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Zmeselo
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The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Zmeselo » 26 Apr 2022, 07:52





This is how, a colonized/enslaved mind looks like. Their ancestors must be rolling in their graves, looking at those “educated” clowns trying to please their masters. White Judges don’t even wear those things, anymore! What a disgrace!! Btw, each horse wig coat costs $6500.



Last edited by Zmeselo on 26 Apr 2022, 13:31, edited 1 time in total.

Zmeselo
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Re: The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Zmeselo » 26 Apr 2022, 09:31

Shamnesty shítting themselves, at the prospect of uncensored free debate?



Zmeselo
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Re: The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Zmeselo » 26 Apr 2022, 10:51



Kenneth Roth to Step Down at Human Rights Watch

https://www.hrw.org/news/2022/04/26/ken ... ghts-watch

Has Led Global Rights Group for Nearly Three Decades

April 26, 2022


Human Rights Watch Executive Director Kenneth Roth speaks during an interview with Reuters in Geneva, Switzerland, April 9, 2018. © 2018 Reuters/Pierre Albouy

(New York) – Human Rights Watch Executive Director Kenneth Roth https://www.hrw.org/about/people/kenneth-roth has announced that he plans to step down at the end of August 2022, Human Rights Watch said today. Roth has led the organization since 1993, transforming it from a small group of regional “watch committees” to a major international human rights organization with global influence.
I had the great privilege to spend nearly 30 years building an organization that has become a leading force in defending the rights of people around the world,
Roth said.
I leave Human Rights Watch with confidence that a highly talented and dedicated staff will carry on that defense with great energy, creativity, and effectiveness.
Under Roth’s leadership, Human Rights Watch grew from a staff of about 60 with a $7 million budget, to 552 covering more than 100 countries and a nearly $100 million budget. In 1997, Human Rights Watch shared a Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts to ban antipersonnel landmines and played a critical role in the coalitions to establish the International Criminal Court and to ban the use of cluster munitions and child soldiers. The staff’s reporting and advocacy also contributed to the conviction of Liberia’s Charles Taylor, Peru’s Alberto Fujimori, and wartime Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic. Today Human Rights Watch is deeply engaged in documenting and working to curtail serious abuses in Ukraine, Myanmar, Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Syria, and Yemen, among the 100 countries where it regularly works.

Roth began his human rights career as a volunteer, working on nights and weekends while serving as an attorney and a federal prosecutor. He joined Human Rights Watch in 1987 as deputy director. At the time, the organization consisted of Helsinki Watch, formed in 1978 to support dissident movements in Eastern Europe; Americas Watch, founded in 1981; and Asia Watch, formed in 1985. Shortly after Roth joined, the organization created Middle East Watch and Africa Watch. Early in his tenure, Roth moved the organization toward a single identity as Human Rights Watch.

Not long after his arrival, popular uprisings toppled dictatorships across Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union collapsed, opening up new opportunities for the human rights movement. But as citizens of Europe’s new democracies embraced their newfound freedoms, rivalries suppressed by decades of dictatorship erupted. When Roth was appointed executive director in 1993, Yugoslavia had split apart, and Bosnia was in the throes of war marked by a brutal ethnic cleansing campaign. The genocide in Rwanda was soon to follow.

Roth recognized the need for real time documentation of atrocities to generate immediate pressure to end them. That led to the creation of a group of specially trained researchers who could provide a surge capacity to the organization’s regular country researchers.

Roth also embraced new possibilities to bring perpetrators to justice. As Human Rights Watch researchers meticulously documented abuses, the organization pressed the United Nations Security Council, then in a more cooperative moment, to create international war crimes tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Human Rights Watch research was used to build some of the cases, and staff testified at both UN tribunals. Human Rights Watch also played a prominent role in establishing the International Criminal Court, fending off pressure from the US government seeking to ensure immunity for its own forces.
Ken’s fearless passion for justice, his courage and compassion towards the victims of human rights violations and atrocity crimes was not just professional responsibility but a personal conviction to him,
said Fatou Bensouda, former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.
He has indeed been a great inspiration to me and my colleagues.
Today, amid the horrific abuse taking place in Ukraine, an infrastructure is in place to hold perpetrators accountable.

Roth also created special teams to address the needs of certain marginalized people, including women, children, [deleted], [deleted], [deleted] and [deleted] (LGBT) people, refugees, people with disabilities, and older people. He also oversaw the development of specialized programs on poverty and inequality, climate change, technology, and corporate social responsibility. In addition, he initiated a program to address human rights in the United States.
When Ken Roth succeeded me as executive director of Human Rights Watch nearly 30 years ago, I had worked with him long enough to know that the organization would be in good hands,
said Aryeh Neier, the first Human Rights Watch executive director, who later became president of Open Society Foundations.
He has exceeded my expectations. Ken’s personal integrity and leadership have been essential in making Human Rights Watch one of the world’s most important nongovernmental institutions.
Roth changed the way that Human Rights Watch directed its advocacy. The organization began focusing mainly on US foreign policy. Roth globalized the organization’s advocacy, establishing offices in Brussels, London, Paris, Berlin, Stockholm, Tokyo, Sao Paolo, Johannesburg, and Sydney. He also spearheaded the organization’s work with the United Nations, with dedicated advocates in New York and Geneva.

