Birtukan leapfrogging back to jail

5 01 2009

birtukan

 

Some call her Benazir Bhutto, others Sarah Palin

Some call her Lady Liberty, others Queen Birtukan

What she really is though – a little girl with a magic wand

A confused little girl another “Alice in wonderland”

She got herself in a hole and now she’ll be swimming in her tear

She is wrong on so many levels but she is not one to fear

To appease Oromos, Habeshas desperately need her

They say she is a young charismatic leader

Playing voodoo with this Barbie doll

Propped her up to put Oromo under their control

Dreaming to squeeze the juice out of her till she is no more vogue

Now they say she is a queen to treat her later as a frog

A judge without a good judgment

Letting herself to be used by ugly politicians as ornament

Taking a stand is good, taking the right stand even better

She should join Oromo camp sooner than later

Thousands of Oromo prisoners will receive her with open arms

When a lost child comes back home, there wont be any qualms

Welcome back to the dungeon, Ms. Midhaqssa

Just so you know, the prison speaks Oromiffa!  





Person of the year 2008

2 01 2009

bekele-geleta

Ethiopolitics’ editors chose Bekele Geleta as the person of the year for 2008 and they said this regarding their choice:

There are several reasons why we chose Bekele Geleta as EthioPolitics’s person of the year for 2008. His life story reads like a fantastic novel; marked by crushing setbacks, seeminglly insurmountable challenges, and the inevitable triumph of the human spirit.

In 2008, he was named secretary general of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. Lessons he garnered from his experiences, many believe, make him perfectly suited for his new job. A co-worker of Bekele put it this way - “Bekele is now my boss in Geneva, and I am so proud to have a leader of his caliber. I have written a lot about the leadership vacuum we have in the humanitarian world. I know that Bekele Geleta will give not only the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement outstanding leadership, but hopefully the whole world.”

On the other hand, Jimma Times chose honorable MP Bulcha Demeksa as their person of the year for 2008. Orom@ntic recognises both gentelmen for their achievment and wishes them both many more successful years to come!

bulcha-person-of-the-year-2008





Happy Oromo Year!

31 12 2008

happy-oromo-year

 

More info about Oromo Calendar





Arrested Development

29 12 2008

arrested-development

 

If anyone challenges them, they throw them to jail

Even if they are on the right side of the law, they don’t get any bail

Innocent professionals and businessmen

Farmers, students and nursing women

No other fault other than being Oromo

Classified as “terrorists” in Meles Zenawi’s memo

While ten percent of the population is starving

They dare to tell us the economy is growing

While the whole world faces financial meltdown

“Ethiopia is doing great” says Meles the clown

This is just unfathomable

Sheer arrogance denying the undeniable!





Strawberry flavored Famine

24 12 2008

strawberries

 

How in the world did this happen

Some live lavishly, other’s misery deepen

Ethiopia exporting strawberries to Europe

While its own starving people lose hope

They got fertile land to till

But they’re starving still

How in the world did this happen

How are those twenty million starving people coping?

Like some queen said once, “Let them eat cake”

Ethiopian dictators don’t feel their ache

Screwing them with coffee flavored condom

Depriving them of their FREEDOM

In their Palaces enjoying strawberry shortcake

They’re the ultimate albatross around their peoples’ neck!

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Ralph Lauren and Hungry Ethiopians

Endless Famine





Orom@ntic’s Top 10 for ‘08

14 12 2008

oromo-top_10

 

Oromantic’s Top 10 music picks for the year 2007 looked like this. There were some questions that came up regarding the absence of Kamar and Epidemic from the Top 10 list. Every release from these two music stars was a hit and if we were to put them in the list they would have blanketed the whole list just between the two of them. I thought that wouldn’t be fair for the other artists because these two are in a whole another league musically just like Ali Biraa! This year, however, Kamar hasn’t released any new material but his popularity is growing with the same rate the controversy surrounding him. On the other hand EpidemictheVirus has been putting out some material but his much anticipated album won’t be released until next summer.

 

For now, let’s count down the Top 10 Oromo artists of the year 2008.

