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Letter from the Oromo Communities in North America to H.E. Mr. Kofi Anan, Secretary-General of the United Nations

April 17, 2000
H.E. Mr. Kofi Annan
Secretary-General
The United Nations
New York, NY 10017
Dear Mr. Secretary-General Annan, 
We, members of the Oromo communities in North America are writing this letter to draw your attention to:
  1. Catastrophic environmental destruction in Oromia and other parts of southern Ethiopia;
  2.  A worsening famine situation in Oromia and discriminatory policies in regional development in Ethiopia;
  3.  A very serious and ever increasing human rights violations directed against the Oromo people in Ethiopia;
  4. Devastating effects of the Ethio-Eritrean War on the welfare of the Oromo and other oppressed people in Ethiopia who are victimized by the senseless war; and
  5. Denial of the right of the Oromo to use an alphabet which advances the development of their own language for reading and writing based on scientific studies.
In the sacred land of their birth, the Oromo are denied basic democratic, political, economic, and civil rights. Those of us who live in freedom in North America have a moral obligation to bring to your attention, and through you to the attention of the United Nations, the trials and tribulations of our people, so that you would take immediate actions that will improve the welfare of the Oromo and other distressed nationalities in Ethiopia.

We are inspired to write this letter by your recent speech in which you captured our imagination and raised our hopes for the future of our people when you stated, "We must put people at the center of everything we do. No calling is more noble, and no responsibility greater than that of enabling men, women and children, in cities and villages around the world to make their lives better.”   Thank you for expressing so deeply and movingly our yearning to make the lives of our people better.  As an eloquent champion of freedom from poverty for all the people of the world, we hope this letter will demonstrate to you and the members of the world community why our people suffer in an abject poverty while their country is the most fertile and richest part of the Horn of Africa.

The Oromo constitute about 50% of the population in Ethiopia. They are the single largest nation in the Horn of Africa and one of the major African peoples. Oromia, the country of the Oromo, is the largest, the richest, and most densely populated regional state in Ethiopia. It forms the backbone of the Ethiopian economy.  Yet,  its people are currently facing a crippling famine and their resources are facing arbitrary destruction.   The Oromo have no voice in the political affairs of their own state which is totally controlled by the ruling Tigrean People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and the fake ethnic-based  organizations it has formed and controls, the so-called Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Forces (EPRDF).  The TPLF, which is from the Tigrayan minority ethnic group from northern Ethiopian, represents only 5% of the population of the country and fears Oromo numerical strength in any free and fair elections.  As a result, it has systematically  destroyed all independent Oromo organizations including their legal free press. Even the Oromo Relief Association (ORA), a humanitarian organization which was established in1979, was closed down by the Ethiopian government and its property confiscated without any due process of law. The aim is to deprive the Oromo people from having any independent organization that does not receive its marching orders from the TPLF leadership.  Emboldened by the silence of international community about its human rights records, the Ethiopian government has recently embarked on catastrophic environmental destruction of Oromia and other states in southern Ethiopia.

I.  On the destruction of Oromo resources

Systematically set fires have been devouring virgin forests, coffee plantations, homes, and rare animals and plants in several regions of Oromia such as Bale, Borana, Wallagga, and Illu Ababora. Similar fires were blazing in the Ogaden region of the Somali state and Malka Wondo of Sidama district in southern Ethiopia. The fires destroyed not only rare indigenous animals, such as the Red Fox, Mountain Nyala, and Bushbuck, and rare plant species, but also precious other resources on which the inhabitants depend for their existence. More than 100,000 hectares of virgin forest were burned down.  In addition to the grave economic consequences, the destruction of these forests will lead to permanent loss of the unique flora and fauna, therein and the degradation of the natural resources base that would accelerate soil erosion and desertification of an already fragile region.

