held on March 17th
when India plans to propose the launching of the India-Africa joint
business council.
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Eritrean
Patriarch’s health reportedly deteriorating say opposition
The Executive Office of the Eritrean
National Council for Democratic Change announced on Monday that it
had confirmation that the 85 year old Abune Antonios, “the
legitimate Patriarch of the Orthodox Church of Eritrea” was “sick
and in a worrisome condition.” Abune Antonios
was illegally removed from his patriarchal position and forcibly
detained at an undisclosed location by the Eritrean government in
2007. The Government claims he has retired to a monastery to
pray. Last week, the Holy Synod of the
Œcumenical Canonical Orthodox Church Worldwide (ŒCOCW) called for
the regime in Asmara to free Abune Antonios
as well as several thousand other detained
Christians in Eritrea. The International Oriental Orthodox
Churches, the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahdo Church Dioceses in Europe
and in North America have also called for the Patriarch’s release.
Now the Eritrean National Council for Democratic Change, set up at
a recent meeting of opposition organizations, has called for the
“immediate freedom for his Holiness” and for him to regain “his
rightful place” among his compatriots from other faiths who have
raised their voices, calling on the entire Eritrean people,
Christians and Muslims alike, to unanimously condemn the actions of
the Eritrean government against religious freedom. Abune Antonios
was removed from office because he expressed
strong concern over the growing interference of the government in
religious affairs. He refused government demands to excommunicate
three thousand members of the Medhane Alem Sunday School movement
and in turn demanded the government should release Christians
imprisoned for their faith and accused of treason.
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