Monday, March 21, 2016

Priceless piece of advice to my Oromo brothers and sisters

#OromoProtests started in small town of Ginchi on November 12, 2015. Within days it gripped the whole Oromia
#OromoProtests started in small town of Ginchi on November 12, 2015. The town is one of the 36 to be incorporated into Finfinne Master Plan. Within days the protest gripped the whole Oromia.
By Ali Yare (opinion from non-Oromo)
(Ayyaantuu) I am aware of the situation in your motherland and how Woyane’s barbaric army forces are killing the unarmed civilians because I am following what is happening there on daily basis. I know how cruel the Woyane regime is and what they are capable of doing. The Somali Ogaden people have been going through the same difficulties that you, as Oromo people, are going through now. I can feel the plights of your civilians now, the relentless horror that the women and children are facing as I am speaking to you, but whatever has happened to you or whatever lives you have lost, there is one thing you should never do and that is to heed to the military pressure. You should never stop the uprising because if you do so, it’s going to be a disaster not only to your people but also to your cause and all of what you have sacrificed so far will be useless. All the people that got killed and all the properties that got destroyed in this revolt will be futile. There are two reasons that you cannot afford to abandon your current protests and they are as the following:
  1. By far, this is the largest civil disobedience led by Oromo people that the Woyane regime or any other regime has ever faced. It is factual that this uprising has created unity among the Oromo people. It united them in one goal which is not to allow the minority groups such as Ahmara or Tigre to rule the majority such as Oromo people. Therefore, if you yield to the pressure and cease the ongoing revolution out of, either fear or intention of saving lives, you will be doomed. If you don’t seize this opportunity, this powerful uprising and the current Oromo unity may not come back to you for the next 100 years.
  1. Ahmara and Tigre believe that Oromo cannot sustain a fight for a long time and that is what they have at the back of their head. If you look at the social media, where they exchange their view points, they deeply believe that Oromo can be pacified easily through force. So, if the protest gets stopped, that will support their belief and they will definitely say “Didn’t we say so”? I know that the Oromo people are resilient when it comes to defending their lives and properties, but the Woyane regime misunderstands you because of their ignorance.
Our reliable sources are telling us that the regime is about to collapse. It is running out of finance and manpower, and we are all aware of the internal fighting among the EPRDF as well as TPLF. I don’t have to prove this to you because the situation in Addis Ababa proves itself. The weak prime minister has even been unable to form his government because of the Woyane military generals who were installed by former dictator Zenawi. All you need now is persistence and endurance against the brutal regime and your efforts will pay off. The power is the people, not the brutal regime in Addis Ababa. If the people reject the oppressed authority, the TPLF led administration, no one can shovel through their throat. Even if they kill millions of Oromo people, never allow them to impose this outdated regime upon you.
Ali Yare

The Shadow Over Ethiopia's Construction Boom




Mulugeta Mezemir
Ethiopian farmer Mulugeta Mezemir on his farmland in front of Country Club Developers properties in Addis Ababa, Ehiopia.
 
Photographer: William Davison/Bloomberg


  • Building glut seen fueling biggest political crisis in decade
    Fatal land protests near capital have raged since November

(Bloomberg) When Ethiopian farmer Mulugeta Mezemir ceded his land three years ago to property developers on the fringes of the expanding capital, Addis Ababa, he felt he had no choice.
A gated community with white picket fences and mock Roman pillars built by Country Club Developers now occupies the fields he tilled in Legetafo, Oromia region, after the 60-year-old said local government officials convinced him to accept an offer or face expropriation. He took the cash and vacated the land, which in Ethiopia is all state-owned.
“We were sad, but we thought at the time that they were going to take the land for free,” said Mulugeta, a father of 12, while feeding hay to cattle a few meters from foundations for the next phase of housing. “We thought it was better to take whatever they were paying.”
As Ethiopia, which the International Monetary Fund estimates saw 8.7 percent economic growth in the last fiscal year, undergoes a construction boom, complaints over evictions and unfair compensation have fomented the country’s most serious domestic political crisis in a decade. 

Fatal Protests

In protests by the largest ethnic group, the Oromo, that began in November, security forces allegedly shot dead as many as 266 demonstrators, according to the Kenya-based Ethiopian Human Rights Project. The government says many people died, including security officers, without giving a toll. Foreign investors including Dangote Cement Plc had property damaged.
Ethiopian Communication Minister Getachew Reda said protesters were in part angry at “some crooked officials” who have been “lining their pockets by manipulating” land deals around the capital. Property developers CCD followed legal procedures, paid standard rates of compensation and employed many members of farmers’ families, according to Tedros Messele, a member of the company’s management team.
Cases such as Mulugeta’s have been a growing trend on the outskirts of the capital over the past two decades, said Nemera Mamo, an economist at Sussex University in England. No recent, independent studies have been conducted into how many people have been affected.

‘Beggars, Laborers’

“The booming construction industry has contributed to Addis Ababa’s rapid expansion that’s dispossessed many poor farmers and turned them into beggars and daily laborers,” Nemera said. “The Oromo protest movement opposes the mass eviction of poor farmers.”
Ethiopia’s state-heavy model seeks to industrialize the impoverished nation within a decade by improving infrastructure and combining investment with cheap labor, land and water to produce higher-value goods. Projects for what the IMF calls African’s fastest-growing economy include the continent’s largest hydropower dam, railways and the building of 700,000 low-cost apartments by 2020.
Construction accounted for more than half of all industry in the fiscal year that ended in July after it grew an annual 37 percent, according to National Bank of Ethiopia data. Industry comprised 15 percent of output.

Domestic Supply

Investors such as Diageo Plc, the world’s largest liquor maker, and Unilever Plc are tapping into the expansion by building Ethiopian facilities. Citizens of Africa’s second-most populous nation are using money earned there or abroad to build residences, malls and offices.
The ruling party hasn’t kept pace with the boom by improving governance and the ability of domestic manufacturers to supply the industry, said Tsedeke Yihune, who owns Flintstone Engineering, an Ethiopian contractor that’s built upmarket housing and African Union offices.
“Construction has not been used as it was supposed to, as a means of building domestic capacity, building good governance, as well as delivering the government’s development agenda,” Tsedeke said in an interview in the capital.
More than 70 percent of construction materials are imported, including cables, steel, ceramics, locks, furniture and electrical fittings, Tsedeke said. Ethiopia’s trade deficit increased by $3 billion to $14.5 billion last fiscal year.

Government Spending

Addis Ababa-based Orchid Business Group is another recipient of government capital spending, which the IMF says could double to almost $15 billion a year by 2020. Orchid’s projects include one with Italy’s Salini Impregilo SpA building the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, said Hailealem Worku, the construction and engineering head.
Cement plants built by companies including Dangote have made Ethiopia self-sufficient in the material, while manufacturing incentives means glass, paint and steel factories will play a bigger role soon, Hailealem said.
The government wants to improve regulations and change attitudes so contractors boost their skills and ethics, Construction Minister Ambachew Mekonnen said in an interview. “The construction industry suffers from a lack of good governance,” he said.
In Legetafo, Mulugeta was paid 17 birr ($0.80) a square meter in compensation. Meanwhile, people were bidding as much as 355,555 birr per meter to rent land in Addis Ababa last year. Mulugeta used the 200,000 birr he received for the plot for expenses including renting more farmland. Two of his children now work as CCD cleaners, earning 40 birr a day.
“We are getting deeper into poverty,” he said.