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Ethiopia Rebels Back US Pressure On Government

Issue 299
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Somaliland Ministers Meet Former Puntland Security Minister In Sool

Somaliland Livestock Exporters Ship Thousands Of Animals From ‘Unofficial’ Sea Ports

Aid Agency In Somaliland Freezes Work

Somaliland Denies Having Talks With Puntland Over Disputed Sool Region

Somaliland Republic Postpones Elections

Somaliland's Political Parties Sign An Accord To Reschedule Elections To 2008

Political Crisis In Somaliland Develop Into Casualties

The Two Gentlemen--and that Third One

Splits Developing In Somali Insurgency

From Cocaine To Plutonium: Mafia Clan Accused Of Trafficking Nuclear Waste To Somalia

Two Ethiopian soldiers killed in suicide attack near Somali PM

Somaliland MP seeks GCC ties

Ethiopia's 'secret war' forces thousands to flee

Regional Affairs

Puntland Ex-Minister Surrenders To Somaliland

Somali Army General, Others Assassinated In Somali Capital, Says U.N. Agency

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Ex-commander calls Iraq effort 'a nightmare'

Blunt Talk About Iraq at Army School

Abdirahman dominates USA Men’s 10 Mile Championship

Gates backs Army’s plans to speed up growth, encourages improved guerrilla tactics training

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

The veteran suffers

Tracing angels' footsteps in ancient Ethiopia

The UN Security Council an underrepresented lot that needs reforms

Saudis Host Conference To Support Pro-US Regime In Somalia, As Opposition Groups Meet In Asmara

1559 shipwreck found off Pensacola, Fla.

Eritrea: Border Row Threatens Terrorism War

Prime Minister Meles says U.S. bill is “not fair”

Maternal Mortality Shames Superpower U.S

Food for thought

Opinions

Maternal Mortality Shames Superpower U.S

Creating The Necessary Conditions For Somaliweyn

Democracy Requires Delegation And Decentralized Work

Xaabsade Is Not Welcome In Somaliland

Somalia: Where Is The Nation Of Poets?

Why Somalis Fail To Integrate In The West?

The Formula of Death: from 1884 Berlin Conference to 2007 Mogadishu Reconciliation Meeting

The Last Ten Nights Of Ramadan


NAIROBI, Oct 7, 2007 – An Ethiopian rebel group applauded on Saturday a bill passed by the U.S House of Representatives that would force their government to make democratic reforms or else lose security aid.

The group, the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), are armed rebels fighting for greater autonomy in ethnically Oromo parts of the vast Horn of Africa nation.

"We believe the Oromo people would have everything to gain and nothing to lose from the advancement of human rights, democracy, independence of the judiciary and the supremacy of the rule of law and freedom of the press, which (the bill) calls for," the OLF statement said.

"The bill...(highlights) the Ethiopian government's large-scale human rights violations," the OLF added, calling for the U.S. Senate and president to sign the bill into law.

The bill also backs the release of Ethiopian political prisoners, of whom more than 80 percent are ethnic Oromo detained under false charges, the OLF said.

The bill, passed this week by the House of Representatives, threatens to deny U.S. entry visas to officials deemed involved in human rights violations.

Another rebel group, the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), has also welcomed the bill.

But the Ethiopian government has reacted angrily, saying that if it passes into law, it will threaten regional stability and Addis Ababa's close ties with Washington.

Ethiopia is the U.S. government's main security partner in the region, and as such, the bill exempts counter-terrorism operations from any funding restrictions.

The bill has surfaced nearly two years after violent protests over May 2005 election results killed nearly 200 when protesters claiming vote-rigging clashed with security forces.

That, and a subsequent trial of opposition members including those who won seats in parliament and other positions, led to rights criticism and the withholding of some Western aid.

Once a darling of the West, former guerrilla leader Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's reputation has suffered badly from rights concerns in recent years, including his prosecution of a military campaign against the ONLF this year.

Source: Reuters


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