February 26, 2008

In Ethiopia, does staying silent save lives? (Christian Science Monitor)

Government warns aid workers if they talk to press about atrocities in Somali region, they will lose access.

Spotting a plume of dust from an approaching vehicle, residents of Gudis village ran to tell their neighbors to hide. Then someone saw the flag on the white Land Cruiser; international aid workers were coming. "We thought you were the military," said one man to an aid worker who later recounted the story.

The residents of Gudis, a village of pastoralists in Ethiopia's Somali region, had not seen an aid worker in the six months since the Ethiopian military sent thousands of troops to the area to put down a renewed surge by a separatist rebel group, the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF). Now the village was eager to share its secrets.

At dusk, accompanied by just one villager, the group drove a few miles beyond the cluster of thatched roofs to four, freshly dug mass graves.

"They begged us to stay," said the aid worker, requesting anonymity.

Indeed, aid workers want to stay, but their presence in places like Gudis comes at a price. As the military campaign winds down in the vast portion of the Somali region known as the Ogaden, international humanitarian groups have been gradually allowed to return, though only in exchange for their silence.

"We have two options: either we come out with a nasty press release tomorrow on protection of human rights, and we will have to leave behind a substantial population still facing atrocities, or we just do our work," the aid worker said.

Those who do talk – and they are few – whisper stories of public executions, arbitrary detentions, rapes, beatings, and torture of civilians by government forces intent on crushing a guerrilla insurgency that draws on sympathetic villagers for support. Others describe equally heinous acts committed by rebel forces against those civilians – often from rival clans – who refuse to help the insurgents, whom the government labels as terrorists.

With journalists prohibited from entering the area under military occupation, most of these allegations are hard to verify, and conflicting versions of the same story are common. For instance, Gudis residents told the aid workers that the 47 young men buried in the mass graves were innocent civilians killed by government forces. An elder from the Abdili subclan that inhabits Gudis said the 47 had been coerced to join a government militia and were slaughtered in a confrontation with the ONLF.

The government denies any wrongdoing by federal troops, including the allegation that soldiers have forced civilians to form militias.

"I can assure you that the government is not in the business of killing people and putting them in mass graves," says government spokesman Bereket Simon. "That is why we fought against the military regime." Mr. Bereket, like Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and many high-ranking members of Ethiopia's government, was himself once an insurgent in the movement that overthrew a socialist military dictatorship in 1991. The former revolutionaries claim to know from experience how brutal military tactics can backfire by galvanizing support for rebels.

The ONLF has been fighting to win greater autonomy for Somali-speakers, about 5 percent of the population, for more than two decades. The simmering conflict flared up again last April when the ONLF attacked a Chinese-run oil exploration facility, killing 74 people.

The United Nations has called for an independent investigation into allegations across the region, but the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights still has no access; meanwhile, international aid workers say they cannot wait for justice.

In Gudis, and in hundreds of similar villages, food and water are in short supply, leaving the residents to rely mostly on camel's milk for sustenance. Medical supplies ran out long ago.

"You always come down on the same side," said the director of one organization operating in the region. "It's better to keep yourself operational and to do something."

Still, questions remain about whether the food aid is reaching the people who need it – about 750,000, according to a recent US-funded assessment. Amid the conflict, food disbursements have been slow. The World Food Program (WFP) planned to distribute 53,000 metric tons of food aid in the Ogaden in the three months beginning in December. As of last week, less than 10,700 metric tons had reached beneficiaries.

"One of the things we want to make sure about is that the food gets to the people," said Gregory Beals, a spokesman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the agency acting as interlocutor for aid efforts in the region. "That may mean that the food will go a little slower than we originally planned."

Yet even at the slow pace, aid workers and clan elders say that regional government officials and military forces still manage to divert supplies away from villages suspected of sympathies with the ONLF.

Some aid workers, increasingly frustrated by the situation, are discreetly speaking out. Many say they quietly and privately inform the head of the UN mission in Ethiopia, Fidele Sarassoro. The US Embassy has also convened a roundtable meeting on the Somali region.

For international staff, these surreptitious confessions may put their mission at risk, but for national staff – some who are from the Somali region – the stakes are even higher. Most refused to cooperate on this article for fear that they might be imprisoned or killed.

In spite of the perceived risk, a few local aid workers are eager to confide.

"It's a relief to speak with you," said one local aid worker. "You hear these things and they weigh on your heart."

February 25, 2008

Ethiopa's war on its own (Los Angeles Times)

Ethiopa's war on its own


The government is accused of a reign of terror similar to what is happening in Darfur.
By Ronan Farrow
February 25, 2008
DADAAB, KENYA -- The bullet tore through Ibrahim Hamad's torso and lodged in his hip. The 26-year-old teacher was at home with his elderly father when government forces swept through his town in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia, burning huts and killing civilians. "The young girls were the first to die. The soldiers shot them and gathered the bodies and burned them," he said. The troops demanded that surviving men join their ranks, threatening those who refused with torture, imprisonment and death.

"When they came to my home, I told them, 'I am just a schoolteacher, I will not leave my family,' " said Hamad. In a bleak whisper, he recounted the ordeal that followed. "They strangled my father with a wire and hung his body in a tree. Then they shot me and left me for dead."

Hamad now struggles to survive in this remote refugee camp in northern Kenya, joining thousands who have fled a reign of terror by the Ethiopian army. Little noticed by the world, Ethiopia is waging war against its own people in the Ogaden desert. Long-simmering tensions erupted last April when separatist rebels attacked a Chinese-run oil field. The Ethiopian government responded by ejecting humanitarian agencies and launching a scorched-earth campaign in the region.

The targeting of the predominantly ethnic-Somali Ogaden population has led to accusations of ethnic cleansing. In October, Human Rights Watch:ABE8kZuMg2AJ:hrw.org/english/docs/2007/10/03/ethiop17010.htm+human+rights+watch+ogaden+frighteningly+familiar+pattern&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=5&gl=us warned that events in Ogaden were following a "frighteningly familiar pattern" to those in Somalia's Darfur region, noting "ethnic overtones" to attacks and accusing Ethiopia of "displac[ing] large populations" and "deliberately attack[ing] civilians." Government forces have been implicated in escalating looting, burnings and atrocities. Recently, soldiers have begun a brutal campaign of forced conscription, often torturing or killing those who refuse to join.

The Ethiopian government has suppressed most news from the region, sealing Ogaden's borders and denying access to the media. Last May, three New York Times reporters researching the crisis were held for five days and had their equipment confiscated. Ethiopian officials have been quick to dismiss mounting reports of bloodshed as propaganda. But in this camp, refugees fleeing Ogaden tell stories of rape, torture and mass murder perpetrated against civilian villages by Ethiopia's military.

