The following is an appeal letter from Oromo-Canadian community organizations to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada …
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December 24, 2015
The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A2
Tel: 613-995-0253
Fax: 613-941-6900
Email: justin.trudeau@parl.gc.ca
Email: pm@pm.gc.ca
Dear Right Honourable Justin Trudeau,
First of all, we wish you and your family a very happy holiday season.
We, Oromo-Canadians, are unable to meet these holidays with joy because a bloody violence is engulfing our families in our homeland of Oromia, Ethiopia. We are writing to you as Oromo-Canadian community associations and organizations from across Canada. We appeal to you to help stop the genocide against our people. A Stalinist type of unparalleled totalitarian repression is unfolding in Ethiopia in the 21st Century. Students from elementary schools to universities are joined by ordinary citizens in peacefully protesting state repression and asking for the restoration of their constitutional rights. Sadly, government response has been brutality and further atrocity.
In blatant disregard for human rights and human lives, the Ethiopia’s Prime Minster, Haile Mariam Desalegn, has come out on state television and vowed to mercilessly crush the peaceful protestors. He has named them “terrorists” and deployed the draconian counter-terrorism legislation to legitimize the use of unrestrained force, arbitrary killings, and overt genocide against our people. People’s constitutional questions are met with unconstitutional force. Oromia regional administration and Oromia regional police forces are suspended and the ugliest face of a brutal military force is mercilessly wreaking havoc in our homeland. Our people are under siege.
Now official and legal, the deadly military force, already unleashed in the Oromia region, has stepped up its savage beating, maiming, killing, and jailing of peaceful protestors. Armed forces are firing live ammunition against unarmed people. State terrorism is out in its naked form. Children as young as 8 and older people of 85 are mercilessly killed in the peaceful protests. Soldiers have broken into university dormitories, savagely raping young women and mercilessly killing students. Thousands of protestors are violently herded in prisons. Prisoners are raped and tortured. Mobility is severely restricted. In many localities, people cannot go out even to bury their dead.
Those who have not participated in the protests are not spared. The military has unleashed its terroristic punishment on the ordinary people. Soldiers are violently breaking into homes and savagely beating children, women, men, youth and the elderly alike. Mothers are gunned down in their own homes along with their children. Respected community elders are pulled out of their homes and dragged in the streets to humiliate the people in terroristic punishment.
Today, as we write this letter to you, leaders of opposition political parties who have been calling for peace and reconciliation, are publicly humiliated, kidnapped and driven away in unmarked cars to unknown locations. Citizens who ran for parliament in the recent election are being rounded up and thrown in jail. Prisons are overflowing and even make shift jails are not enough to contain the current massive imprisonment. Hundreds of prisoners are taken out of the Oromia region and driven to other regional states and far away military camps where no one could visit them. Kidnapping and disappearing are on the rise as we write. Even in the safety of our home in Canada, we cannot live in peace and enjoy these holidays. As you celebrate Christmas and New Year, we hope you remember our suffering people and keep them in your thoughts and prayers.
Dear Right Honourable Justin Trudeau,
Human rights organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have been reporting the atrocities. Although the Ethiopian government has tried to stifle free media, it cannot wreak havoc behind closed doors in this age of technology where ordinary people are reporting directly from their cellphones. Both the impressive beauty of peaceful protests and the graphic details of the bloody response are filling social media as government soldiers are merciless killing, beating and maiming in the unfolding carnage.
The atrocities are coming out and we are documenting the casualties. In the last six weeks alone, the number of peaceful protestors killed has climbed to over a 100 and the number of those imprisoned to over 37, 000. These figures do not include the atrocities that go unreported. We can only imagine the countless number of people who are savagely beaten, raped and maimed in their own homes, within the walls they erected for protection.
