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What Blair and Geldof didn't see in Ethiopia

11/29/08

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What Blair and Geldof didn't see in Ethiopia

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What Blair and Geldof didn't see in Ethiopia

First Published in British Journalism Review Vol. 17, No. 1, 2006

By Thembi Mutch*

The phone call from a mobile in Ethiopia was vague: did I have resilience, a sense of humour, journalism experience? I was in my English garden at the time, and getting a phone call from the UN in Addis Ababa while I was deadheading the dahlias in the early summer of 2004 was surreal. The previous June I had applied for a public information and media job with the United Nations in Namibia, got it, but then turned it down. Presumably my name was floating on a database somewhere. I was sent a job description of the Ethiopia proposal: vague sentences about knowledge of information management and training, the ability to write copy� But it sounded interesting, and having lived and worked all over Africa in the last 14 years, and with dual South African-British nationality, I was desperate to get back to the continent I love and know.

The first shock on arrival in Addis Ababa a little more than a year later was the weather. It rained and rained and rained. I had been employed to �work� on the famine, yet how could a country with this much rain possibly experience famine? Surely, if it rained so much � during two months, the road outside my office was often a river � the water could be stored, relocated, channelled to those that needed it? A look at the aerial picture of Ethiopia, with so many visible lakes, made the possibility of famine in November even harder to imagine.

Most of the country is rural, with more than 90 per cent of the population living outside the cities in areas served poorly by roads, telephone lines, internet access or electricity. Eighty-five per cent of the Ethiopian workforce depends on agriculture. Not the sort of agriculture with which we are familiar in Europe. You never see a tractor, combine harvester or grain silo � it is totally unmechanised. All the ploughing, tilling, planting and harvesting are done by hand and with oxen. If seedlings get no rain or, conversely, far too much, that�s the end of the village�s crop. The majority of villages are too poor to have enough reserves of seeds to start again. Villagers don�t own their land, so they are all equally poor and the incentives to diversify or try something new are restricted by deficient, over-used soil (dung from cows is burnt as fuel). Communities have become used to depending on imported U.S. grain, which comes via handouts from the World Food Programme (WFP). These handouts are delivered by the WFP through international charities working in Ethiopia, and also by the Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Commission, or DPPC (since renamed as an Agency: DPPA) in Addis Ababa, where I was based.

For the first two months I felt my way, studied the Government�s website and tried to fathom the impenetrable jargon surrounding famine and food security, and remember the basics of Ethiopian geography. The practicalities of finding out where the hungry people were, and how many, proved difficult. I would wait for weeks for even the tiniest bit of information about whether the seasonal rain � enabling villagers to plant � had arrived, essential knowledge necessary to be able to judge whether we needed to start informing donors and the WFP that problems were likely, if not imminent.

Situation Kafkaesque
By the August I began to work out what my job actually was (�consultant� was supposed to cover it), to whom I was accountable (nobody other than myself, it seemed), and how little the Ethiopian Government actually wanted a foreigner inside the DPPC. Especially, they did not want an investigative journalist, which is what I am. Sure, I could re-jig the Government website, run training sessions on how to write a press release, and even re-train a few senior managers how to make their reports a little more readable, but to �promote� a famine, and �improve� communications strategies and information flow� no chance.

One of my jobs was supposed to be to create information systems and to monitor that everyone involved in famine was getting the information they needed. But at the DPPC, the idea of establishing basic facts � what�s happening, where, to whom, and why? � became Kafkaesque in its difficulty. Once, over a business lunch, trying to get these foundations in place, I was told by Ato Sisay, the senior Government official responsible for co-ordinating information for famine relief donors: �You really work too hard, you mustn�t worry about things like this. And, anyway, information is power.� So just how was I to �promote� the famine? By finding out the numbers of hungry, and to track systematically exactly who was hungry, their location and why the problem persisted? Or to report shamefacedly, and blatantly lie about the �success� stories of the Government � a new type of peasant irrigation system, or well-digging in one small area?