However, it is the U.S. government, not Ethiopia's, that elicits the most anger from Hamad and the other Ogadenis seeking shelter in Dadaab. The bullet that shattered Hamad's hip, and the gun that fired it, were likely supplied by the United States. The soldier who pulled the trigger was almost certainly compensated with U.S. military aid.

The U.S. has historically provided Ethiopian forces with arms, funding and training. In recent years, the bond has deepened, with Ethiopia's military serving as a proxy for American interests in a region increasingly viewed as a crucial front in the war on terrorism. Since 9/11, military aid to Ethiopia has soared, growing at least 2 1/2 times by 2006. A close intelligence-sharing relationship between the governments has burgeoned.

In the face of mounting evidence of atrocities, some U.S. officials are questioning the no-strings-attached backing of Ethiopia's army. "This is a country that is abusing its own people," said Rep. Donald M. Payne (D-N.J.), chairman of the House subcommittee on Africa and Global Health, accusing the Bush administration of "look[ing] the other way" as Ethiopia's abuses worsen. Last fall, the House passed the Ethiopia Democracy and Accountability Act, sponsored by Payne, to limit military aid to Ethiopia. It awaits action by the Senate. "The United States cannot afford to allow cooperation on the war on terror," Payne said, "to prevent us from taking a principled stance on democracy and human rights issues."

Ironically, unbridled support of Ethiopia's army in the interest of combating terrorism may serve as a powerful catalyst for anti-U.S. sentiment. "We hate the U.S.A. more than the Ethiopians," one Ogadeni told me. "It is guns and money from the U.S.A. that are killing our people."

If Washington wants to fight the rising tide of terrorism in the Horn of Africa, it cannot continue to turn a blind eye to the abuses of its closest ally in the region. The U.S. wields unique influence over Ethiopia; how it uses that influence will determine Ogaden's future. Legislators should continue to press the Bush administration to help stop the bloodshed. Current levels of U.S. aid should be made contingent on Ethiopia halting its attacks on civilians. That might sacrifice some goodwill with Ethiopian officials -- but it could save the people of the Ogaden.

Ronan Farrow, a student at Yale Law School, has worked on human rights issues for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and recently accompanied a congressional delegation to the Horn of Africa.

Los Angeles Times

February 24, 2008

Oromo Refugees Dumped Off of Las Qoary, Somalia

Ethiopian Migrants Dumped Off of Country's North Coast
Nearly 120 Ethiopian migrants were dumped off of north Somalia's coastal town of Las Qoray and informed that they were on Yemeni shores, local sources reported Saturday.

Las Qoray residents awoke today to find the migrants near the coast, including women and children.

A local source told Garowe Online that the migrants are from Ethiopia, and most belong to that country's ethnic Oromo majority.

The migrants told Las Qoray locals that they were thrown overboard when they "saw lights" in the distance. The armed smugglers apparently told the migrants that they had reached the shores of Yemen, a destination for migrants fleeing the Horn of Africa region.

The boat was loaded in a small village east of the port city of Bossaso, the commercial hub of the Puntland regional autonomy, the migrants said.

The boat stayed on the high seas for many hours and then got close to the shore during the night, when the unsuspecting migrants could be easily tricked.

"They [migrants] told us they were thrown overboard," said a local clan elder who spoke with the Ethiopians. "They looked tired and were in very bad shape."

The Bossaso-to-Yemen smuggling route kills hundreds of African migrants each year. Earlier this week, at least 37 people, mostly Somalis and Ethiopians, died in the Gulf of Aden as they attempted to reach the Yemeni coast.

Las Qoray is located in Sanaag, a region disputed for years between Puntland and the neighboring self-declared Republic of Somaliland.

But since last year, Las Qoray and much of Sanaag region has remained in the hands of local clan leaders who established the Maakhir State of Somalia, which considers itself part of federal Somalia but independent of both Somaliland and Puntland.

February 23, 2008

East Africa, from Tyranny to Liberation or Death

Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
February 22, 2008

The oppression and the massacres of numerous East African nations is an undeniable fact. From Darfur to the borders of Tanzania a great number of nations live under absolutely unacceptable conditions.

A veil of Death extends throughout a vast area that has all it takes to ensure human dignity, freedom, progress, prosperity and happiness to all the inhabitants.

To find the reasons of the present situation in the colonization times of Africa explains much of the troubles attested.

To attribute most of the responsibility to the present dictators and tyrannical elites helps us realize some critical dimensions of the problem.

To unveil existing plans that are about to trigger further deterioration of the already disastrous situation of East Africa enables us to expect the worse.

How worse can East Africa turn?

Should we expect to attest in East Africa what is evident now for the world-forgotten Congo, with 5 million dead over the past 10 years?

But is the forthcoming deterioration inevitable?

And do the leaders of the various liberation fronts, movements, organizations and associations not bear any part of responsibility for the present situation?

The Myth of the Liberation Fronts

There is a simple way of viewing things; a people invaded a foreign land, subjugated the indigenous population, and the tyranny produced a reaction, namely the establishment of a liberation front with mission to end the tyranny.

Then, this Manichaeism, the polarization between the foreign ruling class and the local opposition continued for many long decades. However, always for a different reason, this polarization never ended.

For this approach, things are simple; there are the bad guys and the good guys. One day the good guys will kick out the evil ones, and all will be fine!

This is the Myth of the Liberation Fronts – professionalized elites that are part of a world system that

1) does not accept the rise of an uncontrolled nation to national independence,

2) does not agree with the axiom - equation "For every Nation one State", and

3) does not allow the prevalence and the diffusion of the moral values of all these oppressed nations.

These elites of permanent opposition do not know that they are organic parts of the world system, and do not realize that they have no chance to lead their nation to independence – except if they agree to contribute to the metamorphosis of their nation into a colourless and harmless morpheme ready to be absorbed by the dehumanizing machine of the present world system.
What these elites of permanent opposition never imagined is that the inexorable wealth of their culture consists in a lethal enemy for the prevailing world system that cannot afford to cohabitate with a marginal system that, contrarily to the world system, has moral values.

Who would allow a country to implement Gadaa System in 2008?

To give an example, we will refer to the Ancient and Noble Nation of the Oromos. If we suppose that tomorrow an independent Biyya Oromo state is formed and its constitution comprehensively and appreciably stipulates Gadaa, the traditional Oromo social organization system, as the social structure of the independent Oromo state, the new state will automatically be at the antipodes of the world system, as long as it sticks to the traditional Oromo values of Gadaa.