To disrupt such detailed documentation, the military has devised a new strategy of destroying the identity cards of the victims. It is now killing and dumping the bodies in hard-to-reach forests. Unidentifiable bodies are being discovered in the forests, even now as we write. Such outrageous atrocities and disrespect for human lives are unacceptable to any peace-loving human being. To add insult to injury, this carnage is unfolding while a staggering 15 million people are facing starvation, most of them in the Oromia region. Why does this happen when Oromia is the breadbasket able to feed the entire Horn of Africa region? Of course the Ethiopian government blames climate change. However, as you know very well, drought may be the sign of climate change but starvation is the result of failed policy and failed governance. We are insulted when the international community praises the Ethiopian government as democratic and emboldens its leaders with the awards of good governance. Indeed we are outraged.
Dear Right Honourable Justin Trudeau,
Let us give you a bit of background from our perspective. The current peaceful protest was spontaneously started by elementary and high school students in a small district town of Ginci on November 12, 2015. But it has spread in no time and engulfed the whole region of Oromia. Hitherto stifled, Oromos are deploying their constitutional rights to peacefully protest the implementation of the so-called Addis Ababa Master Plan. However, the Master Plan is only the last straw that is breaking the camel’s back. The people’s suffering and grievance is deep rooted and the chronic problem in Ethiopia is much broader and deeper than the Master Plan. It is the longstanding question of fundamental human rights, identity and justice.
Although Oromos are taking the brunt of the atrocity, other nations and nationalities are also suffering similarly. Ethiopia is a multinational country of close to 100 million people where the vast majority suffers under the totalitarian repression of a single-party dominated by the elite of a minority ethnic group. In its extreme greed and lust for power, this minority elite has created a tight and absolute control over the country’s politics, economy, military, security and media. It has used iron fist over the last 25 years to entrench its brutal dictatorship under the very nose of the international community that has looked the other way at best or tacitly endorsed it at worst. Such outstanding issues of justice are exacerbated by the ugliest face of the current global land rush that found arable land in Ethiopia and a government willing to forcefully evict its own indigenous people from their land. Millions have already been evicted and left in complete dispossession and destitution with nowhere to go. Sometimes their homes were bulldozed with little notice and hardworking indigenous people were reduced to beggars.
With the implementation of the current Master Plan, two million households (which means over twenty-million individuals!) will be displaced, losing their livelihoods. While this is what people are peacefully protesting, the government is tagging them as anti-development terrorists. We assure you that our people love peace and development. They are only protesting a development that aims to destroy their livelihoods and obliterate their very existence, a development that refuses to take their input into account, a development pushed down their throats by a regime that does not care about their lives and livelihoods. This leaves them helpless and desperate.
Our people who are renowned for their strong forbearance and unlimited patience are being pushed to the end of their wits. We hear desperation in their haunting cries: “Where shall we go? We were born here; we grew up here; we knew ourselves here; we bore our children here; where shall we go? Where shall we go?” Tears streaming down our cheeks, we listen to the voices of Oromos breaking down and crying as they report the atrocities. We hear their broken voices asking: “Why has the world forsaken us? Why are powerful governments giving us deaf ears? Why is the UN not outraged? Aren’t Oromo lives human lives too? Who do we appeal to?”
Our hearts are broken by these cries for justice. It has been excruciatingly painful for us to watch the slaughtering of our patient and peace-loving people. It has been hard to listen to the suffering our families are going through in this nightmarish ugly reality of state terrorism. Our patient and law-abiding people are confronted by a totalitarian regime that does not abide by any rule of law, including its own constitution.
The Ethiopian government has muzzled the people, denying them their constitutional right to hold peaceful protests. As John F. Kennedy said, “those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.” The Ethiopian government has made any peaceful expression of dissent impossible. Dangerous clouds are hovering over our people.
Dear Right Honourable Justin Trudeau,
We came to Canada fleeing from such atrocities of violent repression, arbitrary killing, beating, imprisonment and torture in Ethiopia. We have made Canada our home and become law-abiding and tax-paying citizens living in the safety of Canada. However the carnage continues for the loved ones we left behind. Oromos are only 40% of the population but they constitute 90% of political prisoners, even by the admission of the government’s own officials. Thousands continue to flee the bloodbath but many of them cannot make it to asylum or resettlement. Some are hunted down and captured by the Ethiopian government; others are eaten by wild animals. Still others drown in the vastness of oceans and seas in a desperate attempt to reach safety.
