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A Man is Shot dead in IFO Refugee Camp

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

By OJ, Reporter - A man was shot and killed in IFO Refugee camp by a Somali gunman on Tuesday May 8 2012, eyes witnesses said. The victim was identified as a young man by the name of Olimi, also known as the "Boy". He was listening to the news when the gunman apparently called him out to the gate of G-3 section and shot him.  He was already dead when Kenyan Police arrived. No words whether the lunatic gunman acted on behalf of any one, any group or alone killer .   

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An interesting Idea of Ending Sudan conflict

Monday, May 07, 2012

In Sudan, Give War a Chance

 

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President Obama Invites African Leaders, including Meles Zenawi, to G8 For Food Security Talks

Friday, May 04, 2012

By Reuters  -  WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama has invited four African leaders to join the G8 leaders' summit at Camp David later this month for a session on food security, the White House said on Thursday.

Those invited to participate are Benin's President Yayi Boni, Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, Ghana's President John Mills and Tanzania's President Jakaya Kikwete, White House spokesman Jay Carney said in a statement.

They will join Obama and the leaders of France, Britain, Italy, Germany, Canada, Japan and Russia at the presidential retreat in rural Maryland to discuss food security concerns in Africa on May 19, the second day of the G8 meeting.

The United Nations' food price index, which measures monthly price changes for cereals, oilseeds, dairy, meat and sugar, fell slightly in April but remains relatively high, with soybean and rice prices poised to increase.

(Reporting By Laura MacInnis; Editing by Eric Beech)

 

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Get out, You Do not Belong Here

Saturday, April 14, 2012

By Ephrem Madebo -When I recently heard the sickening news of mass deportation of ethnic Amharas form the southern regional state, my stomach flipped and somehow I was catapulted back to my boyhood when I was a student in Awassa Comboni Elementary School. The Comboni School of my time was home to Amharas, Ormos, Wolayitas, Sidamas, Tigrigna speakers [ from Tigray and Eritrea] and students of many other nationalities that enjoyed classes together and called themselves nothing but Ethiopians. If ethnicity was what really matters in defining who I am, I don’t belong to the Sidama ethnic group, but I always took pride when I said – I am from Sidama. I believed and I still believe the group name “Sidama” defines me more than my actual ethnic group because I was born and raised in Sidama. So according to the recent troubling news coming from Ethiopia, if I go back to Ethiopia and settle in Bensa, Shebedino, Aroresa, Arbegona, or in my home town of Awassa, does it really mean that Meles Zenawi and his slave Shiferaw Shigute can tell me “you don’t belong here”? Can they? Where else do I belong? God save the king- Oh no!
Here in the United States, I’m surrounded by law and freedom; hence, saying “yes” or “no” to the above proposition is so easy. But, the 22 thousand Ethiopians who were told “you don’t belong here” were told so at gun point and did not have any option other than running for their lives. Most of them were born and raised in the south and the south was the only place they called home until Zenawi’s Bantustan like ethnic policy made them homeless.  

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Southern Ethiopia -the Playground of Meles Zenawi

Friday, April 13, 2012

- Abugida Ethiopian American Information Center - http://www.abugidainfo.com - 

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Letter to the Editor

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Letter to the Editor  

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Disarming Civilians

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

analysis 

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Survival Uncovers Shocking Human Rights Abuses

Wednesday, February 22, 2012
 

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Ethiopia Using Aid as Weapon of Oppression

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Ethiopia 'using aid as weapon of oppression' 

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First Refugees From Ethiopia Arrive Home Under UN Programme

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

New York, (UN news) April 04, 2006 - Slaughtering a white bull and holding prayers at the border, some 500 Sudanese refugees arrived home yesterday in the first such repatriation convoy from Ethiopia under United Nations agreements that eventually aim to bring home the vast majority of the nearly 360,000 Sudanese who fled two decades of civil war. 

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