Worse, its existence will be taken as a threatening element by the world elites that gradually but methodically imposed an absolutely immoral and utterly inhuman world.

The Liberation of the Liberation Fronts

Yet, these oppositional elites, which have long been manipulated in order to help eternalize their nations´ unfortunate situation and conditions of life, never imagined that their only chance to achieve what seemed for decades to be a faraway dream is a double change:

a. they must stop contacting European and American administrations in the help of funds, subsidies, military aid, support, and advice (as it will either have a heavy price or be misleading), and

b. they must focus on their values, their people, and the prevalence of their originality.

Only their values can help them motivate their tyrannized nations, stimulate the most enthusiastic part of them, and engage their forces in an unstoppable struggle for Independence.

This does not suggest that morality and moral concepts are inherent to Africa and Asia; the Western World had its own moral concepts, and even today many people in the West ascribe themselves of their moral principles.

The Struggle for National Liberation should then become a top moral engagement, a commitment to moral principles, a pledge for genuine moral values. All the liberation fronts and organizations, movements and associations should realize this reality and identify their effort as a Moral Issue. Only then, the faraway illusion of independence and justice will be a dream come true.

Otherwise, East Africa will soon make today´s Congo look as an ideal paradise.

February 20, 2008

An Urgent Call for Action from the International Community (Petition)

Please download the attached file, collect signatures for the petition and send it to concerned organisations like UNHCR, ICRC, Amnesty International and other human rights and humanitarian organisations! Galatoomaa!


Ethiopian government blows up two cafés full of Oromo refugees and burns 250 Oromo refugees’ residences in Somalia


An urgent call for action from the international community

On February 5, 2008, at about 8:00 pm, Ethiopian government soldiers blew up two cafés in Puntaland’s Bosasso city of Somalia and killed 65 Oromo refugees and injured 100 people. The Oromo refugees were watching videos in Oromo language at the time. Both cafés, owned and operated by Oromos, were the regular meeting and socialising palaces for Oromo refugees. The Ethiopian government mercenary group first threw two grenades into the cafés and opened fire on and killed those who had survived the deadly bomb blasts. The killers then transported the bodies of the dead away from the site of the blast in two convoys to conceal the tragedy. In addition to the scores killed, residences of 250 Oromo refugees were set on fire with all their property. Some survivors of the attack were denied hospitalisation and were beaten and chased away.


The TPLF is a minority ethnic political group that controls the current Ethiopian government. In a bid to maintain its autocratic control of governance of Ethiopia, the TPLF continues to suppress political freedom of its citizens, particularly of the Oromos.

Oromos who escape brutal political persecution by the government flee to the neighbouring countries such as Somalia and Kenya to seek refuge. In the past, such refugees had been accorded protection by the local UNHCR personnel and the host country. New circumstances have presently changed this dramatically for Oromo refugees particularly in Somalia: for example, the Ethiopian government has been bolstered militarily by Western aid causing it to have little regard for international instruments such as the UN Conventions on Human Rightsthe Universal Declaration of Human Rights; the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; the Convention Against Torture, and among others; the Convention Against Genocide – both within and outside its borders. The government of Ethiopia has resultantly added a disturbing dimension to its practice of ‘Zero Tolerance’ of political dissidence; it is engaged in a systematic plan to hunt and kill Oromo political refugees in their country of refuge. In November 2007, for example, security forces loyal to the TPLF-led government of Ethiopia killed 10 Oromo refugees and carried out a failed kidnap attempt on 4 journalists in Nairobi, Kenya. The 10 Oromo refugees that were killed were university students that fled persecution from their native country Ethiopia to Kenya. The February 5 murder of the defenceless Oromo refugees in Somalia symbolises a growing act of terrorism planned, orchestrated and executed by the Ethiopian government against the Oromo people.

The international community should not turn a blind eye to this barbaric act. Behind all organised terrorist actions is a trail of finances, some diverted, and others deliberate. In the case of the terrorist actions perpetrated by the Ethiopian government against the defenceless Oromo refugees in Somalia, the trail of money points to the well-meaning economic aid and military assistance given to the country by the Western nations. As the primary force for the promotion of democracy and human rights in developing countries, and as nations whose well-meaning economic assistance has been diverted by the Ethiopian government for terrorist activities against defenceless refugees, the responsibility by the Western nations to intervene in the case of the mass murder committed by the Ethiopian government against defenceless Oromo refugees is double fold.

The 1951 CONVENTION RELATING TO THE STATUS OF REFUGEES and THE 1967 PROTOCOL RELATING TO THE STATUS OF REFUGEES, states that:

“By its statute, the Office of the High Commissioner is entrusted, interalia, with the task of promoting international instruments for the protection of refugees, and supervising their application. Under the Convention and Protocol, contracting States undertake to cooperate with the Office of UNHCR in the exercise of its functions and, in particular, to facilitate its specific duty of supervising the application of the provisions of these instruments.”

Quite evidently, in the case of Oromo refugees in Somalia, the Office of the UNHCR has failed to “… exercise its functions and, in particular, to facilitate its specific duty of supervising the application of the provisions of the Refugee Convention.

Clause IV.D of the Convention, further states that:

THE CONFERENCE, CONSIDERING that many persons still leave their country of origin for reasons of persecution and are entitled to special protection on account of their position, RECOMMENDS that Governments continue to receive refugees in their territories and that they act in concert in a true spirit of international cooperation in order that these refugees may find asylum and the possibility of resettlement.”

The Government of Somalia failed to provide the Oromo refugees “… a true spirit of international cooperation” that the refugees were entitled to from the host country. Instead, some of its security personnel the government of Somalia cooperated with the Ethiopian government mercenaries in helping with the logistics that the mercenaries needed to murder the defenseless refugees.

Petition:

We, the undersigned, call upon the following international organizations to:

  1. take urgent action to investigate and to bring to account the perpetrators of the mass murder of Oromo refugees on February 5, 2008, in Puntaland’s Bosasso city of Somalia

  1. provide urgent medical care to the 100 Oromo refugees that were injured by the bomb blasts of the cafés carried out by the Ethiopian government, and to;

  1. provide effective protection, and where appropriate, resettlement, to the remaining Oromo refugees in Somalia.

