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Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 15:43
by sarcasm
Ethiopia is in serious turmoil and another historical political transition is, perceptibly, impending. Ongoing conflicts in different parts of the country, state-facilitated starvation, fresh nationwide anti-government uprisings – and the Horn of Africa nation is once again in mayhem and the future is dreadfully uncertain. Ethiopia is at a bloodcurdling juncture; multiple crises threaten the foundational stability of Africa’s second-largest country. Civil war in Tigray, border disputes with Sudan, Egypt’s disagreement on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) are collectively pushing Ethiopia to the brinks of becoming a failed state.
Between 1991 and 2016, Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front’s (EPRDF) gradual but steadfast program of democratization and liberalization within a multinational constitutional framework succeeded in converting Ethiopia from a poster child of war and famine to a fledgling economic powerhouse and linchpin of security in East Africa. Although a variety of human rights challenges and mass imprisonment subsisted under the reign of Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), its defeat of the tyrannical military junta known as the Derg had embarked Ethiopia on an expedition away from pervasive poverty and toward the fulfilment of meaningful democratic aspirations.
However, between 2016 and 2018, popular protests initially sparked by legislation meant to regulate the uprooting of Oromo farmers by expanding the capital city known as the ‘Addis Ababa Master Plan’ would continue to exceptionally confront Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF); discontent was particularly pronounced in the Amhara and Oromo regions, at the time directly administered by the Amhara National Democratic Party (ANDM) and Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organization (OPDO). This period was also marked by increasing inter-regional tensions including a border war between the Oromo and Somali Regions that produced over a million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) that have yet to be resettled to their former hometowns or sufficiently supported.
“Regional administration members from Somali and Oromo come to Qoloji camps regularly to take our photos and make pledges of resettlement or direct support. We have been here for years now. Some of us are on our third or fourth child. Our lives do not matter to these selfish leaders. We are waiting for our Lord to help us” (A.L. 5/14/2021, Jijiga, Somali Region, Ethiopia).
Abiy Ahmed was competitively selected as chairman by the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) to deliver on the party’s reformist agenda – initiated in January 2018 – in response to the growing unrest. Abiy Ahmed became a beacon of hope for Ethiopia, a symbol of long-overdue reforms and inclusivity. Abiy Ahmed experienced overwhelming domestic and international support, including from the people of Tigray and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Three years later, Ethiopia is returning to the embodiment of famine and war it had been in during the mid ’80s. Unfortunately, there were countless early signs indicating the distinctive democratic ambitions of the Ethiopian people would not be realized or implemented under Abiy Ahmed’s transitional administration. For instance, while the administration’s swift overturning of the ‘anti-freedom’ laws were widely celebrated, they were as quickly replaced by new repressive legal frameworks. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), the UN Security Council, and many other credible entities and international governments have expressed concern over the return of oppressive practices and are calling for an end to atrocities in Ethiopia. [ii]
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Re: Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 16:20
by EthioRedSea
Thanks for sharing!
Re: Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 16:35
by Tog Wajale E.R.
Guhaf Agga*me Qomal Agga*me Bas*tard Prostitutes Bissbiss Shettattam Buzz Of Now. Your Days Of Survival Is Numbered, We Are Coming To Get You From Rats Hole Caves. Go Figure Qomal Agga*me.
Re: Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 18:02
by Educator
Don't you have a valid and educated argument to present other than name calling and displaying a very low behavior?
Tog Wajale E.R. wrote: ↑26 Jul 2021, 16:35
Guhaf Agga*me Qomal Agga*me Bas*tard Prostitutes Bissbiss Shettattam Buzz Of Now. Your Days Of Survival Is Numbered, We Are Coming To Get You From Rats Hole Caves. Go Figure Qomal Agga*me.
Re: Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 18:34
by Tog Wajale E.R.
Qomal Agga*me Guahaf Agga*me A.K.A. Educator:-- With Dedebit Woorgach Tigrayian Agga*me Erkhusan Zerr Have Only One Choice That Is To Exterminate Them Completely From Mama Ethiopia

Face Of The Earth. Bissbiss Shettattam Agga*me .
P.S. My As*s Valid Arguments With Qomalat Agga*mes.
