Manchester City anuncia parceiro oficial de câmbio de criptomoedas OKX

OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City

OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City

  • Manchester City e OKX anunciaram hoje uma nova parceria de vários anos
  • A parceria abrangerá as equipes masculinas e femininas do Manchester City, além das operações de esports do Clube

VICTORIA, Seychelles, March 04, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Os campeões da Premier League Manchester City anunciaram hoje uma parceria global com o segundo maior câmbio de criptomoedas do mundo, a OKX, com a sua nomeação como Parceira Oficial de Câmbio de Criptomoedas do Clube.

Primeiro empreendimento da OKX no mundo dos esportes e entretenimento, a parceria abrangerá equipes masculinas e femininas do Manchester City, além das operações de esports do Clube.

Mais de 20 milhões de pessoas em mais de 180 mercados confiam na OKX para a troca rápida, segura e inovadora de criptomoedas em um lugar ondem podem explorar o poder da criptomoeda.

Manchester City fecha contrato com parceira de criptomoedas OKX

OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City OKX se torna Parceira Oficial de Criptomoedas do Manchester City Manchester City fecha contrato com parceira de criptomoedas OKX

A OKX e a Man City acreditam em inspirar inovação contínua, desenvolvimento de talentos e avanços tecnológicos – um importante alinhamento de parceria das organizações.

Os novos parceiros colaborarão em várias experiências exclusivas para a base de clientes global da OKX, além da sua presença nos Etihad Stadium e Academy Stadium. Os novos parceiros também irão explorar em conjunto futuros projetos de inovação.

Roel De Vries, Diretor de Operações do City Football Group, disse: “É com prazer que recebemos a OKX como Parceira Oficial do Manchester City hoje, na sua entrada no mundo dos esportes. A nova parceria alinha nossos valores compartilhados de inovação, impulsiona o sucesso e está na vanguarda dos nossos respectivos setores. Sua abordagem ampla e inclusiva para atingir diversos públicos é semelhante à nossa abordagem. Estamos prontos para trabalhar juntos nesta parceria.”

Manchester City Stadium

Manchester City Stadium

“Estamos muito contentes com a nossa parceria com o Manchester City, uma das equipes mais amadas e bem-sucedidas do mundo. O futebol e as criptomoedas compartilham algo importante; são para todos e criam inclusão na sociedade. Para a OKX, o Manchester City é um clube que representa o efeito que o futebol tem de fazer uma diferença positiva na vida das pessoas, de unir as pessoas em torno de uma paixão compartilhada pelo belo jogo. Estamos entrando na Premier League pela primeira vez como parceiro oficial de criptografia do City, comemorando esse espírito comunitário no mundo do futebol compartilhado por nós”, disse Jay Hao, CEO da OKX.

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Richard Kay
richard.kay@okx.com

A Glimpse into the Cultural Heritage of the Nakfa Trenches

Nakfa is a famous historical town of Eritrean Liberation Struggle. It is endowed with immense history and the relics of the 30 years armed struggle. Topographically, the town lies on flat- landscape and hills covered with cactus, grass, and some other thorny shrubs and enjoys a mild climate comfortable for habitation, farming and herding. According to some elders the name Nakfa is derived from the Tigre word Naqf, which literally means ‘high’. The historic town is composed of underground trenches and canals which are situated in the landscape bordered by Apolo and Tsebayt chain of mountains in the north, Mount Denden in the south, the Hedai low-flat land in the east, and Embalko and Tsabra in the west. Nakfa´s place in the Eritrean history to a large extent is attested by the monumentality of the trenches and underground trenches reminiscent of the Struggle and this article touches upon the cultural heritage embraced in the trenches.

The town of Nakfa faced the first battle in the Eritrean struggle in September 1975, when the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF) waged a counter-attack against the Ethiopian garrisons that had been stationed in the town. The second battle involved the siege of the town by EPLF forces for six months that lingered in the heaviest of the battles in the struggle. The fighting continued for a year and a half. Ten thousand Ethiopian soldiers and dozens of enemy fighters

were deployed in the battle. The town was eventually liberated by the EPLF in March 1977 and retained its absolute freedom until the complete liberation of Eritrea in 1991. Subsequent to its liberation in 1977, Nakfa became the rear base and capital of the Eritrean liberation struggle from where the EPLF was able to forge strong defense against the Ethiopian army and launch the major offensive for the entire liberation of the country from Ethiopian occupation. The town has a unique place in Eritrean history owing to its unparalleled strategic advantage and the patriotism of Eritrean fighters to ensure it didn’t succumb to the enemy hands.

Fig.1. A Representation of Nakfa Trenches

During the strategic withdrawal of the EPLF, Nakfa became a consistent, powerful and vital frontline of the freedom fighters for about 10 years, 1979-1988. The EPLF regrouped and organized its forces in the town to allow the continuation of the struggle following the strategic withdrawal. The historic town is composed of underground trenches and canals from where the liberation struggle was waged. Consequently, Nakfa had a paramount strategic importance during the protracted 30 years armed struggle for independence due to the following reasons.