International organizations we are sending this petition to:

  1. The good office of the Secretary General of The United Nations, H. E. Ban Ki-moon Secretary-General, The United Nations New York. NY 10017

2. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

Case Posatale 2500

CH-1211 Genève 2 Dépôt

Suisse

3. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

19 Avenue de la Paix

CH 1202 Geneva

· USA / NEW YORK

E-Mail: mail@icrc.delnyc.org

Head of delegation: Mr. Dominique BUFF

· USA / WASHINGTON

E-Mail: washington.was@icrc.org

Head of delegation: Mr. Geoffrey LOANE

· E-Mail: somalia.sok@icrc.org

Head of delegation: Mr. Pascal HUNDT

Mob: (++254) 722 51 81 42

February 19, 2008

HRLHA Urgent Action: An Appeal to the President of Djibouti

URGENT ACTION


Appeal To: The President of Djibouti


February 18,2008

His Excelency Ismail Omar Guelleh

President, The Republic of Djibouti

Po Box 185

Tel. (253) 35 39 95

Fax- (253) 35 39 40

Djibouti.


Your Excellency,

Human Rights League of the Horn of Africa(HRLHA) recieved from its informants in Djibouti a report that your Government’s security forces have arbitrarly arrested four very young Ethiopian refugees on Feburuary 01, 2008 in violation of international treaties to which, we believe, Djibouti is a signatory. All four refugees were picked up and taken to the Lagad Detention Center by the Djibouti scurity force on their way to the refugee camp from school, which they have been attending. The school was set up by Catholic church of Djibouti particulary to help children of the refugees in Djibouti.

It was very saddening to hear that they were tortured while they were in the detention centre; and that they are going to be deported to Ethiopia. We have confirmed from our reporters that,until their deportation date arrived, these teenagers who could be addressed as children, were forced to do very heavy labor in a very harsh situation on a construction site for 12hrs every day.

The names of the four youths abducted and subjected to the hard child labour are:

  1. Kadir Hasan Ahmed, age 17, male
  2. Fatih Mohamed Ali, age 16, male
  3. Abdul Aziz Ahmed Hajii muhamed, age 17, male and
  4. Muhamed Abdoo Ahmed, age 17, male.

The Ethiopian Government has a well-documented record of gross and flagrant violations of human rights, including the torturing of its own citizens who were involuntarily returned to the country. The government of Ethiopia routinely imprisons such persons. There have been credible reports of physical and psychological abuse committed against individuals in Ethiopian prisons and other places of detention. Under Article 33 (1) of the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (189 U.N.T.S. 150), to which Djibouti is a party, “[n]o contracting state shall expel or forcibly return a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his . . . political opinion.” This obligation, which is also a principle of customary international law, applies to both asylum seekers and refugees, as affirmed by UNHCR’s Executive Committee and the United Nations General Assembly

By deporting the four Youths, the Djibouti government will be breaching its obligations under international treaties and customary law.

    • Under the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) adopted by the UN General Assembly resolution 44/25 of 20 November 1989 and entered into force on 2 September 1990, Djibouti has an obligation not to expose under-age children to heavy child labour.
    • Under the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (1465 U.N.T.S. 185) to which Djibouti acceded in 2002, Djibouti has an obligation not to return a person to a place where they face torture or ill-treatment. Article 3 of the Convention against Torture provides:

      1. No state party shall expel, return (“refouler”) or extradite a person to another state where there are substantial grounds to believe that they would be in danger of being subjected to torture.

2. For the purpose of determining whether there are such grounds, the competent authorities shall take into account all relevant considerations including, where applicable, the existence in the state concerned of a consistent pattern of gross, flagrant or mass violations of human rights.

We strongly urge the Government of Djibouti to respect the international treaties and obligations it has signed..

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

Two young refugees, Umar Aliye 16, and Abdulfattah Abdulattif, who were abducted by the Djibouti police from the steet on their way from the school to their refugee camp, who were also forced to do hard child labour in hard situation on constration sites, were deported to Ethiopia in November 2007 and their whereabouts is unknown( HRLHA press release No 4 November 2007).


HRLHA urges the Djibouti Government to revise its policies and procedures so as to ensure compliance with the international conventions and declarations on refugees’ rights and protection; and release these four refugees from prison.


The HRLHA is a non-political organization which attempts to challenge abuses of human rights of the people of various nations and nationalities in the Horn of Africa. It works on defending fundamental human rights including freedoms of thought, expression, movement and association. It also works on raising the awareness of individuals about their own basic human rights and that of others. It encourages the observances as well as due processes of law. It promotes the growth and development of free and vigorous civil societies.

Sincerely,

Garoma Wakessa
Executive Director
Human Rights League of the Horn of Africa

Cc:

Embassy of the Republic of Djibouti

(High Comission) Consulate to Canada

3525 Durocher street, Apt. 91 Montereal Quebec H2X 2E7

Phone (+1 – 514) 2888297

Fax (+1 – 514) 2888297

Email – elisabethdembil@yahoo.ca

February 18, 2008

Broadneck teacher adopts Ethiopian sisters

Published February 18, 2008

For the past few months, the Stimely family's four daughters have been throwing nightly dance parties in their living room to the tunes of Disney's wildly popular "High School Musical."

The Stimely family, from Linthicum, adopted two girls from Ethiopia. Front (L to R) Lillian Stimely (3), Ross Stimely (dad), Masene Stimely (5), Ruth Stimely; Back (L to R) Safiya Stimely (3) and Carol Bittner (mom).

It'd be a nightly scene like any other, except that two of the girls are brand new to both American people and pop culture. The Stimelys adopted Masene, 5, and Safiya, 3, from Ethiopia in November. Their mother, Carol Bittner, said the dance parties have brought the girls closer to their new American sisters, Ruth, 7, and Lillian, 3.

"It feels good to have two new people in the family," Ruth said. "We just play and have fun."

The Stimelys are among a growing number of people adopting from Ethiopia. China and Russia have been the major hubs for adoption, but Ethiopia's star is rising, Ms. Bittner said.

A combination of the country's relatively easy adoption paperwork and large number of children orphaned by the AIDS epidemic has drawn an increasing number of adoption agencies over the past few years, said Merrily Ripley, director of Adoption Advocates International, the agency that helped the Stimelys adopt Masene and Safiya.

About 3,500 Ethiopian children have been adopted by American families since 1990, and of those, about 1,250 children were adopted in 2007 alone, said Hermela Kebede, director of the Ethiopian Community Center in Washington. Government officials have estimated that 4,000 will be adopted in 2008, she said.

"That's how much it's growing," Ms. Kebede said.

Wait times for adopting Ethiopian children are longer than they've ever been, said Ms. Ripley, as agencies realize that Ethiopia's clear adoption procedures make it a good country for international adoption.

