Wednesday, July 29, 2015

President Obama to Africa:Nobody shoud be president for life.

Barak Obama -- addressing the African Union (AU) today: “If a leader says he is the only one who can hold the country together, then that leader has failed to build their nation…Nobody should be president for life. A country is better off with new blood and new ideas.”
“I don't understand why people want to stay in power for so long especially when they have a lot of money...”
"When a leader tries to change the rules in the middle of the game just to stay in office it risks instability and strife. As we've seen in Burundi...”
"I'm still a pretty young man, but I know that somebody with new energy and new insights will be good for my country. It would be good for yours too in some cases."
“I have to be honest with you—I just don’t understand this. I am in my second term. Under our constitution, I cannot run again. There’s still so much I want to get done to keep America moving forward. But the law is the law and no one is above it, not even presidents.”
“…frankly, I’m looking forward to life after being President. It will mean more time with my family, new ways to serve, and more visits to Africa.” 

http://www.politico.com/story/2015/07/barack-obama-africa-trip-democracy-ethiopia-120711.html?cmpid=sf

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

ፕ/ት ኦባማ «ኤርትራ ያለ ተቃዋሚ ድርጅትን በአሸባሪነት ለመፈረጅ» የሚያስችል በቂ መረጃ የለንም አሉ፤

July 27,2015
ኢሳት ዜና ፦ የአሜሪካው ፕ/ት ባራክ ኦባማ ይህን የተናገሩት ” በአሜሪካና በኤርትራ የሚገኙ የተቃዋሚ ድርጅቶች ኢትዮጵያ ሽብርተኝነትን ለመወጋት የምታደርገውን ጥረት እያደናቀፉ በመሆኑ የእርስዎ መንግስት የኢትዮጵያን መንግስት ለመርዳት ምን ያክል ዝግጁ ነው ተብሎ ከኢቢሲ ጋዜጠኛ ጥያቄ መቅረቡን ተከትሎ ነው። ጋዜጠኛው የድርጅቱን ስም በግልጽ ከመግለጽ ቢቆጠብም፣ ፕ/ት ኦባማ የሰጡት መልስ ፣ የኢህአዴግ ባለስልጣናት ከዚህ ቀደም ለአሜሪካ ስቴት ዲፓርትመንት ምክትል ሃላፊ ዌዲ ሸርማን አርበኞች ግንቦት7ትን በአሸባሪነት እንዲፈረጅ ያቀረቡትን ጥያቄ፣ ለፕ/ት ኦባማም ማቅረባቸውን የሚያመለክት ነው። ፕ/ት ኦባማ በመልሳቸው «ፖሊሲያችን መንግስትን በሃይል ከስልጣን ማውረድን አይደግፍም፣ ይህ ፖሊሲያችን በዲሞክራሲያዊ ሁኔታ የተመረጠውን የኢትዮጵያን መንግስትንም ያካትታል» ካሉ በኋላ፣ «በኢትዮጵያ መንግስት በኩል ከፍተኛ ችግር እየፈጠሩብኝ ነው በማለት የሚፈርጃቸው ድርጅቶች እንዳሉ እናውቃለን፣ ይሁን እንጅ በመንግስት ላይ ተቃውሞ ቢያሰሙም የሽብር ዝንባሌ እንደሌላቸው የእኛ የመረጃና የደህንነት መረጃዎች ያሳዩናአል» በማለት በኢህአዴግ መንግስት በኩል የቀረበውን ጥያቄ ሳይቀበሉት መቅረታቸውን ተናግረዋል። «ይህንን በመገምገም በኩል ግልጽ የሆነ መስፈርት አለን ያሉት ኦባማ፣ ለወደፊቱ እነዚህ ድርጅቶች የሽብር ጥቃት ይፈጽማሉ አይፈጽሙም የሚለውን ለወደፊቱ የምናየው ይሆናል ብለዋል።