 

10. Gannana Haylee: Jadhi Malee

 

 

9. Addisuu Furgaasaa: Onnen Kaate

 

 

8. Girma Gemetu: Dawwaa

 

 

7. Magie & Kadir: No more people cry

 

 

6. Maaruu Kaabato: Gada Oromo

 

 

5. Fayyissaa Furrii (Fayyee): Daballee and a second hit Oromoo intala booranaa

 

 

4. Kamal Ibrahim: Niyaanaa and another hit song Illilli

 

 

3. Jamboo Joote (JJ): Kamisee

 

 

2. Jemal Sule featuring Semmere: Immiman Koo Haqii

 

 

  1. Epidemic & the O’z UP! Crew: Oromia needs to be free and Bareeduu

 

 

 

******************************************

 

 

Close runner ups that didn’t make this year’s cut but who deserve an honorary mention are:

 

Various Artists: for collaborative work on Sirba Gamta

 

Up and coming artists

 

Tajuu Shurbee, Muluu Baqalaa, Rajjuu Mahaamad and Badhaani Burqaa for his two traditional songs.

 

 

Demo music: Oromos in Europe

 

 

Resurfacing Old school musician: Afandi Siyo singing at Melbourne Art Centre

 

Grammy nominated Rock Star: Kenna

 

And last but not least give it up for the Oromo Bati Beat from:

 

Tadele Roba and Jossy.

 

 

 

 

 

What a great year it has been for the arts!





Increased Repression of Oromos

11 12 2008

wpr-logo

Matthew Stein | 10 Dec 2008
World Politics Review

Surrounded by unstable regimes and beset by national conflicts, the current Ethiopian government has long been preoccupied with containing any militant threat. In June, even as the country was gripped by its worst famine in 25 years, the government announced plans to increase its military budget by $50 million — to $400 million — just one week after appealing to the international community for assistance.

As a result, in addition to deploying troops into Somalia for the past two years, and intermittently clashing with Eritrean troops along their northern border, Ethiopia’s military has also fought several internal conflicts in the Ogaden and in the less known Oromia regions.

Ethiopia’s ethnic Oromo people have been in conflict with the state since they were forcibly integrated into the Amhara-dominated Ethiopian empire at the end of the 19th century. However, the arrests of at least 100 Oromos since Oct. 29, including the secretary general of the Oromo Federalist Democratic Party (OFDM), without warrant or charge is an indication that the conflict is intensifying.

The 53 Oromos still being detained by the authorities also include three human rights workers, teachers, students and successful businessmen. They have all appeared in court three times since their arrest on allegations of supporting the outlawed militant group, the Oromo Liberation Front, but have yet to be formally charged. As is common practice in Ethiopia, the court keeps extending their illegal incarceration to give the Ethiopian police and intelligence services more time to gather evidence.

At their last appearance, several detainees said they had been taken from their jail cells at Addis Ababa’s Maikelawi detention center in the middle of the night and tortured.

A former Ethiopian journalist and human rights activist who endured Maikelawi for eight months, Garoma Wakessa — now a Canadian resident — still has trouble recounting the horrors he encountered.

“Even in Canada I have no relief,” he says. “I know what’s happening to those people and it’s not human.”

Garoma explains that because of Maikelawi’s special status as an interrogation center rather than a formal prison, the use of torture to extract information is widespread. Guards use electrical cables or sticks during investigations, and interrogations are conducted in rooms with varying electricity.

“In the absolute dark room there is a possibility they will kill you because you are dangerous according to them,” says Garoma.

Similar reports of abuse, often following arbitrary arrests or other forms of state suppression, have been well documented by local and international human rights groups, but fail to garner international attention in a corner of the world ravaged with bloodshed.

Instead, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has enjoyed considerable support from the Bush administration in order to counter the threat of Islamic extremism in the region. In October 2007, however, in the wake of the 2005 general elections whose bloody aftermath claimed 200 lives and amidst mounting abuses in the Ogaden region, the U.S. Congress passed the “Ethiopia Democracy and Accountability Act,” which would withhold U.S. aid from Ethiopia unless it implements human rights reforms. The act must still be passed in the Senate and signed into law by the president.