Also, because of new drugs that reduce the risk of spreading HIV, American families can now adopt HIV-positive children, Ms. Ripley said. Adoption Advocates placed about 30 HIV-positive children from Ethiopia last year, she said.

"That's something we never thought we'd be able to do 5 to 10 years ago," she said.

American families are aware that HIV, malaria, yellow fever and poverty have left many children orphaned.

"I think because they're aware of the need there, the orphans, a lot of folks are motivated by wanting to adopt a child," Ms. Ripley said.

That was one reason why the Stimelys decided to adopt from Ethiopia.

Ross Stimely, a teacher at Broadneck High School, and Ms. Bittner, who is an attorney for the federal court in Baltimore, had talked about adopting for years. It would be a way to make a difference and also grow their family, Mr. Stimely said.

They decided to work through Adoption Advocates because unlike agencies that focus on babies, Adoption Advocates works with older children and tries to keep siblings together, Ms. Bittner said. The agency has placed as many as five siblings together, Ms. Ripley said.

They applied and in May were told the agency had found two little girls who needed a family. But summer is the rainy season in east Africa, and the Stimelys had to wait until November to make the trip.

They passed the months by writing to Masene and Safiya, sending them photos of their new house, their new sisters. The trip they finally took in November with Ruth and Lillian was the furthest they had ever traveled, Mr. Stimely said.

He and Ms. Bittner met their new daughters on Nov. 19 - a date that also happened to be their 13th wedding anniversary.

Masene and Safiya are from a rural part of southern Ethiopia, where people raise sheep and goats and have neither electricity nor running water, Ms. Bittner said. The girls were apprehensive when they first arrived in the United States.

To help them adjust, the Stimelys have been cooking traditional Ethiopian food, like potato stew and injera, a sort of pancake that's a staple of the Ethiopian diet, Mr. Stimely said. Ruth and Lillian have been taking Ethiopian food to school in their packed lunches. And they're trying to learn Amharic, the regional Ethiopian language.

Lillian and Ruth have already picked up some Amharic, he said, just as Masene and Safiya have picked up the words to High School Musical. Lillian, at 3 years old, has already forgotten what it's like not to have adopted sisters, Ms. Bittner said.

"For her, it's completely normal," Ms. Bittner said. "Like, doesn't everyone have a sister from Ethiopia?"

The Stimelys hope their story will inspire more people to adopt one of the many Ethiopian children who need families. If their family can do it, anyone can, Ms. Bittner said.

"We are completely normal, regular people, except we saw a problem and acted on it," she said. "We're just raising our kids. It's just life, and you can do it and it can be great."

www.hometownannapolis.com

Urgent Appeal by OMRHO e.V concerning imprisonment of Oromo political refugees in Sudan

To all international communities

Urgent appeal letter

The Oromo Human rights and Relief Organisation (OMRHO e.V) received information that the Sudan government imprisoned the Oromo political refugees at a place called Dabaq which is located in the north of Khartoum and preparing to hand them over to the Ethiopian government. Among the Oromo refugees who are imprisoned at Dabaq north of Khartoum are:

  1. Adunya Shifarraw
  2. Harun Idris
  3. Mhamed Nadoo
  4. Abdalla Suleman
  5. Ibrahim Youssouf (marqos Gobana)
  6. Shantam Atalay
  7. Abamalka (Adam) Bisil
  8. Milkessa Hailu
  9. Teshome and there other refugees whose names did not reach OMRHO e.V.

Such action is against the international law that the Sudan government is obliged to respect. To hand over refugees to the government who persecuted them is morally wrong and it is against humanity. Some of theses refugees were imprisoned in Ethiopia at Zway prison without trial for more than six years and were released. They escaped from Ethiopia and lived for many years in the Sudan to save their lives. OMRHO e.V. is very much concerned for the lives of these refugees and we apply for urgent action to save them from being deported to Ethiopia.

Rev. Benti Ujulu

OMRHO e.V. Chairperson

Hannover

Germany

February 17, 2008

Open Letter to UNHCR Concerning the massacre of Oromo refugees in Bosaso, Somalia

Open Letter to UNHCR

Antonio Guterres, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Case Postale 2500CH-1211
Genève 2 Dépôt Switzerland

Dear Commissioner Guterres,

I am writing you this letter to express our deep concern and dismay regarding the inhuman massacre of around 100 Oromo Refugees and wounding of more than 65 in Bosaso, breakaway region of Somalia, on February 5, 2008. The basic reason Oromos flee and take refuge in neighboring countries is protection from persecution due to their national identity and their political belief in Ethiopia. Unfortunately, this is not being so for these refugees. The harassment, suffering, persecution and ill treatment of Oromos perpetrated by the Ethiopian regime is crossing international boundaries. Oromo refugees are constantly being harassed, forcefully deported by would be host governments and murdered by assassin squads of TPLF/EPRDF government or by paid agents of Ethiopian government in Djibouti, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan, and even Yemen, where they arrive after risking their lives on the high seas where about half of those who attempt to cross perish on a regular basis.

The current regime has made its policy clear from the very beginning when it assassinated Major Jatani Ali, an Oromo refugee, a former officer in the deposed Derg regime, in Nairobi in 1991. This was followed by assassination of Mr. Adam Tukale (Mullis Abbaa Gadaa), an OLF high-ranking official in Mogadishu, in 2000. They have acquired forceful repatriation of many prominent refugees who fled to the neighboring countries, whose destinies have never been known. Last year they assassinated many Oromo former journalists in Nairobi. The current mass massacre is a culmination of this policy of physically liquidating opposition individuals wherever they go.

The universal declaration of human rights signed in 1948 and 1951, have articles that recognize the right for refugees. Any country that has signed these declarations is obliged to respect them. These neighboring countries, except those entities that were part of Somalia, are members of the United Nations, and are signatories to the universal declaration of human rights of both 1948 and 1951. When these countries are violating every letter of these declarations member countries of the UN and humanitarian organizations should not keep silent.

