As the excellent news
about President Al
Bashir facing ICC arrest
warrant spread
throughout the entire
world, we have to
establish the parallels
that exist between the
two Eastern African
colonial relics, Sudan
and Abyssinia
(fallaciously
re-baptized ´Ethiopia´),
and the two ominous,
tyrannical rulers, Omar
Al Bashir and Meles
Zenawi.
Both countries are fake;
they are the result of
colonial expansion.
Sudan emerged as
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan,
and then through what is
called ´decolonization´
– which is the latter
phase of the
colonization – appeared
as a supposedly
independent country,
whereas Abyssinia
expanded over no less
than 12 African,
Kushitic or Nilo-Saharan
nations, invading their
lands, killing their
kings and leaders,
expropriating the
indigenous peoples from
their lands, and
performing genocide for
at least 10 different
cases over the past
century.
Both countries represent
excruciating tyrannies
based on fake
ideologies, Sudan being
supposedly an ´Arabic´
country, and Abyssinia
turning (through
usurpation of a
historical name that
never belonged to it) to
be ´Ethiopia´.
Both ideologies consist
in provocative
alteration and violation
of the historical
reality and both
ideologies are
absolutely of racist
character, which means
the imposing parts, the
Arabic speaking group in
Central Sudan (which is
purely Kushitic –
Meroitic in its origin)
and the Amhara and
Tigray Monophysitic
Abyssinians in Abyssinia
should – only for the
reason of diffusing
these two ideologies
(Pan-Arabism and ´Ethiopianism´)
– be considered as
threats against the
Mankind – no less than
Hitler and the Nazi
regime of Germany.
Due to the racist nature
of the state ideologies
in Sudan and Abyssinia,
genocides could easily
take place. The Furi
Nation of Darfur are
Muslims but this did not
save them from the Pan-Arabist
pestilence of Khartoum.
The (partly) Christened
Oromos and Anuak have
been repeatedly
butchered by the
supposedly Christian (in
fact heretic
Monophysitic and
pseudo-Christian)
Abyssinians.
The recent cases of
genocide in Darfur and
Ogaden are of similar
nature, reason,
implication and
repercussions. The same
appalling crimes have
been carried out in both
cases. The recent HRW
Report on Ogaden
provides sufficient
reasons in order to
internationally treat
Zenawi in absolutely the
same way as Al Bashir of
Sudan. To offer relief
to the tyrannized
nations of the Furis and
the Ogadenis and be fair
in both cases, an ICC
arrest warrant against
the ´Ethiopian´
´president´ – gangster
Zenawi must be delivered
to him within short
notice.
In the case of Ogaden,
the propinquity of
Somalia and the risk of
an Islamist avalanche
should be given
additional
consideration.
To underscore the
chaotic and inhuman
situation that currently
prevails in Ogaden, in
the light of ICC arrest
warrant issued against
Al Bashir, I republish
1) a report ´US confirms
ICC arrest warrant
against Sudanese
president´ from the
Sudan Tribune,
2) an O.N.L.F Statement
On Ethiopian Obstruction
of MSF Aid Operations,
3) news published in the
world press about
Medecins Sans Frontieres
pulling out of Ogaden
(due to the dictatorial
and inhuman practices of
the gang Zenawi)
´Medical aid group pulls
out of Ethiopia's Fik
region after government
harassment´,
4) an O.N.L.F Statement:
On the Illegal Killings
of Prisoners in the
Jigjiga Prison, Ogaden,
5) a Radio Freedom audio
website on ONLF recent
victories over the
criminal Amhara and
Tigray thugs sent to
Ogaden as ´national
army´ (Ethiopia: Ogaden
rebels claim killing 33
government soldiers in
latest fighting), and
6) an illuminating
feature written by Jamal
Osman on /Ethiopia´s
Hidden Horrors´.
1. US confirms ICC
arrest warrant against
Sudanese president
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article27821
July 11, 2008
(Washington) — The US
State Department
confirmed Friday that
prosecutors from the
International Criminal
Court were to seek an
arrest warrant for
Sudanese President Omar
al-Beshir for genocide
and crimes against
humanity in Darfur.
"I understand that there
is some notice that the
prosecutor intends to go
before a panel of judges
to present information
and request for a
warrant," department
spokesman Sean McCormack
told reporters.
He was asked to confirm
reports that ICC chief
prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo
will seek the arrest
warrant Monday in the
first-ever bid before
The Hague-based tribunal
to charge a sitting head
of state with war
crimes.
"My understanding of the
procedures is that the
panel of judges will
take the request and
advisement and make some
decision in some period
of time. I can´t tell
you how long it would
be," McCormack said.
Some UN officials feared
the move to haul up
Beshir could complicate
the peace process in
Darfur and trigger a
military response by
Sudanese forces or their
proxies against UN and
African Union
peacekeepers.
McCormack warned Sudan
against taking any such
action.
"I would simply say that
it is our view that all
parties, including
Sudan, need to abide by
their international
obligations.
