Freedom For Oromia(Oromiyaa)

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Ethiopian migrants return empty handed from Saudi Arabia

A returnee shortly after arriving at the airport in Addis Ababa



 ADDIS ABABA, 18 December 2013 (IRIN) - When Mohamed Yusuf left his home town in Ethiopia for Saudi Arabia a year ago at the age of 17, he thought life would change for the better. Instead, a difficult and unprofitable stay in Saudi Arabia ended when he was among the nearly 137,000 undocumented Ethiopian migrants deported by the Saudi authorities to date. 
 
"At first, I thought I was going to change my life and those of my father and mother, who paid for the whole trip out of their meagre income," said Yusuf, whose father is a farmer in northern Ethiopia. However, the gruelling journey to Saudi Arabia and his stay there had been harrowing experiences, he told IRIN.
 
During the long trek through Ethiopia’s northeastern Afar Desert to Djibouti on the Red Sea, he endured hunger and thirst and had to bury some of his friends, who perished along the way. On reaching Djibouti, he paid smugglers 5,000 Ethiopian Birr (US$261) to take him from Obock, on Djibouti’s northern coast, across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen. From there he made his way to Saudi Arabia.
 
The majority of male migrants from Ethiopia follow similar routes when crossing into Saudi and mostly depart from Obock, although many also leave from Somaliland. Female migrants usually enter as domestic workers under Saudi Arabia’s ‘kafala’ (sponsorship) system. 
 
Human rights groups say the system creates conditions for abuse, including rules requiring workers to obtain permission from their employer to change jobs. Those who do so without permission are considered undocumented and were among those rounded up during the government’s crackdown on foreign workers, which started in early November 2013. 
 
Initially, Yusuf found work as a shepherd in a rural area of Saudi Arabia but decided to leave after two months because his employers refused to pay him the 800 Saudi Arabian riyals ($213) they owed him. "One day I decided to quit my job and fled to the city [of Jeddah]. And that was when I got captured by the police and put into prison for five months before coming here like this with many Ethiopians," he told IRIN. 
 
There was no opportunity to earn back the cost of getting there, let alone fulfil his dream of a better life. “I’m confused and do not have any idea what I’m going to do next,” he told IRIN. "One thing is for sure, I will never go back to that country after seeing and hearing what is happening to Ethiopians there."
 
Number of returnees still rising

According to Human Rights Watch and testimony from returnees, during the crackdown, Ethiopian migrant workers were subjected to beatings by Saudi police and citizens that resulted in at least three deaths. 

Another returnee, Kidane Gebre, told IRIN: "After hearing this, my mother will be terrified and waiting for me anxiously. Many people from my home town were victims of this violence."
 
Many of those rounded up were held in makeshift detention centres without adequate food or shelter while they awaited repatriation. 
 
The Ethiopian government initially estimated that some 30,000 undocumented citizens were being detained and would need to be repatriated, but as of 16 December the number of returnees had reached 136,946. Of these, 84,721 were men, 45,157 women and 7,068 children.
 
Up until last week, over 7,000 were arriving every day, but according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the number has now slowed to about 1,000 a day. A further 35,000 migrants are still expected, according to IOM.
 
Photo: Anteneh Aklilu/IRIN
Until recently, over 7,000 migrant workers were arriving at the airport daily
Six transit centres have been set up in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, to receive the returnees and, with the support of government, IOM has been providing temporary accommodation, meals, medical services and a $50 transportation allowance to help the migrants complete their journey home. The organization launched an appeal on 6 December for $13.1 million to continue addressing their needs, but to date had only raised $1.9 million.

“As the number of returnees increases, the financial gap has further widened,” notes a press briefing from IOM released on 17 December.
 
IOM's Chief of Mission in Ethiopia, Josiah Ogina said the migrants included vulnerable people, such as the victims of human trafficking, unaccompanied minors, pregnant women, and disabled persons. "Many of those detained and returned to Ethiopia arrived in need of medical support," Ogina told international donors in Addis Ababa.
 
'A blessing in disguise'
 
Ethiopian government officials say they are viewing the situation as an opportunity to educate the public about the risks of irregular migration. A spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Dina Mufti, said most of returnees had told interviewers they would not have left the country if they had known more about the treatment of migrant workers in Saudi, and what they would have to endure to get there.
 
"We know that there are people who went there by selling their houses and [those of] their families as well. Despite a lot of sad stories, we consider this as a blessing in disguise, as it could be a lesson for those who want to go there illegally and without proper preparation,” said Mufti. “These migrants have stories to tell on how they moved out, which could help the government to track down traffickers and improve the situation in the future."
 
