Which one you first choose? በቅድሚያ የሚፈልጉት

Thursday, May 7, 2015

ዌንዲ ሸርማን አዲስ አበባ የተናገሩትን ቀለበሱ -The U.S. Ethiopia mischaracterized concern

ዌንዲ ሸርማን አዲስ አበባ የተናገሩትን ቀለበሱ - የሚሊዮኖች ድምጽ
ዌንዲ ሸርማን ለዋሺንገትን ፖስት ምላሽ ሰጡ። ሴክሬተሪዋ አዲስ አበባ የሰጡት አስተያየት ወደ ሌላ እንደተተረጎመባቸው ጠቅሰው፣ በአዲስ አበባ ጉብኝታቸው ከኢሕአዴግ ባለስልጣናት ጋር በዴሞክራሲና ሰብአዊ መብት ጉዳይ ግልጽ ዉይይት እንዳደረጉ ለዋሺንገት ፖስት በጻፉት ደብዳቤ ገልጸዋል። የፖለቲካ ምህዳሩ መጥበቡ፣ ጋዜጠኖች መታሰራቸውና የጸረ-ሽብርተኝኘት ሕጉ፣ ሽብርተኝነት ለመዋጋት ሳይሆን ሰላማዊ ተቃዉሞን ለመጨፍለቅ ጥቅም ላይ እየዋለ እንደሆነ ፣ ለኢትዮጵያ ባለስልጣናት መናገራቸው የጻፉት ዌንዲ ሸርማን ፣ «ኢትዮጵያ በአፍሪካ ጋዜጠኞችን በማሰር አንደኛ ናት» ብለዋል።
በኢትዮጵያ እየታየ ነው የሚሉትን የኢኮኖሚ እድገት፣ እንዲሁም ኢትዮጵያ በአካባቢ ያለዉን የሽብርተኝነት አደጋ ለመከላከል ከአሜሪካ ጋር የምትተባበር ወዳጅ አገር እንደሆነች ያስረዱት ወንዲ ሸርማ፣ መረጋጋት፣ ደህንነት እና ልማት ቀጣይነት እንዲኖረው የዴሞክራቲክና የሰብአዊ መብቶች ሲከበሩ ብቻ እንደሆነም አረግግጠዋል። « stability, security and economic development are sustainable only with the development of democratic values» ነበር ያሉ ሴክሬተሪዋ።
በኢትይጵያ የሰብአዊ መብት ረገጣ ፣ የፖለቲካ ምህዳሩን መጥበብን በተመለከት አስተያየት ከመስጠት ተቆጥበው፣ ኢትዮጵያ ዴምክራቲክ አገር እንደሆነች በመናገር ፣ የአገዛዙ ቃልአቀባይ መስለው እንደነበረ ይታወሳል። በአዲስ አበባ የተናገሩትን ቀልብሰው፣ በኢትዪጵያ ዴሞክራሲ ሳይሆን አምባገነናዊነት እንዳለ፣ ኢሕአዴግ ሜዲያው በነጻነት እንዲንቀሳቀስ የሚፈቅድ ዴሞክራቲክ መንግስት ሳይሆን፣ የጋዜጠኞች ጠላት መሆኑም ማሳየታቸው በብዙዎች ዘንድ እንደ አንድ ጥሩ አዝማሚያ እየተወሰደ ነው።
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-us-relationship-with-ethiopia/2015/05/06/eabe5b0e-f273-11e4-bca5-21b51bbdf93e_story.html

image.adapt.990.high.Sherman_Ethipoia_041815.1429379476862

The U.S. relationship with Ethiopia

Regarding the May 1 editorial “Make-believe on Ethiopia”:(The United States’ irresponsible praise of Ethiopia’s regime)
Ethiopia is a valuable partner in a critical region, from peacekeeping to fighting al-Shabab to pursuing peace in South Sudan. Ethiopia, among the world’s fastest-growing economies, has made significant progress toward itsMillennium Development Goals.
But stability, security and economic development are sustainable only with the development of democratic values. Ethiopia has a long road to full democracy, as I publicly said there. As President Obama suggested, my comments were aspirational in hopes that the upcoming election would be a step forward. Later in the trip, I said, “Ethiopia is a young country in terms of democracy and over time we hope the political system matures in a way that provides real choices for the people.” I highlighted that more journalists are in jail in Ethiopia than anywhere else in Africa. Civil society leaders told me, “They are about solving problems and being advocates for people who don’t believe they have a voice.”
The United States maintains a frank discussion with Ethiopia regarding democracy and human rights. In my meetings in Addis Ababa, I expressed concerns about restrictions on political space, arrests and imprisonments of independent journalists and use of antiterrorism legislation to stifle political dissent.
It is unfortunate the editorial mischaracterized my remarks and, more important, underestimated the fullness of our bilateral relationship. The U.S. government closely monitors the human rights situation and works with Ethiopia to foster a true democracy as part of our valued relationship.
Wendy R. Sherman, Washington
The writer is undersecretary of state for political affairs.
When I grew up in Ethiopia, Americans built roads there and invested in education, agriculture and commerce. They showed us how to wash and dry our coffee.  Consequently, quality, price and incomes improved. Ethiopia sold more than 50 percent of its high-quality coffee to the United States.
About 35 percent of Ethiopia’s development loans came from the United States. Pan American Airways helped modernize Ethiopian Airlines. Americans were our teachers and mentors in high schools and colleges. 
After the Cold War, U.S. officials lost the motivation to invest in Ethiopia. Now China is lending money and building roads. India and Turkey are investing in agribusiness, manufacturing and banking. And U.S. officials are heaping praise on the regime in Ethi­o­pia — their so-called key security ally in East Africa. But a free and democratic government is a better and more enduring ally than a repressive one.
The United States has not learned from its past mistakes of propping up dictatorial regimes in Africa.
Daniel Teferra, Madison, Wis.

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