1. From 1977-78 Nakfa became the turning point, source and hope for the liberation to other towns of Eritrea and, as a result, most towns in Eritrea, with the exceptions of Asmara, Asseb and some parts of Massawa were under the full control of the EPLF.

2. Most of the people in Eritrea became aware of the struggle for independence and they started to join the EPLF to consolidate the struggle against the aggressive and suppressive rules of the Ethiopian regime.

3. Freedom fighters had practiced social justice, unity, bravery, endurance and political stability with Nakfa taking the central place in the struggle.

4. From 1976-78, Nakfa faced uninterrupted day and night war for almost one year and a half. Similarly, most of the offensives of the Ethiopian army to retake the town took place in the Nakfa front to no avail.

5. Due to the heavy losses in manpower and weaponry incurred by the Ethiopia army in Nakfa, the Derg regime was eventually forced to engage in peace talks with the EPLF.

The numerous trenches and underground establishments constructed by the liberation fighters in Nakfa enabled every fighter to practice the making, designing, directing and covering of the whole processes. The canals run in a zigzag based on the strategic importance of the area to control the enemy’s sight, direction and distance. The average extension of the trenches and canals is estimated to reach about 180 kilometers in the north-south direction. Based on the information given by Division 61, there are about 1500 underground houses in and around the town.

Fig.2. A Representation of Underground establishments in Nakfa

The essential raw materials used in for making the front line were brought from the surrounding environment and far-off areas. The raw materials included large and stiff trees, granite stones as well as rare iron sheets collected from abandoned railway lines. The wall sides were constructed using stones dug out from around the trenches. However, the heavy trees were cut and brought from remote areas of Sahil and Barka regions.

These canals or tunnels were made night using inefficient shovels, hoes and human labor. The canals have an average height of 1.80 meter and 0.80-meter width. Furthermore, they were built according to the structure and importance of the terrain with respect to enemy´s visibility, stiffness as well as the formidability of the area. The design and complexity of the canals bear purposeful construction based on specific function and utility. For instance, along with the trenches, narrow canals locally, referred to by the fighters as “Juba(s)” (pockets), are seen and have very narrow and tiny windows faced directly towards the enemy’s side, on one hand, to control the movement of the enemy. Similar pockets designed within the trenches also faced towards the semi-liberated areas and were used as temporary posts to deliver first aid to freshly wounded fighters, allow freedom fighters to take brief rest while off duty and as recreation centers and on-field academic schools for freedom fighters. The long and steady canals served as the sole pass-way to and from the front and the semi-liberated areas camouflaging freedom fighters from enemy visibility and targets.

Most of the underground houses are found within and around the town of Nakfa and are adorned by different pictures and slogans reminiscent of the struggle for independence. Some of the underground posts served as command posts of chief military commanders and representatives of the executive body of the EPLF in the Front as well as the temporary office of the secretary general of the organization. In general, the underground establishments proximity to each other enabled immediate contact of the army commanders for discussions and effective decisions.

The majority of the underground houses were erected in the 1980s and are mostly clustered around the town of Nakfa. There used to be about 1500 underground houses in and around Nakfa. Based on the statistical data of Division 61, about 500 of these remain intact and some 600 are partially dismantled while the remaining have been totally destroyed. Several of the underground canals and trenches were restored by Division 61 during the anniversary of the 25th silver jubilee of the liberation of Nakfa in 2002. They are used at present as stores and residences by civil servants and the military.

The permanent trenches and underground establishments in the Nakfa Front were connected to the liberated areas that housed political, military, economic and social bureaus of the EPLF, located at least within 30 kilometers from the canals and trenches in the Nakfa Front. The liberated areas, known as Dejen, include localities such as Wegryet, Ketan, Wina Technical School, Himbol, Eila Babu, Amberbeb, Hishkib, Asmat, Arag, Hager, Ararb, etc. Rare underground facilities used to house bureaus of the Front in the liberated areas also survive to these days.

In general, the Nakfa front was divided into two wings, right and left wings, owing to geographical directions, strategic military coding and structural locations of the area. The Nakfa-Afabet road became the reference point to divide either wings, and familiar trenches from both wings assume names bearing traditional references by freedom fighters. The Right Wing of the Nakfa front includes trenches such as Fidel ‘Pe’ (as in the of Tigrigna alphabet), Taba Selam (peace hill), Globe (as in the orbit of the earth), Rigole (penalty spot), Wancha (cup), Denden, Galdenden, Endanepal, Farnello, Testa, Sewra (revolution), Sembel, Afncha (nose), Teateq, Kubub Baray and Sege. The Left Wing also extends to the left direction over the chain of mountains and terrains with ample traditional referents to the trenches constructed during the perpetual fighting. Some well-known of these include Merkebna, Medat, May Kelashin, Arew, Teamamen, Nakura, Anda-sga, Otolo, Sulfur, Volley-ball, Agadu, Enda Krbit, Tiks, Spartacus, Hamukushti, Aibre and Cubania.

