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Oromo nationalists are "like a chick that had not broken out of its shell" says Dr Negasso
  • Dr. Negasso said he chose the UDJ "because he wanted to be part of a multinational party. He said that his participation in ethnic-based Oromo groups had borne no fruit."
  • In his speech, Negasso said nationalists "were like a chick that had not broken out of its shell."
  • Siye had said during this party that the party he wanted to join was one that would fight for individual and group rights, but would have appropriate regard for both.
  • Another former TPLF member joins UDJ
  • "When individual rights are respected, then group rights will be respected." Prof. Mesfin

(ADDIS FORTUNE) While the Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJ) political party celebrated the welcoming of Siye Abraha, the former defence minister  and Negasso Gidada (PhD), former president into its fold, the life-long dissident, Mesfin Woldemariam (Prof.), who had been kicked out for disciplinary reasons, lurked around to make sure that they had a hard time.

The meeting they planned for November 29, 2009, had a slight problem from the beginning, and it started with the old professor. The UDJ applied to the Justice Bureau of the Addis Abeba Administration on November 3, 2009, to get a licence for the intended meeting. That was followed by a counter-application by a group led by Professor Mesfin, which claimed that the meeting was illegal and almost succeeded when Markos Bizuneh, the Demonstration and Meeting Notification Officer at the bureau, complied.

The UDJ took its case to the mayor's office who referred it back to the Justice Bureau, whose head, Tsegaye Hailemariam, and Markos sat down with Gizachew Shiferaw (Eng.) and Hailu Araya (PhD), UDJ vice presidents, for a discussion that led to the meeting being permitted with a guarantee of police protection. The UDJ paid 3,500 Br to rent the conference room of the Imperial Hotel for a nine-hour meeting with 250 members called from all over the country at a expense of 60,000 Br. Issues to be discussed included improving the party programme and regulation and replacing missing members.

On November 26 the UDJ had a 17,000 Br luncheon at the Ghion Hotel to mark Siye's and Negasso's joining of the party. Siye had said during this party that the party he wanted to join was one that would fight for individual and group rights, but would have appropriate regard for both. The purpose of the November 29 meeting would be to align the party to Siye's wishes, which was one big reason why Mesfin was mad enough to stop that from happening at any cost. Siye had also said that he had discussed it with the party, following which they had drafted a new programme.

"If this programme is adopted, I will be happy to join the UDJ," Siye said.

"The party has deviated from the principles of its establishment," Mesfin said to Fortune, protesting the extremeness of the programme change to suit one entrant. "Number one, you do not change a party programme just to gain one new member. Second, the Unity was formed on the principle of individual freedom. When individual rights are respected, then group rights will be respected. The new change will force this principle to be violated."

Mesfin then took matters into his own hands and acted in a manner that might have him criminally charged.

With these points of difference, the UDJ worked on a meeting to approve the new programme, while Mesfin strove to foil it, although the party had announced on September 13 that Mesfin and 20 other people had been removed from party membership. These people, however, want the party to continue giving heed to their voice, according to Tamrat Tarekegn, who used to lead the youth wing of the party.

On November 29, as the UDJ delegates gathered at the Imperial Hotel conference hall on the sixth floor, they found the disgruntled old members waiting for them, determined to make sure that no meeting would take place. They succeeded, too. As the two sides argued, the police watched without interfering, according to Asrat Tassie, UDJ secretary.  The party officials gave up trying to meet at Imperial and took their members to the new party office, rented for 8,000 Br in front of Bambis Supermarket on Jomo Kenyatta Street. The party moved to this office in October after leaving the villa off the road from Bambis to Olympia which they had kept at a monthly rent of 18,000 Br. Between 2pm and 6pm that afternoon the meeting hall of their smaller villa was jam-packed with 225 of the 250 members, most of whom were standing. They all voted for the membership of both Negasso and Siye, nearly the only thing that meeting achieved that day. These two erstwhile independent politicians were among the 20 that were elected into the council of the party.