The number of returning migrants who will need more than just immediate assistance is high, but apart from organizing repatriation flights, the Ethiopian government has no plans to help them in the longer term. Mufti said the government's current focus is on "bringing them to their country and providing them with necessary services such as transportation to their home town".
 
Like other young people, the returnees could benefit from the government’s five-year Growth and Transformation Plan, which aims to stimulate economic growth and create jobs. 
 
"We are creating a lot of job opportunities through Small and Medium Enterprises,” he said. “If we can do more on this, we can definitely absorb those who want to go out [of the country] and help change their lives and [those of] their families as well."
 

=>irinnews


Posted by Freedom for oromia(oromiaa) at 9:55 PM No comments:
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Walgahiin Ummataa Magaala Phoenix tti Gaggeessame Milkii Guuddaan Xumurame!!

Mudde 18, 2013
Phoenix_1Walgahiin ummataa guyyaa 12/08/2013 magaala Phoenix, Arizona tti taa’ame injifannoo guddaan xumurameera. Walgahiin kuun kan qophaahe dargaggoota oromoo Phoenix jiraataniin yeroo ta’u kaayyoon isaas Haawaasa Oromoo haala adda addaan faca’ee turee deebisani ijaarudha. Walgahi kana irratti ummatni heeddumminaan bahee qooda kan irraa fuudhate yeroo ta’u senaa haawaasa Oromoo naannoo kanaa keesatti qophiin guuddaa akkasi qophaahuun waggaa heedduun booda isa jalqabaa ta’u hirmaattoonni sagantichaa ibsani jiru. Ummata walgahi kanarratti argameef keessuummaa kabajaa ta’udhaan kan haasaa goodhan Obboo kediro Amme fi Dr. Warquu Buurraayyuu tuuran. Obboo Kediroon xiinxala taasisan keessatti tokkummaan Oromoo bara duri haagam jabaa akka turee fi duula bal’aa gabroonfattoonni haabashaa irratti banan irraan kan ka’e laafina inni amma keessa jiruufi, tokkummaa Oromoo laafatee jiru kana deebisani ijaaruun egeree ummata Oromoof haagam barbaachisaa akka ta’e bal’inaan ibsaniiru.
Kanatti ansuun Dr. Warquu Burraayyuun jabiina, laaffinaa fi carraa haawaasni oromo naannoo Phoenix qabu irratti ummata dukaa mari bal’aa gaggeessaniru. Walgahii seenaa qabeessa kanarratti hirmaattoonni walgahichaa tuta tutaan hiiramani jabinaa fi laaffina haawaasa Oromoo Phoenix akka marihatan kan taasisame yeroo ta’u sana booda bakka bu’aan tuuta (group) cuunfaa maree taasisame akka ummataaf ibsan taasisameera. Sana booda Dr. Warquun cunfaa tuuta huundaan dhiyaate walitti qabani eerga manaaf ibsaniin  booda carraa jiruu ilaalchise ummata marihachisaniru.
Akka marii taasisame kanarraa hubatameetti hirmaattoonni walgahi kanaa deebi’ee ijaaramuu haawaasa phoenix irratti yaada tookkoon kan waligalan yeroo ta’u ijaarsi kuun akkammiin ta’uu akka qabu irratti gaaffi fi yaaddoon mana keessaa ka’ee erga irratti marihatameen booda koreen haarayaa ummata keessaa akka fiilamu fi koreen filamu kuniis kooree community duraani waliin gamtaan akka hoojjetu sagalee tokkoon irratti wali galameera. Haala kanaan koreen haarayaa nama ja’a of keessaa qabu kan filame yeroo ta’u koreen lameen kuun (kan duri fi kan haarayaa) akka kooree qindeessituutti waliin dalagu. Dirqamni koree qindeessitu kanaaf keennamees:
1.     Seera buulmaataa (By law) haawaasa Oromoo Phoenix barreessu.
2.     Walgahi  ummataa biraa yaamudhaan seera kana raggaasisu.
3.     Koore haarayaa kan haawaasa Oromoo Phoenix gaggeessu filachisu ta’a.
Wali galan alaa galan!!
Waldaa Dargaggoota Oromoo Phoenix

Phoenix_2

Dargaggoo Phoenix

Phoenix_3



=>ayyaantuu
Posted by Freedom for oromia(oromiaa) at 9:46 PM No comments:
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Saudi expulsions leave broken dreams in Africa and Asia