I went to endless meetings in tiny wooden-floored rooms with little or no lighting. For eight whole months I watched plastic flowers grow dusty, and computers, paid for by the American Government, never even get turned on. I organised endless questionnaires, training sessions and meetings for Ethiopian colleagues at the DPPC where we could, potentially, talk about the key issues and hurdles and obtain consensus. People rarely turned up. What use is free discussion in a military society riddled with spies? It took me a long time to get to grips with just how undemocratic Ethiopia really is.

With the regional DPPC offices mired in fighting, pay disputes and resignations, the fact that there was often no telephone or fax contact became the focus of my frustration. Local charities were often able to supply the necessary knowledge; unlike many of their senior Government counterparts, they had both the resources and the willingness to undertake unpleasantly bumpy, hot journeys into remote areas to find out how villagers were faring and, in some cases, whether the villagers were alive or dead. But four of my own requests to visit famine-affected areas were rejected by superiors, one an hour before I was due to board a local plane. Morale at the DPPC was lousy, a word the Ethiopian English-speakers used often. It was as if managers were doing their best to prevent information getting out, not to circulate it. In desperation I spent my lonely nights studying the local language, Amharic, in the hope of breaking the ice and perhaps discovering the reasons for the absenteeism and the consuming lethargy and lack of direction of my colleagues. Occasionally I risked visiting the local expatriate hangouts, where hardened Africa hands would dismiss my attempts to do my job as a pointless waste of time.

The key clue eventually came in February 2004 when a senior colleague � a journalist and military man before moving into PR � unhappily thrust under my nose a Government newspaper article concerning a UK Channel 4 programme about Ethiopia, Living with Hunger. The Sub-Saharan Informer spent two whole pages lambasting Channel 4 journalist Sorious Samora for �tricking and manipulating the Ethiopian people�. His trip had been �facilitated� by non-governmental organisations (the significance of this came only later) and his attempt to live for a month on what the majority of rural Ethiopians � more than 40 million people � live on during the leaner seasons every year was scorned. More crucially, the paper nit-picked at Samora�s motives for making the film, concluding that he was egotistical, had interrogated Ethiopians, remained aloof and ultimately made the documentary simply to win another media award. It concluded that the programme would harm foreign investment and tourism and portrayed Ethiopians as eating things they would have the good sense to know were inedible. Whether the programme was accurate and informed journalism, which I believe it was, became irrelevant. The Informer article was suffused with a sense of hurt pride, of refusal to acknowledge that ultimately Samora may have done Ethiopia a favour by focusing world attention on the practicalities of survival in such a harsh environment. Having lectured to students in London on the portrayal of Africa in western media, it was fascinating for me to witness first hand the denial, anger and sense of being let down felt by some of my colleagues.

Work became even harder
Meanwhile, there was the pressing issue of 1.3 million Ethiopians living in the Somali region who had somehow gone missing from official figures. Someone had �forgotten� to include them in estimates of the hungry. After a long conversation with a colleague at the UN Office for Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA), the truth dawned on me that the majority of members of the Government belonged to the Tigray ethnic group and that only certain tribal groups actually mattered to them. It became even harder to do my job as I uncovered some grim facts, such as the obvious prior knowledge of famine � there is one most years � by almost everyone concerned, from the World Food Programme and UNOCHA to the various foreign embassies and international charities. Peter Gill�s excellent 1984 book, A Year In the Death of Africa, outlined the business of famine, including the sheer number of meetings, memos and reports involved. Here I was in 2004, living through exactly the same scenario he chronicled, with trucks being hijacked, food failing to reach its destinations, and charities frustrated beyond belief as many of their efforts to sort out problems were blocked by bureaucratic hurdles � agreements reneged upon, requests for vehicles turned down or stuck in a labyrinthine system, and visas for foreign national workers taking months to sort out. Every day there were always at least five women and their numerous children knocking on my house door, begging for clothes, food, scraps, money, firewood. It was very sad.