The names of the trenches and underground establishments were based on varieties of aspects and circumstances, such as natural obstacles, functional attributes of the mountains, heroic deeds that might have been carried out at that particular place, distance from enemy’s positions as well as activities in the Nakfa Front. Most of the trenches, therefore, assume names given by freedom fighters. ´´Rigole´´ (as in the penalty spot in football), for instance, is a referent to imply the nearest trench to the enemy in the front while ´´ Fidel Pe“ resembles the alphabet ´´Pe“ in the Tigrigna script. Other fortresses and trenches in the Nakfa Front have similar derivation and speculations of their names

At present, Nakfa´s record is not only of the protracted fighting in the past but also of change. Despite some maintenance and restoration activities by the Eritrean army, a great deal of the trenches need urgent preservation by pertinent government institutions. The historic town offers a tangible evidence of the armed struggle for independence. The landscape becomes a reference to an effective warfare machinery of the struggle forged over a formidable terrain and the remnants of the fortifications reflect a pattern which strongly held safe the future of the nation. This pattern embraces the internal organization of combatant establishments and the distribution as well as interrelation of multiple logistical and institutional facilities over much of the landscape. The interaction of these warfare systems with the core establishments of the EPLF in the liberated areas (Dejen) is indeed a tangible element of the rich and plentiful outstanding historical values of the town. The intangible aspects of the heritage contained in the trenches also took mold in the shape of the tenacity, heroic deeds and martyrdom of freedom fighters in the frontline and evoke the cherished national identity. Nakfa, thus, has a central place in the history of Eritrea and to memorize this Eritrea’s currency is named after it. The preservation, conservation and protection of the trenches, therefore, is an urgent task for all nationals.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Wedi-Feraday: A Household Name in the Eritrean Film Industry

In addition to being a playwright and renowned director, he is also a poet, painter, very talented program leader, a soccer player and more…. He is also known for his charm and good sense of humor. Q&A introduces you with Msgun Zeray, famously known as Wedi-Feraday, director and writer of many renowned Tigrinya feature films and TV series.

Would you please tell us about your childhood and the nickname “Wedi-Feraday”?

I was born in Dekemhare in 1952. I wasn’t that much interested in education in the beginning, and as a kid I was best known for hunting birds. But after we moved to Massawa, I became an outstanding student. I think it is maybe because I couldn’t find birds to hunt in Massawa. Also my elder sister Sara was my best friend.

About my nickname Wedi- Ferady; it is because my father was an Attorney General. I told my father’s job when I was filling my recruitment form, then someone called me Wedi-Feraday, which literally means the Judge’s son, and it became my nickname.

What inspired your interest in film making?

When I was young I used to go to theatre shows frequently. The old memories never faded from my mind. At that time, I and some other kids in our neighborhood formed a team and started to show dramas to the rest of the neighborhood kids. And when I was a student, I loved writing down my favorite songs, quotes and articles which I read from books. And football game was also my favorite sport, but beyond loving it I was also a good player. And at first, in the first half of the 1970s, I started playing for Meloti Football Club and later transferred to Tele, both of which are local first division Football Clubs. But soon the repression in Eritrea was getting much worse due to the coming of the Derg regime to power. For that reason, I was compelled to stay away from my favorite sport.

I was looking at your childhood book (bella copia), would you please tell us something about it?

Well, may be that can give you a hint of what my childhood looked like. Along the academic contents, the book also carried poems, song lyrics, quotes and impressions about love and more. My colleague used to call it “general knowledge”. And I am very happy that my friend brought it back from the US after so many years.

How did you join the Eritrean Liberation Struggle?

The late 1970s was known for its instability and the Eritrean youth was petrified by increased brutal oppressions of the Derg regime. Jailing and killing of innocent Eritrean youth was a daily scenario at the time. As a result, many youths were fleeing cities and towns to villages and some were joining the armed struggle. I was in the port city of Assab at that time and I had to go to my village of origin. For some time then, I started farming and began getting involved in administrational activities of the village. Shortly after that however, I left the village and joined the liberation struggle along with many of my colleagues in 1978 with the strategic withdrawal of the EPLF.

Tell us your experience in the struggle?

Of course the struggle was hard, which is of course what we expected. After I was w o u n d e d in a battle during the 3rd offensive, I was w i t h d r a w n from the f i g h t i n g units and got assigned as a teacher at the revolutionary schools; and once I was a coordinator of our unit’s cultural troupe. In line with that, I used to contribute articles to the revolutionary magazines which were published by the EPLF. Later I became an official writer of the Halewa magazine.

Let’s proceed to your post-i n d e p e n d e n c e works, particularly film making.

I made my film directing debut with the first Eritrean series movie “kuana” which was written by Debesay Woldu. After that I directed several Tigrinya TV series including the current Eri-Tv series film Jorjo. When it comes to feature movies, I and Isaias Tsegai wrote and directed the renowned film Eta Ade, which is among the first Eritrean feature films. And I also wrote and directed the film Ablel it was the first Eritrean feature film to be translated to Japanese language, and many others.