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«አንድ ድርጅት የፖለቲካ ተቃውሞውን ቢገልጽ ፣ ከአስተሳሰቡ ጋር ባንስማማም እንኳ ከለላ እንሰጠዋለን፣ ይሄ በአሜሪካ በሌላም ቦታ የሚሰራበት እውነታ ነው፤ ይህን ማድረግ ለዲሞክራሲ እድገት አስፈላጊ ነገር ነው» ያሉት ኦባማ ፣ ድርጅቶቹ ወደ ሃይል ሲያዘነብሉና በህገመንግስት የተቋቋመን መንግስት ለመገልበጥ ሲሞክሩ፣ ድርጊቱ ያሳስበናል።» በማለት መልሰዋል። የውጭ አገር ጋዜጠኞች ፣ በእስር ላይ ስለሚገኙ የነጻው ፕሬስ ጋዜጠኞች እንዲሁም ስለኢትዮጵያ የሰብአዊ መብት አያያዝ ጉዳይ ለፕ/ት ኦባማና ለአቶ ሃይለማርያም ደሳለኝ ጥያቄዎችን አቅርበዋል። ፕ/ት ኦባማ በኢትዮጵያ የሰብአዊ መብት ጥበቃ እና በዲሞክራሲ ዙሪያ ከአቶ ሃይለማርያም ጋር ሰፊ ውይይት ማድረጋቸውን፣ አሜሪካ በቅርብ ሁና እገዛ ለመስጠት መዘጋጀቷን ገልጸዋል። የኢህአዴግ መንግስት ከፕ/ቱ ጉብኝት በዋናነት የሚጠብቀው ለስልጣኑ ስጋት የሚፈጥሩ ድርጅቶች በሽብረተኝነት እንዲፈረጁለት ቢሆንም፣ ይህንን ሳያገኝ ቀርቷል። ይሁን እንጅ ባራክ ኦባማ የኢህአዴግን መንግስት በዲሞክራሲያዊ ምርጫ የተመረጠ ነው ማለታቸው በርካታ የሰብአዊ መብት ተሟጋች ድርጅቶችን ሳያስቆጣ አይቀርም። ኦባማ በአንድ በኩል በኢትዮጵያ እየጠበበ ስለመጣው የፖለቲካ ምህዳር ሲናገሩ፣ በሌላ በኩል ደግሞ ምርጫውን ዲሞክራሲያዊ የሚል ካባ ማልበሳቸው፣ የአሜሪካ የውጭ ፖሊሲን ተቃርኖ የሚያሳይ ነው።
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በሌላ በኩል ኢ/ር ይልቃል ለፕሬዝደንት ኦባማ በተዘጋጀው የእራት ግብዣ ላይ እንደማይገኙ አስታውቀዋል። የሰማያዊ ፓርቲ ሊቀመንበር ኢ/ር ይልቃል ጌትነት መንግስት ሀምሌ 20/2007 ዓ.ም ምሽት 1፡00 ሰዓት ላይ ቤተ መንግስት ውስጥ ለአሜሪካው ፕሬዝደንት ባራክ ኦባማ የሚያደረገውን የእራት ግብዣ ያልተቀበሉት፣ «አሸባሪ አድርጎ የሚቆጥረን ኢህአዴግ፣ ፕሬዝደንት ባራክ ኦባማ ሲመጡ በዴሞክራሲያዊ መንገድ የተመረጠ ለማስመሰልና ዕውቅና ለማግኘት ያደረገው በመሆኑ አልገኝም» ብለዋል፡፡ ኢ/ር ይልቃል አክለውም «የኢትዮጵያ ህዝብ ጭቆና እና ስቃይ ውስጥ ባለበት በአሁኑ ወቅት ኢህአዴግ የጠራው የቅንጦት ግብዣ ላይ መገኘት የህዝቡን ሰቆቃ እንደመርሳት እቆጥረዋለሁ» ብለዋል፡፡ በሌላ በኩል የአሜሪካው ፕሬዝደንት ባራክ ኦባማ መግለጫ በሚሰጡበት ወቅት ኢህአዴግ በዴሞክራሲያዊ መንገድ የተመረጠ ነው ማለታቸው ቅር እንዳሰኛቸውም ሊቀመንበሩ ለነገረ ኢትዮጵያ ገልጸዋል፡፡ «ኢህአዴግን በዴሞክራሲያዊ መንገድ የተመረጠ ነው ማለት የሰላማዊ ታጋዮችን ስቃይ የሚክድና ለአምባገነኖች ይሁንታ የሚሰጥ ነው» ሲሉ የፕሬዝደንት ኦባማን ንግግር ነቅፈውታል፡፡ ፕሬዝደንት ኦባማ የጠበንጃ ትግልን አለመደገፍን ለመግለፅ የአሜሪካ ስቴት ዲፓርትመንትን ጨምሮ ሌሎች የአሜሪካ ተቋማት ኢ-ዴሞክራሲያዊ መሆኑን አረጋግጠውት፣ መቶ ፐርሰንት ምርጫ አሸንፌያለሁ የሚልን ፓርቲ በዴሞክራሲያዊ ምርጫ እንደተመረጠ መግለፃቸው እንዳሳዘናቸው ኢ/ር ይልቃል ገልጸዋል፡፡