We are outraged, to say the least, that the international community is praising the Ethiopian government as democratic and the Ethiopian state as developmental. We are deeply concerned that they are praising Ethiopia only for the superficial economic growth without considering the incredible human cost or paying attention to the equally important issues of human rights and justice profoundly undermining such growth. We are deeply concerned that their encouragement is emboldening the Ethiopian government to step up its atrocities with impunity.
Dear Right Honourable Justin Trudeau,
We are deeply concerned that a Rwanda-type genocide is in the making in Ethiopia and, once again, the international community is looking the other way. We have come to a point where we cannot sit in silence and watch the massacre of innocent people. Oromo lives are human lives and Oromo rights are human rights. Justice is justice no matter what color we are and where we are born. We have come out from across Canada and held rallies in solidarity with our Oromo peaceful protestors demanding the restoration of their constitutional rights. We have appealed to the various levels of our Canadian government to help stop the carnage in Ethiopia. We have no doubt that your good office has the most up-to-date information about what is happening in Ethiopia. We, therefore, respectfully request that you use the influences of your good office to put pressure on the Ethiopian government to immediately and unconditionally:
1) lift the merciless military rule imposed on our people
2) stop the killing, beating, maiming, imprisoning and torturing of innocent people
3) release all protestors and political prisoners
4) bring to justice those responsible for the atrocities
5) restore the constitutional rights of the people to hold peaceful rallies
6) avail itself to the calls for peace and national reconciliation
7) allow people to participate in the affairs affecting their lives and livelihoods
8) restart participatory development that includes people’s development
Sincerely,
Singed below are our communities and organizations from the various provinces of Canada
ALBERTA
1. Ababa Dheressa
Secretary, Oromo Evangelical Church of Calgary
3104-34 Ave. NW
Calgary, AB T2L 2A3, Canada
2. Abdurahman Abdurro Kadir
Chair, United Oromian-Canadian cultural Association of Alberta
1693 42 St NW
Edmonton, AB T6L 2R8, Canada
3. Badri Mohamed Kabira
Chair, Oromo Community Association of Northern Alberta
9636 105A Avenue
Edmonton, AB T5H 0M4, Canada
Tel: 780-428-5062
Tel: 780 399 3450
E-mail: eoc@edmontonoromocommunity.org
4. Boka Terfassa
Chair, The Oromo Evangelical Church of Edmonton
9606-110 Ave
Edmonton, AB T5H 0M4, Canada
5. Haider Shamsi
Chair, Arssii Oromo Self-Help Association of Alberta
6711-26 Ave NE
Calgary, AB T1Y 6M7, Canada
Email: Ka.arsiioromo@gmail.com
6. Jiilcha Hamid
Chair, Oromo Community Association of Alberta
Unit 200B, 223 12 Avenue SW
Calgary, AB T2R 0G9, Canada
Email: contact@calgaryoromocommunity.org
Email: Abazinab@Hotmail.com
7. Mitiku Wakwaya
Chair, Oromo Society Network of Calgary
101-223 – 12 Ave SW
P. O. Box 45
Calgary, AB, Canada
Email: dagaagaa@gmail.com
BRITISH COLOMBIA
8. Gammadaa Ukaash (President)
Dr. Ahmed Galchu (Vice-President and contact person)
Chair, Oromian-Canadian Association of British Colombia
42055 Marpole Ave
Vancouver, BC V6P 6T2, Canada
Tel: 604-837-326
Email: mwalaabuu@hotmail.com or ukgamadaa@gmail.com
9. Ibrahim Jawaro Iresa
Chair, Sikko Mando Self-Help Association
64027-11528 Street 107 Ave NW
Edmonton, AB T5H 0Y7, Canada
10. Nure Sharifa
President, Oromo Community Association of British Colombia
218-55 West Broadway
Vancouver, BC V5Y 1P1, Canada
Email: caayaaoromoobc@gmail.com
MANITOBA
11. Addisu Beyene Kello
President, Oromo Association of Manitoba 57 Barber St.