Dear Mr. Commissioner,
The continuation of human rights violation in Ethiopia and the generation of many refugees have been perpetrated partly because the international community had chosen to turn a blind eye. We are convinced that at this crucial moment, your leadership, and the active engagement of the International Community, could mean the difference between life and death for many Oromo Refugees as well as the troubled Horn of Africa region. We strongly believe that this horrendous and inhuman act is an augmentation of permanent policy of the Meles Zenawi regime since 1991. Several hundreds of Oromos have been killed or disappeared in neighboring countries or forced to return to Ethiopia to face injustice between 1991 and 2007.
We, therefore, appeal to the UNHCR, all UN member nations and humanitarian organizations to put necessary pressure on the governments and groups to refrain from violating the rights of refugees in their respective countries and territories under their control. We also call upon human right activists, peace and freedom -loving individuals and organizations to condemn these cowardly act and render their much needed assistance to refugees suffering without any treatment. We request urgent medical care for those wounded, since they are not getting proper treatment, provide proper burial to the dead and investigate to bring the perpetrators to justice. We specifically request the UNHCR and member nations to find a way to protect these refugees from such carnage and the unbearable death toll on the seas as they attempt to escape such fates and help those still suffering without proper medical attention. Oromos as any other peoples in the world are entitled to get refugee protection and assistance from governments and UNHCR offices.

The followings are some of the current victims on (February 5, 2008 at 2:30PM local time) massacre by two simultaneous Hand Grenade attacks in two Bosaso restaurants each owned by Oromo immigrants. There are as many wounded ones being recklessly amputated for simple treatable wounds while the others who happened not to be at the targeted places that night are being made shelter-less by burning down their houses and forcing the landlords to expel tenants lest their own houses are also burned.

1. Abdallaa Siraaj Abraahim (28) from Roobee town, Arsi Zone.
2. Adusalaam Mustafa (20) from Baroda town, Harare Zone
3. Mohamed Email Passim (18) from Machala town of Harare Zone
4. Abdujabaar Mohamed Abdo (24) from Jajuu town of Arsi Zone
5. Mohamed Said (19) from Martu Abomsa, Arsi Zone
6. Aliyyi Mohamed Aliyyii (20) from Wallo Zone
7. Abdallaa Kamala Tusee (20) from Sude, Arsi Zone
8. Ziyaad Ibraahim Hassan (30) from Galamso town of Harargee Zone
9. Abdilgafaar Abdulahi Jabran (18) from Burqaa, Walqixee Zone
10. Abdilxaaif Shubbee Mohamed (42) from Bale Zone
11. Musxafaa Saalii Abdallaa (22) from Baddano town of Harargee Zone
12. Abdullee Biluu Ahmed (19) from Shirkaa town of Arsi Zone
13. Mohamed Amiin Kadir (22) from Robe town of Arsi Zone
14. Abdulmajiid Abitii Mohamed (22) from Jajuu town of Arsi Zone
15. Daud Kadir Hussen (20) from Jaju town of Arsi Zone
16. Xaahir Husseen Abdilkariim (25) from Baale Zone
17. Umar Aadam Umar (23) from Raya town of Wallo Zone
18. Nagahuu Abdi Ali (38) from Robee town of Arsi Zone
19. Qaasim Kadir (22) from Lole town of Arsi Zone
20. Ridwaan Kadir (23) from Jaju town of Arsi Zone
21. Hassan Umar Duqaa (20) from Wallo Zone
22. Usmaail Hasso sh Aadam (47) from Machitu town of Arsi Zone
23. Abdul Fataah Sh. Abubakar (18) from Arsi Zone
24. Mohamed Hassan Alilu (20) from Wallo Zone
25. Fadluu Haajii Abdoo (20) from Arsi Zone
26. Jamaal Mohamed Ululaa (53)
27 .siraaj kadir mahamed (20) from Arsi Zone
28. Abdallaa Ahmed Maluu from Shambale Town of Wallo Zone
29. Umar Ahmed Carafaa. From Wallo Zone
30. Ahmed Mohamed Kali Wallo
31. Sulaymaan Ahmed
32. Jamaal Mohamed Saali
33. Amiin Husseen Abdulqaadir
34. Mohamed Aloo Tufaa
35. Nagayoo Abdoo Alliyyii
36. Turee Amaan Abdoo
37. Mohamed Yaasiin Ibroo
38. Ali Mohamed Bashiir
39. Amina Umar Takaa
40. Aliyyii Ahmed Musa
41. Gidanaa Muusee Daadee
42. Ahmed Bakar Birkaa
43. Obsaa Amaan Sheekoo
44. Abdoo Kaliifaa
45. Nagaash Mohamed Idris
46. Mohamed Gazaalii sh. Amaan
47. Arabuu Hussen Abdurahmaan
48. Nuuraa Abdurahmaan Sheekaa
49. MUhyadiin Kamaal Amaan
50. Mohamed Aamadee Ulumee
51. Umar Mahamud Umaree
52. Husseen Jaaraa Sulxee
53. Abama Nyalata Abit
54. Mohamed dheeree
55. Almuu Bayanaa
56. Mohamed Bile Ahmed Yuusuf
57. Wandasan Baqalaa
58. Sulaymaan Ma’alim Warsame

Sincerely,
Qotto Gufuu

CC: H. E. Ban Ki-moon
Secretary-General
The United Nations
New York. NY 10017

February 16, 2008

HRLHA Press Release: 65 Oromo refugees murdered and more than 100 others injured

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Press Release No9

February 2008

Mass Murder in Bossaso (Puntland, Somalia)


65 Oromo refugees murdered and more than 100 others injured
65 Oromo refugees from Ethiopia were killed and more than 100 others were seriously injured when two grenades were thrown at two different hotels owned by two Oromo refugees, Melaku and Jamal Arsii, in port town of Bossaso in Puntland, Somalia. The victims were watching a video game produced in Oromo Language by the time the attack took place on the 5th of February, 2008.

According to HRLHA informants in the area, the deadly attack was planned and executed jointly by security forces form Ethiopia and Puntland. A three-member mercenary group organized in Ethiopia was sent out to neighbouring countries were refugees from Ethiopia are believed to have been staying to take such actions against suspected members of opposition political organizations. Relatives and family members of the victims in particular give the following proofs to substantiate their claims:

1. One day prior to the attack in Bossaso, houses of Oromo refugees living in Borama and Buro towns of Puntland were searched by the joint Ethio-Puntland security agents.

2. 30 seconds before the happening of the attack, the power was turned off from its source and the whole town remained in absolute darkness; domestic and international telephone networks were disconnected.

3. The town of Bossaso was fully surrounded by heavily armed security forces and all roads leading into and out of the town were blocked.

4. After the attack took place, the bodies of the victims were immediately loaded onto two trucks and taken to unknown places.