We believe that the fires were set by government agents for different reasons even though the government has been pretentiously blaming local farmers and honey gatherers as the culprits. In spite of such denials and passing the blame, farmers and honey gatherers lived for hundreds of years in this region without simultaneously setting fires to their homes and resources over such vast regions and different parts of the country.   Nevertheless, the repressive government of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi failed to promptly report the fires and solicit assistance from the international community to put them out. Only belatedly, junior officials reported the existence of the fires to which the South African and German governments responded swiftly and provided vital assistance to help extinguish them.   The Government of Meles Zenawi not only downplayed and ignored the fires but also either discouraged or prevented Oromo students, environmentalists and civic societies from mobilizing to put out the fires.  For instance, government security forces killed several students and wounded many in Ambo and Dambi Dolo districts of central and western Oromia, respectively,  when they tried to demonstrate and draw public attention to help put out the fires. Many more students and their parents are arrested and jailed.  It is ironic that the government of Meles Zenawi goes to such extreme lengths to stop concerned volunteers from saving Oromia from an environmental calamity but builds Greater Tigray in the north via its conscription of the very same Oromo students it discourages from fighting the fires in the south.  All this is for a senseless war with Eritrea over a barren strip of desert.

The government has been pursuing environmentally harmful policies since it seized power in Ethiopia in 1991.  With total disregard for the long-term environmental consequences and under the guise of free market economy, the government has been awarding contracts to investors undertaking unregulated mining and mechanized farming in ecologically sensitive and vulnerable areas.  This policy has led to the significant degradation of the natural resources of Oromia.  This government has also adopted a policy of massive resettlement of armed northern migrants on Oromo land and in southern regions. The migrants impose their views on the local people, and seize and use by force the resources in a manner which is inconsistent with the local culture and traditions that had been always protective of the ecology.

 

Mr. Secretary-General,

II.  On famine and discriminatory policies in regional development

We would like also to raise the urgency of helping victims of the catastrophic famine in many parts of the country including Borana and other lowland areas of Oromia.  In this regard, we would like to thank you for the recent initiatives you have taken to help avert the crisis.  We believe that the present regime has again failed to report the existence of a serious famine to the world community until it was quite late in its progression.  The regime was giving its utmost priority to waging war with Eritrea and other oppressed nationalities such as the Oromo, Ogaden Somalis, and Sidama and its lavish celebrations of TPLF's 25th anniversary in the past months.   The regime did neither earnestly help nor ask in a timely manner for international assistance to avert the crippling famine in the southern and southeastern Ethiopia.  In fact, several months ago, it detained two officials who tried to alert the world by taking BBC reporters to the Gamu Gofa region where famine was already hitting.  The current Tigray-led regime in Ethiopia has failed to provide for the security of the people of the south: Oromos, Somalis, Sidamas and others.  It has failed to respond promptly when they are threatened with death and destruction by famine and when their resources are burned down into ashes.

On the other hand, the government has been pursuing discriminatory policies in its regional development in Ethiopia.  First, while Oromia has around thirty million inhabitants, Tigray has less than five million people.  Yet, for the past nine years the annual budget of Tigray has been twice that of Oromia.  Secondly, Oromia produces more than 65% percent of Ethiopian government revenues, yet its share of budget allocation is the smallest compared to the size of its population.  Thirdly, billions of dollars raised from the international community through loans and aid grants for the whole country have been diverted for the development of the Tigray state in the last ten years; southern states and Oromia are deliberately neglected.  An impressive number of schools, colleges, highways, airports, factories, telecommunication networks and introductions of computers into schools, and electrification of towns and districts are some of  the development projects carried out in the Tigray state.  Meanwhile Oromia and  the south are given only lip service, thereby exposing the people to famine and hardship.  Such discriminatory and unequal treatments have frustrated our people who have been losing not only their resources, but also their lives, by the misguided policies of these minority rulers from the north.

III.  On human rights abuses
Although Oromia is autonomous in name, the TPLF totally controls the political, military, and economic resources of Oromia.  The TPLF soldiers are the law unto themselves.  In short, there is no rule of law in Oromia where our people are subjected to arbitrary arrests, prolonged detention without trial and due process of law and frequently  subjected to extrajudicial execution.  According to the 1999 US Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, there are "more than 7,500" political prisoners in detention in Oromia. This is a very conservative estimate and we believe the true figure may be ten times higher.  By its own admission, the Tigrean-led minority regime in Ethiopia revealed not long ago that prisons in Oromia are unable to cope with the flood of Oromo prisoners, thus, thousands of Oromo men and women, young and old are detained for years without any due process of law.  Ethiopia is supposed to have been a democratic federal republic since 1995.  What is federalism when thirty million people in Oromia are not allowed to freely organize and support their own political organization? 

