Skip to content

Worldwide Ethiopian march for freedom and justice

Click here for the Washington DC event
The third anniversary of the failed Ethiopian National Election is almost here. As the time approaches, the Worldwide March Committee members are working hard to plan events in cities across North America, Europe, Australia, Africa and Israel.

These events will publicly demonstrate that the Ethiopian peoples’ thirst for freedom, human rights, justice and democracy will not die despite the hijacking of the last election and the increasing repression within the country. This has been a huge organizational task and will not be perfect, but it is the beginning. Let the sleeping giant—the freedom loving people of Ethiopia—awaken and rise up for truth and right!

EPRDF or Woyane reportedly are asking, “Why do these people want to embarrass their government and their country by coming out for this rally?

The real question is, who is embarrassing Ethiopia—those who repress their fellow Ethiopians or those who tell the truth about it? In other words, stop the human rights abuses, injustices and electoral manipulations and we will not have anything to rally about.

Just look at two recent examples, Ethiopian children have the lowest access (83%) to health care in the world!1 Secondly, Ethiopia received another world distinction—the dishonor of being the most backslidden country in the world in regards to freedom of the press!2

Should we admit this? Why not? Are these correctable problems? Of course! Denial of real problems will not do anything to solve them. In all fairness, health care is an enormous problem throughout the world, but Ethiopia is the worst—why? The repression of the press is directly linked to a repressive government. Why should we not rally against this?

We would be happy and proud of our government that was doing its best for the people despite limitations. This is the kind of government for which we are rallying—not a perfect government, but a government that serves the people, not themselves! Anyone who agrees with us should come out this week and not stop working until justice comes to Ethiopia!

This is not about political choices. It is about the basic right to make “a political choice”—whichever choice that might be! If you want a choice, you need to come out from May 15 to 18th and stand up for that right!

One of the greatest joys over these last three to four weeks of planning has been to see so many previous “fighters for liberty” re-emerge to work alongside new Ethiopians at the grass roots level after the deep discouragement among Ethiopians over the last months. There has been a tremendous amount of work accomplished in a very short time—with much more to do—but the highlight has been in seeing new groups and new people joining together to accomplish a shared goal—a free Ethiopia where the rights of all of the people will be respected.

As Ethiopians remember those who have died, let us come together in unity for we have all suffered losses either during this regime or at the hands of earlier ones in our history. These events are meant to remind us that one of the chief roles of government is to protect and uphold the lives of its citizens. How can we do a better job of this as a people and as a nation? These events over these four days are ways to raise the expectations for what we expect as people of Ethiopia, the Horn, Africa and as members of human kind.

Groups will differ in how they accomplish this. The format of these events will take on the creativity, diversity and ownership of the local organizers. In some cities, events will be combined into one or two events. Others will change the dates to accommodate the needs and preferences of various groups.

For instance, Muslims will be having a Day of Marching on Thursday, a Day of Prayer on Friday and a Day of Reaching Out will remain the same, Saturday. For some, celebrating a Day of Reaching Out will mean small gatherings in homes for dinner, tea or coffee while others are organizing community gatherings in town halls or in their places of faith. Prayer gatherings Friday or Sunday might include five earnest people or fifty.

Remember, this is only the beginning. It is an opportunity to reject the worst parts of tribalistic thinking that leave so many out. We can be proud of our own ethnicity while at the same time; we can still embrace others from other backgrounds.

We are hopeful that all these events and suggestions will begin to connect us together in new ways so that the human rights of all Ethiopians will be upheld and valued and so that people will reach out in unity, tolerance, respect, love and care for one another to create a better future for our children.

We still expect more and more people to join by the end of the week, contributing in their own ways to this effort. Some of these efforts will be very simple, but meaningful. Here is one inspiring example of two families from Denmark. We hope many of you will follow this example.