Winnipeg, MB R2W 3J6, Canada
Tel: 204-942-1521
Email: kaloab8@yahoo.ca
12. Daniel Gemechu Ayana
President, Winnipeg Oromo Youth Association
22 Royal Crescent
Winnipeg, MB R2V 1J7, Canada
13. Yeshi Abeya Olkeba
Chair, United Oromo Church Fellowship of Manitoba 59 Academy Rd.
Winnipeg, MB R3M 0E2, Canada
ONTARIO
14. Abdalla Hassen
Chair, Oromo-Canadian Community Association of Hamilton
946 Mohawk Rd East
Hamilton, ON L8T 2S2, Canada
Tel: 289-700-4236
15. Abdulhamid Mohammed
President, Oromo-Canadian Community Association of Toronto
94 A Kenhar Dr. Unit 3
Toronto, ON M9L 1N2, Canada
Email: roobaa@aol.com
16. Badri Adem
President, Oromo-Canadian Cultural Association
94 A Kenhar Dr. Unit 3
Toronto, ON M9L 1N2, Canada
17. Garoma Wakessa
Director, Human Rights League of the Horn of Africa
Email: hrldirector@mail.org
Tel: 416-705-8723
Fax: 416-767-7223
18. Giifty Mussa
President, Oromo-Canadian Cultural Association of Ottawa 27 Tierney Dr.
Ottawa, ON K2J 4T3, Canada
Email: info@ottawaoromocommunity.org
Email: giiftii@rogers.com
Email: said.abdosh@gmail.com
Tel: (613) 769-3948)
19. Martha Kuwee Kumsa
President, Oromo-Canadian Community Association of Waterloo Region
19 Tami Court
Kitchener, ON N2B 3V2, Canada
Tel: 519-885-832
Email: mkumsa@wlu.ca
20. Pastor Dr. Mezgebu Tucho
President, United Evangelical Oromo Churches in Canada
1110-390 Dixon Rd
Toronto, ON M9R 1T4, Canada
Tel: 647-721-6361
Email: Pmezge7abd@gmail.com
21. Wondimu Senbeto
Chair of Elders’ Council, Oromo Evangelical Church of Ottawa
St Martins Anglican Church of Ottawa
2120 Prince Charles Rd
Ottawa, ON K2A 3L3, Canada
22. Yusuf Ahmed Hergeya
Oromo Relief Association in Ontario
94 A Kenhar Dr. Unit 3
Toronto, ON M9L 1N2, Canada
23. Zelalem Gemeda
Chair, The Oromo Christian church of Toronto
330 Bellamy Rd N
Toronto, ON M1H 1E8, Canada
Email: zeegammada@gmail.com
Email: dbwakessa@yahoo.com
SASKATCHEWAN
24. Finte Adem
Chair, Oromo Community Association of Saskatchewan Inc.
4238 England Road
Regina, SK S4R 4N9, Canada
25. Mohammed Danfa
Chair, Saskatchewan Oromo Self-Help Association Corporation
318 Winnipeg Ave. South Saskatoon, SK S7M 3M4, Canada
Email: saskoromo@gmail.com
CC:
The Honourable Stéphane Dion
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Global Affairs Canada
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
UN Secretary-General
Joachim Rücker
President of the Human Rights Council, Ninth Cycle (2015)
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
President Barack Obama
The White House; U.S. President
Secretary of State John Kerry
U.S. Department of State
Ambassador Samantha Power
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations
Laura Hruby
U.S. State Department
Ethiopia Desk Officer
Martin Schulz
President of the European Parliament
The Right Honouralbe David Cameron
Prime Minister of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
The Right Honourable Philip Hammond
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
The Honourable Malcolm Turnbull
Prime Minister of Australia
The Honourable Julie Bishop
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Chancellor Angela Merkel
Chancellor of Germany
Frank-Walter Steinmeier
The Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs of Germany
Matteo Renzi
Prime Minister of Italy
Erna Solberg
Prime Minister of Norway
Børge Brende
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Stefan Löfven
Prime Minister of Sweden
Margot Wallström
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sweden
Juha Sipilä
Prime Minister of Finland
Timo Soini
Minister of foreign Affairs of Finland
Mark Rutte
Prime Minister of the Netherlands
Bert Koenders
Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands