O Boys

30 11 2008

haileg1tarikub

Haile in Australia and Tariku in Spain win!





Free Oromo prisoners!

27 11 2008

hrw-logo

New York, November 27, 2008 - The Ethiopian government should immediately free 53 ethnic Oromos arrested several weeks ago on allegations of support for terrorism if it cannot credibly charge them, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch said that a court should not grant further police requests to extend their detention without charge past a December 1, 2008, deadline, in part because of serious risks of torture.

Ethiopian authorities have arrested more than 100 ethnic Oromo Ethiopians since October 30 in Addis Ababa and across Ethiopia’s Oromia region, and 53 remain in detention without charge in Addis Ababa. The government claims they were helping plot terrorist attacks on behalf of the outlawed Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), that they were funding the rebel group or committing other, as yet unspecified crimes linked to terrorism or rebel activity.

“Ethiopia has well-founded fears of terrorist attacks, but has often manipulated those fears to suppress dissent,” said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “These mass arrests bear all the hallmarks of the ‘imprison first, investigate later’ tactics used to arbitrarily detain peaceful critics.”

While Ethiopia has valid security concerns related to bombings and other attacks, the government has routinely cited terrorism as a pretext for suppressing nonviolent opposition and arbitrarily detaining peaceful government critics. Over the years, Ethiopia’s government has regularly used accusations of support for the Oromo rebels, who have been carrying out a low-level insurgency for a decade, as a pretext for cracking down on political dissent among the Oromo population.

Those arrested include Bekele Jirata, secretary general of the Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement, an opposition political party with seats in Parliament; three human rights activists working for the Ethiopian Human Rights Council in the town of Nekemte (since released); teachers and university lecturers; and several prominent businessmen and hotel owners. At their last court appearance, some of the detainees said that they had been taken from their cells at night and tortured. Torture has been a routine practice at Addis Ababa’s Maikelawi, or Central Investigation Unit, where the detainees are being held.

Past arrests of ethnic Oromos have targeted people from all walks of life, including political figures, teenage students, teachers, and civil society activists. In November, the government pardoned and released 44 people convicted of crimes linked to the rebels who had been in prison for long terms. Some had originally been sentenced to life in prison or death.

As Human Rights Watch has documented, governance in Oromia has long been marked by widespread acts of intimidation, arbitrary arrest, torture and other serious human rights abuses targeting people who criticize the government. Many of those targeted for abuses have done nothing more than to criticize local officials or participate in student protests.

Police investigators have not charged any of the recent detainees with a criminal offense. Courts have ordered some detainees released after police failed to provide any legal basis to justify their detention. Five detainees were released in Addis Ababa along with others who were detained in Nekemte, Dembi Dollo and other parts of Oromia. But 53 remain in custody in Addis Ababa after police officials obtained a court order to allow them to keep the detainees in custody for two weeks while they gathered evidence against them. When the two-week deadline expired on November 24, the police returned to court empty-handed but obtained a one-week extension, until December 1, to find evidence that might substantiate criminal charges.

This pattern of prolonged detention without charge is routine practice in cases of Oromo Ethiopians arrested on accusations of terrorism or of supporting the rebels. Ethiopian courts often eventually reject police requests for continued detention and order those held to be  released - but only after they have spent weeks or months in detention while police claim to look for evidence that could justify their being charged.

“Ethiopian judges deserve praise when they stand up to order the release of people detained without legal basis,” Gagnon said. “But often this only happens after detainees have already been held without charge for punitive lengths of time.”

Oromia is Ethiopia’s largest and most populous region. Its regional government is controlled by the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO), a member of the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF).

The Oromo Liberation Front fought alongside the governing party in the struggle to overthrow the Derg dictatorship, but after the war the two organizations fell out with one another. The OLF was outlawed and its leadership driven from the country. It is now based in Asmara, Eritrea. Relations between Ethiopia and Eritrea have been poisonous since the two countries fought a bloody border war in 1998-1999 that claimed tens of thousands of lives. The border issue remains unresolved.

For full article, visit Human Rights Watch News page.





