MORE SCHOOLS JOIN ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTS
ADDIS ABABA - Student unrest in most towns of Oromia region of Ethiopia has continued as more schools join the protest sparked when the government expelled 300 Oromo students from Addis Ababa University a month ago. The student unrest sweeping much of the region is focused on forcing the government to lift the restrictions the government imposed on the expelled students as the well as to reverse the decision of transfering the capital of Oromia from Addis Ababa to Nazret. (The two reportes were compiled from the online Reporter: March 21, 2004)
GOVERNMENT TALKS TO HUNT DOWN PROTEST LEADERS
ABIY ADI, TEMBIEN, Northern Ethiopia - The government is discussing on how to crack down on individuals who led a public rally in this town last week and demanded the government stopped its repressive and isolationist policies which cut off the Tembien Province of Tigrai region from basic services like water, electricity and roads.
In a March 22 interview with the Voice of America Tigrinya Program, the individuals said their demand for basic services in the province was ignored time and again by the ruling regime and the people had no choice but to express their anger through peaceful protests.
"If it were not for the people of Tembien who are vigilantly keeping an eye on those who are out to get us, the government would have thrown us into jail. Right now, they are at a meeting, and they are discussing ways to hunt us down. We would see where this would lead to," one of the speakers told VOA.
The Abi Adi Protest, in which over 5,300 people took part, signifies the political challenge Prime Minister Meles Zenawi faces in Tigrai, which is the seat of the ruling Tigrai People's Liberation Front (TPLF), which, observers say, the premier used as an Eritrean Trojan horse to secure the independence of Eritrea and the weakening of Ethiopia as a landlocked nation on the one hand, and when the going gets tough, as a strategy of plunging the country into ethnic conflict as the cases of targetting Oromo students and ethnic Gambella inhabitants testify.
ETHIOMEDIA.COM - ETHIOPIA'S PREMIER NEWS AND VIEWS WEBSITE
© COPYRIGHT 20001-2003 ETHIOMEDIA.COM. EMAIL: webmaster@ethiomedia.com