Since it seized power in 1991, the current Ethiopian government has consistently waged war on the Oromo and other southern Ethiopian peoples in violating their human rights and depriving them of personal security.  As reported by several human rights organizations including Amnesty International ( Attachment VII), Human rights Watch/Africa (Attachment VIII), the US State Department, Survival International, The Committee to Protect Journalists (Attachment IX), the International Commission of Jurors (X), the Ethiopia Human Rights Council ( Attachment XI) and the Oromia Support Group ( Attachment XII), the regime has consistently muzzled any opposition and denied them their democratic right to compete freely in the political process.  This is in spite of its claim, in order to win international support and legitimacy, of establishing a working democracy.

In their own land, our people are denied the right to organize freely and express their political opinion.  Today, it is a serious crime in Ethiopia to support independent Oromo organizations such as the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) and others.  Supporters of the OLF are constantly harassed, imprisoned, and killed.  Ironically, the TPLF leaders do not trust even their own puppet creation, the Oromo People's Democratic Organization (OPDO) in whose name they have eliminated all independent Oromo organizations.  For instance, the TPLF expelled thousands of its peasant members while detaining hundreds of its cadres in 1997 (Attachment I).  Just last month, all members of the supreme court of Oromia were unceremoniously expelled.

Mr. Secretary-General,

We do not know of any country in the world where the majority of the population are terrorized by a tiny minority to the extent that it is happening to the Oromo today in Ethiopia.  There is massive evidence which demonstrates beyond any doubt that the TPLF regime is intensifying the persecution of the Oromo (Attachment II). Even those Oromo nationals who manage to escape from persecution in Ethiopia are killed by the agents of the Ethiopian regime in the neighboring states of Djibouti (Attachment III), Kenya (Attachment III), Somalia, and more recently even in South Africa  Attachment IV). Those who are not killed in the neighboring states face the danger of forced repatriation and cross-border raids by Ethiopian government forces ( Attachment V).  There is no doubt in our minds that the Ethiopian regime is engaged in systematic destruction of Oromo intellectuals, business and cultural leaders, and above all, Oromo nationalist elements and supporters of independent Oromo organizations.  We believe there was not such a time of oppression since the conquest and colonization of Oromia during and after the 1880s, when the best elements of the Oromo society were singled out for destruction.

IV.  On Ethio-Eritrean war

Our people have been suffering from the current war with Eritrea as they are forced to send their children, in disproportionate number, to fight this senseless war in the last two years.  Oromo youths have been callously sacrificed in tens of thousands as mine sweepers (Attachment VI).  Thousands of our youth have been forced to lose their lives for the purpose of creating Greater Tigray.  Our people have been forced to give contributions in cash and other goods from their meager resources which they desperately need to buy food for their own survival at this critical time of famine.

V.  On banning Qubee, the Oromo alphabet

For at least three decades before 1991, the Oromo political organizations and Oromo intellectuals have been using Qubee, an Oromo writing system, adopted from the Latin alphabet based on scientific studies which indicate it contributes more suitably than the Ethiopian Sabean based alphabet to the development of the Oromo language.  After a special Oromo convention endorsed it in 1991, Qubee became legally recognized as a practical alphabet for writing in the Oromo language.  Within a few years it revolutionized the production of literature in the Oromo language.  More books, newspapers, and magazines were produced in the Oromo language from 1991 to 1997 than from the 1880s to 1991.  Sadly, however, all Oromo newspapers and magazines have since 1997 been closed down.  In March 2000, the Ethiopian government banned the use of Qubee in Oromia.  This is a tremendous setback for the development of literature and official business applications in the Oromo language and is thus a great loss for all the Oromo people.  By banning the use of Qubee in Oromia, the TPLF leaders have destroyed the prospect for educational development for more than thirty million people and they are thus playing with the lives of Oromo children.   We believe banning Qubee is a prelude to the unacceptable banning of the Oromo children's learning in their own language in Oromia.