Irreecha: an Oromo Thanksgiving

27 11 2008

irreecha-2008-switzerland-11irreecha-2008-switzerland-31

irreecha-2008-oslo-1irreecha-2008-switzerland-2

 

Irressa

 

A time for Celebration

A time for Devotion

A time for Thanksgiving

A time for Blessing

A time for Spiritual Journey

A time for Pilgrimage to the land of Milk and Honey

A time for Good Harvest

A time for Ritual Fest

A time for Appreciating Mother Nature

A time for Authentic Oromo Culture

A time for Worshiping the God of our Forefathers

A time for Waaqa’s Devine Manifest

 

It’s time for Irrechaa!

 

Learn more about Irreechaa here.

Photos courtesy of Oromia Times.





Traitors or Nationalist?

25 11 2008

Ali Bira and Kemer Yousuf need no introduction to Oromo communities around the world. Living in exile for over two decades, they have both been compared to Maria Makeba of South Africa for stirring hopes of freedom with their music among millions in Oromia and beyond. Music being a central part of the Oromo struggle against past and current oppressive Ethiopian regimes, Ali and Kemer acted as constant reminders of the events in their homeland.

But unlike Maria Makeba, these icons of the Oromo nation have decided to reconcile with their people’s enemy – the Ethiopian regime – before the freedom they once sung for and raised hope about among the Oromo arrived.

Ali decided to reconcile with the TPLF government in September 2005 following Ethiopian elections in the same year and while the world was in the middle of condemning the TPLF government for stealing elections by intimidating, detaining and murdering hundreds Oromos and others.

Kemer followed suite three years later and flew back to perform in Finfinnee (Addis Abeba) a couple of days ago (November 200 8) hot on the heels of mass arrests, “disappearances” and mistreatment of Oromo nationals (Read Amnesty Intenational Urgent Action Request Here) including his popular fellow singer Zerhun Wedajo whose where about is unknown.

Much has been said on and off the Internet about Ali Bira’s and Kemer Yousuf’s visits to Ethiopia to perform there. To my knowledge, not since Leencoo Lataa’s visit to Ethiopia (purportedly to have Ibsa Gutema released from TPLF dungeon) has any Oromo’s visit there generated such a heated debate among our people. Opponents have painted them as traitors and sell-outs. The old adage “everyone can be bought” is heard a lot in reference to the two singers. Supporters, on the other hand, see no issues or concerns with what they have done and argue that their critics’ concerns are misplaced.

Why such a controversy over two singers’ visits to, and performance in, their home land?

No serious person can dispute Ali’s quasi-legendary status when it comes to Oromo music. That he got Oromo music going when the going was tough needs no reminding for any serious observer of Oromo cultural renaissance. Neither is Kemer’s stature as a popular and very much loved Oromo singer is contested by anyone I know. Ali’s and Kemer’s love for the Oromo language and music is beyond dispute. That much is known and beyond debate as far as I am concerned.

Ali Bira had won some ethnic music award, along with other African singers in Canada, in or around 1996. The awards were given out to the winners by ambassadors (to Canada) of their respective native countries. Ali is said to have refused to receive it from the then Ethiopian ambassador, and was given the award by the then mayor of Toronto. I have checked out this story with brothers living in Toronto who confirmed it as accurate.

Rumor has it that Kemer Yousuf was offered hundreds of thousands of dollars by the TPLF government on various occasions to return to, and perform in, Ethiopia which he rebuffed bluntly, often disdainfully. It is said that he refused to succumb to financial enticements by the powers that be in Ethiopia mindful of the political benefit the current rulers of the country would rip from his appearance there.

That was then and this is now.

Read more…





Africa’s biggest road race winners

23 11 2008

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Addis Ababa, November 23, 2008 (Addis Ababa) - Athletes Wude Ayalew, and Chala Dechasa here on Sunday won the 8th TOYOTA Great Ethiopian Run in female and male category respectively. Wude won the competition for the second time in a row.

Wude finished the competition in 33:31.25, while Chala clinched the victory in 28.54.47.

“This victory will provide a platform for my future success. It was very important and I’m very happy,” Chala said shortly after crossing the finish line.

Werkitu Ayano and Teyeba Erkeso stood 2nd, and 3rd in female’s category finishing the distance in 33:34.01, and 33:56.49, respectively.

Feyesa Lelisa finished 2nd in 29:6.37 . Deriba Merga, who won Delhi half marathon a few weeks ago, finished third in 29:9.87.

