Tuesday, May 6, 2014

An Unholy Alliance in East Africa

John Kerry knows Ethiopia is repressive. So why does Washington keep shoring it up?
John Kerry’s hastily announced trip to Africa last week is something of an occasion: It’s the first time he has set foot in sub-Saharan Africa as secretary of state aside from a brief visit just to Addis Ababa in May 2013.
But the abruptness of the trip—announced barely half a week before Kerry’s departure and conveniently timed to fill a scheduling gap caused by an unmet end-of-April deadline in the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks—is hardly the most troubling part of Kerry’s visit. Far less forgivable is his decision to honor Ethiopia, a country that widely persecutes dissidents, with another visit, and the first on this trip. Kerry’s remarks in Ethiopia included long-overdue public comments on the sorry state of democratic and human rights in the country. But the secretary made clear that the United States is more concerned about strengthening ties with Ethiopia—a repressive regime that Washington nonetheless relies on as its primary strategic partner in the region.

Ethiopia : Ogadenia, Oromio Communities in U.S Vows engaging Strong Diplomatic ties to topple Addis Ababa

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May 5, 2014 (Ogaden Today) – A joint-meeting between Ogadenia and oromia communities in the United States took place in Minnesota on Sunday.
This session, which was attended by a large number of United States’ Ogadenia and Oromio communities in Minnesota was discussed about the new crisis and atrocities being committed against these two brotherly ethnics of Oromia and Ogadenia by the Tigray-ruled regime of Ethiopia.
For the last several days, the bloodstained regime of Addis Ababa massacred dozens of oromia students in Ambo and many other places in Oromia, following a huge protests amid to stop Addis Ababa’s proposed master plan.