That�s the thing about Ethiopia: there are just so many sad, ill, poor, desperate and not particularly resourceful people living absolutely on the edge, not just in rural areas but on your own, middle-class street. So the frustration of wanting to improve information exchanges and to be honest about what was happening under our noses was even more acute. But questions about water and food storage, the appalling state of the roads and the reason for the enormous amount of �lost� food in certain parts of the country remained unanswered. The focus constantly remained on the obscure, such as �metric quintals of food�, �early-warning systems� and �normative vegetative indices�. The logistics of whether there was enough money to buy food and enough trucks to shift it from point A to point B were prevalent � and a week or so before the actual famine became �official�, the head of information and a scary military crony would put together an �appeal�, stating how much money they needed from western donors. Then it became everyone�s job to try to get increasingly-cynical foreign office and embassy staff to commit large sums.

When Tony Blair and Bob Geldof turned up in Addis, everything shifted up a gear. We listened as Blair talked of Ethiopian �countryside�, a term so bizarrely inappropriate in a country where the rural areas are swathes of unmanageable moistureless scrub, highly eroded plateaux, or beautiful mountains, all of which are un-farmable and used only by nomads. Blair made it all sound so easy: if the West just gave more, if journalists reported how hard the people were working to improve the situation, then all would be well. Inside the main organ of the famine, the DPPC, the Ethiopian Government and the UN were arguing about the actual numbers of hungry people. Too low a figure and the Government wouldn�t get enough foreign aid; too high and it would look as if they weren�t solving the problem. Blair avoided the thorny subject of tribalism and ethnic divisions in a country where the most important government posts are all held by Tigrayans. Several senior ministers and other functionaries were all Tigrayans. Blair also appeared to avoid asking whether the allocated food substitutes, grain etc, actually ever reached the intended recipients, and he seemed unaware that Oxfam, Save the Children, Farm Africa and GOAL, the international humanitarian organisation, all of which work there, risk being thrown out of the country should they ask if aid pledged to victims of the famine actually ever arrives.

The gossip was that Bob Geldof was angry there hadn�t been enough change, and the tensions in the DPPC government office at this point were palpable. Surely someone would break the silence and reveal the emperor had no clothes? I waited to hear one of the international charity reps point out that for the last several years the Ethiopian Government had actively carried out a blatant propaganda campaign against them, destabilising them with allegations of fraud and corruption. In a recent Government newspaper spread, a prominent minister had explained to citizens why charities were the enemy of the people. Nobody said anything, of course. It was simply too dangerous � we all lived in fear of being PNG�d (made persona non grata) and thrown out of the country within 24 hours.

To their credit, a handful of local and international journalists in Ethiopia did their best. One particularly colourful character was asked to leave, and Ethiopian television had to retract publicly the UN figures he had used in an article about projected numbers of hungry people. In the goldfish bowl of the ex-pats, everyone had an opinion on whether he was right to refuse. The point was, however, that the Government was watching him and his family. Another friend, a local journalist, was beaten up several times, called into ministers� offices and not so subtly told to retract an article about industrial corruption. He decided to seek asylum in Britain.

Something was seriously wrong
My own life became harder. I felt terribly depressed � it seemed to me that the Ethiopian Government increasingly was only going through the motions of being accountable or transparent. I decided to send emails to journalists and friends in London, telling them what was going on. The only computers I could use were at the UN, as all others went through the Government�s server and were monitored. In February of last year my innocuous request for a press pass to interview Bob Marley�s widow, Rita, about a forthcoming Marley remembrance concert to be staged in Addis was turned down. I knew something was seriously wrong. Then my landlord suddenly decided I needed to be evicted, with a week�s notice, and he conducted a smear campaign in my neighbourhood, suggesting that I was a drug dealer or prostitute. And I knew my phone was being bugged. At night I was rung at home by junior Government ministers and quizzed about exactly what I was doing. My handbag, with mobile phone and contacts book, vanished and Ethiopian friends were convinced it had been stolen. In late March 2005, homeless, without a telephone, and having resigned from the DPPC, I decided to leave. In order to do so I had to get an Ethiopian friend with good connections in the Ministry for Foreign Affairs to remove any checks from my file, so I wouldn�t be detained at the airport and prevented from leaving. I�m very grateful to her.