Wude, and Chala received 25,000 birr award each. Winners of second and third places were awarded 15,000 birr, and 10,000 birr each, respectively.

In the competition held among ambassadors residing in Addis Ababa, Portuguese Ambassador to Ethiopia Vera Fernandes won in female category while Norwegian Ambassador to Ethiopia, Jens-Petter Kjemprud, clinched the victory in male’s competition.

The 10-Km run, which started and ended at Mesqel Square here, attracted a total of 32,000 participants, and 480 athletes drawn from Addis Ababa athletics clubs, competition organizers said.

Source





Obama’s policy on the Horn of Africa

22 11 2008

By Kumsa Aba Gerba

November 21, 2008 — The sweltering African issue during the Bush lame duck session and the Obama transition period has been the DR Congo crisis. The two Sudanese problems, i.e the Southern Sudan referendum and the Darfur issue have also been in the front burner. Until the November election results, some optimist neo-con hawks in the Bush and McCain camp, along with the Christian Right and oil companies had a grand scheme of seceding the Southern Sudan as a separate country toying with the upcoming referendum by using covert operatives in the area posing as NGOs and referendum observers. The Somalia problem however had been lost in the shuffle. The wish of the current Pentagon policy makers to recognize the self declared independent Somaliland as a country has been moot as it was forsaken by State Department last year. The recent hijacking of a major oil tanker may have put the spot light back on Somalia. Anyhow, both Sudanese and Somali problems shall directly affect US-Ethiopian relations.

Under the new Obama administration the Horn of Africa will be a foreign policy archetype and test case for various interest groups. Unlike Bush, under the Obama administration, it seems that foreigner policy making shall go from the Pentagon and NSA back to its original home, the State Department. Most of the African policy issues in the new administration will depend on the characters and attitudes of people that will join Camp Obama.

It is now highly likely that Senator Hilary Clinton is going to be the top diplomat for President Obama. If Senator Hilary Clinton takes the helm at the State Department, she will definitely bring in her own people from the old Clinton era. Some foreign policy watchers perceive some activities by John Podesta, Susan Rice, Russ Feingold and Donald Payne marketing several people for posts in African affairs, regardless of who is at the helm of the State Department.

By some odd condition related to her husband’s global activity, if Senator Hillary Clinton does not take the State Department post, the position might go to Senator John Kerry who is said to be actively lobbying for it. If John Kerry takes the State Department job he will be out of the senate. His chairmanship of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will have to go a senator second in line. The first in line on seniority is Senator Chris Dodd. But Senator Dodd is the chair for the Banking Committee which, these days, is a hot post that he may not let go. Thus Senator Feingold is second runner up. Senator Feingold is an arch foe of the Ethiopian government’s NGO law. He has been sponsoring NGOs to run abortion clinics in Ethiopia, among other things he has been working with various NGOs and opposition elements in Ethiopia.

Ms. Susan Rice was initially the focal point for the State Department job but Obama’s close advisors did not think of her as the top diplomat. Sources say that Susan Rice was then assumed for the post as a UN Ambassador. It now appears that it is going to be from the Kennedy family. Thus some observers say that she may end up at the NSA.

With direct impact on US-Ethiopian relations, one personality to keep watching is a former congressional librarian and a Donald Payne assistant named Ted Dange, an Ethiopian-American married to a Somali-American, with a special affinity towards ONLF, an Ogaden Somali Separatist armed insurgent. Ted Dange is being sponsored by his close friends Donald Payne and Susan Rice for some post in the Obama’s State Department African Affairs camp. Ted Dange’s handlers are working hard to make sure that he is on a list of not only for a job at the State Department but also at several other agencies dealing with African policy. Some sources close to him say that he is no more interested in the African politics but rather in the trade and commerce aspect of Africa.

On another front, Obama’s transition co-chair John Podesta, a former Clinton chief of staff, is also pushing two intriguing figures to the African affairs arena. One is Colin Thomas-Jensen, a former peace corps in Ethiopia from 1996 to 1998. Mr. Thomas-Jenson had been working hard to put Omar Al Bashir behind bars for a long time for the Darfur disaster. He was recently in Addis for a field research on Sudan and Somalia as part of the recent article for the “ENOUGH” project run by John Morris who is also another potential runner for some positions on African affairs. The other is Ruben Brigety, a former state Department official who was also the head of Human Rights Watch for Arms Proliferation Division on Africa. Mr. Brigety is one of the personalities who authors the Annual State Department Human Rights Reports.

