In a previous
article I focused on
the need to deliver
the UN, US and
European
humanitarian aid for
Ogaden to the
correct recipients,
the starving people
of Ogaden, and not
Zenawi´s terrorist
Amhara and Tigray
thugs ("World Aid
for Ogaden: To be
Handed Over to
Ogadeni Leaders –
Not to Tyrant
Zenawi´s Death
Squads" / http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/74829).
I republished a
press release issued
on the occasion by
the ONLF, and an
insightful on the US
aid.
As the subject is of
the utmost
importance and
urgency, I republish
another two reports,
the first signed by
Reuters´ Daniel
Wallis, and the
second focalized on
the delivery details
and the dire
situation that
currently prevails
at Ogaden.
Before millions of
Ogadenis die of
starvation and the
Nazi plan for racial
extermination of the
Ogadenis be
completed by
Hitler´s children in
Africa, the Zenawi
administration and
the Amhara and
Tigray elites of
Abyssinia, the
Mankind has to react
by all means.
Call for an
International
Humanitarian
Corridor in Ogaden
Now!
Ethiopian rebels
call for Ogaden aid
corridor
By Daniel Wallis
http://www.ayyaantuu.com/Oromiyaa/NewsBlog/tabid/36/EntryID/3257/Default.aspx
Nairobi (Reuters) -
Ethiopia's Ogaden
rebels demanded on
Friday that the U.N.
Security Council
secure an aid
corridor to their
homeland where they
said people were
starving behind a
military blockade.
Since June last year
the Ethiopian
military has been
waging an offensive
against separatist
guerrillas that has
cut off access for
most aid workers and
journalists to the
ethnically Somali
region.
"The situation is
getting out of hand.
Women and children
and the elderly are
dying from thirst
and hunger,"
Abdirahman Mahdi, a
founding member of
the Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF)
said in a telephone
interview.
"The U.N. Security
Council must set up
and enforce an aid
corridor
immediately, with
international
monitors, because
the army is using
relief supplies to
fuel its campaign."
Ethiopia's
government, an
important U.S. ally
in the region,
routinely rejects
ONLF claims that its
forces withhold aid
from desperate
communities in the
drought-stricken
east.
The ONLF was formed
in 1984 in the
ethnically Somali
region on Ethiopia's
border with Somalia.
Its aims have varied
between full-scale
independence to
joining a "Greater
Somalia" to more
autonomy within
Ethiopia for a
region it says is
neglected.
Addis Ababa says the
rebels are
terrorists supported
by Horn of Africa
rival Eritrea, and
points to an ONLF
attack on a
Chinese-run oil
field in April 2007
that killed 74
people.
It says criticism of
its tactics in the
rocky, arid region
is just defamation
by "anti-peace"
forces.
Mahdi said
international
officials who had
visited Ogaden
recently, including
U.N. aid chief John
Holmes, had
underestimated the
crisis.
"People are eating
roots and grass,
animals are dying,"
he said. "And at the
same time the
military campaign is
going on. Soldiers
are shooting people,
beating people,
harassing them."
Holmes said earlier
this month special
attention should be
paid to the region
and food deliveries
should be speeded
up.
In June, U.S.-based
Human Rights Watch
said donors who gave
the government more
than $2 billion a
year in aid needed
to speak out against
what the group
called widespread
and systematic
atrocities by
Ethiopian troops.
HRW accused Western
nations including
the United States
and Britain of
maintaining a
conspiracy of
silence. Addis Ababa
said the report was
fabricated.
In July, regional
government officials
in Ogaden accused a
Swiss medical
charity of spreading
hearsay after it
stopped work there
complaining of
repeated
obstructions,
intimidation and
arrests.
Aid to Ethiopia
never appears to
reach it's intended
target - Ethiopia
starving Somalis
Amongst others
http://www.pr-inside.com/ethiopia-starving-somalis-r815082.htm
and http://www.ayyaantuu.com/Oromiyaa/NewsBlog/tabid/36/EntryID/3256/Default.aspx
Reports from Somali
observers in
Ethiopia accuse the
Ethiopian regime of
gross human rights
violations against
indigenous Somali
groups in the north
and east Ethiopia
bordering Somalia
and Somaliland known
as Ogaden.
Human Rights Watch
reports atrocities,
systematic abuse and
violations to
dehumanise Somalis
in Ethiopia. Somali
tribal elders also
report campaigns of
terror deliberately
set to drive them
out and starve as
the Ethiopian regime
considers them
"threat" to peace
(Ethiopian
government often
uses the term
"anti-peace" to
describe foes).
United Nations
Humanitarian chief,
John Holmes visited
the city of Jigjiga
this week now the
capital city of
Somali region in
Ethiopia and one of
the biggest
Ethiopian military
camp in the region.
Travelling with aid
convoys, he saw
desperate villagers
living in small
domed huts facing
hunger and
malnutrition.
