Friday, June 10, 2011

Ethiopia May Charge More Oromo Rebels, After Fighters Sentenced Over Plot - Bloomberg

Ethiopia May Charge More Oromo Rebels, After Fighters Sentenced Over Plot

Ethiopia is “highly likely” to charge another 121 Oromo rebels with terrorist offences after 14 people were sentenced yesterday over their involvement in a plot to bomb an African Union summit, a government spokesman said.

The Supreme Court yesterday jailed four of the accused for life, while six received 25-year prison terms, one got 14 years and three others were incarcerated for nine years, State Minister of Communications Shimeles Kemal said in a phone interview from Addis Ababa, the capital. All 14 were convicted of involvement in a plot to set off bombs at the AU’s headquarters in the city during a summit in January.

“All of the defendants were members of the Oromo Liberation Front,” Shimeles said yesterday. “Some of them were assigned to go to Eritrea for the purpose of carrying out the operation to terrorize the summit as well as demolishing hotels and entertainment sites.”

Oromos are the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia. The OLF has waged a 38-year campaign for autonomy in Oromia, the biggest of Ethiopia’s nine federal states. Cases are still being put together against 121 OLF fighters arrested in March, some of whom were trained by the Eritrean government, Shimeles said.

“It’s highly likely they may be charged in accordance with the anti-terrorism proclamation,” he said.

Regional Destabilization

In April, Ethiopia’s Foreign Ministry said it will back Eritrean rebels trying to overthrow the government of Eritrean President Isaias Afewerki unless that country changes its policies of regional destabilization. Eritrea’s ambassador to the AU, Girma Asmerom, denied the charge and said the stance was “pure aggression and a declaration of war.”

The two countries fought a 1998-2000 border war in which an estimated 70,000 people were killed, according to International Crisis Group, the Brussels-based advocacy organization.

The OLF denied its forces had anything to do with a plot to attack the AU summit and said its fighters are trained in Oromia, not in Eritrea.

“The OLF did not and will not plan to bomb the AU headquarters,” Beyan H. Asoba, spokesman for the rebel group, said in an e-mailed response to questions yesterday. “As a matter of policy, the OLF does not target civilian populations and property in its military operations.”

In March, Oromo opposition parties said that 69 of their activists or sympathizers had been arrested by the government that month.

“Generally the government’s strategy is the marginalization of the opposition using the anti-terrorism law. They use it against the opposition whether they are legal like us or operating outside the legal framework,” Merera Gudina, chairman of the Oromo People’s Congress, said in a phone interview from Addis Ababa yesterday. “For sure I know the members have nothing to do with Eritrea or illegal activities.”

The mobile phone of Ambassador Girma was switched off when Bloomberg called seeking comment.

To contact the reporter on this story: William Davison in Addis Ababa via Nairobi atpmrichardson@bloomberg.net.

Ethiopia Buying 200 Tanks From Ukraine for $100 Million


Ethiopia Buying 200 Tanks From Ukraine for $100 Million
Ethiopia has signed a $100 million deal with Ukraine to buy more than 200 tanks. UKRINFORM news agency reports that Ukrspecexport SC signed the deal with the Ethiopian Defense Ministry to supply 200 T-72 tanks.
The upgraded version of T-72, the T-20 tanks are equipped with modern technology. The company claims that the tanks are equipped with upgraded guided weapons, reactive armor system for improved battlefield survival, and modernized propulsion system. This is the eighth largest contract signed by Ukrainian’s state-controlled arms exporter in 15 years since its establishment following the collapse of the Soviet Union. The tanks were originally manufactured in the Soviet Union in the 1970s before its collapse. These tanks were known as Soviet Union's premier weapons systems and had high demand in the Asian, African, and Middle Eastern nations.
The arms exporter expects that one of its biggest deals will have a great social and economic impact in Ukraine and that the contract would be a harbinger of attracting new orders for the country’s defense establishment. It is likely to boost capacity of Ukrainian businesses, increase revenues, and generate jobs. Further, under the deal, Ukrspecexport will be responsible for the repairs and upgrades of the tanks supplied to Ethiopia, which will further boost Ukrainian businesses.
This is the second such military deals Ethiopia has signed in the recent past. Earlier, it signed a contract with Israel for the supply of unmanned aerial vehicles. The deal also includes Israeli manufacturer BlueBird’s help in setting up maintenance facilities for UAVs.
Due to its fragile borders and active neighbors like Eritrea, Sudan, Kenya, the need for securing borders becomes intense. Ethiopia often accuses Eritrea of sponsoring violence in the country. Skirmishes and small violence incidents are a common occurrence on the Ethiopia-Eritrean border. Ethiopia and Eritrea were engaged in a border war between 1998 and 2000, which claimed more than 70,000 lives. Since then, Ethiopia has been engaged in securing its borders.
Government critics find fault with the administration’s military deals, saying that expenditure on procuring weapons is not rational for a country dependent on foreign aid and fighting poverty.
Ukraine and Military Supplies
After the dismemberment of the Soviet Union, important military production infrastructure was left in Ukraine. The country continues to supply tanks, aircraft, and other important Soviet military hardware at low cost to other countries. Under deepening economic crisis, the country looks forward to military hardware sales to revive its condition and create employment.
Ukraine-Russia Relations
The relations between Ukraine and Russia seem to be getting strained as a result of Ukraine's further integration into the EU. Ukraine-Russia relations were at the lowest ebb during the earlier Yushchenko regime. Ukraine even went to support Georgia against Russia over South Ossetia. Even Russia stopped supplying gas to Ukraine. However, with the return of Viktor Yanukovych to power, the relations improved. But the people of Ukraine are divided over their ties with Moscow. The industrially developed West Ukraine looks for integration with EU while the agricultural east favors stronger bonds with Russia. Political leaders are also divided on the subject and there is no consensus in the country over its foreign relations. Integration with EU is looked at by political leaders as a more important option to save the country from an impending economic disaster.