You have worked in many of the Eritrean musical and stage dramas……?

Yes, I have participated in many Eritrean stage dramas as director and writer. The “village dream” is among them which was written in English language, and is being translated to Indian language.

What’s directing for you?

Directing is a real art. Being a director is to be able to organize the technical crew and the actors, plus to be able to interpret the written story in to dramatic action. This requires making in depth analysis of the story. In addition, the director needs to convey the writer’s message appropriately and to ask himself what the audience should gain from the dramatic experience. Overall, film director should be patient with the actors until the needed shape of the film has taken.

What do you normally expect from your actors?

First and foremost, a film actor should be disciplined with punctuality and to present himself fully and willingly. And it’s obvious that they should portray the character they are assigned with all their ability. And it wouldn’t be boring if they changed their styles every now and then.

I have heard that you are also a painter….?

Actually I don’t have that much experience. But I like to play with colors like a small kid. I love to paint landscapes, birds and other things which impresses me; but I haven’t exhibited them yet, because I thought I have to make more collection.

How do you manage all of these works of art; is that a gift or result of toil?

First, I want to thank your appreciation. And sometimes something pushes you from your inside, and you try to express it in different ways. Some of them can’t be expressed simply with bare words, but it becomes easier to express them in other ways such as painting, poetry or other means of art. May be it could be a gift but gift alone is worthless without determination.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

TheHill.com: What the UN General Assembly vote on Ukraine tells us.

There really were no surprises among the five states that voted against the United Nations General Assembly resolution condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and demanding that it withdraw its forces from that embattled country. Syria, Belarus, North Korea and Eritrea, all led by authoritarian dictators, supported their fellow autocrat in the Kremlin. Indeed, the Biden administration had sanctioned the Eritrean Defense Forces and the country’s ruling party as recently as September, stating, “Eritrea’s destabilizing presence in Ethiopia is prolonging the conflict … and threatening the integrity of the Ethiopian state.” In other words, it has been taking a leaf out of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s playbook.

On the other hand, there were some surprises both among the 141 states that supported the resolution — of which 96 were its co-sponsors — as well as among the 35 states that chose to abstain. The list of co-sponsors included Israel, which previously had attempted to walk a fine line between Russia and Ukraine. This was in part because of Israel’s concern about endangering its arrangements with Moscow that have enabled it to attack Iranian targets in Syria and thwart Tehran’s efforts to establish a position on the Golan Heights.

Jerusalem also did not want to alienate those oligarchs in Putin’s circle who have supported Israel politically and financially. For those reasons, the Israelis blocked sales of their weapons to Ukraine, either directly or through third countries. Nevertheless, given the scale of Ukraine’s growing humanitarian crisis, as well as Putin’s clear determination to wipe the country off the map, and facing intense American pressure, the Israelis did an about-face. They began to provide humanitarian aid to Ukraine, and then chose not only to vote for the resolution but to co-sponsor it.

Like Israel, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) had hesitated to criticize Russia. It not only remained silent during Russia’s pre-war military buildup on Ukraine’s borders, but also voted against the Security Council resolution that presaged the virtually identical resolution in the General Assembly. Although the UAE did not co-sponsor the General Assembly resolution, it did join the other 140 countries that voted in its favor. Saudi Arabia likewise supported the resolution, even though it has developed close ties with Moscow and had refrained from criticizing Russia’s actions. So, too, did the other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC): Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman, as well as non-GCC member Yemen.

There were other surprises among those states that supported the General Assembly resolution. Singapore, traditionally careful not to get caught in disagreements between the United States and China, was a supporter. So was Cambodia, which tends to take a low profile on controversial international political matters. Indeed, of the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), only Vietnam and Laos abstained.

It was no great surprise that China abstained from voting on the resolution. It had abstained in the Security Council vote and did not want to alienate either Moscow or the many Third World countries that host Chinese economic projects and supported the resolution. Nor was it surprising that Russia’s Central Asian neighbors abstained as well.

Apart from China, Pakistan and India were among the most notable abstainers. Several European Union states, as well as Britain, Canada, Australia and Japan, had lobbied Pakistan to support the resolution. But Islamabad in recent years has supplemented its close ties to China with a growing relationship with Russia. This past April, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told his counterpart on a visit to Islamabad, “I came with a message from my president that tell Pakistan we are open for any cooperation; whatever Pakistan needs, Russia is ready for it.” The Pakistanis interpreted the statement to mean that Moscow would give them a “blank check.” And Pakistani President Imran Khan was in Moscow striking a trade deal with Russia even as Russian forces penetrated deeper into Ukraine.

Pakistan’s arch-rival India has had a longstanding relationship with Russia. Sixty percent of India’s military equipment is Russian or Soviet-made. Given the ties between the two countries, it probably is not surprising that the world’s largest democracy in effect has aligned itself with the world’s second largest (after China) autocracy.

