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All
the way with Medrek driven by the vision of Birtukan
By Robele Ababya | May 11, 2010
I would like to start this
piece by paying tribute to the opposition parties such as Medrek on home
soil for their stellar performance in the debate in which they have
succeeded in driving the brutal TPLF Party to the corner, defenseless on
every issue raised. They have articulated burning issues with courage
against draconian odds. It is fair to conjecture that those who have
followed the debates diligently and objectively have learnt a lot. I did.
The ruling party was a loser in all respects. The one issue regarding
construction industry - buildings and roads – to which the ruling party
sought refuge in the heat of the debate was shredded to pieces. It was
told the roads are already badly in need of repair; that the only railway
from Djibouti to Addis Ababa is in tatters; that lack of own harbor is
costing the country US$ one billion per annum. Gross violation of human
rights; utter failure of Gibe II electric dam project; denial of private
land ownership to the peasants; virtually no attempt for irrigation
farming despite our blessing with plenty of water; poor quality of
training and education; rampant unemployment et al are the shameful
hallmarks of the brutal regime speaking volumes of its dismal performance
as disclosed by the opposition.
The
top leaders who represented Medrek – Engineer Gizachew Shiferaw, Ato
Seye Abraha, Dr. Negaso Gidada, Ato Gebru Asrat, Dr. Hailu Araya and the
young and vibrant Secretary General of UDJP, Ato Andualem Aragé - held
their ground so well proving their worth in Medrek.
I
have some more to say here about Ato Seye to respond to some of my
virulent critiques in respect of my article entitled “A question to ask
– actions to take”. One of my critiques asked “Is Seye worth
defending?” and another one demanded I should give up my name. But I
will never give up my name given to me by my Oromo parents and I am proud
to keep my Gobenite psyche of which OLF supporters accuse me.
Anyway,
my rationale for supporting Ato Seye without seeking favors or reciprocity
is captured in the following paragraph. I hope my critiques, assuming they
are Oromos caring for their ethnic group, will understand my rationale. It
was at the time that he coined the magnetic phrase "እስር
ቤቱ
ኦሮምኛ
ይናገራል"(the
prison speaks Oromiffa) that I was convinced that Ato Seye Abraha was
really a changed man as an eye-witness to the plight of the Oromo people
during his ordeal of six years in the infamous Kaliti prison. “ብርቱካን
የኛም
ናት
እኮ!”(Birtukan
is ours too!) is another public utterance which gained him the rising
support of the Ethiopian people to whom Birtukan is an apple of their eyes
forever. Therefore, I would be remiss in my duty as a human rights
activist if I withhold deserved compliments to leaders of the caliber of
Dr. Negasso Gidada and Ato Seye Abraha.
Medrek
is a credible political organization representing a very wide spectrum of
ethnic groups struggling peacefully and lawfully for a bright future under
the umbrella of Ethiopian unity in a democratic and compassionate society.
It is a beacon of hope of the present and future generation of young
citizens desirous of bloodless transfer of power to replace the long
culture of grabbing power by the barrel of the gun as the bitter and
shameful events which saw the brinkmanship of the Derg and TPLF regimes.
The
military junta dethroned the Emperor in a bloodless coup with a promise to
hand over power to civilian rule. However, the provisional military
government held a tight grip on power and transformed itself into a
civilian government in form but in content dominated by members of the
Dergue wielding real power. The tragedy that began with the slaughter of
over 60 top officials of the Imperial regime in cold-blood culminated in
the annihilation of a generation of young educated Ethiopians. The coward
leader finally fled to Zimbabwe for his life leaving the door wide open to
the TPLF regime to enter Addis Ababa with the blessing and support of the
US government.
The
TPLF regime came to power in 1991 with outside help coupled with the
indifference of the Ethiopian people disgusted by the atrocities of the
Dergue regime. Some of us wondered why two pro-communist entities were
fighting in the name of class struggle, deploying children of peasants for
battle and feeding them to the raging flames ignited by bullets coming out
of the guns of the combatants on both sides. There is no need to elaborate
the well-documented list of betrayal to national interests, unprecedented
heinous crimes, invasion of a neighborly country, and political blunder
inciting unrest by exploiting ethnic origin and religious differences –
a time-bomb waiting to explode if unchecked speedily.
It
is known that there are genuine Ethiopians who argue that the Meles regime
can only be evicted from power or forced to the negotiating table through
an all-inclusive struggle including weapons of war. This is their right as
it is also of others to suggest one more time to give this coming election
a chance and catch the habitual robber of votes in the act and go for an
all-inclusive highly coordinated struggle.
I
have been at almost all trouble spots of our country, including in Tigray
during the 1984 famine and Eritrea when our army was locked in battle with
Shaebia. A non-combatant, I have seen bullets falling in the battle field.
The result of all these is an impoverished Ethiopia, which we see today.
Another civil war to which Meles is inviting us by calling us enemies
could therefore be even more ruinous unless it is forced on us by the
brutal regime stealing votes once again. The illegitimate TPLF regime
emerged badly bruised from the crushing defeat that it suffered in
election 2005. It is in power because of the active support of Bush and
Blair governments. There is no reason to expect the Obama Administration
would do otherwise if the Meles regime steals the election once again.
President Obama in his speech from Accra, Ghana has clearly told the
African people that it is up to us to reign in our dictators and foster
democracy. That is as it should be.
The
President, due to overriding national interests, appears to follow the
policy of his predecessor of alliance with the Meles regime. Only the
emergence of united and strong political forces will change the status quo
policy of the US government towards Ethiopia. Medrek is one of the
foremost exemplary political enjoying entities.
As
to tyrant Meles he will eventually end up in prison for his heinous crimes
including genocide. The time will come soon when his financiers and
backers no longer need his services. This will depend on the strength of
opposition parties at home and relentless support of all Ethiopians or
citizens of Ethiopian origin in the Diaspora.
I
contend that Medrek should take part in the coming election. That would be
in the best interest of Ethiopia including ensuring the continuity and
bolstering the momentum for the release of Birtukan Mideksa and all
political prisoners. So, what Medrek needs is cheer leaders at this
crucial time it has decided to stay in the contest and fight the ruthless
regime at the polls.
The
cardinal issue is that the cycle of violence in the contest for political
power must end some day. When and how is it going to be?
The
answer is that the time is now. The strategy is by supporting Medrek all
the way embracing the vision of Birtukan Mideksa. Her dream and that of
her generation and beyond is bloodless change. Let us make that happen by
ourselves.
Release
Birtukan and all political Prisoners in Ethiopia!
LONG
LIVE ETHIOPIA!!!
robele_ababya@yahoo.com
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