5. The vehicle of the Ministry of Interior of Puntland was identified at the place of the attack.





The names of the injured Oromo refugees are:

1.Abrahim Siraj Abrahim 28,born inRobe/Arsi

2. Abdusalam Mustaffa 28,born in Baroda/Hrarge

3. Abdala Kamal Tuse 20, Sude/Arsi

4. Siraj Kadir Mohamed 20,Arsi

5. Abdul Fatah Abubakar 18, Arsi,

6. Suleyman Ahmed,

7. Mohamed Usmael Kasim 18,Machara/Hararge

8. Mohamed Usmael Aliyu 20, Wallo

9 Jamal Mohamed Saali,

10. Ali Mohamed Bashir

11. Fadluu Haji Abdoo 20,Arsi

12. Amin Hussen Abdulqadir

13. Mohamed Aloo

14. Nagawo Abdoo Alliyyi

15. Ture Aman Abdo

16. Mohamed Yasin Ibro

17. Abdujabar Mohamed Abdo 24 Jaju/Arsi

18. Umar Taka

19. AliyyiiAhmed Musa

20. Gidana Muse Dade

21. Umar Aadam Umar raya 23, wallo

22. Jamal Mohamed Ulula 53

23. Mohamed Amin Kadir 22, Robe/Bale

24. Mustafa Salii Abdalla 23,Baddanno/Hararge

25. Abdiugafar Abdulahi Jabran 18, Wakkite Burka/Shwa

26. Abdulle Biluu Ahmed 19, Shirka/Arsi

27. Ziyaad Ibrahim Hassan30,Galamso/Hararge

28. Ahmed Bakar Birka

29. Obsaa Aman Sheeko

30. Abdo kalifa

31. Nagash Mohamed Idris

32. Mohamed Said 21, Marti Abomsa/Arsi

33. Mohamed Gazali Sh. Aman

34. Arabu Hussen Abdurahman

35.Nura Abdurahman Sheka

36. Muhaddin Kamal Aman

37 Mohamed Amade Ulume

38. Umar Mahamud Umare

39. Aliyyi Mohamed Aliyyi 20, Wallo

40. Xahir Hussen Abdilkariim25, Bale

41. Ahmed Mahamud Kalil, Wallo

42. Hassan Umar Duqaa 20, Wallo,

43. Qasim Kadir 22, Lole/Arsi

44. Abdiltif Shubbe Mohamed 42 Bale

45. Redwan Kadir23, Jaju/Arsi

46. Daud Kadir Hussen 20, Jaju/Arsi

47. Abdulmajid Abiti Mohamed 22, Jaju/Arsi

48. Husseen Jara Sulte

49. Umar Ahmed Tarafa, Wallo

50. Abama Nyalata Abit

51. Mohamed Dhere

52. Abdallaa Ahmed Malu ,Sambate/Wallo

53. Nagahu Abdi Ali 38 Robe?Arsi

54. Usmael Hasso Sh Aadam, Machitu/Arsi

55. Alamu Bayana

56. Mohamed Bile Ahmed Yusuf

57.Wandwoson Baqalaa

58. Sulayman Ma’alim Warsame

59. Melaku (hotel owner); and the names of more than 40 victims who are in critical condition were not included



The Human Rights League of the Horn of Africa/HRLHA believes that such kinds of mass murders were pre-planed and well organized. HRLHA also believes that defenseless civilians who have already fled their home lands seeking for safety and security should get a full protection in countries where they are staying; be it temporarily or permanently. It strongly condemns such barbarous act committed against defenseless refugees. Also, HRLHA is highly concerned about the safety and security of those refugees currently living in Puntland and other neighboring countries.

HRLHA urges other international human rights agencies to join hands with it to condemn these illegal and inhuman acts committed in Bossasso, Puntland against defenseless refugees. HRLHA also requests governments of the west and other international organization to interfere so that the safety and security of the refugees in Puntland and other neighboring countries in the Horn would be secured. In the mean time, HRLHA demands that the barbarous act committed against defenseless refugees be investigated.

The HRLHA is a non-political organization which attempts to challenge abuses of human rights of the people of various nations and nationalities in the Horn of Africa.

HRLHA is aimed at defending fundamental human rights including freedoms of thought, expression, movement and association. It has also aimed at raising the awareness of individuals about their own basic human rights and that of others. It has intended to work on the observances as well as due processes of law. It promotes the growth and development of free and vigorous civil societies.

February 11, 2008

Oduu Oromiyaa (Madda Oduu ABO)

Madda Oduu ABO

Guraandhala 2008

Manni Murtii Olaanaa Federaalaa Wayyaanee dhaddachi 3ffaan ilmaan Oromoo seeraan ala hidhanirratti murtii hidhaa fi adabbii dabaa dabarsuun barame
Manni murtii olaanaa Federaalaa Wayyaanee dhaddachi 3ffaan, gaafa Gurraandhala 08, 2008 taa’ee murtii kenneen Prezidentii Waldaa Maccaa fi Tuulamaa (WMT), obbo Dirribii Damisee qarshii 3000, obbo Naggaa Kafanii qarshii 2000n oggaa adabu, barataa Malaakuu Dagafaa ammoo hidhaa waggaa tokkoo itti murteessuun gara mana hidhaa Qaallittiitti erguun isaa barameera.
Obbo Dirribiin mirga wabiin gadi dhiifamanii kan turan oggaa ta’u, Gurraandhala 06,2008tti wayyaanotaan deebifamanii hidhamuun isaanii ni yaadatama. Ilmaan Oromoo kunniin badii tokko illee osoo hin raawwatan qabamanii kan hidhamanii fi adabamani tahuun ni beekama.
Haaluma wal fakkaatuun manni murtii waliigalaa Federaalaa sirna wayyaanee dhaddacha Gurraandhala 05,2008 taa’en ilmaan Oromoo galmee obbo Eliyaas Huseen jalatti argaman irratti murtii diinummaa dabarsuun barame jira.
Haaluma kanaan obbo Eliyaas Husseen (Caalaa Leencoo), obbo Ayyalaa Abbee (Gadaa Jamaal), obbo Adam Ahmed fi obbo Ahmed Usmaa’el irratti hidhaa waggaa 8:8 oggaa muruu, barataa Yunversitii Jimmaa kan ta’e Abbabaa W/Maariyam irratti ammoo hidhaa waggaa 5 murteessaniiru.
Ilmaan Oromoo kunniin bara 2004tti Oromummaa isaaniin yakkamanii Oromiyaa bahaa irraa wayyaanotaan qabamuun manneen hidhaa Maa’ikalaawwii, Karchallee fi Zuwaayitti hidhamanii hiraarfamaa kan turan oggaa ta’u, amma immoo mana hidhaa Qaallittii keessatti dararamaa jiraachuun gabaafame.
Shawaa Lixaa Ona Gindabarat keessatti barattootni lukkeewwan Wayyaanee mormuun Itti-fufe
Godina Shawaa Lixaa Ona Gindabarat mana barumsaa Gindabarat Sad.2ffaa keessatti barattootni sirna wayyaanee irratti mormii jalqaban itti fufuun gabaafame.
Barattoota fakkaatanii kanneen lukkee diinaa ta’an waliinis wal dhabanii mormiin dhalachuun beekameera.
Lukkeen Wayyaanee barsiisaa Anbassee Tolasaa jedhamu barattoota sab-boontota ta’an doorsisaa akka jirus barameera. Gocha barsiisaa kanaatti barattootaa fi maatiin barattootaa kan aarani jiran ta’uunis ibsame.
Gama biraan qonnaan bultootni Oromoo naannoo kanaa gibirrii fi gatiin xaa’ooo waan itti ulfaateef, rakkoof saaxilamanii akka jiran maddeen oduu keenyaa gabaasaniiru.