Mr. Secretary-General,

In the light of the above, we, members of Oromo communities in North America, call on the United Nations, and the international community to listen to the woes of our people and take action on their behalf before it is too late.  We implore you, and through you the United Nations, not to ignore the sufferings of our people.

I.  Regarding the destruction of resources we ask you
  1. To condemn the Ethiopian government for its role in the setting of the forest fires and destruction of the environment, property, lives and rare and endangered animal and plant species,
  2. o demand investigation of the causes of the fires by an impartial and independent body,
  3. To request a halt to the resettlement program and all unnecessary military activities especially in the ecologically sensitive areas of Oromia,
  4. resources in Oromia in an environmentally destructive manner and respect international agreements and conventions protecting the environment,
  5. To request that the Ethiopian government release the innocent farmers and students in its custody whom it has falsely accused,
  6. o assist Oromo institutions and local and international non-governmental organizations currently engaged in fire-fighting and providing emergency assistance to the victims of the fires and famine in Oromia.
II.  Regarding famine and development assistance we ask you
  1. To intervene and directly deliver food assistance to the famine stricken regions of Oromia, and other parts of Ethiopia,
  2. To closely monitor the delivery of such assistance to make sure it reaches the starving people and is not diverted to feed the regime's expansive army,
  3. To assist local NGOs to provide sustained development assistance so that similar catastrophes are prevented in the future.   In this regard, we ask you to exert pressure on the Ethiopian government to allow the Oromo Relief Organization (ORA) to freely function in its humanitarian mission,
  4. To monitor fair allocation of aid funds and technical assistance among all regions and peoples of the country instead of simply delivering aid to the Tigrean government, which mainly uses resources for the development of the Tigray state.
III.  Regarding the human rights situation in Ethiopia we ask you
  1. To appoint a special rapporteur on human rights in Ethiopia.  We know Ethiopian government leaders are sensitive to criticism from the UN and the appointment of a special rapporteur will force them to improve their human rights record, an immeasurable service in itself,
  2. To put strong political, economic, and moral pressure on the Ethiopian government to stop its extrajudicial killings, arrests, and detentions of innocent people,
  3. To closely monitor the regime's human rights records and demand its release of tens of thousand of Oromo detainees or bring them to speedy trial,
  4. To put pressure on the Ethiopian government to respect its own constitution of 1994, uphold the right of self-determination of the Oromo, abide by the rule of law, and above all, to seek a negotiated settlement of conflict in the country,
  5. To pressure the government to settle its conflict peacefully with Eritrea and spare the people of the two countries from suffering meaningless death and destruction.
IV.  Regarding continuation of war with Eritrea we ask you
  1. To demand that the Ethiopian government refrains from the use of civilians and non-Tigrayan soldiers as mine-sweepers,
  2. To exert the necessary pressure for a negotiated peaceful settlement of the conflict.
V.    Regarding the banning of Qubee, the Latin alphabet to use as a means of communicating in the Oromo language we ask you
  1. To put pressure on the Ethiopian government to legalize the use of Qubee in Oromia,
  2. To impress upon the Ethiopian government that it is the fundamental right of the Oromo people to use their alphabet and language to develop their material and spiritual resources and to better their lives.
We plead with you and the international community to intervene and take immediate action to avert a humanitarian catastrophe before yet greater tragedies occur in the Horn of Africa.
           
Most Sincerely,
Bahiru Gametchu, D.V.M., M.S., Ph.D.
Chair of the Organizing Committee
Asfaw Beyene, Ph.D.
Vice Char of the Organizing Committee
Esaias W/Georgis, M.S., M.D.
Secretary of the Organizing Committee
Mohammed Hassen, Ph.D. 
Member of the Organizing Committee
Hamdesa Tuso, Ph.D.
Member of the Organizing Committee
Abraham Dalu, Ph.D.
Member of the Organizing Committee
Mr. Sisay Ibsa
Member of the Organizing Committee

 

 

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