Ethiopia: Tedros Adhanom played a key role in kidnapping of prominent dissident
ΣΧΟΛΙΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟΥ : Aυτό είναι το μούτρο που διευθύνει τον ΠΟΥ. Εμπλέκεται σε απαγωγή , και είναι μέλος σε μια συμμορία την Tigray People Liberation Front (TPLF), που είναι υπεύθυνη για διαφθορά, δολοφονίες, βασανιστήρια, μαζική κράτηση, κατάσχεση γης και εκτοπισμό ανθρώπων στην Αιθιοπία.!!Τις εντολές αυτού εδώ του καθάρματος ακολουθούν πιστά τα εδώ κουκλοθέατρα...Κούλης, Χαρδαλιάς, και Τσιόρδας.!! Αλλά τα λαδωμένα παπαγαλάκια με τα 30 αργύρια της δημοσιογραφίας εδώ στην Ελλάδα, αυτά δεν τα ξέρουν...αυτά ΔΕΝ τα λένε. Έχω να κάνω τις επόμενες μέρες πολλές αποκαλύψεις για την οικογένεια Μητσοτάκη.!!! Κούλη θα τα πούμε..δεν σε βλέπω να είσαι Πρωθυπουργός ακόμα για πολύ.!!
By Abebe Gellaw
In his bid to win the position of Director-General for the World
Health Organization (WHO), Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus is playing a
nice technocrat. At every venue and opportunity, he presents himself as a
humble, smiley and caring and humanitarian who loses sleep over the
state of world health. But his 12-page campaign CV never mentions his
most important experience that made it possible for him to climb the
ladder of power within the tyrannical regime oppressing and misruling
Ethiopia.
In a move that can be interpreted as fraud by omission, he failed to
mention the fact that he is a top Executive and Central Committee member
of the Tigray People Liberation Front (TPLF), a brutal and corrupt
ethno-fascist political group mainly responsible for gross human rights
violations and crimes against humanity in Ethiopia.
The perfect pretender
Before it came to power in 1991 through a violently destructive armed
struggle, the TPLF was blacklisted as a terrorist organization by the
U.S. Homeland Security’s Global Terrorism Database. There are a select
few key decision makers within the TPLF, the nine-member gang–the
executive committee. The gang is ultimately responsible for all the
corruption, killings, torture, mass detention, land grab or
displacement. Adhanom is among the top three within the gang. He was
very close to the late dictator Meles Zenawi, who trusted him to be a
confidant as well as a cabinet minister. But the numbers Adhanom is
throwing to foreign journalists and diplomats are not about those who
were murdered and tortured by the TPLF, which claims to represent
minority Tigrians, at the detriment of the rest of the population.
With the help of Mercury Public Affairs, a high-end U.S.-based
lobbying firm that calls itself a “high-stakes public strategy firm”, he
is hyping up his dubious succcesses: conquered malaria, destroyed HIV,
reduced infant mortality, built thousands and thousands of clinics. But
they never talk about the reality behind the exaggerated figures.
Dr Tedros with the late Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi
Once a trusted right-hand man of the late tyrant, Meles Zenawi, whom
Adhanom refers to as the “great leader”, he wasn’t an ordinary health
minister (2005-2012) and foreign minister (2012-2016). He rose from a
rank-and-file member of the TPLF to its central and executive
committees. TPLF, where membership is mainly based on ethnic origin, is
responsible for countless killings, torture, mass detentions and violent
repressions. Its divide and rule system has instituted a highly
discriminatory political and economic structure that has enabled it to
dominate and subjugate the majority. Given his narrow-minded and
ethnocentric experience, his aspiration to lead WHO is an oxymoron.
Adhanom is involved in terrible decisions and actions that violate
the rights and dignity of others. It turns out that a prominent
dissident is one of Adhanom’s victims.
Sana’a. They were scheduled to have a high level meeting the next day with Yemeni leaders, security and diplomatic officials.
The two rogue regimes, besset with a varying set of crises mainly
related to violent repressions and misgovernance, had held at least
three high level meetings before. But what made the 2014 meeting “very
important”, especially for a small circle within the delegation, was a
crude agenda that the former foreign minister was persistently pushing.
They had sharpened their daggers with a plan for a politically motivated
vendetta in Yemen.
When Ethiopian migrants and domestic workers in Yemen were routinely
beaten, raped, abused and deported back to Ethiopia, neither the Foreign
Minister nor the Ethiopian embassy in Sana’a raised concerns. But this
time, they were keen to get involved for a special operation–kidnapping
and rendition. They wanted Yemen to have dissidents that enter Yemen to
seek asylum or use Sana’a International Airport as a transit route,
kidnapped and handed over to them, according to two credible former
security operatives.