Last June I returned to make a BBC documentary. The situation had reached the crescendo that to me had seemed inevitable. The populace was sick of being bullied and lied to and wanted fair elections. They had reached breaking point. In a riot in which 36 people were killed and hundreds injured and imprisoned, I was inadvertently caught in the gunfire between Government soldiers and unarmed students. This was a completely unprovoked attack, outside a training college near the British Embassy. I felt very scared, but vindicated in my view that the political and economic situation during the previous year had been repressive and unjust. The harassment of journalists continued. In January this year Anthony Mitchell, latterly the Associated Press correspondent who had been reporting from the country for four years, was expelled at 24 hours� notice for �disseminating information far from the truth about Ethiopia�. Despotism brooks no criticism.

Britain gave Ethiopia �73 million in aid in 2003-04, of which �45 million was paid direct to the Ethiopian treasury, and in June last year the G8 Summit agreed to cancel the �40billion owed by 18 countries, including Ethiopia, to the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the African Development Bank. But Britain�s generous aid began to draw criticism as police continued to suppress anti-Government demonstrations and Blair�s Government suspended a proposed �20million increase after the death of the students. Then, in February last year, international development secretary Hilary Benn decided to cut off direct budget support to Meles�s government worth around �50million, describing the �breach of trust� since the imprisonment of more than 100 people, and the death of more than 80 people in various protests. In January last year Benn said: �We are looking with Government and other donors to develop a new protection of basic services grant to deliver education, health and water to the poor. This would mean tighter financial reporting and stronger local accountability so that the funds reach the poorest people.� The money will now be channelled through aid agencies and local organisations in the hope that it will reach the people who desperately need it, rather than being siphoned off by the Ethiopian Government. It�s a start.

After 14 years of living and working in Africa, I have mixed feelings about aid, although you can never generalise on the experience of one country. Ethiopia, undoubtedly, is hampered by unfair trade agreements and the restrictions of having a hugely under-developed infrastructure. The solution is not simply aid, but better human rights, the promotion of free speech, and crucially, local and international structures that promote equality. This includes the protection of local and international journalists. If we are to send British aid money and skilled British people to work in Africa, then the host country must value us in the same way as it must start valuing all its citizens. At the very least we need to listen to local, African experts, journalists and commentators, who often speak from more informed, critical and realistic perspectives. We need to start rigorous debate about aid and democratic principles and the amount of local budgets spent on arms, health, education. Otherwise it is simply a feel-good exercise for the UN and the governments involved. It is not enough to �feed the starving�: we have to know that the poor, the vulnerable, wherever they are, are getting the food and money we give and their human rights, and have not become merely political pawns to their own governments. Here in Britain, it�s time to face up to some unpalatable truths about the regimes we support.

*Thembi Mutch is a journalist who has worked for Channel 4, various national print outlets and BBC national radio and the World Service, mostly in Africa. She is currently teaching cultural studies and journalism at Birkbeck College and London South Bank University and working with the University and the Aegis Trust on an international training programme for African journalists

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msg Comment from: ፊታውራሪ Free [Member]
Thembi Mutch, did you just awaken from an almost five years old slumber or it is that your medieval time processor needed this long to fetch, decode and execute an information from your memory?
You are a scum, merchant of chaos, misery, hate and certainly one of the many western aid profiteers and genocide instigators who is angry at a government that has denied her a job. I'm in disagreement with the ruling party almost all the time, but this time around I really do owe them a thanks for kicking you out of the country and hope that they will never allow you to set a foot in that land, never again.

PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 02:39

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msg Comment from: JOSEPH JAMENE [Visitor]
Well done
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 03:03

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msg Comment from: habeshawu [Visitor]
the writer is just another scumbug not worthy of noticing!
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 03:42

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msg Comment from: SleeplessInLA [Visitor]
Ethiopia is littered with such unqualified White opportunists, only reason she went to Ethiopia is to add the country on her resume. If she really wanted to help or learn, she would've joined a foreign charity, but probably tried and was rejected, or salary too low.