"In the case of Sudan,
this means their
international
obligations vis-a-vis
deployment of
peacekeepers and, of
course, we deplore any
violence that takes
place, whoever is
responsible for that."
2. O.N.L.F Statement On
Ethiopian Obstruction of
MSF Aid Operations
http://www.ogaden.com/onlfp110708.htm
The Ethiopian regime
continues to pursue a
policy of collective
punishment against the
civilian population of
Ogaden. The latest
manifestation of this
policy is the blatant
interference in the work
of the Swiss branch of
Medecins sans Frontieres
(Doctors Without
Borders) in the Fik area
of Ogaden.
Ethiopian armed forces
have deliberately
prevented the delivery
of humanitarian aid by
MSF solely for political
reasons affecting
thousands of innocent
men, women and children.
This interference has
resulting in the halting
of MSF operations in
that area altogether.
Deliberate starvation,
denial of medical aid,
extrajudicial killings
and arrests and the
torching of village huts
have all now become
commonplace in Ogaden.
Despite this, the
international community,
particularly donor
nations, continue to
provide hundreds of
millions of dollars in
aid to a regime that
enjoys no legitimacy and
has even less regard for
human life.
The world community
should be under no
illusion that left to
its own devices this
regime will continue to
commit war crimes and
crimes against humanity
in Ogaden.
Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF)
onlfpress@onlf.org
3. Medical aid group
pulls out of Ethiopia's
Fik region after
government harassment
http://www.ogaden.com/msf100708.htm
Geneva (AP) - The aid
group Medecins Sans
Frontieres says it is
pulling out of
Ethiopia's Fik region
because of persistent
government harassment.
MSF representative
Hugues Robert says staff
members have been denied
work permits and
detained without reason.
Robert says Thursday's
decision means that the
group's efforts to
provide medical care to
ethnic Somali
inhabitants in the Fik
region are on hold
indefinitely. The group
also is known as Doctors
Without Borders.
Ethnic Somalis have been
fighting for greater
autonomy or independence
since Ethiopia seized
the eastern region of
Ogaden in a war with
Somalia 30 years ago.
4. O.N.L.F Statement: On
the Illegal Killings of
Prisoners in the Jigjiga
Prison, Ogaden
http://www.onlf.org/onlf07102008.html
The Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF)
condemns in the
strongest terms the
wounding of innocent
prisoners in a prison
called Ogaden Jail at
the outskirts of the
city of Jigjiga .
On July 04th, 2008 at
around 8:00 PM Local
East African Time, a
contingent of the
Ethiopian security and
armed forces visited the
Ogaden Jail and started
shooting
indiscriminately at the
prisoners. Eyewitness
accounts confirm that
wounded prisoners were
not allowed to get
prompt access to doctors
and medical care. In
addition the situation
in the prison is tense
and the prisoners are in
danger of further
abuses. This deliberate
wounding of prisoners
cannot be justified
under any circumstances.
In fact, most of the
inmates at this prison
have never been charged
with a crime, let alone
convicted. The prison
houses the innocent
civilians seized for
allegedly sympathyzing
the ONLF.
The Ogaden civilian
population deserves the
attention and the prompt
intervention of the
international community.
The United Nations in
particular must
intervene urgently to
avert the risk of
further bloodshed in the
prison. The
international community
continues to fail to
give proper attention
and consideration to the
gross violations of
human rights and war
crimes being committed
by the Ethiopian regime
in Ogaden. Rather, the
Ethiopian regimes
continues to recieve
economic and political
support encouraging them
to defy all
international norms of
respecting basic human
rights in Ogaden.
We appeal to the
international community
to go behind the
Ethiopian facade and
find out the extent of
the crimes committed by
Ethiopian security and
armed forces against the
maltreated people in
Ogaden as well condemn
this heinous act by the
Ethiopian army.
The Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF)
extends its sincere
condolences to the
families and relatives
of the victims who's
relatives were harmed in
the despicable terror
attacks that too place
in 'Jail Ogaden' and
reiterates its
condemnation and
disapproval of all State
sponsored terror acts
against the civilian
population of Ogaden.
Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF)
5. Ethiopia: Ogaden
rebels claim killing 33
government soldiers in
latest fighting
http://www.ogaden.com/onlanws090708.htm
Text of report by
Ethiopian opposition
Radio Freedom audio
website on 8 July
Our [Radio Freedom]
correspondent in the
Ogaden [southeastern
Ethiopia] reports that
at least 33 Ethiopian
colonialist soldiers
have been killed and 36
others have been wounded
in the latest battles
between ONLA [Ogaden
National Liberation
Army] and colonialist
troops. The battles took
place as follows:
On 4 July 2008,
colonialist soldiers
were attacked four times
in a place called
Malqaqa in Galalshe
district, killing 13
soldiers and wounding 15
others.
On 3 July 2008, four
colonialist soldiers
were killed and five
others were wounded in a
battle that occurred in
Samu in Danod district.