It began with a Tigrayan woman who read about the upcoming events, particularly the suggestion about reaching out on Day Three to your neighbors and those from different groups around you. She immediately thought of an Ethiopian family she regularly met at the grocery store. She said that early on, she had asked the woman, Abasha Neach? the woman replied in English, “I’m an Oromo.”

After that, both of them had merely passed each other in the community for five years. She admitted that she was friendlier with the Danes in the country than with one of her own fellow Ethiopians. She said that after reading about reaching out to others, she had started to feel guilty and knew she had been wrong. She decided she was going to do change.

The next time she saw the woman in the store, she asked her if she could come with her family to her home so she could cook for them and have supper together. The woman asked her why. She explained that it was because those organizing the Worldwide March events had asked people to do simple things such as reaching out to invite someone to your home for supper, not to talk about politics, but to learn about each other. She said she had been passing her in the community for five years and that she wanted to know her better.

At first, the woman told her that she would get back to her, but by the time she had gotten through the store, she went up to the other woman who had invited her and said, “We will come to your home.”

We will not know the end of this story until after next Saturday, but what if more people did this all over the Diaspora and throughout Ethiopia? What would Ethiopia be like if this became common? Changes like this are up to many average Ethiopians, not politicians who sometimes use their hidden agendas or ethnicity to divide average Ethiopians. If many average Ethiopians would extend love and caring actions to others, imagine what could happen!

This is what it means to be human. This is what our complaint is about our government— they have forgotten how to be human. Let us start this week to show each other what it will mean to Ethiopia if each of us is simply “human”, one person at a time!

Let us persist in our struggle for such a society. Come out of your homes and join this week in any way you can to bring about a new Ethiopia! It is up to Ethiopians like you and like me!

For information on events or if you want to participate in some of the planned groups, you should email us at [email protected] for details. Events are planned in many different cities in 23 cities and in 17 countries throughout the world.

If you want to join, it is still not too late! If you are already organizing something, email the details to us of the date, the time and the location so we can put it all together with other information. Also, for ideas of possible slogans that are being used throughout the world, contact us.

—————–

For more information please contact
The Worldwide March for Ethiopian Freedom, Human Rights and Justice Organizing Committee
By E-mail at: [email protected]

9 thoughts on “Worldwide Ethiopian march for freedom and justice

  1. This is really a smart move. We have to be involved in such progrms as much as possible. This is what politicians have done to us in the past years.

  2. The world only understands force.You can march all you want outside Ethiopia.Nobody cares.The world leaders don’t care.The world leaders know what it costs to have a freedom and justices in any country.Before U.S became this free loving country there were others who fought and died to created this country we all call today U.S Of America.Can not you you people understand that the U.S and EU ledaers do’t care?Why Don’t you go back to Ethiopia and march in your country? To get ride of Meles and his child killers you people must united and fight child killers and kill them.TPLF only understands force only.

  3. Freedom and Justice

    Freedom and justice do not come easily to some people. Millions of people raise their voices and cry out for freedom and justice to shine upon them. For example, the Burmese, the Chinese, the Iraqis, the North Koreans, the Palestinians, the Somalis, and, of course, we the Ethiopians long for freedom and justice for our people in jail, in house arrest, in exile, and for the whole people under oppressive dictators.

    In the past, the great freedom and justice lovers such as Mahatama Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr., and others like them, marched on the streets, spent, some of them, years in confinement and dragged by police for freedom and justice, and today, we their adherents continue to march, demanding freedom and justice for our people whose rights to speak out about their grievances are taken away from them by ruthless dictators who care nothing about their people but only for themselves and for their political gangs.

    Freedom and justice are like new born babies covered with fresh blood, and no country ever gets its freedom and justice without a blood shed. Only the luckiest ones get their freedom and justice with less blood shed but others with an ocean of blood in their streets, in their houses, in their farmlands, in their offices, in their market places, in the churches, Mosques, Synagogues, and in the battle fields. That is what freedom and justice require from each one of us – a complete surrender of our lives to the two of them.