Andargachew Tsege, a British citizen of Ethiopian origin was top on
the list of dissidents that the delegation wanted to have their heads
on a platter. Tsege, who was one of the key figures during the 2005
popular movement for change and democracy in Ethiopia, had already
received two death sentences in absentia in 2009 and 2012. As head of
the delegation, Tedros Adhanom led the negotiations with the former
Yemeni Foreign Minister Abubeker Al Qirbi and security officials
including Brig. Gen. Abdou Hussein al-Tarb. Before he flew back, he went
to the Presidential Palace to press the issue with President Abdrabbuh
Mansour Hadi. On May 15, Adhanom tweeted, “We just concluded #Yemen
#Ethiopia joint ministerial meeting in #Senea’a [sic]. Signed 9
agreements.”
One of the sources, former security official Ayalew Meshesha, says
that Adhanom was not only involved in facilitating Tsege’s kidnapping
but also played an active role in the rendition of over 760 dissidents
who fled to Yemen. Meshesha alleges that most of those handed over by
the Yemenis to TPLF’s security agents were rounded up several months
before the kidnapping of Tsege.
“Most of those renditioned were Oromo and Ethiopian Somalis suspected
of being OLF and ONLF sympathizers,” said Meshesha, who fled to the
U.S. a couple of years ago. Lurking danger
It was an opportune moment for such a special operation. Yemen had
already been in turmoil since the Arab Spring triggered a political
whirlwind in the country in 2011. The clash between revolutionaries
pushing for change and the rogue regime resorting to violence to stem
the storm turned it into bloodbath.
As a matter of fact, the former strongman of Yemen, President Ali
Abdullah Saleh reportedly fled to Ethiopia after he was forced to cede
power to his deputy, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi. Even if he lost power,
Saleh remained highly influential and deeply involved in the civil war
breaking up his country. He was also closely involved, as a
go-between,in the secret operation, the sources say.
At the conclusion of the meeting, officials from both sides signed a
dozen of agreements and protocols including one on security that
reaffirmed and expanded an existing accord. Following the Ethio-Eritrean
conflict, the late tyrant Zenawi switched side and had been cozying up
with Yemen. In October 1999, Yemeni and Ethiopian officials signed a
security accord. IRIN News reported at the time quoting officials that
the pact was aimed at “jointly controlling elements seeking to destabilise peace and stability in the two countries”.
“Tedros Adhanom actually played the most important role in the
kidnapping of Andargachew. He was the one who convinced the Yemenis to
be part of the illegal kidnapping and rendition. He paved the way and
laid the groundwork for the whole operation,” one of the sources said on
condition of anonymity.
Despite the pacts, what happened to Tsege, a father of three from
North London, was an extraordinarily illegal kidnapping and rendition
that violates every domestic and international legal norms. Unsuspecting victim
Mr. Tsege was not supposed to travel to Sana’a from Dubai in June
2014 as information had already leaked to his group that TPLF security
agents were lurking in Yemen for an ambush.
Abebe Bogale, an executive of Patriotic Ginbot 7, is the last person
Tsege talked to while in Dubai. Bogale says he had a direct flight to
Asmara on Eritrean Airlines (ERT). But he decided to cancel his flight
on June 20, 2014 as the retail suppliers, who had him waiting for the
equipment he wanted to buy, called him to inform him that his delayed
consignment had arrived.
Nonetheless, there was a problem. He had an urgent matter and
meetings to attend. But ERT had only two flights a week. He booked
another flight. When he informed Bogale that he booked a flight on
Yemenia, he told him never to do it owing to the security threat in
Yemen.
“Do not worry. I did it before a couple of times,” Tsege said. Bogale
discouraged him again. At that point, he seemed to relent. He assured
him that he would cancel his Yemenia flight.
It was exactly five weeks after Dr. Adhanom’s delegation flew back to
Addis. On a fateful evening of Sunday, June 22, 2014, Tsege took a
Yemenia flight that had a two hour layover in Sana’a. It was during that
stop that the kidnapping operation took place. Along with the security
czar, Adhanom was playing an active role in coordinating and
orchestrating the brazen kidnapping and rendition.
There was already a six-man team sent by TPLF security chief Getachew
Assefa. They arrived earlier on a chartered flight with a large amount
of dollars to Yemeni security officials according one reliable source.
PG7 sources estimate that around nine million of dollars was paid as to
make the extradition a swift rendition with no due process.
One the same day Tsege was kidnapped, intelligence sources passed
information to PG7 leadership that Tsege was held in Yemen. Apparently,
he was seen bundled and manhandled by Yemeni agents at Sana’a
International Airport. He was arguing and asserting his right to see
British consular officers. His request was denied and taken to an
unknown place–still handcuffed and shackled.
The next day, Prof. Berhanu Nega, leader of PG7 called Bogale, who
lives in an EU member state. “Which Airlines did Andargachew take?” the
unusual question was a bit alarming.
Bogale informed the Professor that he had booked a Yemnia flight but
he managed to persuade him not to. The professor fumed. After a long
silence, he told him that might be kidnapped in Sana’a. Bogale was
devastated.
A rescue operation kicked off immediately–British, and PG7 efforts
hit the wall. The initial response by Yemeni officials was repeated
denial. Then they started making assurances that he was safely in their
hands. “He will not be given over. He will be freed,” they assured.