In so doing, however, India signaled the limits to its participation in the Quad with the U.S., Japan and Australia, all three of which co-sponsored the resolution on Ukraine. For years, under both Democratic and Republican presidents, Washington has sought closer ties with India, not least in the military sphere. There is no reason that the United States should not seek to expand those ties. But India still sees itself as non-aligned, however much business — including arms business — it does with the West. Unlike Israel and the Gulf States, India simply is not prepared to condemn any Russian aggression, even if it merely is asked to support what ultimately is a toothless, non-binding U.N. resolution.

Washington should harbor no illusions about India. The giant of the Asian subcontinent will resist binding ties with anyone and, as it has since gaining its independence from British colonial rule 75 years ago, will continue to go its own way.

* Dov S. Zakheim is a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and vice chairman of the board for the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He was under secretary of Defense (comptroller) and chief financial officer for the Department of Defense from 2001 to 2004 and a deputy under secretary of Defense from 1985 to 1987.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

‘Indemaso’ Award to outstanding students

The National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students in cooperation with the Ministry of Education provided ‘Indemaso’ Award to outstanding students in Dekemhare sub-zone that scored higher marks in the eighth-grade national examination.

According to Mr. Filmon Mesfun, head of the National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students branch in Dekemhare sub-zone, the awardees were 126 students including 66 females that scored over 80 marks in the national examination.

Mr. Filmon went on to say that the objective of the award is to encourage students become competitive in their academic performance and fellow students to follow their example.

Pointing out that the commendable performance of the students in the national examination has been the result of the strong effort on the part of the students, parents and teachers, Mr. Yemane Abera, administrator of the sub-zone, called for reinforced effort for a better outcome.

At the occasion, 40 women trained in beauty salon have been graduated.

In the Southern Region so far 1 thousand 771 outstanding students who scored higher marks in the eighth-grade national examination have received the ‘Indemaso’ award.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

EheElephant.Info: The Sands of the Ogaden Are Blowing Across East Africa.

Even in a season of bad years, it is a particularly very bad year for the Horn of Africa. War and hunger tearing at Somalia, revolutionary hope in Ethiopia turned into existential crisis, the coming end of Kenyatta’s reign over Kenya with a Kalenjin successor and ethnic tensions in the wings, and in Uganda, the recent suspicious death of an Archbishop amidst a military regime openly massacring the country’s citizens, bring the region to the very edge of catastrophe.

As always happens for the region, it all starts with failed rains, most likely somewhere between Ethiopia and Somalia, although because the way in which it works is complex, few pause to consider that stopping hunger deaths in the Ogaden could create a more stable East Africa. But the rains have failed for more than three years now, and in time, the impact will be felt as coups and massacres as far afield as Kampala and the Congolese border.

In the meantime, as superpower rivalry swoops in, a looming election cycle is setting unease. The elections come. They are stolen. Civil war breaks out in Uganda. In Kenya, tensions between Luo, Kikuyu and Kalenjin politicians push the country to the brink of civil war; in no time, there will be an attempted coup in Nairobi.

But for the more alert readers, if the above scenario sounds more like a description of 1977, rather than of 2022, then there is a good reason for it; it is 1977. There have been many turning points in our post-independence history, but if I were pressed hard to pick the one that unites us in our common fate, I would settle for 1977.

And then, I would back up a little to 1972. For this was the year in which a general, global drought hit East Africa in a serious way. An indictment of public media discourse in the region is the degree of ignorance it engenders not just in its audience, but also in its reporters and editors, and so it was not until 2012 that, travelling to Kaabong from Kotido in Karamoja, I first heard the words “Loreng Lega”, from a pastoralist-turned farmer, Faustino Odir. He was explaining why he, a Jie man, started farming, saying that his family fled Loreng Lega in Karamoja in 1973 and lived in Masindi in Western Uganda for 36 years.

When I inquired further, I was told that Loreng Lega means Red Jewels, in Ateker. At the time, before plastic and glass spread across the pastoralists’ lands as beads, women wore loops of iron wire as neckpieces and kept them fresh with cow butter. In 1973, the cows died. There was no butter. The neckpieces turned rusty and the ever-poetic Ateker found a name for the famine. I might have left it there but there were others. I was told of Lopiar and Loreng Arup, all describing famines — Lopiar in 1980 and Loreng Arup in 1986.

The 1972 famine — also named the Dimbleby Famine by the international media after the British journalist Jonathan Dimbleby who brought it to Western attention — caused what I came to see as the most important political event in all of Eastern Africa for 50 years. Without that event, it is arguable that Eritrea may never have split from Ethiopia, Somalia might still be stable, Museveni would not be president and the Rwanda genocide of 1994 would not have happened.

The fall of Emperor Haile Selassie undid settled but fragile political ties that had kept Somalia, north-eastern Uganda, northern Kenya, parts of South Sudan and all of Ethiopia manageably stable for centuries. The immense legitimacy that comes from a political system widely seen as both righteous and lawful is not a cheap one, and with the great 19th century opening of all the world’s corners to communication and commerce, Ethiopians learnt that the feudal system they had so naturally accepted was in fact a very bad system. Attempts at reforms did not go far enough, and the fact that by 1974 Ethiopia still had actual, rather than metaphoric peasants, who gave up a part of their harvest to the landlord, meant that the country was really asking for it.