On the same date, five
colonialist soldiers
were killed and three
others were wounded in a
battle that took place
on the outskirts of
Yu'ub town. Also on 3
July, a nocturnal attack
was carried out against
colonialist soldiers
stationed in Malayko
town. Casualties
suffered by them are
unknown.
On 2 July 2008, seven
colonialist soldiers
were killed and six
others were wounded in a
surprise attack launched
against them in a place
called Dih Dher in Degeh
Bur district.
On 29 June 2008,
colonialist soldiers
based in a place called
Kalyal in Kebri Dehar
district were attacked.
Four colonialist
soldiers were killed and
seven others were
wounded in the attack.
Source: Radio Freedom,
Voice of the Ogadeni
People audio website in
Somali 8 Jul 08
6. Ethiopia´s Hidden
Horrors
By Jamal Osman
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-07-11-ethiopias-hidden-horrors
Suleikha Mohamed Adan, a
30-year-old widow and
mother of five, was
living a difficult
nomadic life in the
harsh Ogaden region of
eastern Ethiopia when
government soldiers came
to her house and
arrested her.
Her husband and father
were killed last year by
government forces, who
accused them of the same
crime for which she was
arrested: sympathising
with the Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF),
a group fighting for
self-determination for
the Ogaden region.
"My five children were
crying when they tied my
hands behind my back and
kicked me to the
ground," said Adan, who
now lives in Kenya, as
she wiped the tears from
her face. "I was
blindfolded and they
threw me like a ball on
to a military truck."
After two nights, Adan
found herself in an
underground prison in
the town of Godey where
she was kept for 15
months with hundreds of
other prisoners.
"Soldiers would take me
out to beat me up and
sometimes rape me," she
said, sitting in her
room in Eastleigh,
Nairobi. "Younger women
were the soldiers'
favourites. While I was
there I saw two old men
hanged from the roof
with a wire and they
both died."
Adan escaped and feels
very lucky to have got
away from the worsening
situation in Ogaden, a
region that has been
embroiled in conflict
for decades.
Somalia and Ethiopia
have twice gone to war
over the region, which
is populated by ethnic
Somalis, and which each
country claims as part
of its territory.
The Ethiopian military
campaign has intensified
since the ONLF attacked
a Chinese-run oil
installation in April
last year, killing 75
people, including nine
Chinese workers.
A report by Human Rights
Watch (HRW) released
late last month accuses
the Ethiopian regime of
committing widespread
abuses against
civilians. "The
Ethiopian army's answer
to the rebels has been
to viciously attack
civilians in Ogaden,"
said Georgette Gagnon,
Africa director at HRW.
"These widespread and
systematic atrocities
amount to crimes against
humanity. Yet Ethiopia's
major donors --
Washington, London and
Brussels -- seem to be
maintaining a conspiracy
of silence around the
crimes."
Ethiopia has become a
close ally of the United
States since the
September 11 2001
attacks. Western
governments and
institutions --
including the US, the
United Kingdom, and the
European Union -- give
the country at least
$2billion in aid each
year.
Many of the civilians
living in the conflict
zone in Ogaden are
nomads who are
constantly on the move
in search of fresh
grazing.
Maryan Nur Ahmed (52)
said her house, in a
village near the town of
Shilabo, was raided at
night by the Ethiopian
military.
Jailed by Ethiopian
forces, she was
repeatedly tortured but
the soldiers considered
her too old to be raped.
Instead, they raped her
daughter when she
visited the prison.
"They used to say [an]
old woman is [no use],"
said Ahmed, who is now
also in exile in Kenya.
"I have 10 children, but
my youngest child is the
only one with me here in
Kenya. I do not know if
the others are safe."
She said that the
soldiers often tortured
and killed prisoners.
After five of her fellow
inmates were killed, she
decided to escape. "One
night, I realised the
guard was falling asleep
and I used my chest to
walk like a snake," she
said, describing how she
wriggled out of the
prison.
HRW has also condemned
Ethiopian forces for
imposing a series of
measures aimed at
cutting off economic
support to the ONLF,
including a trade
blockade of the
war-affected region and
the obstruction of
humanitarian assistance.
"The government's
attacks on civilians,
its trade blockade and
restrictions on aid
amount to the illegal
collective punishment of
tens of thousands of
people," said Gagnon.
"Unless humanitarian
agencies get immediate
access to independently
assess the needs and
monitor food
distribution, more lives
will be lost."
In July last year the
Ethiopian government
expelled the Red Cross
from the region. It has
since permitted some
United Nations agencies
and NGOs to operate, but
only under tight
controls.
HRW has also criticised
the ONLF for violating
the laws of war,
including summary
executions of Chinese
and Ethiopian civilians
during the Obole attack
and the killing of
suspected government
collaborators.
The Ethiopian government
has denied HRW's
allegations. Foreign
journalists who have
attempted to conduct
independent
investigations have been
arrested.
Note;
Picture: Save, Liberate
Ogaden now!
http://dhanaan.com/index.php?subaction=showfull&id=1205962638&archive=&start_from=&ucat=1&