After supposedly working in Africa for 14 years, she never heard of famine and politics in Ethiopia? She's either lying, or ignorant, and shame on institutions that hire such unqualified Whites over more qualified educated Ethiopians.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 03:58

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msg Comment from: habeshawu [Visitor]
what makes the whole story unbelievably contradicting is, that she went through a horrible experience yet she managed to even go back to Ethiopia. so desperate to avenge that she had the gut to return to such a (in her own words) difficult land and people, hoping to earn the journalist of the year award. but what she fails to understand is that her kind of cheap propaganda has been tried on countries like china just to make them even more determined and look where they are now. And there is nothing you can do about it?
the most interesting part of her b*tching is when she questions Blair's judgment about his opinion on ethiopia's beautiful landscape. mind you, it's one thing to criticize his foreign policy (assuming she is not one of tax dodger freelance journalists) but for unknown straggling freelance journalist to question Blair's Idea of beauty is taking democracy too far. so my dear By Thembi Mutch, you sound worryingly angry with Ethiopia that i suggest you stop paying tax so that you don't feel exploited . the world is better served with you on a doll.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 05:09

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msg Comment from: habeshawu [Visitor]
correction!

what makes the whole story unbelievably contradicting is, that she went through a horrible experience in undemocratic Ethiopia, yet she managed to even go back. or could it be she was so desperate to avenge that she had the gut to return to such a (in her own words) difficult land and people or is the desperation to earn the journalist of the year award?. what ever the reason is she failed to understand is that her kind of cheap propaganda has been tried on countries like China just to make them even more determined and look where they are now. And there is nothing you can do about it?
the most interesting part of her b*tching is when she questions Blair's judgment about his opinion on ethiopia's beautiful landscape. mind you, it's one thing to criticize his foreign policy (assuming she is not one of those tax dodger freelance journalists) but for unknown straggling freelance journalist to question Blair's Idea of beauty is taking democracy too far. so my dear Thembi Mutch, you sound worryingly angry with Ethiopia that i suggest you stop paying tax so that you don't feel exploited . the world is better served with you on a doll.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 05:30

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msg Comment from: Nebil [Visitor]
My Eyes ouuchhh >:( man it's just too long to read on a computer with all the light burning ur eyez....comon am too young to start wearing glasses nazeretoch

p.s please please there should be a limit on how long an article should be to post on the blog otherwise i tell u u r looking at many lawsuits filed against ur site for causing poor vision :)

PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 10:03

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msg Comment from: philly [Visitor]
Thembi Mutch

people like you are the problem in the horn, people who worship $$$$$$$$$$$
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 10:13

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msg Comment from: flulu [Visitor]
Your are one of those white or non white foreigners who benefit from the plight of people living in africa.when you stop pro ofiting from their plight then you start to write those comments about the goverment you have worked with for a long time.we know hat kind of losers work in africa to benefit from the poverty and misery of africa.Never assume that you ever worked for the poor in africa but you actually used them to make money b.you are one of those people who are not able to make competitve living in the west sto that you have to come countries like africa to make money.when the goverment wakes up and stops your worthless NGOS you becme angry and try to crtisize the people you benefited from.we know most of the money the the western goverment gives to the african nations is wasted on worthless good for nothings people like you ,it will never reach the real beneficators the people of africa.we are actually better of blood sucker people like you .Go and cry to your white audience.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 11:04

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msg Comment from: Jamal [Visitor]
Free

I don't usually agree with you but this time I do. when they suck the system and cruise around in 4WD cars in Addis the system is all good, suddenly they walk on the wrong side of it they all turn professional.

Let her start with her own country Britain, the fountain of death, destruction and misery all around the world. Every single war still raging anywhere in this world the British are responsible for it. They support and prop up dictatorships all over the world and here she is telling us about freedom and free speech!