The fall of Selassie, heart-rending and ruinous as it was, was a foregone conclusion, which is not to say the successor system was deserved nor that those who carried out the coup de grace to an ossified system were angels. The tragedy of Ethiopia has always been that the rules of political dialectics that describe a move to a better system, don’t usually apply.

We have been paying the price for Selassie’s fall ever since.

With the fall of Selassie, subject ethnic groups on the empire’s periphery began to question their status — questions unthinkable whilst Menelik’s progeny sat on the throne. For a measure of how recent this is, Somali writer Nurrudin Farrah once told me that he met the Emperor as a child when he came on a tour of the territories and was picked to read a poem to him.

The loss of Ethiopia’s sacerdotal myth (aspects of it still exist in what is described as Solomonite society in origin) combined with the ascendency of the Derg to convince the empire’s provinces that the time to leave had come. The most important departure was Eritrea. But in 1977, it looked as if Somalia might be the first.

“The tragedy of Ethiopia has always been that the rules of political dialectics that describe a move to a better system, don’t usually apply.”

The Ogaden war that broke out in July 1977 was a tragic event that should have been avoided, if only for the fact that it produced none of the intended goals. When Siad Barre launched his Greater Somalia wars, the irredentist suit for the unification of ethnic Somalia, he may not have foreseen an even greater shrinkage of Somalia. But it was an explicit threat to territorial Kenya as it was to Ethiopia, both countries more important to world powers than Somalia.

That Siad Barre chose to launch a revanchist campaign in the deep winter of the Cold War only ratcheted up the stakes. It ensured that his war was very quickly hijacked to become a USSR-USA affair. It is here that one of the most cynical manoeuvres of the Cold War era took place.

Since the 1930s, Imperial Ethiopia had aligned with capitalist powers after Haile Selassie petitioned the League of Nations to stop Italian aggression against what was then better known as Abyssinia. American patronage of Ethiopia continued even after the Derg was entrenched, but the openly Marxist Mengistu Haile Mariam could no longer be accommodated. Down in Mogadishu, Siad Barre was in bed with the Soviets. The march down to the Ogaden war happened with cold abject calculations. The Soviets helped Mogadishu draw up a battle plan against Ethiopia. The popular version of the story, as told to me by the late Kenyan cameraman, Mohinder Dhillon who covered the fighting, is that at the 11th hour, the Soviets, doubtless with the battle plans in their breast pockets, switched sides and supported the Ethiopians while the Americans fled Addis Ababa to take sides with Siad Barre. Beyond all belief, the Somalis marched into battle with the same Soviet battle plan. The result was a complete rout of Somali forces, the centre of battle converging at Jijiga. But there are more subtle ways in which it happened, which is beyond the scope of this piece.

“That Siad Barre chose to launch a revanchist campaign in the deep winter of the Cold War only ratcheted up the stakes.”

The result was that Mengistu got allies he was comfortable with, and the Americans, the port of Barbera and the Eastern Africa Indian Ocean. Which was cold comfort for both the USSR and the USA; scholarly journals make the argument that, by so openly going to war against the Soviets in Africa, Jimmy Carter and his national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, may have precipitated the end of the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty — the detente with the Soviet Union — meaning they threw away something bigger for a regional conflict.

It was a short war, lasting from June 1977 to May 1978. But it put an end to short regional wars for it put in the hands of non-state actors the means to wage guerrilla warfare. Before that, guns and ammunition had been the preserve of state actors. Both the Americans and the Soviets decanted ship and plane loads of arms into the conflict. They inaugurated a regional small arms market that is nigh impossible to shut down. And this is where the tragedy begins.

The first groups to acquire those guns were the pastoralists that straddle the Horn. The testing ground for the destructive power of guns easy to acquire, hide and maintain were the cattle rustlings which had for centuries been little more than sporting, manhood-proving raids. Supercharged with the AK47, they became lethal.

The Turkana had hitherto ruled the pastoralist roost, acquiring their first guns from Menelik in 1911, and lording it over the Samburu, Karamojong, Didinga, Tepeth, Pokot, Toposa, and Nyangatom. Now, all these groups had guns. The region’s descent into hell had begun; these gun trails were to feed Joseph Kony’s war, and all still feed conflicts in the region.

As it was, the timing could not have been worse. The pastoralists had not fully recovered from the famine of 1972, but the famine was not a singular factor. The fate of pastoralists is one that those living in the capital cities — who are nearly all from agricultural communities — don’t fully appreciate nor care about. What had happened was that colonialism had closed up lands and created administrative units corresponding to ethnicity, in effect, inventing tribes. This did not suit nomadic pastoralism, which not only required open lands, but also did not want national borders.

“The region’s descent into hell had begun; these gun trails were to feed Joseph Kony’s war, and all still feed conflicts in the region.”