Everywhere visited,
villagers huddled
together in fear
from Ethiopian
terror than the
hunger which visited
them. Family after
family told stories
of pogroms,
appalling cruelty
and threats by
Ethiopian
paramilitaries
closely linked to
Ethiopian military
to avenge for every
Ethiopian soldier
killed in Somalia or
by rebel groups.
These paramilitaries
often enjoy immunity
to rape, torture and
kill Somali
civilians.
Traumatized and
desperate
Britain's Channel 4
confirmed the dire
sequence of events
in Ethiopia's ethnic
Somali regions.
Pictures of
traumatized and
dazed mother with
her children crying
of hunger and her
inability to feed
her four children
touched many. Elders
often miss meals to
feed their young
offspring. An older
man struggled to
protest against
Ethiopia as he
barely could lean
his skeleton body on
a thorny tree. There
was no food or
medicine in sight
the correspondent
declared.
For the first time
in history, the
Somali people in
today's Ogaden home
to the rich Somali
independent pastoral
traditions and
abundance of meat
and milk lost it's
glorious face
forcing many to
become beggars or
living on eating
dead leaves and tree
barks. Many villages
in Ogaden now live
in similar
conditions. Although
many Somalis are
grateful to
assistance, and
natural born
survivors, their
plight today
explains much of the
broken social fabric
which had been a
policy of the
Ethiopian government
to fight and
marginalize Somali
"nomads".
As many villagers
were forced or
abandon their
settlements, dusty
cities such as
Jigjiga become a
place of opportunity
to save themselves
from misery. Those
too proud to beg,
entered into
prostitution with
the added risk of
diseases such as HIV
and AIDS. As most
cities are
frequented by the
marauding Ethiopian
soldiers as the only
regular income
earners, women fall
victim to such seedy
trade in order to
survive.
Suffering in silence
Isolated by the
Ethiopian
government, Somali
elders whose
knowledge is
imperative to combat
such devastating
starvation claim
diversions of food
aid. "the only
people who eat are
the military" said
one elder.
Before this current
devastation, Somalis
in Ethiopia survived
by trade with
Somalia and
Somaliland. However,
with the ban on
Somali livestock by
Arab countries such
as Saudi Arabia,
many faced hardship
often loosing
crucial investments
in livestock which
was their economic
backbone. To add
insult to their
injuries, Ethiopian
backed
paramilitaries
destroyed the
regions relations
with Somalia and
Somaliland by
burning trucks and
goods designated to
Ogaden supplying
essential goods such
as sorghum, wheat,
animal fodder and
cooking oil. As a
result, trucks from
Somalia and
Somaliland avoid
entering Ethiopia in
fear of molestation.
The only supply
route the UN has is
through the
unfriendly and
hostile environment
of Ethiopian
controlled districts
such as Jigjiga.
Many UN staff are
crudely awaken by
the endless requests
of "travel
permissions" to
travel into each
settlements. Without
these "travel
permissions", no
place can be
visited. As one
elder said, "we live
in a prison and we
have no friends,
thus suffer alone".
The latest to fall
victim to Ethiopian
forces is an IRC
(International
Rescue Committee)
employee called
Kamal Keit from
Nepal. He was
apparently arrested
for over staying
"his tenure" in the
village of Dig after
a water sanitation
project assignment
took longer than
expected, Kemal is
sadly under arrest.
Fridays no more holy
days in Ogaden
Ethiopian regime's
president Meles
Zenawi denied rights
abuses and continues
to enjoy USA support
for his apparent
"war on terror". For
a country whose
value to Al-Qaeda is
difficult to
comprehend, Ethiopia
is currently
involved in an
imaginary war with
"Islamic extremism".
This despite the
absence of any
Islamic militancy
within Ethiopia as
Christians enjoy
military and
political dominance
over its Muslim
constituencies.
The latest grief for
Somalis was the
confirmation of
Ethiopian
administration to
designate Fridays as
a working day.
Friday is similar to
Sabbath and Sunday
for Muslims as they
consider it a holy
day. This loss of
religious right has
become the latest
denial of rights to
Muslim Somalis.
Somali experts cite
an increasing fear
of the regime afraid
of Muslim gatherings
and sermons as the
rising tension could
spark demonstration
in cities such as
Jigjiga.
Unlike in Nigeria's
ethnic federalism,
Ethiopia's ethnic
federalism is still
abused by a central
government
preferring obsessive
control over the
lives of its people
than accommodating
freedom. After dawn
everyday, curfews
are brought in
Somali towns and
cities as the
streets are crowded
by military vehicles
and soldiers. A
hotel owner in
Dhegahbuur town
called Ahmad Nasir
said: " we sleep
early in fear, and
yet are awake all
night fearing a
knock on the door by
the soldiers". The
Ethiopian army is
notorious for
forcefully
conscripting men and
children as they are
dragged from their
houses in the middle
of the night.
Note
Picture: Ogaden
today