Charity begins at home, let her go back and teach the tormentors of humanity, the blood suckers of the poor, the instigators of all civil wars how to live peacefully with the rest of the world.

God! how do I hate the condescending, arrogant talk of some riif-raff, ruffian and utter vagabonds addressing us like we have the mental capacity of a spider monkey. Most of those so called journalists and UN workers are nothing but sex predators, frequenting bars and night spots just for the thrill of humiliating some young underage girls and boys. It wasn't long ago when an English pedofile was arrested, jailed and awaiting a subsequent deportation.

we know the system in ethiopia is not perfect, we know its an inhumane system and very tribalistic but what we know is that its the british and the americans holding them in place. Stay in England and never ever come back to ethiopia. you maggot.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 12:04

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msg Comment from: guramilea [Visitor]
u lie worshipers,u can't handle the truth allways u wanted to hear lie after lie what ever the gov.told u that is ur bible.the journalist is doing her job and she is right,if u don't like it or her hung ur self.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 13:18

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msg Comment from: ፊታውራሪ Free [Member]
Jamal, there is no much of a difference between you the polygamist, terrorist lover, Ethiopia's demise wisher, primary agent/servant of retarded & illiterate Wuhabists AND the Brit's hate, division and chaos preacher and instigator. The level of your stupidity and hypocrisy surpasses "your brother's" wild animal behavior that have stoned helpless girls in places under the siege of the dark age ideology practitioners. As a result, i would like to disagree with myself that agrees with the man that i consider not only treasonous but also enemy of humanity.

PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 14:16

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msg Comment from: OGADENI4LIFE [Visitor]
Garbage accusation. The usual lie from a reporter who didn't get sh.it out of the Ethiopian people.

May be she is used to be treated like a queen in other African countries like Kenya or Eritrea cuz she is white and she didn't find that to be the case back home and start accusing them of this and that..... If u guyz look closely that is exactely the case.....

it seems to me people ignored her and didn't talk to her like a slave master relationship back home and so she vents her anger on her report here......who cares..? get lost
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 16:23

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msg Comment from: armacho [Visitor]
free
well versed and well said.for a change
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 16:23

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msg Comment from: mosisa chelenko [Visitor]


Those years were an opportunity for you whereby you could have learned a great deal from the Ethiopian courteosness, resilience, moral strength,generousity, and many more good virtues. You got it wrong. Ethiopian does not deserve to be treated like this. You are just another burden on a shoulder of an African; who sustained the survival of your ancestors. Complete waste of time for nothing.
Low quality journalism at work! Do not bring shame to the profession.Work on your grammar,composition, and style of writing.
Look for some thing else to do; may be one of the two things you were alleged to have been ivolved in while you were in Ethiopia, would be a viable option for you-given the moral lapse and ignominy of your nation. Do you have any moral left in you?
Every dog has its own day.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 18:06

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msg Comment from: Jamal [Visitor]
Free

don't panic all is according to plan and the tide is finally turning to our advantage. Ethiopia will be part of the greater caliphate, your rights will be guranteed under the shariah and due process will be followed to correct any mishaps in our pursuit to carry out justice.

The killing of millions of people just because they came from the wrong tribe will be brought to an end, and cowards like you will be apprehended and face death, a coward anyhow does not deserve anything better.

your fears of ethiopia disintegrating are unjustified, its territorial integrity will be closely guarded under the umbrella of the muslims umah where it rightfully belongs. There is no point fighting the forces of nature, better accept and harness it; such is the fate of ethiopia in realtion to Islam.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 18:40

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msg Comment from: engeda [Visitor]
To All,

Let her alone she told us the truth and only the truth the situation in ethiopia is very bad and ugly.Unless a fair gov. is in place it will continue and we will face a very hard situaton who knows may be genocide like in rwanda when patience of the general puplic reache its limit the situation will be very different and difficult eprdf is rulling at the expence of the poor ethiopians only to satisfay tigrays and "hodam oromos and hodam amaras" at one point things will shift and it back fire
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 19:08

