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Zmeselo
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A Response to the New York Times

Post by Zmeselo » 28 Feb 2021, 06:29



A Response to Declan Walsh, Chief African Correspondent, a patently false statement on @nytimes article.
Mr.Abiy launched the Tigray campaign on Nov. 4, following months of tension with the regional ruling party..





Mr @declanwalsh, do your homework on how the Tigray conflict started. No govt. but PM Abiy's would bend backwards to tolerate 2yrs of TPLF's acts of destabilization & prepartions for war, due to loss of minority hegemony & undue power for 27 yrs till 2018.



(Neamin Zeleke: @NeaminZeleke)




Ethiopia’s War Leads to Ethnic Cleansing in Tigray Region, U.S. Report Says
A confidential U.S. government report found that people in Tigray are being driven from their homes in a war begun by Ethiopia, an American ally — posing President Biden’s first major test in Africa. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/26/worl ... nsing.html

Zmeselo
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Re: A Response to the New York Times

Post by Zmeselo » 28 Feb 2021, 06:40



Response of the Eritrean Delegation to the Oral Report of the High Commissioner of the OHCHR

https://shabait.com/2021/02/27/response ... the-ohchr/

GENERAL

Feb 27, 2021



46 Regular HRC Session – ITEM 2
Response of the Eritrean Delegation to the Oral Report of the High Commissioner of the OHCHR on Eritrea


Madam President,

The oral report of the High Commissioner on Eritrea presented to the 46th HRC Session, attempts to portray a dark picture and essentially repeat fallacious narratives advanced by the EU and certain countries.

In a way, this is not new. Indeed, a core group of western countries have unfortunately made it a habit to sully the image and coerce Eritrea for reasons known to them. The crisis in the Tigray Region in Ethiopia is being used, conveniently at this point in time, as one element in the continuum of unrelenting smear campaigns against Eritrea.

Eritrea has earnestly worked to partner with the OHCHR, and to this effect, four OHCHR technical missions were conducted so far. Furthermore, Eritrea identified its own priorities for technical assistance (relating to Administration of justice, right of persons with disabilities and right to water). On the other hand, to expand the scope of cooperation and the benefits that accrue from the technical assistance offered by OHCHR, Eritrea decided, as a first step, to invite certain thematic mandates and treaty bodies. But these earnest requests, fell on deaf ears.

Furthermore, the technical missions and the attendant reports of the OHCHR have never reflected the efforts and the outcomes gleaned in an adequate and balanced manner. In substance and intent, they seemed to blindly endorse or recycle the lopsided approaches and templates of the Special Rapportuer’s report. This is another indication, that the OHCHR is not prepared to work as a partner to enhance ongoing technical capacities for the promotion and protection of human rights in Eritrea.

Madam President

The allegations levelled by the EU and the OHCHR oral report of sexual violence, looting and other “crimes by Eritrea’s armed forces” are utterly baseless. These are alien and an affront, to the history and culture of Eritrea and its military establishments.

In the smear campaigns focused on Eritrea, the grave situation that unfolded in Ethiopia in early November by the massive, pre-emptive attack by the TPLF clique on the largest contingent of the Ethiopian army continues to be routinely downplayed or totally ignored. One wonders whether Eritrea is being deliberately targeted as a scapegoat, to deflect attention from the gravity of what was in store and potential regional conflagration that would have ensued had these reckless attacks succeeded. We have not also seen sincere attempts to re-examine the prudence of the unbridled financial and military assistance – to the tune of 40 billion US dollars – that were given to the TPLF regime, in spite of policies of ethnic exclusivity and repression in Ethiopia and continued aggression and occupation of sovereign Eritrean lands in flagrant violation of international law.

Madam President

These days, disinformation in the cyber domain remains the dangerous weapon left in the hands of the defunct TPLF clique. This is pursued, on a daily basis, through a frantic fabrication and recycling of fake news and photo-shopped images of events and narratives that never occurred. Certain media outlets – most of them hired by the TPLF clique in the past years – continue to be fully engaged in these unconscionable acts.

In the event, we request the OHCHR to refrain from making hasty decisions based on unaccounted and unverified allegations. Attempts to deflect attention from the high crimes perpetrated by the TPLF clique and downplaying its culpability will not, indeed, serve the cause of regional peace and stability.

I thank you!

Geneva, 25 February 2021


_______________________





Last edited by Zmeselo on 28 Feb 2021, 07:20, edited 1 time in total.

Zmeselo
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Re: A Response to the New York Times

Post by Zmeselo » 28 Feb 2021, 06:55



___________________


Ethiopian Orthodox Church (EOC) Archdiocese of New York and the vicinity, Aba Petros, revealed today that the imposter Amnesty International witness Michael Berhe is not even follower of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.

___________________

Real:



Fake:


ኣብ ጊኮምባ ዝተበሃለ ዕዳጋ ናይሮቢ ኬንያ ዘጋጠመ ናይ ሓዊ ባርዕ ኣብ ዓድታት ትግራይ ብድሮናት ዝተፈጸመ ጌርካ ንምቕራብ እንክፍተን::

___________________


TPLFisaTerroristGroup, are looking for air time on CNN to spread their smear campaign.

Zmeselo
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Re: A Response to the New York Times

Post by Zmeselo » 28 Feb 2021, 12:06


Digital Weyane, continues to fabricate and lie about Eritrea. This Facebook post claims that Eritrean troops killed 6 members of a family (this is false) in Wukro, Tigray. The truth? This picture was actually taken in Nairobi, Kenya in May 2020.