Some personalities that were active proposing polices on Africa during the campaign may not make it to any post due to allegation by Senator Feingold and Congressman Payne as sympathetic to the Ethiopian government. One is former Congressman Howard Wople who chaired the African Committee for ten years. The other is Gail Smith who is still advising the Obama Camp on Africa. Observers say that Ms Smith is not even interested in African political affairs anymore, but seems to be interested more in global warming and security issues.

On the other side of the coin, Whitney Damron, a lobbyist/consultant was campaign adviser for Obama about African Diaspora. Whitney D became close to US based Ethiopian opposition groups during the election and he was the contact person for their campaign fundraising. His relationship with the Obama transition team has been officially severed. This is because of a new Obama rule against lobbyists not to be on his transition and his cabinet posts. Nonetheless the Washington DC revolving door is hard to monitor as to who goes in and out.

Whether or not the Obama Administration will heed the aggressive and antagonistic way of Congressman Payne and Senator Feingold is yet to be seen. Be that as it may, some in congress strongly believe that Obama will govern from the center and his foreign policy shall be moderate and accommodative towards underdeveloped countries.

US policy on the turbulent situations in Sudan and Somalia will directly affect Ethiopia, for it is sandwiched between these two major crisis points with dreadful regional and global impacts. Eritrea, Ethiopian northern neighbor and arch foe, may not be on the radar screen of US African policy right now but it remains a wild card in the stability of the region.

Due to the explosive and chaotic conditions in Somalia and Sudan, one would assume US relations with Ethiopia would at best be lukewarm, if not congenial. On the Ethiopian side, the government is working on pressing on to pass the new NGO law and working on getting out of Somalia as soon as possible. These Ethiopian moves may not bode well with the United States and may adversely impact US monetary and food aid that have always come along with some strings attached. With all these variables, whether or not US-Ethiopian relations will chill or warm up is yet to be seen.

The author is an Ethiopian American graduate student of International Relations in USA. He can be reached at abagerba@yahoo.com





Mass arrests and killings

21 11 2008

omrho

Oromo Menschenrechts- und Hilfsorganisation (OMRHO e.V.)
Oromo Human Right and Relief Organisation
Ijaarsa Mirga Namoomaa fi Gargaarsa Oromoo

 

The Oromo Human Right and Relief Organization (OMRHO) received yesterday alarming and shocking news that at least 13 Oromos have been killed in cold blood by the TPLF regime in Northern Oromia, Wallo, at a district known as Sambatee. The reason given for the killing was their political affiliation with the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF). The precise date and their circumstance of death remain yet unknown. What is certain is that they were killed by government security forces. List of the killed includes the following names:

  1. Mr. Aadam Umer Kubii
  2. Mr. Usee Ammadaa Usee
  3. Mr. Rahammad Abdullaa
  4. Mr. Saalih, Buubaa
  5. Mr. Umaruu, Ahmed Alii
  6. Mr. Mohammad Diinaa
  7. Mr. Aliyyii Muhee
  8. Mr. Hassan Mohammad
  9. Mr. Jaarraa, Ammadee
  10. Mr. Abbaa Aadam
  11. Mr. Umer Buubaa Umaruu
  12. Mr. Mohammad Usee Alii
  13. Mr. Husuu Aliyyii.


According to the information we got, the mentioned were previously forcefully displaced from their village known as Jiillee, near to Laga Saagat in Sambatee district, and transferred to somewhere unspecified. Their murder by the regime took place after they were uprooted from their community with a sinister aim
of avoiding public awareness and thereby communal unrest. Our source of information added that there were numerous other individuals who survived the death squad with serious injuries. In view of this fact therefore it is highly probable that the number of the killed may increase soon.