Re: Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 18:55
by Abere
The Hallmark of the era of Tigre Woyane:
- Genocide
- Mass displacement and exodus
- Theft and corruption
- Minority ethnic tyranny of Tigres
-Mass impoverishment (subhuman living situation, homelessness, living on refusals from dumpsters; moral decadence)
Ethiopia is better ever without Tigre Liberation Front Thugs. No eyes want to see Tigre Woyanes again and No ears want to hear about Tigre Woyane again - this is the bitter truth. Woyane is gone forever. It is a cry over a spilled milk - TPLF is gone.
Re: Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 19:12
by sun
sarcasm wrote: ↑26 Jul 2021, 15:43
Ethiopia is in serious turmoil and another historical political transition is, perceptibly, impending. Ongoing conflicts in different parts of the country, state-facilitated starvation, fresh nationwide anti-government uprisings – and the Horn of Africa nation is once again in mayhem and the future is dreadfully uncertain. Ethiopia is at a bloodcurdling juncture; multiple crises threaten the foundational stability of Africa’s second-largest country. Civil war in Tigray, border disputes with Sudan, Egypt’s disagreement on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) are collectively pushing Ethiopia to the brinks of becoming a failed state.
Between 1991 and 2016, Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front’s (EPRDF) gradual but steadfast program of democratization and liberalization within a multinational constitutional framework succeeded in converting Ethiopia from a poster child of war and famine to a fledgling economic powerhouse and linchpin of security in East Africa. Although a variety of human rights challenges and mass imprisonment subsisted under the reign of Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), its defeat of the tyrannical military junta known as the Derg had embarked Ethiopia on an expedition away from pervasive poverty and toward the fulfilment of meaningful democratic aspirations.
However, between 2016 and 2018, popular protests initially sparked by legislation meant to regulate the uprooting of Oromo farmers by expanding the capital city known as the ‘Addis Ababa Master Plan’ would continue to exceptionally confront Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF); discontent was particularly pronounced in the Amhara and Oromo regions, at the time directly administered by the Amhara National Democratic Party (ANDM) and Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organization (OPDO). This period was also marked by increasing inter-regional tensions including a border war between the Oromo and Somali Regions that produced over a million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) that have yet to be resettled to their former hometowns or sufficiently supported.
“Regional administration members from Somali and Oromo come to Qoloji camps regularly to take our photos and make pledges of resettlement or direct support. We have been here for years now. Some of us are on our third or fourth child. Our lives do not matter to these selfish leaders. We are waiting for our Lord to help us” (A.L. 5/14/2021, Jijiga, Somali Region, Ethiopia).
Abiy Ahmed was competitively selected as chairman by the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) to deliver on the party’s reformist agenda – initiated in January 2018 – in response to the growing unrest. Abiy Ahmed became a beacon of hope for Ethiopia, a symbol of long-overdue reforms and inclusivity. Abiy Ahmed experienced overwhelming domestic and international support, including from the people of Tigray and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Three years later, Ethiopia is returning to the embodiment of famine and war it had been in during the mid ’80s. Unfortunately, there were countless early signs indicating the distinctive democratic ambitions of the Ethiopian people would not be realized or implemented under Abiy Ahmed’s transitional administration. For instance, while the administration’s swift overturning of the ‘anti-freedom’ laws were widely celebrated, they were as quickly replaced by new repressive legal frameworks. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), the UN Security Council, and many other credible entities and international governments have expressed concern over the return of oppressive practices and are calling for an end to atrocities in Ethiopia. [ii]
This is only spiting out banal fake cheap cyber propaganda which is used to be the private monopoly of tplf's Digital Wayane, an organization bent on destroying Ethiopia and capturing state power for the second barbaric shooting and looting criminal activities. All the turmoils in Ethiopia are the handwork of the destabilizing tplf agents because tplf is like a hydra with a single body but multiple heads.
