(MinnPost) Killings in Ethiopia outrage Minnesota's Oromo community

From: Biniam Tekle <biniamt_at_dehai.org_at_dehai.org>
Date: Sun, 11 May 2014 19:01:47 -0400

http://www.minnpost.com/community-sketchbook/2014/05/killings-ethiopia-outrage-minnesota-s-oromo-community

Killings in Ethiopia outrage Minnesota's Oromo community
 on email
By Ibrahim Hirsi | 05/08/14

Members of Minnesota's Oromo community plan to rally Friday in St. Paul and
are calling for a hunger strike to mourn the deaths of student
demonstrators gunned down last week by Ethiopian security forces in Addis
Ababa.

Oromo students and others in Ethiopia have been protesting since April 26 a
plan to develop the capital Addis Ababa, saying the proposal will displace
farmers in the city outskirts, erase significant landmarks and dismantle
the rich culture and identity of the ethnic Oromo people. Because the
Oromia region surrounds Addis Ababa, an expansion of the city will mean a
further blow to the region and its people, who have been marginalized for
decades, they say.

Addis Ababa city officials argue the plan will develop and improve the city
-- one of the fastest growing cities in Africa -- and its surrounding suburbs.

Thousands of people, mostly university students, took their anger and
frustration to the streets of Addis Ababa to express their disapproval of
the plan unveiled in April. The ongoing demonstration erupted in violence
May 1, the day U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry visited Ethiopia as part
of a tour of Africa.

There are conflicting reports about casualties, with government officials
saying the death toll has grown to 11 and witnesses counting nearly 50 dead.

Hassen Hussein, an assistant professor at St. Mary's University of
Minnesota and a longtime Oromo community activist, said in an interview
Thursday that the regime has killed more than 75 demonstrators and wounded
up to 200.

Whatever the case, Nasser Mussa, a Minneapolis Oromo-American activist,
noted that the demonstrators have been peaceful and were attempting to
exercise freedom of expression and demanding their rights.

"Killing unarmed protesters is unacceptable and should not be tolerated,"
Mussa said. "The Ethiopian government says they are democratic, but they
have been doing undemocratic things for years, including the killing of
innocent people and committing other serious human rights abuses.

"The current situation there is making me feel terrible," said Mussa of the
unfolding political tensions and violence in Ethiopia. "Those killed are
like brothers and sisters to me."
Friday protest at state Capitol

Members of the Oromo community in Minnesota will assemble Friday outside
the state Capitol to call attention to the killings and condemn the
Ethiopian regime. At the rally, which will run Friday to Sunday,
demonstrators plan a hunger strike and a 24-hour vigil.

"Although experience of oppression at the hands of the Ethiopian government
is not new to the Oromo population in the Twin Cities, nothing in my recent
memory has moved the community as much as the killings of peaceful
protesters these past two weeks throughout the vast Oromia region," said
Hussein.

An estimated 40,000 Oromos live in Minnesota, the largest concentration
outside Ethiopia. Hussein, who is organizing the protest, and other
demonstrators hope the event will raise awareness.

"The regime is a strong ally of the United States," Hussein said. "We want
the U.S. government to reconsider its policies."

The United States provided the Ethiopian government more than $135 million
for humanitarian aid this year. Hussein and Mussa said that aid isn't used
to assist vulnerable populations. Instead, they said, it's used for
human-rights abuses.

"We need to stop our tax dollars from killing innocent people, our
children," Mussa said. "We need to hold the Ethiopian government
accountable for what they're doing."
Human-rights abuses

According to a 2013
report<http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/2013/af/220113.htm> by
the U.S. Department of State, the most common human-rights abuses Ethiopian
forces commit include suppressing freedom of expression, harassment and
intimidating journalists and politicians. The report added:

The East African country has more than 80 ethnic groups, according to the
report. It has a federal-government system, with its boundaries generally
divided into ethnic groups. Likewise, its political parties largely remain
ethnically segregated. *Other human rights problems included arbitrary
killings; allegations of torture, beating, abuse, and mistreatment of
detainees by security forces; reports of harsh and, at times,
life-threatening prison conditions; arbitrary arrest and detention;
detention without charge and lengthy pretrial detention; a weak,
overburdened judiciary subject to political influence; infringement on
citizens' privacy rights, including illegal searches; restrictions on
academic freedom; restrictions on freedom of assembly, association, and
movement; alleged interference in religious affairs; limits on citizens'
ability to change their government; violence and societal discrimination
against women and abuse of children; trafficking in persons; societal
discrimination against persons with disabilities.*

The Oromo ethnic group makes up about 40 percent of Ethiopia's 94 million
people, the largest ethnic group in the country.
Received on Sun May 11 2014 - 19:02:30 EDT

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