Also elected were Bahta Tadesse, a former TPLF member,  and Andualem Aragie, once a member of Lidetu Ayalew's Ethiopian Democratic Party, who succeeded to become one of the officials of the then Coalition for Unity and Democracy during the 2005 election, but remained independent since the break-up that followed. Fifteen other people were also elected as possible replacements for missing party members.

Negasso Gidada who is one of the founders of the Forum for Justice and Democracy and one of the only two individual members of it, with Siye Abreha, also pointed out that he chose the UDJ because he wanted to be part of a multinational party. He said that his participation in ethnic-based Oromo groups had borne no fruit.

He had also said that his flirtation with the ruling party, which had made him president of the country, was the period of his life he was most ashamed of. "Nationalists," he said in his speech at the Ghion luncheon, "were like a chick that had not broken out of its shell."

Merera Gudina (PhD), chairman of the Oromo Congress Party, who also chaired the Forum which Negasso helped establish, said that Negasso's belief would not make his ethnic political party change its programme.

The delegates left the party meeting leaving all the work related to the programme to the part of executives, their excuse being the shortage of time for a rich discussion. The two individuals may have come to the party when their presence was most needed.

The 65-party negotiation, including and initiated by the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), had led to agreeing on an electoral code of conduct. [Out of the 65 political parties who signed the electoral code of conduct, 64 of them are supporters of Meles Zenawi's TPLF]. The eight parties and two individuals that made up the Forum chose not to join the talks insisting that they only wanted to talk with the ruling party without any of the pro-TPLF parties being involved.

The negotiation which continued without them not only came up with a code of conduct but are also to talk about how they are going to share the government budget for election campaigns. The Forum's absence from the negotiations will significantly affect its share of the money, according to a source at the National Electoral Board.

Asrat Tassie says that the UDJ is attracting a lot of support from the Diaspora since the two individuals joined the party. These two people and Shiferaw are expected to travel abroad to capitalise on the heightened interest and raise badly needed money for the party.

Meanwhile the party was trying to get Mesfin out of the way. They have filed charges to the Kirkos District Police for criminal investigation following his behaviour at their last meeting. They want  criminal charges to be filed against him and his followers, which could only be done by the prosecutor based on a police investigation. Police say that changes cannot be filed  without proof from the National Electoral Board that the professor and his followers are really fired from the party. The charge was made a week ago, and yet an officer said that his department has still not proven the dismissal of the professor's group. The officer in charge was not available for comment.  

  • SOURCE: ADDIS FORTUNE
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Comments 67 comments for this article
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Added: December 21, 2009. 02:11 AM GMT
dear Mr. OPDO,

nobody cares what you have to say

VIVA OLF!!
FREE OROMIA!!!!
Opride
Added: December 21, 2009. 02:53 AM GMT
so says a habasha puppet donkey

One wonders what thhe "doctor" has to say about democratic european countries craeted by nationalists
shame on whoever gave you a PHD
Waqjira
Added: December 21, 2009. 04:46 AM GMT
finaly, oromos are waking up!
RESPECTING individual rights is the only solution inethiopia
Anonymous
Added: December 21, 2009. 07:02 AM GMT
The doctoer is behind Funds!
It is a shameful act to insult Oromo nationalism as unhatched chick.Thousands have died for the noble cause of Oromummaa,Though such pretenders as "the Doctor" used to be there to cover up atrocities committed against us.
It is now clear that he would be calculating future dollar inflows by proposing ideas he think would catch minds of habeshas.
He should convince himself that Oromos have rejected his pretense for long and no longer will back him.
sorsa
Added: December 21, 2009. 09:15 AM GMT
dhigan ira dhalte dina wojin lolafte amas olasuf yada
fuck this Gobana
vivi OLF
Anonymous
Added: December 21, 2009. 11:10 AM GMT
Dr. Negaso
You are always the puppet, who cares about you kkkkkk.