    The irony here is that injustice and slavery also do not come easily; they require hard work and blood shed. For example, Meles Seitanawi came to power by slaughtering hundreds of Ethiopians and continues to this day to kill people to stay in power. As a result of the blood shed committed by Meles and his death squads, injustice and slavery are flourishing today in Ethiopia and in Somalia.

    To eliminate injustice and slavery, to commemorate the deaths of our brothers and sisters who gave up their lives for justice and freedom, to create an awareness among our people that there is still hope for our country to be free and start a new life, to tell to the world that hunger and disease are not the only enemies of our people, but man-made injustices and slavery are killing our Ethiopian people, and to let especially the United States and the European Unions know that the Dictator Meles Seitanawi is responsible for the destruction of Ethiopia by selling its lands to a foreign country, its valuable gold to the Arab merchants, its indispensable artifacts to the highest bidders, and by waging his own war against neighboring countries and its own people, we will march and continue to march in the streets of Addis Ababa, in the streets of London, in the streets of Washington, in the streets of Rome, in the streets of Ontario, in the streets of Johannesburg, in the streets of Sidney and in many other streets of freedom and justice loving countries.

    We will not only march in the streets for these two noble causes – freedom and justice for our people – but we will also held prayer meetings in Churches, in Synagogues, in Mosques, and in private meetings in our houses, in our offices, and in stadiums. We will publicly declare the deaths of our brothers and sisters killed in the daylight time, gun downed in the dark rooms, rotten in the jail, expelled from their country and passed away in a foreign land, and we will not be quiet until justice is done for all of them, killed, jailed, expelled, and persecuted by our common enemy – Meles Seitanawi.

    As we march, singing the song of freedom and justice, we will not be intimidated by those power abusers, baby killers, slave drives, treaty breakers, political liars, and renegades. Our march, joined by thousands of concerned Ethiopians and others, intimidates our enemies and sends them into hidings because they do not want to see us march, conversing about their crimes against our people slaughtered in 2005 and after that.

    We are witnessing what has happened to our brothers and sisters in the streets of Addis Ababa, in the streets of Gondar, in the streets of Oromia, and in the streets of Ogaden, but our enemies are denying it as if it has never happened; they may deny it, but the streets, the buildings, and the telephone poles will affirm it. The weather of that day, the sun, the stars, and the moon of that night will testify for the bloods of those innocent Ethiopians shed by the hands of Meles’ death squads.

    Therefore, let us march, hand in hand and sing in one voice one song that resembles the song of Moses and Mariam, after they crossed the Red Sea in great triumph; yes, we have not yet triumphed, but we believe one day we will triumph, and our enemy pharaoh – Meles Seitanawi – will be drawn into the Red Sea- the River Nile. Then freedom and justice will shine upon the people of Ethiopia forever and ever.

  4. i want everyone to check this out it is the current situation ethiopia is facing due to meles adminstration it is on sudan tribunehttp://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article27050

  5. For many years ethiopians march for freedom but international organization continue ignoring .many international organization are misguded by meles zenawi agents that ”the opposations are terrorits nor nationalist,that it might be affect the horn of africa strategies”

    For further exsitance meles Zenawi buliding the terrorist caltivation home for further bussinse.the existance of terroriest in the neighbor countries the most income and power for meles ethinc party government

    Isurprise why weterns strongly recommanded him on power. they are many organization opposations group anti terrorist and considering as a freedom of nations to be europianzation or American life.they have an ablity to leads the horn peasfull to the scintifc world.

    many ethiopian opposation groups are ready to work with global world and the climatic changes.but keeping the dictators creats a good apportunity for terrorist to well organized.

    For further devlopment the only solution, must ethiopians addminsterd by a democratic elected
    keeping meles Zenawi on power means ,increasing terrorist atctivites which may dangerous in the future . Do international community supporte the equbation of terrorist ? if not why they keep silent ?

Leave a Reply