BY ANGUS MCDOWALL , PRAVEEN MENON AND AARON MAASHO
RIYADH/DUBAI/ADDIS ABABA

An Ethiopian worker (C) argues with members of the Saudi security forces as she waits with her countrymen to be repatriated in Manfouha, southern Riyadh, November 11, 2013. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser
An Ethiopian worker (C) argues with members of the Saudi security forces as she waits with her countrymen to be repatriated in Manfouha, southern Riyadh, November 11, 2013.
CREDIT: REUTERS/FAISAL AL NASSER

(Reuters) - More than a million people from across the world - managers, maids, accountants and labourers - have left Saudi Arabia since March, after years or even decades working in the Gulf Arab state, which sustains its own citizens with oil revenues.
Around 120,000 Ethiopians have been deported in the past month alone as part of a visa crackdown aimed at pushing more Saudis into employment to ensure future political and economic stability.
"We were kicked out of our homes and our jobs," said Mohamed Ahmed, 27, waiting with thousands of other Ethiopians at a transit centre behind Addis Ababa's Bole Airport after disembarking with a few bags from Saudi Arabian Airlines jets.
Like many others, Ahmed, who spent five years in Saudi Arabia after crossing the Red Sea in a fishing boat and trekking through turbulent Yemen, had to leave at short notice.
"We left all our belongings there," he said.
Saudi Arabia avoided significant unrest during the Arab Spring pro-democracy protest wave in 2011, but its leaders were uncomfortably aware that entrenched unemployment was a big factor behind rebellions in other Arab states.
Cheap labour from 10 million foreigners in the country hampered previous government efforts to persuade the private sector to employ some of the 20 million locals.
Many of those who have left were illegal immigrants like Ahmed, who crossed the kingdom's porous borders or stayed on after the haj pilgrimage, which attracts around 2 million foreign visitors to Mecca every year.
Many others came to Saudi Arabia legally then fell afoul of rigid visa rules, which require all expatriates to work for a single employer in a field specified on their residence permit and are often used to exploit migrants.
EXTORTION
Mohammed Yunus, 27, was brought to Saudi Arabia by an employment agency to work at a hotel after taking loans to travel to the kingdom, but was soon told to leave his job.
His sponsor then demanded 7,000 riyals a year ($1,867) to sign off on his visa papers while he found odd jobs on building sites and in grocery shops to pay his debts. Such tales of extortion are common among low-paid workers in the country.
"I am trying to get back to Saudi. There's no way I can repay my debts by working in India," said Yunus, who worked in Saudi Arabia for five years before leaving during an amnesty declared in March to encourage expatriates to head home without paying fines for violating residency rules.
The government said about 4 million people changed their visas to stay in the country, while another million left during the amnesty and can apply for new visas in future.
When it ended in early November, forcible deportations began. Authorities raided shops, offices, marketplaces and streets in low-income areas, checking residence permits.
The Labour Ministry has said it will set up new tribunals to hear expatriates' complaints about their sponsors, but it has no plans to change the sponsorship system itself, something even a Saudi government-affiliated rights group recommends.
"SMEAR CAMPAIGN"
International migration and rights groups have acknowledged Saudi Arabia's right to deport visa violators and change its employment rules to favour locals, but are critical of the way the crackdown has been carried out.
Deportees returning to Yemen and Ethiopia have reported ill treatment, including physical abuse and poor conditions at holding centres before they were expelled, the International Organization of Migration, an international agency, said.
When millions rushed to rectify minor visa infringements earlier this summer, government departments appeared unprepared, causing vast numbers of people to queue in temperatures of 40 Celsius, some for more than 24 hours.
The government has dismissed allegations of abuse and chaotic policymaking as a foreign "smear campaign", saying it welcomed expatriates who abide by the rules, and that 250,000 Saudis have gained jobs as a result of its crackdown.
The human impact of making way for them has reverberated across the world. In Yemen, Ethiopia, Pakistan, Indonesia and India, politicians have voiced concern about the fate of their citizens in the kingdom. Egypt, Sri Lanka and the Philippines are all affected too.
"I'm going back with literally nothing. All that I earned here has been spent on raising my children," said Abdul Kareem Shamshudeen, 53, who returned to the Indian state of Kerala last week after illegally doing odd jobs in shops for 20 years.
The impact has even been felt in other wealthy oil-exporting Gulf nations, which also have large expatriate populations and where many of those leaving Saudi Arabia now want to seek work - including Yunus, if he cannot go back.
"I'm always hopeful there will be another chance," he said.
Although official unemployment among Saudis is around 12 percent, economists estimate up to two thirds are not in the labour force. Those who do work mostly have government jobs, the absolute monarchy's way of spreading oil wealth and buying social peace, and tend to support large extended families.
While the world's top exporter now enjoys large surpluses, economists say a rising population and growing domestic energy consumption mean the burden of creating work must move to the private sector for the economy to continue to thrive.
RIOTS AND DEPORTATION
The cost for many migrant workers has been high. In the poor south Riyadh neighbourhood of Manfouha, an Ethiopian man was killed in a confrontation with police during a visa raid. Days later, local anger spilled into clashes between Ethiopian migrants, riot police and some Saudis, leaving three dead.
Ahmed, the returnee to Addis Ababa, said gangs of Saudis attacked Ethiopians and raped Ethiopian women. Saudis said Ethiopians had started the riot, rampaging through Manfouha with knives and sticks.
"I gave myself up. I was afraid of getting killed," he said.
For the millions of expatriates remaining in Saudi Arabia, many of whom are still thought to be in breach of residency laws, the crackdown inspires gallows humour.
A comic song called Ja Jawazat, "Passport department is coming", has attracted a million views on YouTube. Faez Choudhary, a Pakistani national who wrote the song, was born and raised in Saudi Arabia and works at a Riyadh shopping mall.
"I want to help other expatriates, especially those born here, understand this is our country as well," he said.
"I myself feel like a Saudi, sometimes."
(Additional reporting by Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