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msg Comment from: gorade [Visitor]
philly..........what do u think u r doing? the only difference is, she discover the truth,but u r paid to cover the truth,did u stop and think about that?noooooooo!!!!! why?becouse"i am money worshiper" yes u got it and u r.
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 20:27

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msg Comment from: yes we can [Visitor]
We all need to come together and help our country from this unspeakable poverty.
May GOD help us all!!! AMEN
PermalinkPermalink 11/30/08 @ 21:10

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msg Comment from: Gudfela [Visitor]
A very well informed article, though came out a little late. We all know that the western Governments know what is going on in Ethiopia. They just don't want to do anything about it coz ZENAWI is their Dictator.

It is true that the current Goverment is rulling the country with iron fist and anyone who tries to expose the truth is enemy to the Zenawi minority regime. We are heading to our demise and the minority regime and its supporters do not seem to be worried about it. They think that if their belly is full so is everyone elses'.

PermalinkPermalink 12/01/08 @ 10:36

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msg Comment from: thereal fighter [Visitor]
her name "thembi" sounds southafrican...but alas!but i really give a damn shit about her BS episstle which is nothing but hoe's bizness. yesegera lidjotch like her are the flies sitting on the excrements down at the streets-maggots and fags like her overflow africa in general and ethiopia in particular...but the real question is:WHO'S FEEDING'EM WITH SUCH BS "INFOS"?!-the answer is:ASkaribandas.period.what kind of askaribandas?!members of the socold "refugee organisations"(human delalas)-yes foks-we have to face the reality-i'm neither sympathizer of EPRDF nor of the oppositions,cause both play their own game...BUT THE WORST ENEMIES OF US ARE THE "ETHIOPIAN""CROWNWITNESSES" WHO PERMANENTLY COLLABORATE WITH OUR EXTERNAL ENEMIES!TOO MANY FIVE-CENT-HOOKERS and BACKSTABBERS WHO CRUISE AROUND THEIR MASSA'S TABLE IN ORDER TO SNAP CHICKENBONES (FOOD LEFTOVERS) WHICH ARE THROWN AT 'EM BY THEIR ADULTERERS:SHAME-SHAME-SHAME !!! always the same muckypup by such self-underestimating crooks-bytheway-she's southafrican-I REMEMBER HER COWARDLY COMPATS WHO KILLED FELLOW AFRICANS DURING THEIR LICK WHITEY'S BOOTS!here we go...
PermalinkPermalink 12/01/08 @ 10:37

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msg Comment from: berta [Visitor]
Free
you should see the date she wrote her book. it is published 2 yrs ago Nov 2006 just a year after the Nov 2005 mascre in Addis. you just saw it this week on Nazret doesn't make it late.

What the writer wrote can be seen dangerous by some of you, but that is the truth on the ground. dont deny that.
PermalinkPermalink 12/01/08 @ 11:26

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msg Comment from: Jemal [Visitor]
I think she nicely portrays the situation of managing famine in Ethiopia how it is highly mismanaged. I total buy what she wrote about the DPPC which is about that it has been staffed with people who don't have the proper training and stamina to manage famine in Ethiopia. She is actually needed to be taken right by most of Ethiopian readers in many of her testimonies knowing that the current government is so undemocracti, tribalist and nepotist. There is no way to prove that key government positions and ministries are held by Tigriyans. She also basically criticize the then Blair's Biritish government for giving the so called 'aid' money despite knowing that the government is so repressive and tribalist. So I think we need to have this kind of courageous journalist who is up to write overtly about the current tribalist, archaic and backwardish Tigriyan dominated Ethiopian government. I think we should owe her many thanks for exposing the shames of this government to the international community. And I think we should kindly ask her to write more of her experience while she was in Ethiopia.
Peace and Love!
PermalinkPermalink 12/01/08 @ 15:56

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msg Comment from: girmai [Visitor]
a story as relevant today as the time it was written.nothing explains it better. thanks for the eyewitness account of the situation in the country.well done you!
PermalinkPermalink 12/01/08 @ 23:19

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