The TPLF/EPRDF regime is virtually in a state of war against the Oromo public at large. This is true particularly since the new wave of mass arrest in the last couple of weeks. Reports about mass arrest, kidnapping, displacement and torture are overwhelming OMRHO. According to our freshest information, Harargee region is this time the target of the regime’s all out action campaign. Accordingly, the following individuals were reported to have been kidnapped, on 11th November 2008, by the regime and where their about remain yet unknown:

  1. Mr. Jaafarii and Mr. Abdusalaam from a locality known as Gooroo Guutuu, Baroodaa town in Harargee region.
  2. Mr. Mohammad Aamma from a locality Cinaaqsan, Ordee village.
  3. Mr. Joohar from Baabbilee area, Feerroo village.
  4. Mr. Abdul Aziiz from Qilee village


While the above mentioned are those who were kidnapped and no one can tell where their about, the following are those who were arrested by official federal police and security forces of the regime on the same date, 11/11/ 2008.

  1. Mr. Haarun Kabir Ibroo and his wife Mrs. Fatiyaa Ahimed, arrested and their property confisicated by the regime.
  2. Mr. Abdii Amadee.
  3. Mr. Toofiq imprisoned
  4. Mrs. Caaltuu
  5. Mr.Mohammad Sheekaa,
  6. Mr. Abdii Muummadee,
  7. Mr. Mohammad Alii,
  8. Mr. Mohammad Abdallaa Ahmad,
  9. Mr. Mohammad Haajii,
  10. Mr. Geetaachoow,
  11. Mr. Abdii Walloo,
  12. Mr. Birraatuu Kabbadaa,
  13. Mr. Mohammad Hawaash,
  14. Mr. Aliyyii Faxiiraa,
  15. Mr. Najjaash Awwadaay,
  16. Mr. Abdurahamaan Mohammad
  17. Mr. Saabit Abdurahmaa Aammee


All these mentioned individuals are from Diree Dhawaa city in Harargee region. The reason for their imprisonment was said to be, by the regime, their political opinion or organizational affiliation.


In view such an all out gross human right violation, it is obvious that the Ethiopian state is getting in a very turbulent and dangerous situation. Its danger lies precisely in the dissemination and naturalization of violence into the civil society, which could lead in the final analysis to a common ruin. OMRHO recommends all peace, justice and democracy loving nations of the world to act before it would be too late to act as it often happened else where in Africa. OMRHO strongly believes that humanity would ultimately prevail.

Source: Oromia Times





POP Star going back to Oromia

20 11 2008

 

Twenty-four years after escaping, Kemer Yousef is going back to perform in Ethiopia, where the Oromo singer is a symbol of unity to the country’s dozens of ethnic groups

Nov 20, 2008 04:30 AM

 


staff reporter

 

 

 

 

A Toronto man who once fled Ethiopia in terror is to return Saturday as the country’s No. 1 pop star.

Kemer Yousef, who escaped on foot with nothing 24 years ago, has scored an unprecedented video hit with Nabek, a seven-track DVD showing him singing from a yacht in Toronto Harbour and dancing on the steps of Casa Loma. Clamour for his return has become so great that the central government is helping to arrange a six-concert homecoming tour that opens Dec. 7 at the East African country’s largest indoor venue – Addis Ababa’s 20,000-seat Millennium Hall.

For Kemer (Yousef is his father’s name) the tour means seeing his family for the first time since he escaped across the desert to Somalia at the age of 20. His mother is in her 70s. His father is 103.

The tour also means singing to former enemies.

Kemer belongs to the Oromo ethnic majority, long oppressed by successive ruling minorities, who are now as swept up by the pop phenomenon as anybody else.

“Ethiopia has more than 70 ethnic groups and languages,” tour co-producer Bumiden Abdul Wahab explains by phone from the central city of Adama. “Normally people only listen to their own music, follow their own traditions.

“Kemer shook up the country,” he says. “He broke the barrier. Every time you turn on the radio – in whatever language – you hear his music.

“If you ask 10 people, at least nine have his CD.”

Kemer is a broad-shouldered man with a magnetic grin and a warm, tender way of expressing himself.

He grew up in an oral and singing culture in the village of Golu, near the town of Deder, in east-central Ethiopia. Villagers had enough to eat, he says. The famine regions lay elsewhere.

More on this story @ TheStar.

For more Qamar music videos, click here!





Multi-talented Orom@ntic girl!

19 11 2008

 

 

Former Miss Ethiopia, Jiitu Abraham, and her family met with President-Elect Barack Obama and wife Michelle. Jiitu currently resides in the Washington DC area and works as a model and broadcaster (watch her interviewing Hayden Panettiere who is the star of the popular NBC television show – HERO. She has recently completed the US Marine Corps Marathon in Washington DC.