Dabballootni wayyaanee kaardii filannoo Dirqiidhaan ummataatti Raabsuun barame
Godinoota Oromiyaa gara garaa keessatti dabballootni wayyaanee “kaardii fudhaa nu filadhaa” jechuun ummata rakkisaa kan jiran yeroo ta’u, namoota kana didan dhaanaa fi hidhaatti darbatamaa akka jiran maddeen gabaasaa jiran.
Naannolee akka Baatuu (Zuwaayi) Shaashamannee, Maqii, Arsii Nagallee fi bakka birootti maqaa kaardii humnaan fudhachuu jedhuun ummatni dabballoota sirna wayyaaneen goolamaa jira.
Gama biraan hidhattootni fi ergamtootni wayyaanee Godina Arsii Ona Kofalee bakka Amshookaa jedhamutti daldaltoota sodaachisuun maallaqaa fi qabeenya irraa saamuu irratti akka argaman bira gahamee jira.
Godina Shawaa dhihaa Ona Meettaa Roobii keessatti argamu manni barumsaa Garbii Bultoo jedhamu Abbidaan barbadaa’e
Ona Meettaa Roobii-Godina Shawaa-dhihaatti manni barumsaa Garbii Bultoo jedhamu gaafa Gurraandhala 7, 2008 guutummaatti barbadaa’uun gabaafame.
Kutaa barnootaa dabalatee, Laaybirariin qabeenyaa keessa jiru waliin barbadaa’uu ibsanii, manni barumsaa kun galgala sa’aa 9:00 kaasee hanga barii sa’aa 8:00tti wayta gubatu dabballoonni wayyaanee callisanii ilaaluurra taranii ummata abidda dhaamsuuf ba’e irratti dhukaasa banuu gabaafasiiru.
Kana malees guyyaa manni barumsaa kun gubatu dabballoonni wayyaanee ta’e jedhanii, tajaajila bishaanii, ibsaa fi bilbilaa adda kutuun baramee jira.
Sirni wayyaanee yeroo gara garaa dhaabbilee tajaajila hawaasummaa laatan gubanii, dhaabbilee saba isaaniif falman ittiin himatuun, yakkuun ni yaadatama.
Barattoonni Godina Shawaa Bahaa magaalaa Duukam mana barumsaa Odaa Nabee maqaa deegarsa ABOn hidhaatti guuraman
Godina Shawaa Bahaa magaalaa Duukam mana barumsaa Odaa Nabee barattoonni maqaa ‘ABO deeggartu’ jedhuun mana hidhaatti guuramaa jiraachuun gabaafame.
Dabballoonni wayyaanee barattoota Oromoo guuranii mana hidhaatti naqan keessaa barataa kutaa 10ffaa kan ta’e Geetuu Dhaqqaboo reebicha irra gaheen qaamaa hir’atuun hubatamee jira.
Dabballeen wayyaanee barattoota kana irratti hiraartti ulfaataa kana irraan gahaa jiru ajajaa Poolisii Onichaa nama Shaambal Daraaroo Roobii jedhamu ta’uun bira ga’ameera.
Ergamaan wayyaanee kun kanaan duras, hammeenya wal-fakkaataa raawwataa kan turee ta’uu fi gocha kanarraa hin dhaabbatu taanaan tarkaanfiin barbaachisu kan irratti fudhatamu ta’uu sab-boontonni akeekkachiisan.
Balaan baqqattoota Oromoo Puntland fi Djibutiitti Sirna Wayyaaneen aggaammate Itti Fife
Goolessitootni wayyaanee baqattoota Oromoo Bosaassootti erga fixanii as haalli baqattoota Oromoo naannootti argamanii daran hammaataa jiraachuun gabaafame.
Gurraandhala 05,2008 galgala Puntland buufata galaanaa Bosaassootti goolessitoota wayyaaneen baqattoota Oromoo irratti tarkaanfiin fudhatamee namootni 60 ol dhumanii, 100 ol erga madaa’anii as haalli jiru daran hammaataa jira.
Humnootni tikaa fi goolessitootni wayyaanee hedduun naannoo Booramaa, Hargeeysaa, Barbaraa, Bosaassoo fi Buro’ootti bobba’anii baqattoota Oromoo hiraarsaa jiraachuun gabaafame. Humni tarkaanfii wayyaanee namoota 4:4 irraa ijaarame naannoo Barbaraatti bobba’ee baqattootni Oromoo sirna wayyaanee jalatti akka deebi’an dhiibbaa godhaa akka jiru hubatame.
Basaasotni wayyaanee kunii fi poolisootni SomaliLand naannoo akka Hargheesaa fi Booramaatti gandeen baqattoota Oromoo qofa sakatta’uun akka dararan barameera.
Haaluma wal fakkaatuun goolessitootni wayyaanee 40 ga’an baqattoota Oromoo Jibuutii jiraatan irratti dhumaatii geessisuuf Jibuutii seenuu isaanii maddeen keenya saaxilaniiru.
Tiki wayyaanee ‘Alamuu’ jedhamu keessatti akka argamus ibsameera. Ergamni goolessitoota wayyaanee fuula lama kan qabu oggaa ta’u, baqattoota Oromoo nam-tokkee fi gurmuun jiran irratti tarkaanfii fudhachuuf saganteeffatuunis barameera.
Kana malees baqattoota Oromoo fi ummata Jibuutii walitti buusuuf daba qindeessaa akka jiranis hubatame. Basaasotni wayyaanee kun irra guddaan isaanii Tigroota ta’uu oduun kun ni ibsa.

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