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Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby EPRDF » 24 May 2012, 22:32


Ethiopia at 2012 G8 Summit: Abebe Gellaw Only Embarrassed Himself

By Samuel Gebru



Ethiopia’s Prime Minister was recently in Washington, D.C. as part of his participation in the annual summit of the Group of Eight (G8).

Mr. Meles Zenawi was speaking at an agricultural forum moderated by the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, Dr. Rajiv Shah. During the session, Mr. Meles was asked to elaborate on the priorities of Ethiopia and Africa when it came to agriculture and aid commitments by donor countries (see video time 03:30:30). As the Prime Minister was answering the question, Ethiopian American Mr. Abebe Gellaw disrupted the forum by yelling at the Prime Minister to free the jailed Mr. Eskinder Nega and boastfully declared that Ethiopians need freedom not food (see video time 03:31:35).

Even while Mr. Abebe was yelling, Mr. Meles kept on talking over him (see video time 03:31:46). Dr. Shah of USAID essentially told Mr. Abebe to shut up and called security on him (see video time 03:32:01). The Ethiopian Prime Minister continued answering the question posed by Dr. Shah.

I know Mr. Abebe and was extensively quoted in a critical article he wrote on the Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray (EFFORT).

Although I agree with Mr. Abebe that Ethiopia needs a free and functioning private press and political environment, his actions were in all respects immature, insane and quite unprofessional. Professional journalists—which Mr. Abebe claims to be—would know that their job is to professionally report the news without jumping up and disrupting events and meetings. Forget protocol and the fact that this was a high-level panel—Mr. Abebe’s actions served no purpose. If his goal was to embarrass the Prime Minister of Ethiopia then he terribly failed.

Again, if you see the actual video, while Mr. Meles looked shocked, he continued to talk over Mr. Abebe and when that proved difficult, he waited and let Mr. Abebe have his moment. If Mr. Abebe actually wanted to embarrass the Prime Minister, he would have waited and used his press credentials as an opportunity to ask hard questions on freedom and democracy that could have challenged Mr. Meles and his policies. However, the Prime Minister was not embarrassed—and keep in mind, he got what we wanted: a renewal of G8 commitment to food security in Africa through the opening of a new fund of $3 Billion.

Time and again, Ethiopian Americans miserably fail to seize the opportunity to challenge senior Ethiopian government officials. Many senior Ethiopian government officials visit North America and Europe frequently on what I essentially call propaganda tours. That being said, a reasonable person should be able to attend these meetings and ask hard questions that challenge the Ethiopian government’s policies. Instead of that, many in our diaspora community choose to protest and disrupt meetings. This serves no purpose beyond giving the ruling party more reason not to trust or cooperate with the diaspora.

I am truthfully not surprised by the actions of Abebe Gellaw. I just hope that Ethiopian Americans understand that there is another and much better way of challenging senior Ethiopian government officials who visit the United States.



Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby EPRDF » 24 May 2012, 22:37


It is blessing for we still have some people left with brain cell that distinguish right from wrong.



Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby Minelik » 24 May 2012, 22:41


Samuel Gebru is that banda weyane former ambasaddor. He is always in the weyane league.



Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby Halafi Mengedi » 24 May 2012, 22:42


The real medicine for that is the federal Government should commit some money to fund the Agew people to organize themselves and let them have their own Kilill like you and the Bantu shouting will subsided for good. Very simple solution for the foresight people to see it.



Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby Minelik » 24 May 2012, 22:48


Halafi Mengedi wrote:The real medicine for that is the federal Government should commit some money to fund the Agew people to organize themselves and let them have their own Kilill like you and the Bantu shouting will subsided for good. Very simple solution for the foresight people to see it.


ደደብ አጋመእ




Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby Obamajr. » 25 May 2012, 03:40


EPRDF wrote:I am truthfully not surprised by the actions of Abebe Gellaw. I just hope that Ethiopian Americans understand that there is another and much better way of challenging senior Ethiopian government officials who visit the United States.

:roll: ታጥቦ ጭቃ



Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby Aragaw » 25 May 2012, 10:38


Even while Mr. Abebe was yelling, Mr. Meles kept on talking over him


You can justify all you want. You can cut it, slice it or chop it. ጌታህ ድመት ያየች አይጥ መስሎ ነበር:: ሂድና ወያኔዎቹን ፎግራቸው::

Pictures don't lie. :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
Image
Image



Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby Engidaw » 25 May 2012, 11:58


EPRDF wrote:
Although I agree with Mr. Abebe that Ethiopia needs a free and functioning private press and political environment, his actions were in all respects immature, insane and quite unprofessional. Professional journalists—which Mr. Abebe claims to be—would know that their job is to professionally report the news without jumping up and disrupting events and meetings. Forget protocol and the fact that this was a high-level panel—Mr. Abebe's actions served no purpose. If his goal was to embarrass the Prime Minister of Ethiopia then he terribly failed.


Funny how two people can see one color, its possible one is deliberately color blind or one is truly color blind. Young Samuel Gebru is a Pro-TPLF sing choir, he is naturally distorted, not by choice, but brought up by power affinity. Sometimes, we look at a given reality not as it is but as we would like it to be. There is one thing I agree with Samuel Gebru, Meles was not as much ashamed when he was called out, for there is no shame in Tigrian culture, shame is looked as a sign of soul satisfaction, hence highly discouraged or frowned upon by Tigrians.



Re: Jegnaw Abebe Gelaw in the eyes of rational thinkers

Postby EPRDF » 25 May 2012, 17:21


Aragaw,Oj,Menilik and Revolutions

It seems you all disagree with Mr. Samuel’s assertion for possibilities of his association to Meles regime, his ethnic background, and his political outlook or for many other similar reasons. I personally don’t even know who this man is, nevertheless, the important point Mr. Samuel made in his analysis is this part, which I agree with 100% coz what he exactly said was that came to my mind before I read his article
Although I agree with Mr. Abebe that Ethiopia needs a free and functioning private press and political environment, his actions were in all respects immature, insane and quite unprofessional. Professional journalists—which Mr. Abebe claims to be—would know that their job is to professionally report the news without jumping up and disrupting events and meetings

If Mr. Abebe actually wanted to embarrass the Prime Minister, he would have waited and used his press credentials as an opportunity to ask hard questions on freedom and democracy that could have challenged Mr. Meles and his policies.

Now, don’t you all think Gelaw could have inflicted a big blow on PM Zenawi if he would have questioned him much more on democracy and human right issues instead of barking like a mad dog among all those dignitaries? He failed to use his press credential as Mr. Samuel put it and lost opportunity while he had it, and went to expose his uncivilized, attention seeker behavior by screaming like BoBY.


God bless.

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