 

jitu_abraham_obama_2008

 

 

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Source: Ethiopian Review

 

 

More Interviews on NBC

 

 

 

 

 

 





Amnesty International: Arbitrary detention/torture

18 11 2008

amnesty-international

1. Bekele Jirata (m), General Secretary of the Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement (OFDM) party

2. Asefa Tefera Dibaba (m), university lecturer at Addis Ababa University

3. Bekele Negeri (m), a businessman

4. Dejene Borena (m),

5. Fiqadu Jalqaba (m), college student

6. Eshetu Kitil (m), owner of the Hawi Hotel

7. Desta Kitili (m), his brother

8. Kebede Borena (m), assistant manager of the Hilton Hotel in Addis Ababa

9. Leslie Wodajo (f), a journalist

An unknown number of other members of the Oromo ethnic group

At least 15 members of the Oromo ethnic group, including those named above have been arrested in the capital Addis Ababa and also reportedly in eastern and western parts of the Oromia region of Ethiopia, since around 30 October 2008. Most are reportedly held incommunicado in detention facilities in Addis Ababa, including Maikelawi, where torture and ill-treatment of political prisoners has been reported in the past.

 

Some of those detained were reportedly briefly brought before a primary court, accused of financially supporting the OLF. Some were also paraded on state television on 5 November. Amnesty International believes that those detained are at risk of torture and other ill-treatment.

 

The Government of Ethiopia, including the National Anti-Terrorism Taskforce, has reportedly claimed that those detained had links to the armed opposition group, the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), and a previously unknown armed group, Kawerj.

 

Bekele Jirata is General Secretary of the Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement (OFDM) party, a small registered political party in Ethiopia that holds seats in parliament. Others arrested include Asefa Tefera, a lecturer at Addis Ababa University, and a number of students. Leslie Wodajo is a journalist who worked for the Oromo television programme on Ethiopian state television. On 12 September, the airtime of this programme was cut, a move the OFDM and another opposition party, the Oromo National Congress, claimed was politically motivated. Sixty staff members of the Oromo television programme were also removed from their jobs, many of them placed under security surveillance while their movements in Addis Ababa were restricted.

 

The OFDM has strongly denied that Bekele Jirata, or the party, has had any links to the OLF. In April, the party accused the Ethiopian authorities of intimidation during local elections, the first held since the post-election violence of 2005 which killed some 187 civilians.

 

This wave of arrests follows on a series of suicide bombings in Hargeisa, Somaliland, one of which targeted the Ethiopian consulate, killing several Ethiopian officials and a number of Somalilanders queuing for visas.

 

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

Thousands of members of the Oromo ethnic group have been detained, and many of them tortured, in recent years on suspicion of links with the OLF. The OLF has been fighting the Ethiopian government in the eastern and western parts of the Oromia Region and other areas since 1992. Among detainees held on these grounds have been people who Amnesty International considered to be prisoners of conscience who had not used or advocated violence.

 

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in English or your own language:

- calling for formal charges to be brought against Bekele Jirata and other Oromo citizens, including those named above, who were recently arrested, or their immediate and unconditional release;

- expressing concern that those detained are being held incommunicado and are at risk of torture or ill-treatment;

- urging the authorities to bring all those detained before a court with a guarantee of fair trial, and allow them access to their families, legal counsel and medical treatment;

- expressing concern that those detained may be prisoners of conscience who have not used or advocated violence.

APPEALS TO:

Prime Minister

Meles Zenawi

Office of the Prime Minister

PO Box 1031

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Fax: +251 11 1552020

Salutation: Your Excellency

 

Minister of Justice

Berhan Hailu

Ministry of Justice

PO Box 1370

Addis Ababa

Ethiopia

Fax: +251 11 5517775/ +251 11 5520874

E-mail: justice@telecom.net.et

ministry-justice@telecom.net.et

Salutation: Dear Minister

 

COPIES TO:

 

Governor of Region of Oromia

Mr. Abadula Gemeda,

P.O. Box 10176

Addis Ababa

Ethiopia


and to diplomatic representatives of Ethiopia accredited to your country.

 

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 26 December 2008

Source