After the 9/11 attacks, Human Rights Watch documented and exposed the use of “black sites” where US officials interrogated and tortured terrorism suspects. Under Roth, Human Rights Watch pressed the US government to investigate and prosecute those responsible for issuing the orders. Eventually the US Senate issued the Torture Report confirming Human Rights Watch’s findings and denouncing the Central Intelligence Agency’s use of torture.
Ken Roth turned Human Rights Watch into a juggernaut for justice,
said Anthony Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union.
He has inspired a generation of human rights defenders to fight for a better world. During the so-called ‘war on terror,’ Ken went to Guantanamo and brought to bear his acumen and stature in exposing the farce of the military commission process. No organization and no leader have had a greater impact in human rights on a global scale.
Human Rights Watch’s communication strategy evolved dramatically under Roth. The organization began by writing reports. Over time, it also began producing shorter and quicker reports and built a strong multimedia capacity, so that videos, photos, and graphics now routinely accompany the organization’s publications and sometimes are the publication itself. The organization also embraced social media. The organization has amassed nearly 14 million followers on the major social media platforms. Roth himself has more than half a million Twitter followers.

In his nearly 30 years at the helm of Human Rights Watch, Roth traveled the world, pressing government officials of all stripes to pay greater respect to human rights. He met with more than two dozen heads of state and government along with countless ministers and made investigative or advocacy trips to more than 50 countries. Whenever he could, he also met with communities affected by human rights violations. During his early years with the organization, he conducted fact-finding investigations himself, including in Haiti, Cuba, Israel-Palestine, Kuwait after the Iraqi invasion, and Serbia after the US bombing. In recent years, he has been especially concerned with addressing atrocities during the Syrian war as well as Chinese government repression in Xinjiang.

Roth inevitably earned many enemies. Despite being Jewish (and having a father who fled Nazi Germany as a 12-year-old boy), he has been attacked for the organization’s criticism of Israeli government abuses. The Rwandan government was particularly vitriolic in its criticism of Roth after Human Rights Watch, which had issued a definitive account of the genocide, also reported on atrocities and repression under President Paul Kagame.

The Chinese government imposed “sanctions” on him and expelled him from Hong Kong when he traveled there to release the annual World Report in January 2020, which spotlighted Beijing’s threat to the global human rights system. Roth responded to these and many other criticisms by noting that the organization employs the same fact-finding methodology and applies the same human rights principles in every country where it works.

Roth has written extensively on a range of human rights issues. In addition to writing the introduction to the World Report since 1990, he has published more than 300 articles including in the New York Times, The Washington Post, The Guardian, The New York Review of Books, Foreign Policy, and Foreign Affairs.

Roth plans to write a book drawing on his personal experiences about the most effective strategies for defending human rights.
I am leaving Human Rights Watch but I am not leaving the human rights cause,
Roth said.

Human Rights Watch will conduct an open search for Roth’s successor. Tirana Hassan, chief programs officer, will serve as interim executive director.
Ken’s clarity of vision brought me to Human Rights Watch,
said Amy Rao, the Human Rights Watch Board of Directors co-chair.
Supporting him and this organization has been one of the great honors of my life. We are committed to ushering in a new leader who will build on Ken’s legacy and drive Human Rights Watch forward in partnership with other organizations to defend and protect human rights around the globe.

Temt
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Re: The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Temt » 26 Apr 2022, 12:32

Yes, brother Zmeselo,
Unless one is like the inferiority complexed Weyanes and their mindless "Digital Weyanes", who love to copy and look like their masters behind the scene, these African clowns, you posted above, are shameful to Africa. "Neighbors" or not, these monkeys are of no caliber to represent the Horn countries like Somalia, Eritrea, and Ethiopia.
But watch out Ethiopians and Eritreans, the developing ferenji name choice to our newborn kids may slide us into the abyss of history, same as these shameful judges that we have seen with their British crap on their head!

Mesob
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Re: The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Mesob » 26 Apr 2022, 16:56

People who suffer of inferiority complex among us that chose to commit suicide by burning their own Eritrean and African languages of Tigre Tigrinya to borrow a second hand Arabic and to Arabize themselves in order to get a short cut to Islamic Wahhabi Arabized-heaven.
The open source in the net, the Eritrean Human Rights Electronic Archive (Ehrea) confirms that the Jebha ELF leaders who decided to burn Eritrean Tigre language 1500 textbooks in the 1970s that was prepared and printed by its own Department of Education are the following:
1. Abdela Idris
2. Hamid Adem Sulieman
3. Ibrahim Mohamed Ali
4. Azien Yasin, and few minions
People like Ahmad Naser and Melake Tekle were not involved.
Here you have the historical truth and the shameless idiots of Jebha who committed “linguistic suicide”.
Thanks to the documentation center at – Eritrean Human Rights Electronic Archive – EHREA . at ehrea website …