In reality, what was supposed to be an immediate effort turned out to
be too late for a rescue. Without any legal proceedings, without giving
him consular access and any fair hearing, the Yemenis had handed him
over to the notorious TPLF’s security and intelligence officers despite
the fact that he was facing the death penalty. The chartered plane had
already returned to Ethiopia the next day.
What happened at the airport remains sketchy. But it was crystal
clear that Tsege’s kidnapping and rendition was a done deal. It was
negotiated and agreed five weeks earlier by Adhanom and Yemeni
officials. There was no time to spare and no deal to make to reverse the
situation. Within 48 hours, the kidnapping mission was completed. A costly passion
Tsege’s kidnapping caused widespread outrage among Ethiopian
activists and those struggling to free their country from the tyrannical
regime. Tsege began to play active role during the md-1970s student
moment. He was Meles Zenawi’s classmate. When Zenawi and a few others
launched the TPLF with a view to seceding Tigray from the rest of
Ethiopia, Tsege had joined the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Party
(EPRP), whose members were slaughtered en mass for opposing the military
junta. He was a vehement opponent of Mengistu’s military rule, the
Derg.
After wandering in political wilderness for a few years during the
revolution, he sought asylum in the UK in 1979. In 1991, the fall of the
Derg had restored his hope. He returned to Ethiopia and joined the new
transitional government and became a key official at the Addis Ababa
municipality. As the TPLF broke its promises for a democratic change and
imposed a brutal minority regime that resorted to violent repressions,
he left the regime and began struggling for a genuine democratic
transition. It was during the 2005 elections that Tsege had renewed his
faith and hope once more for a drastic change that can usher in
equality, justice and freedom for all.
Unfortunately, that hope was shattered again when TPLF rigged the
elections to reverse its spectacular defeats and employed brute force to
crush the long held dream of Ethiopians to be masters of their own
destiny. In his book “A liberators unaware of freedom”, which he
published 1997, he rejected TPLF’s divide and rule policy and tried to
show the dangers of its fascistic and Stalinist ideology. He had
warned that the TPLF, armed with its ethnofascist ideology, poses a
danger to Ethiopia as a nation and individuals as citizens.
For his unwavering courage and struggle, the TPLF accuses the 62-year
old dissident of being a terrorist. Twice, on December 22, 2009 and
November 7, 2013, TPLF’s Kangaroo courts, which are notorious for being a
sledgehammer of injustice, sentenced him to death.
A few days after his kidnapping, he was paraded on national TV.
Despite being on death row, he said calmly: “I have no regrets….I am at
peace with myself. I need to rest.”
In a twist of irony, it was Adhanom who appeared on VOA Amharic in
July 2015 and told the nation that Tsege’s kidnapping was justified.
Contrary to reports, Adhanom claimed that the prisoner of conscience was
treated well and was given a laptop to write a book, claims that turned
out to be big lies.
Adhanom is well-known for tendency of telling tall tales. It is
rather a tale of the the crocodiles and their preys. Adhanom is just
shedding his crocodile’s tears when he talks about his “concern” for
world health. Spending millions of dollars snatched from the throats of
hunger-stricken Ethiopians, it appears to be easy to hoodwink the world
with sweet talks and march to Geneva to head WHO, which finds itself in a
compromising position for failing to properly vet a fascist aspiring to
become its director-general.
Obang Metho, Executive Director of the Solidarity Movement for a New
Ethiopia, says that Ethiopians should have celebrated the candidacy of
Adhanom. But he is not our candidate, he says.
“His ethnicity or politics never matters to most Ethiopians. What
matters to us is his criminal record. He is one of those corrupt TPLF
criminals whose hands are drenched with the blood of countless Ethiopia.
If WHO ignores this reality, it will only expose its own hypocrisy and
how out of touch it is on issues that matter to ordinary people
suffering at the hands of criminals like Adhanom,” he said.
While Adhanom, a well-known human rights violator, has the luxury of
travelling around the world pleading governments to vote him in as
director-general of WHO, the men and women that he and his TPLF gang
held captives in torture chambers, are not feeling well. Tormented and
tortured, they are in deep pains and despair. That must be the reason
why Ethiopians around the world are protesting against Tedros Adhanom,
WHO never cares for their plight.
In a surging twitter campaign, Ethiopian activists are voicing their
protest and venting out their anger. “Killers can’t be healers,” they
say. So far, WHO officials are dodging hard questions. They are clearly
in awkward position. It is a very compromising position.
1 σχόλιο:
Είμι καλό παιντί ιγκώ΄
(ρωτάτε και το Τσιόντρο που ' ναι μάλαμ παιντί
κριστιανικό να σας το πεί αυτό.)
κι ας λένε αι κακαί γκλώσσαι.
(αι παρέαι μου μόνο είνι σατανικαί.)
Ιγκώ πάντως με την αξία μου
και το φιλότιμό μου,
κρατάει πάντα στη ζωή
ψηλά το μέτωπό μου.
Γκαμώ το κέρατό μου!
(Εκατό χιλιάδαι ντίσκοι όπως και το Λύκαστρο.)
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