The worst affected pastoralist groups were those of south-western Uganda and Rwanda, who suddenly found themselves stateless for their forage lands were split between Uganda, Rwanda, Tanzania and Congo.

Deep into independence in 1977, pastoralists started to realise that the post-colonial state had left them out and would continue to leave them out. The race to pick up guns was a belated reaction to the knowledge that unless they fought, their way of life was doomed.

The death of animals and humans from the 1972 famine broke pastoralism. But now, unbeknownst to all, an even bigger event — Lopiar — was coming in 1980 to effectively bury it. Before that, another fateful event occurred. The fall of Idi Amin in 1979 left tens of thousands of guns floating in Uganda. Just think of what it means that, when the Ugandan army under Amin fled in 1979, all of Uganda government’s guns fell into private hands. A lot of the suddenly unemployed Ugandan soldiers found that the Ogaden war had already created a market for the guns in their hands. In Moroto, the story is still told of how people carried guns like so many bunches of firewood on their heads.

Hence, when 1980 came, pastoralists were armed to the teeth. The famine of that year is hard to outdo. It is estimated that up 21 per cent of pastoralist lives were lost in that year, first to the drought and the loss of animals, but the bulk of it to the cholera outbreak that followed. They called it Lopiar, The Sweep, in Ateker languages. (On a minor note, this was the event that gave birth to Kakuma Camp, for the relief agencies that arrived found the Turkana assembled in this high, cooler and moist valley. Henceforth, arriving refugees from Somalia, Sudan and Uganda would go there, because it was a feeding centre.)

But the biggest impact was still in the future. In Uganda, 1980 is thought of narrowly as the year that Museveni launched a bush war in response to a lost election. What is rarely thought of is that Museveni, himself a pastoralist, was merely doing what pastoralists all over The Horn of Africa were doing. He was playing the part of kraal boss, and like all kraal bosses, he was leading a group of young pastoralists to fight to keep their way of life viable, for it falls upon young men in pastoralist societies to go out and fight for animals when the herd is either dead or rustled. This time, they were going to rustle the entire Uganda.

Museveni not only led Ugandan pastoralists to battle, but combined those with pastoralist refugees from Rwanda as well. The mass of guns floating all over the region found eager takers.

Overall, the decision could not have been worse. The gun turned against pastoralists, and for the next two decades, hundreds of thousands would perish in ensuing conflicts. The shadow of the Rwanda genocide of 1994 obscures the fact that the 1990s was the worst decade for pastoralism. The drawing up of colonial borders had kettled in nomadic lifestyles. The attack on Rwanda in 1990 by Paul Kagame and the late Fred Rwigyema was not too different from the Somali attack on Ethiopia in 1977; the aim was the same, to pry loose the 1884 Berlin conference borders and let the herds roam free. It was not too different from the armed gunfights by the Turkana, Pokot, and Karamojong against the Kenyan and Ugandan armies. The Toposa of Southern Sudan were caught in a much more complex battle, for they were caught between the Khartoum forces and the SPLA, who both supplied them with guns, and although they were better off with the SPLA, whom they chose in the end, they were still part of the “Karamoja” cluster, their fate still impacted by the fall of Emperor Haile Selassie.

“The shadow of the Rwanda genocide of 1994 obscures the fact that the 1990s was the worst decade for pastoralism.”

Grimly, the killings in Rwanda in 1994 were not too distant in form from the gun deaths that happened with such casual repetitiveness between Ugandan, Kenyan, Ethiopian and Sudanese pastoralists at the same time that they were rarely reported. But hundreds of thousands perished in the decades between 1977 and 2006.

The one pastoralist struggle that made good was the ascension of Museveni to power. He has said it many times — and makes propaganda use of herding his animals for the cameras — but what perhaps explains the seeming paradox of his reformist rhetoric which clashes with his dictatorial practice, is that he was driven to pick the liberation lingua of his time to gain support beyond his clannist instinct, whilst fighting for something closer to his heart. If Museveni does not seem that presidential, it is because his psychological make-up is that of a kraal leader. You have to meet many of them throughout the pastoralist lands in the north to meet his kind: tyrannical, brash, hard-driving, imperative, brooking no argument, but above all uber-clannist. The massive land grabs in the latter days of his presidency have a central pattern — to benefit pastoralists as unreported conflicts in many, many parts Uganda between farmers and pastoralists protected by the army attest. The colonial and postcolonial abuse of pastoralists made its mark. They are called “backward”, which is derogatory, considering that pastoralists today remain the true custodians of African cultures abandoned by agricultural communities, and that many in agricultural communities are only a generation removed from pastoralism. But conflict is conflict, and Museveni used to state that he would not leave power while his people remained backward. He has since turned every government institution into an ethnically monolithic stronghold.

“If Museveni does not seem that presidential, it is because his psychological make-up is that of a kraal leader.”