· The burning of Tigre books – Saleh Ghadi’s account
If there is one human being that would never be suspected of ignorance in matters big and small regarding Jebha, it would be Ghadi. So the idea that somehow he was not in the know regarding the burning of Tigre books in mieda would be a joke. Only he didn’t claim ignorance, but came up with an utterly benign version of it.
Here is the strategy the Awate duo employ in their anesthetizing mission: if any damaging evidence surfaces, deny it; but if the chances of counter-evidence seems to be real, trivialize it.
Here is how Ghadi handled the claim that I made in this article – that Jebha burned all Tigre books:
“Salih Abdu Yonous Saay, this is sounding as if a library was burned. The ‘books’ are actually handwritten, a few pages typed, copies for use as a teaching aid–sort of a curriculum of a few pages. Some of those who wrote it didn’t even speak Tigayet and all those who were pushing Tigrayet in place of Arabic were Tigrinya speakers, including Zemehret. I am not sure but I doubt if few pages reached the duplicator stage. But exaggeration has been the hallmark on such issues.”
His first reaction was: how do I attribute the burning of the Tigre books to Kebessa elite? This is a brilliant move, because if he could do that, the Tigre elites would be absolved of that horrendous sin of burning their language – for that is what the burning of the books symbolized. First, he claimed that it was written by Tigrignas who don’t speak Tigre (or Tigayet, as he calls it)! The idea is to make it seem a preposterous idea from the very beginning. And in doing that, Ghadi found a perfect scapegoat: Zemhret Yohannes! This is a smart move since it would make many of the Kebessa zombies happy, that being part of the ongoing anesthesiology.
Ghadi’s second strategy is to trivialize the incident to an inconsequential point: that it is a matter of few handwritten pages. Think of Jebha that has been printing countless pamphlets suddenly preferring to do it the medieval way, with hand-writing scribes toiling in the candle light, when it comes to books!
Enter Amnuel Hidrat, who spoils this damage control by spilling the beans, telling the Awate duo that the burning concerns 1,500 printed books written by none other than Kerenites (which means that Gadi had heard it before over and over one thousand and one times, as a bed-time story).
Since the spilling of the beans, we have yet to hear from Salih Johar Gadi on this matter.
Courtesy of asmarino website:

Fiyameta
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Re: The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Fiyameta » 27 Apr 2022, 23:55

These so-called "Pastors" are the real enemies of Africa. During their 27 years of reign the terrorist agame created so many of these "pastors" in Ethiopia to poison the minds of the young people. :x :x :x




Temt
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Re: The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Temt » 28 Apr 2022, 00:08

Fiyameta wrote:
27 Apr 2022, 23:55
These so-called "Pastors" are the real enemies of Africa. During their 27 years of reign the terrorist agame created so many of these "pastors" in Ethiopia to poison the minds of the young people. :x :x :x



It is sad, very sad, what has been going on in Ethiopia! :roll: :roll:

Ethoash
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Re: The real enemies of mamma Africa

Post by Ethoash » 28 Apr 2022, 10:54

this blog was very good subject before Ato Fiyameta come and destroy it .. so i am forced to ban him because i dont want to see his picture anymore ..... how to ban doctor Flymate. easy click on his name and it will take u to Viewing profile - Fiyameta then u will see add foe. and u click on it and say yes. and u will not see his post or picture in case if u r at work place u dont want people to see his posting ... if u r in safe place then u can click on his name and u can see what he posted u can enjoy the safe serving without him

ይህንን ቆርኪ ለባሽ ተመልከተው በርግጥ የአማሮች ልብስ አይደለም


ይህም የጅብ ፀጉር ከእንግሊዞች የተቀዳ ነው። ግማቱን ብታዩት በተሀምርም አታረጉትም ። የሐይሌ ክብር ዘበኞች እኮ ልክ እንደእንግሊዞች የክብር ዘበኞች በተጠንቀቅ ይቆሙ ነበር።


ይህም ቦላሌ ወይም ካኪ የመጣው ከእንግሊዝ ነው።


i know u dont have universty in ur Assmara but when student finished their degree they wear robe. where u think that come from. Ethiopian judge also wear robe where did u think that come from. Ethiopian lawyer also wear tie white tie and black coat where did u think that come from.

anyhow Eritrean and Amhara this two idiot should not talk about other nation which are much better then us and Eritrea. u r nothing comer to those African look at them how many judge they have u r not even jealous u care about dress code. this dress code make them authority they r the one who make u go to jail or make u kill at least they must have dress code and this dress code make them play the part.. when the police wear their dress code they look more powerful and people respect their order otherwise they dont respect them even in backward Ethiopia the judge dress differently በርኖስ ይህ ብቻ ነው ኢትዬዽያዊ ልብስ

if u ask why the head cover cost 6500 dollar whatever that is good because no con-artist going to afford to buy those head gear. the black robe also in olden time it is more expensive and more costly to dye black hence prevented other from copying

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