Nevertheless, since the mass detainment of Oromos in October, the State Department has been largely mute on the subject. There have been no stern warnings, with one State Department official simply maintaining that the U.S. is supportive of reconciliation between the OLF rebels (a onetime political party) and the government.

Negotiations between 125 elders of the Oromo community and the government have been initiated in recent weeks, purportedly as a means of finding a peaceful solution.

But many Oromos argue that by continuing to arrest Oromo political leaders and scholars, the government is demonstrating it is not interested in reconciliation.

“This is a gimmick, an overture to deceive Oromo public opinion, world opinion, and portray itself as if the regime is changing,” Beyan Asoba, an OLF spokesman, said from the United States.





2nd issue of Ogina is out!

9 12 2008

hiphop_ogina

 

The idea for Ogina zine was incepted few months back by few members of the Arts and Culture Committee of the International Oromo Youth Association. Now Ogina has become a quarterly issue that a lot of Oromo youth eagerly await for.  I, for one, looks for the next issue right after I finished checking out the current one.

The current issue of Ogina focuses on Oromo hip hop and even brings us interviews of Epidemic and Boonaa who are the trailblazers of Oromo hip hop. There are also other wonderful pieces of art included in this issue. If you want to see for yourself, you could visit Ogina by clicking here.

If you have any art work of your own that you want to contribute, you could directly contact the editors also.





Oh really?! You don’t say!

7 12 2008

abbaa-biyyaa

 

The recent statement of Ababiya Aba Jobir regarding the age old Oromo questions being answered adequately by the Meles administration and other ridiculous things he said in his interview with Reporter brought a sense of bewilderment to me and many Oromos I talked to. I don’t know which questions he is exactly referring to but the ones that matter the most to us still haven’t been addressed yet as far as the Oromo mass is concerned. May be what Obbo Ababiya asked the TPLF officials is to be allowed to use their restroom and they might have let him to relieve himself.

It would be nice if he could tell us what exactly has changed for the Oromo. What international human rights agencies are reporting is continual violations of human rights of Oromos and other Ethiopian people. Is Obbo Ababiya oblivious to the fact that Oromos are victims of constant harassment, intimidation, arbitrary arrest, inhumane torture and extrajudicial killings? It is flabbergasting to hear him say that when the news of hundreds of innocent Oromo people being rounded up and being thrown to jail is still fresh in our minds.

I want to give him the benefit of the doubt though in light of the fact that he and other former OLF officials are supposedly negotiating right now with TPLF government as some news sources disclosed. And maybe this is his way of being diplomatic. We don’t know yet what agreement they have reached, if there are any, in their negotiation with TPLF . Without full official disclosure, it is hard for us to believe his rather altruistic statement. We earnestly hope they won’t sell us short for the second time.

Our demand is clear and we don’t settle for anything short of Liberty and Justice for all. If TPLF is indeed willing to give ear to our request and cooperate to solve the many problems of the region one by one, we welcome them but having witnessed their insidious ways we can’t help it but be skeptical about the whole deal.





Oromia: the Cradle of Humankind

7 12 2008

Modern humans may have evolved more than 80,000 years earlier than previously thought, according to a new study of sophisticated stone tools found in Ethiopia.

The tools were uncovered in the 1970s at the archaeological site of Gademotta, in the Ethiopian Rift Valley. But it was not until this year that new dating techniques revealed the tools to be far older than the oldest known Homo sapien bones, which are around 195,000 years old.

Using argon-argon dating—a technique that compares different isotopes of the element argon—researchers determined that the volcanic ash layers entombing the tools at Gademotta date back at least 276,000 years.

Many of the tools found are small blades, made using a technique that is thought to require complex cognitive abilities and nimble fingers, according to study co-author and Berkeley Geochronology Center director Paul Renne.

Some archaeologists believe that these tools and similar ones found elsewhere are associated with the emergence of the modern human species, Homo sapiens.

“It seems that we were technologically more advanced at an earlier time that we had previously thought,” said study co-author Leah Morgan, from the University of California, Berkeley.

The findings are published in the December issue of the journal Geology.