Yes, tplf wanted Dr. Abiy and by extension, the 50 million Oromos to become a docile coward tplf puppet, only taking tplf orders coming from above and implementing them as well as keep hating Amharas and Eritreans forever, with no end in sight as tplf oligarchs keep getting fatter and fatter,richer and richer by shooting and looting other peoples resources. But the opposite happened, as the brave PM and the brave Oromos declared their autonomy from the tplf dictatorship and started working for Mamma Ethiopia on their own, independently and jointly with others.
What can cause outrages and violence in the camps of the tplf oligarchs other than such noble activities of empowering all Ethiopians from corner to corner. Right now, Ethiopians are saying, "Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice shame on me."
But currently Ethiopians are waking up and increasingly exposing and responding to Digital Wayane fake news in kind, to the extent that digital Wayane can't even find a place to hide. At the same time over 90% of Ethiopians went out in droves and elected the new Ethiopian Prime minister, Dr. Abiy Ahmed and as a continuation to the mandate demonstrating almost in all the Ethiopian regions and cities, denouncing the barbaric tplf anti Ethiopian aggression and savage left and right killings mainly to serve Misir and other anti Ethiopian foreign Judas.

Re: Abiy Ahmed’s Destabilization of Ethiopia (Homeland Security Today)
Posted: 26 Jul 2021, 19:28
by Aba
Brilliant analysis. Thanks for sharing.
sarcasm wrote: ↑26 Jul 2021, 15:43
Ethiopia is in serious turmoil and another historical political transition is, perceptibly, impending. Ongoing conflicts in different parts of the country, state-facilitated starvation, fresh nationwide anti-government uprisings – and the Horn of Africa nation is once again in mayhem and the future is dreadfully uncertain. Ethiopia is at a bloodcurdling juncture; multiple crises threaten the foundational stability of Africa’s second-largest country. Civil war in Tigray, border disputes with Sudan, Egypt’s disagreement on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) are collectively pushing Ethiopia to the brinks of becoming a failed state.
Between 1991 and 2016, Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front’s (EPRDF) gradual but steadfast program of democratization and liberalization within a multinational constitutional framework succeeded in converting Ethiopia from a poster child of war and famine to a fledgling economic powerhouse and linchpin of security in East Africa. Although a variety of human rights challenges and mass imprisonment subsisted under the reign of Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), its defeat of the tyrannical military junta known as the Derg had embarked Ethiopia on an expedition away from pervasive poverty and toward the fulfilment of meaningful democratic aspirations.
However, between 2016 and 2018, popular protests initially sparked by legislation meant to regulate the uprooting of Oromo farmers by expanding the capital city known as the ‘Addis Ababa Master Plan’ would continue to exceptionally confront Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF); discontent was particularly pronounced in the Amhara and Oromo regions, at the time directly administered by the Amhara National Democratic Party (ANDM) and Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organization (OPDO). This period was also marked by increasing inter-regional tensions including a border war between the Oromo and Somali Regions that produced over a million Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) that have yet to be resettled to their former hometowns or sufficiently supported.
“Regional administration members from Somali and Oromo come to Qoloji camps regularly to take our photos and make pledges of resettlement or direct support. We have been here for years now. Some of us are on our third or fourth child. Our lives do not matter to these selfish leaders. We are waiting for our Lord to help us” (A.L. 5/14/2021, Jijiga, Somali Region, Ethiopia).
Abiy Ahmed was competitively selected as chairman by the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) to deliver on the party’s reformist agenda – initiated in January 2018 – in response to the growing unrest. Abiy Ahmed became a beacon of hope for Ethiopia, a symbol of long-overdue reforms and inclusivity. Abiy Ahmed experienced overwhelming domestic and international support, including from the people of Tigray and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Three years later, Ethiopia is returning to the embodiment of famine and war it had been in during the mid ’80s. Unfortunately, there were countless early signs indicating the distinctive democratic ambitions of the Ethiopian people would not be realized or implemented under Abiy Ahmed’s transitional administration. For instance, while the administration’s swift overturning of the ‘anti-freedom’ laws were widely celebrated, they were as quickly replaced by new repressive legal frameworks. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), the UN Security Council, and many other credible entities and international governments have expressed concern over the return of oppressive practices and are calling for an end to atrocities in Ethiopia. [ii]
Continue reading https://www.hstoday.us/subject-matter-a ... -ethiopia/