=>reuters




Posted by Freedom for oromia(oromiaa) at 9:37 PM No comments:
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CPJ: Eritrea, Ethiopia, Egypt Among Worst Journalist Jailers

FILE - Somalis and local journalists carry the body of Moqtar Mohamed Hirab for burial in Mogadishu, Somalia.
FILE - Somalis and local journalists carry the body of Moqtar Mohamed Hirab for burial in Mogadishu, Somalia



Marthe van der Wolf
December 18, 2013
ADDIS ABABA — The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists says Eritrea, Ethiopia and Egypt have the highest number of imprisoned journalists on the African continent. The three countries are also on the worldwide top-ten list of worst journalist jailers.

A new survey released Wednesday by the Committee to Protect Journalists indicates 34 African journalists are in jails in northeast Africa.

Tom Rhodes, the group’s East Africa representative based in Nairobi, says the Horn of Africa is particularly problematic because the governments there do not tolerate dissent.

“I think they have been on this list year-in, year-out simply because of the governments’ lack of tolerance towards any kind criticism. Every time a reporter reports something critically, they throw them in jail,” he said.

WATCH: CPJ Video East African Journalists in Exile 

In Ethiopia, seven of the 34 journalists are in jail.  But the government here insists these reporters are imprisoned for violations of anti-terrorism laws, not because of their reporting.

Global rights groups, including Amnesty International, have been critical of these laws in Ethiopia and elsewhere, noting they are often misused to silence the media.

Egypt has cracked down on journalists since President Mohamed Morsi was ousted in July by the military.

And in Eritrea, 22 journalists are in prison; none of them were charged or brought before a court.

Rhodes says it is difficult to get reliable data from Eritrea.

“It is really a closed off country. It is considered the North Korea of Africa. That said, we mostly rely on exiled journalists, Eritreans who fled the country that tell us what’s going on,” he said.

Turkey tops the list of most imprisoned journalists, followed by Iran and China. Other countries in the top 10 list of CPJ’s worst journalist jailers are Vietnam, Syria, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan.

Worldwide a total of 211 journalists are currently imprisoned.



=>voa

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Aadaa Oromoo Naannoo Matakkal/Taamiruu Hayiluu Tufaa


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Madda Walaabu Media Foundation Launching Event


Children sang Ali Birraa's song "Oromia! Biyya Abbaa Kooti"
“Oromia! Biyya Abbaa Kooti”, Ali Birraa’s song by Washington DC children
The launching event of Saturday, December 14, 2013 was successfully concluded thanks to our determined supporters. That day was the most difficult day for travelling from one place to the other in the Metropolitan Washington DC area. It heavily snowed and rained the whole day. But it did not hinder many of those who wanted our success in our mission to give voice to the voiceless. Though physically unable to be present for the event many have sent us their support and best wishes by email and other means of communication.
We thank all from our hearts and vow to live to our promises and deliver what is expected from us. Still we are upstarts and need the moral and material support of our compatriot and friends. Our success will be the success of our nation and so remain confident that Oromo nationals will remain on our side at all times during fulfilling our mission. Your continued encouragements and support are indispensable for us.
Once again thank you for making our launching event a success under that difficult weather. We look forward for your participation as supporters and members to enhance our efforts. Visit our websitehttp://oromovoice.org for information on our activities.
Madda Walaabu Media Foundation
December 17, 2013

=>ayyaantuu
Posted by Freedom for oromia(oromiaa) at 12:35 AM No comments:
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