The biggest coming conflict of Museveni’s life, and one which will survive him for the coming decades, will be a rebalancing of the power stakes between pastoralists and agrarians, for in the long term, agriculture always wins, even if by absorbing pastoralists. This means that this coming conflict will once more pit Museveni’s pastoralists against the agricultural communities of southern and south-western Uganda. The break with Buganda and Busoga, hitherto Museveni’s biggest supporters, is only the opening salvo of this coming conflict. Bobi Wine may be the spearhead of this struggle, but it will outlive him and reshape Uganda for generations to come.

It is Museveni’s terrible, bad luck that Cold War II is returning when his government has lost all legitimacy, meaning that in the event of another armed rebellion, he will no longer be the good guy. He lost that tag forever when he ordered his goons to shoot to death dozens on 18 November 2020. Even worse, he is now the de facto Haile Selassie of Eastern Africa, meddling in Congo, Rwanda, Sudan, Kenya and Somalia. By positioning his son to succeed him, and now openly saying that Ugandan public offices will be ring-fenced to those with money (effectively his bush war pastoralist compadres), he is creating a feudal monarchy out of Uganda, like Ethiopia in reverse. He is making Selassie’s mistakes. But he is also giving a bad name to pastoralists who are otherwise noble people.

That is because, as in 1977, the factors to turn conflicting interests into ruinous warfare are in place, almost comically so in how much the players of 1977 are back in place. In Kenya, another Kenyatta is about to exit office. His vice president happens to be a Kalenjin. In the wings, vying for succession, is another Odinga. You cannot make this stuff up. But unlike 1977, and unlike Moi, Ruto is Museveni’s protégé. The ethnic configurations of Kenya are such that should Ruto become president, he will find himself forced to govern like Moi, albeit a Moi who can count on another Idi Amin in Uganda as his ally. This will mean that the coming political instability in Uganda will also become political instability in Kenya. Ruto is opening the gates for Uganda’s political incompetence to be imported into Kenya. We just hope that among his intimate exchanges with Museveni, military rule in Kenya did not crop up.

Like in 1977, Ethiopia is at war. It might be a matter of time before dreams of Greater Somalia are revived, as Mogadishu once more watches Addis Ababa’s discomfiture. Somalia’s options are not that many. After all, the state disintegrated after Siad Barre was beaten on the plains of the Ogaden. It is a matter of time before someone in Mogadishu sees a foreign military adventure as a way to unite the country’s clans. Should this happen, the Ogaden could well be the playing field. But this will not be too much news to Kenya whose biggest threats have so far come from Somalis.

Almost beyond belief, Russia, in the place of the Soviet Union, could very well join China and the USA in messing up the politics of the region, which mess is already in high gear. In 2022, there could well be more AK47s poured in, but there might be other weapons as well.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Manchester City Announces Official Cryptocurrency Exchange Partner OKX

OKX becomes Manchester City’s Official Cryptocurrency Partner

OKX becomes Manchester City’s Official Cryptocurrency Partner

  • Manchester City and OKX have today announced a new multi-year partnership
  • The partnership will span Manchester City men’s and women’s teams, in addition to the Club’s esports operations

VICTORIA, Seychelles, March 04, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Premier League champions Manchester City have today announced a global partnership with the world’s second largest crypto exchange, OKX, naming it the Club’s Official Cryptocurrency Exchange Partner.

OKX’s first venture into the world of sport and entertainment, the partnership will span Manchester City men’s and women’s teams, in addition to the Club’s esports operations.

Manchester City sign with crypto partner OKX

Manchester City sign with crypto partner OKX

OKX’s fast, secure and innovative cryptocurrency exchange is trusted by more than 20 million people in more than 180 markets as a place to explore the power of crypto.

OKX and Man City believe in inspiring continued innovation, talent development and technology advancements – a key partnership alignment between both organisations.

The new partners will collaborate on a number of exclusive experiences for OKX’s global customer base, in addition to an in-stadium presence across the Etihad Stadium and Academy Stadium. The new partners will also look to explore future innovation projects together.

Roel De Vries, Chief Operating Officer, City Football Group, said: “We are pleased to welcome OKX as an Official Partner of Manchester City today as they look to venture into the world of sports. The new partnership aligns our shared values of innovation, drive for success and being at the cutting edge of our respective industries. Their broad and inclusive approach to targeting diverse audiences resonates with our approach. We look forward to working together throughout the partnership.”

Manchester City Stadium

Manchester City Stadium

“We are delighted to partner with Manchester City, one of the world’s best-loved and most successful teams. Football and crypto share something important; they are for everyone, they create inclusivity within society. For OKX, Manchester City is a Club that represents the effect football has to make a positive difference in people’s lives, to bring people together around a shared love of the beautiful game. We are entering the Premier League for the first time as City’s official crypto partner to celebrate this community spirit in the world of football because it’s something we both share,” said Jay Hao, CEO of OKX.

Photos accompanying this announcement are available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/99b1c268-b437-430e-a504-cf4d276df83a
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d63580c8-9c47-4baa-a5ea-93d724c69409
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/2c7534e4-7252-4896-bc5a-f94f1ec6f423

Richard Kay
richard.kay@okx.com