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"The thing that lies at the foundation of positive change, the way I see it, is service to a fellow human being." - Lech Walesa
Friday, 1 March 2013
Thursday, 28 February 2013
London Debretsion Church and the Ethiopians
by Yilma Bekele
Watch the YouTube video before reading this article.
This is Debretsion Ethiopian Orthodox Church in London England. The
picture seems to have been taken on a cold winter day. It is such a
beautiful church. Doesn’t it look so serene and peaceful? I am sure it
is that most of the time. But according to this video it was nothing but
serene a few weeks back. The best way to express the twenty one minute
video is it felt like was watching a scene where the mental patients
have taken over the asylum.
I agree it is totally depressing to see all classic Ethiopian
behavior on display in a controlled environment. The location being a
church gives it that special quality of raising the bar to show how low
we have sunk. Such a brawl in some obscure hall, how ugly it is,
normally is not worth a mention. I guess we get so consumed with the
righteousness of our cause that we toss out all civilized behavior out
of the window regardless of the place or the time.
The video is not intended to be a work of art. It is not fiction that jumped out of some ones
imagination. This play does not have a director, a producer or a lead
actor. This video is real unrehearsed presentation of Ethiopians and
their social interaction. The setting adds to the drama of the moment.
We thank the individual who had the patience to record reality in that
hallow ground.
Ethiopia: MENELIK THE GREAT OF ADWA
by Msmaku Asrat
March 1st 1896 is the 117th anniversary of the Battle of Adwa. The decisive victory at Adwa is a tale to be told every year
on this day of its commemoration because it worms the heart and lifts
the spirit of every black person in the world. Few places evoke stronger
memories than places of triumphant victory or places of devastating
defeat. Napoleon Bonaparte achieved his greatest fame at the battle of
Austerlitz (now in Czech Republic) in 1805 where he decisively defeated
the combined armies of the kings of Europe. Few defeats are as well
registered as the defeat (by then Emperor) Napoleon, at the battle of
Waterloo (now in Belgium, near Brussels) ten years later in 1815, where
the Emperor after his army was defeated declared “flee those who can”
and fled from the battlefield on horseback. Adwa, a dusty little village
in Tigre, was put on the map of the world by the mighty and valiant
Emperor Menelik who decidedly defeated the Italian army there by a
brilliant strategy not unlike that of Napoleon at the battle of
Austerlitz. So by that singular victory at ADWA ,
Monday, 25 February 2013
Ethiopia: Another False Prophet from the North?

The Horn Times opinion 23 February 2013
by Getahune Bekele, South Africa
Is it Abune Matias or Abune Samuel?
“The church is Noah’s ark and he who is not found in it shall perish when the flood overwhelms all…”
(The Cappadocia fathers, 376 AD)
One of the first Christian nations with more than 60 references in the bible, a refined and purified church made up of
Abune Samuel of Tigray, still the main
TPLF candidate as the 6th patriarch?
people united to their priest and the flock that cleaves to its shepherd; with unique theology, traditions and customs in the land of Prester John- Ethiopia, where priestly dignity transcends royal or political powers.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahido church is no ordinary church but those which the apostles themselves established and governed from the ancient imperial city of Alexandria.
Ethiopia: Suppressing Protest during Electoral Crises
Georgetown University
School of Foreign Service
Tuesday, February 26, 2013 from 12:00pm to 1:30pm
Mortara Building Mortara Center Conference Room
Suppressing Protest during Electoral Crises: The Geographic Logic of Mass Arrests in Ethiopia
by Leonardo Arriola, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, UC Berkeley
How do authoritarian governments respond to the threat of opposition protest after disputed election results? Governments often use coercion to suppress protests that threaten the political status quo, but it remains unclear whether they seek to maximize the impact of repression by imposing sanctions indiscriminately, stoking general terror to induce acquiescence, or by targeting sanctions against those most likely to mobilize against the regime in power. This paper contributes to the study of electoral authoritarianism by showing how governments use the urban geography of their capitals to target repression during electoral crises. The argument is illustrated with evidence from the Ethiopian government’s response to opposition protests in the national capital after disputed election results in 2005. Based on an analysis of nearly 15,000 protest-related arrests, the paper shows that the Ethiopian government pursued a strategy of geographic targeting, preemptively detaining young men mainly residing near the executive office, in order to forestall further anti-regime mobilization. Distance from the executive office alone is shown to explain nearly a third of the variation in neighborhood arrest rates, while factors such as protest history, the intensity of protest, the location of opposition leader arrests, and the location of police stations are found to have no impact on neighborhood arrest rates.
Ethiopia: The Prototype African Police State

by Alemayehu G. Mariam
The sights and sounds of an African police state
When Erin Burnett of CNN visited Ethiopia in July 2012, she came face-to-face with the ugly face of an African police state:
We saw what an African police state looked like when I was in Ethiopia last month… At the airport, it took an hour to clear customs – not because of lines, but because of checks and questioning. Officials tried multiple times to take us to government cars so they’d know where we went. They only relented after forcing us to leave hundreds of thousands of dollars of TV gear in the airport…
Last week, reporter Solomon Kifle of the Voice of America (VOA-Amharic) heard the terrifying voice of an African police state from thousands of miles away. The veteran reporter was investigating widespread allegations of targeted night time warrantless searches of homes belonging to Ethiopian Muslims in the capital Addis Ababa. Solomon interviewed victims who effectively alleged home invasion robberies by “federal police” who illegally searched their homes and took away cash, gold jewelry, cell phones, laptops, religious books and other items of personal property.
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