Zmeselo
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Re: A Response to the New York Times

Post by Zmeselo » 28 Feb 2021, 12:19






Zmeselo
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Re: A Response to the New York Times

Post by Zmeselo » 28 Feb 2021, 12:43





__________________"



AWASA GUARDIAN
"A Southern Light at the end of the Tunnel"



Tigrayan Lives Matter more in Ethiopia, one last time

February 27, 2021

By Samuel Gabisso

http://awasaguardian.com/index.php/2021 ... last-time/

For many people of Sidama nation, the conflict in Tigray was first felt when their sons serving in the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) were sent down to Hawassa in body-bags or lost contact with them forever, after the TPLF treasonously massacred its own federal army protecting the border with Eritrea. Since then, the conflict has been mostly hidden as the ENDF quickly defeated the junta and brought them to justice one-by-one. But recently, outside media reports online seem to have provided alternative stories, mostly defending TPLF’s narratives, that should make Sidama and other Ethiopians wonder; where was all this international media the last 29 years?

When we read some of the Western media reports, we can assume that thousands of slain peaceful protestors in Sidama, Oromia, Amhara etc murdered by TPLF the last many years must be rolling over their graves. Whether it is the Looqqe massacre in Sidama or the many others slaughters by TPLF, peaceful and unarmed protestors were gunned down like animals. Where was the media? Millions of Sidamas, Somalis, Oromos, Gedeos, Amharas, Gurages, Anuaks etc have been displaced over the years. And nobody outside Ethiopia spoke for them. Perhaps, there was one or two articles here and there, but not at the magnitude of hundreds of news cycles like those covering Tigray today. There were no United Nations sessions discussing the mass murder of Sidamas and no Western diplomats displaying outrage.

Many of us might wonder why is Tigray getting more attention. Perhaps our fallen Sidama heroes made a mistake raising their hands peacefully, instead of raising weapons like TPLF. Instead of waving our Bibles, maybe we should have waved a rifle like TPLF. Instead of exposing ourselves in the streets peacefully, we should’ve been digging trenches in schools, churches or at a hydro-dam like TPLF. Instead of holding hands and demonstrating outside, we should have been holding an AK-47 inside our churches or Mosques.

The violent insurrection by Tigray forces against the federal government is obvious for all to see. Ironically, in the most pro-TPLF report to date, an Amnesty International report about Axum reveals that even Tigrayan civilians used “improvised weapons” to join TPLF militias in attacking the federal government. What a privilege to gain international media sympathy despite raising weapons! What a privilege to start an armed insurrection that causes so many unnecessary deaths and humanitarian crisis and still avoid any blame. Surely, we should have sent the Sidama police (and even our children) to go ambush a federal military base while they are asleep or in a “pre-emptive strike.” Our mistake the last 29 years afterall must have been engaging in peaceful resistance for change.

Perhaps the above is true. But we don’t really have those “historical churches” like Tigray has to use as a shelter for our fighters, do we? In fact, many Tigrayan activists on Facebook reminded us how much special they are, as soon as TPLF began the insurrection. They said
Tigrayans are the bravest fighters in Ethiopia.
They said
Ethiopia is nothing without Tigray.
Without Aksum, you have no history,
they said.

Their demeaning attitude to the rest of Ethiopia was a reminder of the past when Meles Zenawi declared that Tigrayans are “golden people” and depicted southerners as having no culture and no historical heritage.

Lo and behold, let alone the media and western politicians, Tigrayan activists even boasted about articles with archeologists and historians complaining about the law enforcement operation by ENDF, as if the TPLF did not start this whole conflict and as if TPLF is not the only side that wants to continue this conflict. The experts warned that historical artifacts and churches will be destroyed if the war continues. Even as I write, the words I use themselves — “conflict”…”War” — displays the uneven status of nations in Ethiopia. Even if Sidama people, let’s say, were to raise arms against the federal government, it would never be labeled a “WAR” on Western media, but it would be perhaps a “skirmish” or “clash” at most. This is the reality because no other regional state has accumulated as much ammunition and heavy weaponry as Tigray did over the last 29 years. This is because TPLF controlled the whole military and security apparatus to benefit Tigray. So virtually every word we utter and everything in this “war” is a manifestation of Tigrayan supremacy in Ethiopia. In every aspect of Ethiopian life, Tigrayan Lives has mattered more for decades. TPLF dominated every regional state, using billion dollar conglomerates and controlled even the profitable NGO sector that was disproportionally staffed by and benefited Tigray. Not only inside Ethiopia, even outside, TPLF officials like WHO Director Tedros Adhanom gained international positions by exploiting Ethiopia’s status in the AU. Over the years, TPLF made so many connections with western diplomats, journalists and analysts, that some of them have dropped the mask and openly became TPLF mouthpiece like Alex de-Waal, whose “expertise” is used on western media like Washington Post and The New York Times. The most famous western TPLF expert is Martin Plaut, who recently said
I will die for TPLF.
What a privilege to be a Tigrayan!

As if enduring almost three decades with Tigrayans controlling the political, economic & every aspect of our lives was not enough, now we get to endure Tigrayan privilege one more time even in “war,” as we say bye bye to the TPLF junta.

The new Ethiopia should treat all her citizens and peoples equally. Minus the noise outside, we Ethiopians inside should focus on building a democratic country that is fair for all nations and nationalities. The way some foreigners blindly support TPLF and TPLF narratives, it is as if they purposely want the rest of Ethiopians to envy and hate Tigrayans. Instead, we should love our Tigrayan brothers and sisters but encourage them to understand the various crimes of the TPLF. Even when TPLF was given a second chance (between 2018-20) to be just another party or just another state, the TPLF chose otherwise. And now, in the minds of 100 million Ethiopians, TPLF has joined the Derg and other African juntas in the dust bins of history.

Samuel Gabisso is a Sidama political analyst and journalist

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