Go hell with your masters. Your gullibility never take us anywhere. Dr. you are the silliest person I have ever witnessed.

At first, you were used by TPLF, then thrown away and now you are decided to become another OPDO. Fool Dr. lol

Viva Oromia
Tana Dubbin
Added: December 21, 2009. 11:31 AM GMT
The Professor Is Right
The Crator made individuals in His own image. That is the basis for human rights foundation which professor Mesfin establihsed in 1991. The communist Dergue era chanting of "the mass is right", "the mass is God", "the mass can see you even if you hide", "the mass will will triumph" and "you will not escape the masses' wrath", etc., had greatly contributed to the ethno-centric "mass" organizations like TPLF, OLF, etc,. Apparently it is still ringing in the ears of some conservative communist leaders. The liberal professor is right as he fights for the individual's right in his party. It is only if the individaul's rights is respected that the rights of masses or groups, gangs or tribes or nationlities is respected. It is NEVER the vice-vesa. You cannot guarantee the individual's right by guaranteeing the rights of the masses or the ethnic groups. Siye and TPLF has it totally wrong. It means the individaul has no right outside of his ethnic group. Siye is contradicting himself if he hinks otherwise. He is now enjoying his individual right as a human being first, an Ethiopian second and many other things third including his ethnicity. I hope the pary does not recognize him as a Tigre or TPLF or Adwan, etc.



Obviously, it is the individuals that make the group, not vice-versa. Individauls of common interest can always form a group and rally agaist the individual but that is wrong and immoral. The individaul's right is God-given and cannot be taken away by the group, unless he/she forfeits it for the "good" of the others. The only person I know who paid such a maximum price is "Jesus Christ" whom Herod judged it is better if one man dies instead of the mass. Many individuals have willingly sacrifieced their life for the mass but they were all sinners like the mass. The "democracy" the world is practicing is republican representative. It is really not the tyrany or rule of the mass or "majority'. It is not absolute truth but functional.



Now Siye and his communist friends should change their mind not to poison the party, if UDJ is truly democratic party. Only if they denounce their ethnocentric superiority should they join the party as individauls. Their followers should be treated as equal individaul members of the party, not a group within the party. It should still be one-person, one-vote, not ethnic or group majority or minority, as such.



The party, I believe is vey much influenced by communists and ethnicists. Ethiopia does not need both. Those individuals have to discard their old 'religion' and be transformed. For that matter, all Ethnic parties should be dismantled including OLF, ONLF, TPLF,



By keeping the communist or ethnicist individual leaders, the party is hiding a time bomb for itself. It is suicidal. What the party needs to do is to immediately reconcile with the professor. However, I do not condone the professor's "kurfia". He should return to his party and work from inside out.



The party should NEVER change its manifesto to entice individuals who would haunt it later.



What the party is facing a void of leadership. Bertukan, its chairperson must be freed if the coming election is to be deemed serious. The Diaspora, the diplomatitic and international communities must first secure the release of Birtukan Medaksa to smell the fragrance of democracy in Ethiopia.



It is in the best interest of the party to reconcile with and to win back the professor.



Please, do not crucify me for expressing my thoughts. Do not attack me personally, but my thoughts are open for discussion.
Anonymous
Added: December 21, 2009. 11:33 AM GMT
Silly Dr
I know many people who have PhD but PhD doesn't make someone clever,smart, bright or brilliant. Being smart leader or brilliant is somewhat inborn. I'm not saying education is useless but it is little to do with. They just read and got it but not because they are better than others.

Sometimes I surprise when I see some silly people who says "I have PhD" but when you consider their thinking capacity you hate having PhD.

Guys, me too, going to do PhD but I'm not take it very serious. kkkkk
Tana Dubbin
Added: December 21, 2009. 12:06 PM GMT
thankyou for your courage nagaso
we ethiopian people forgive you for your crimes under OPDO
Bekele
Added: December 21, 2009. 01:13 PM GMT
with all due respect you are completely wrong
Anonymous
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