Monday, July 27, 2015

Obama begins Ethiopia, African Union visit

Addis Ababa (AFP) - US President Barack Obama landed in Ethiopia on Sunday, beginning a two-day stay and becoming the first American leader to visit Africa's second most populous nation.
Air Force One touched down at Addis Ababa's international airport after a short flight north from the Kenyan capital Nairobi, and the president was greeted on the tarmac by Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn.
The visit will include talks with the Ethiopian government, a key strategic ally but criticised for its record on democracy and human rights. Obama will also become the first US president to address the African Union, the 54-member continental bloc, at its gleaming, Chinese-built headquarters.
He will also hold talks with regional leaders on the civil war in South Sudan.
AU Commission chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma hailed what she said will be an "historic visit" and a "concrete step to broaden and deepen the relationship between the AU and the US."
While Kenya launched one of the biggest security operations ever seen in the capital Nairobi to host Obama from Friday evening to Sunday, the habitual reach of Ethiopia's powerful security forces meant there was little obvious extra fanfare ahead of his arrival.
Ethiopia, like Kenya, has been on the frontline of the fight against the Somali-led, Al-Qaeda affiliated Shebab. Both nations have troops in Somalia as part of an AU and US-backed force, and are key security partners to Washington.
But the visit also comes two months after elections that saw the prime minister's ruling coalition take every one of the 546 seats in parliament.
The opposition, which lost its only seat, alleged the government had used authoritarian tactics to guarantee victory.
The US State Department notes Ethiopia's "restrictions on freedom of expression," as well as "politically motivated trials" and the "harassment and intimidation of opposition members and journalists."
Ahead of the visit, the White House stressed it frequently addresses issues of democracy and political rights with countries in the region. Having spoken frankly in Kenya on human rights and corruption, Obama can also be expected to address Ethiopia's -- and Africa's -- democracy deficit.

- South Sudan peace push -

Through the tinted windows of his bomb-proof presidential limousine, nicknamed "The Beast," Obama will see Addis Ababa's construction boom of tower blocks, as well as sub-Saharan Africa's first modern tramway.
Ethiopia has come far from the global headlines generated by the 1984 famine, experiencing near-double-digit economic growth and huge infrastructure investment -- making the country one of Africa's top-performing economies and a magnet for foreign investment.
The Horn of Africa nation also remains a favourite of international donors -- despite concerns over human rights -- as a bastion of stability in an otherwise troubled region.
On Monday Obama will try to build African support for tough action against South Sudan's warring leaders if they reject an August peace ultimatum.
Obama will meet with leaders from Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda as well as Sudanese Foreign Minister Ibrahim Ghandour in Addis Ababa to try and build a collective front to end the 19-month-old civil war in the world's youngest nation.
Signalling a deeper commitment to ending violence that has killed tens of thousands of people and forced more than two million from their homes, Obama is expected to make the case for tougher sanctions and a possible arms embargo.
South Sudan's rivals -- President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar, who will not be at the meeting -- effectively face an ultimatum, a "final best offer," according to one senior administration official.
"The parties have shown themselves to be utterly indifferent to their country and their people, and that is a hard thing to rectify," the official said.
Rights groups, however, are not happy about Obama visiting Ethiopia, saying the trip could lend credibility to a government they accuse of suppressing democratic rights. They say that includes the jailing of journalists and critics, often using anti-terrorism legislation said to stifle peaceful dissent.

"We don't want this visit to be used to sanitise an administration who has been known to violate human rights," said Amnesty International's Abdullahi Halakhe, adding he feared Ethiopia would "spin" the visit to its benefit.

U.S. President B. OBAMA arrived in Addis Ababa Bole International Air Port