Ethiopia Expels New York Times Reporter Who Covered Tigray War

Ethiopia has expelled a foreign correspondent working for The New York Times after earlier revoking his license over “unbalanced” reporting, a government official has confirmed.

The decision to kick out Simon Marks, an Irish journalist living in Ethiopia, drew swift condemnation from Reporters Without Borders, which said it was “the first time that a foreign journalist is expelled from the country” under Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

In a story on Marks’ Friday expulsion, the Times said Ethiopian officials summoned him to a meeting Thursday and held him at the airport for eight hours before putting him on a flight early Friday.

“It is alarming that the government of Ethiopia treated the journalist, Simon Marks, like a criminal, expelling him from the country without even letting him go home to get a change of clothing or his passport,” said Michael Slackman, the paper’s assistant managing editor for international news, according to the Times.

Describing the experience on Twitter, Marks wrote: “Not only did Immigration officers prevent me from going home to collect my belongings but also from kissing goodbye to my beautiful 2-year-old son and two dogs, despite my polite requests. At least I could give my partner a kiss at the airport.”

No license, no job

Mohammed Idris, head of the Ethiopian Media Authority, told AFP on Friday that Marks had no business staying in the country without a media license.

“You are here for a job. If you have the license, you will stay here. If you don’t have the license, if we revoke the license, the responsible body will send you back,” Mohammed said.

Marks has filed a series of hard-hitting reports on the war in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region. His accreditation was canceled shortly after he returned from a trip to Tigray in March.

Ethiopia’s government has imposed tough restrictions on journalists covering the conflict.

A number of Ethiopian journalists and translators working for a range of international media organizations — including AFP, Reuters, the BBC and the Financial Times — have been detained while doing their jobs in recent months.

Journalists and human rights groups have nonetheless uncovered growing evidence of atrocities committed by armed groups in the region, including Ethiopian soldiers and Eritrean troops fighting on the government’s behalf.

The revelations have contributed to growing international diplomatic pressure on Abiy, the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize laureate who will seek a new term in elections scheduled for June 21.

The government has said it is committed to investigating human rights abuses committed during its fight against troops loyal to the region’s former ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

Source: Voice of America

Independence Day celebrations in Northern Red Sea and Gash Barka

The 30th Independence Day anniversary has been colorfully celebrated in the Northern Red Sea and Gash Barka regions on 20 May under the theme “Resilient: As Ever”.

At the celebratory event held in the port city of Massawa, Ms. Asmeret Abraha, Governor of the Northern Red Sea Region, said that despite the unprecedented challenges encountered praiseworthy achievements have been registered through integrated efforts on the part of the Government, the people, and members of the National Defense Forces.

Ms. Asmeret went on to say that a strong foundation has been laid to ensure social justice and to develop the academic and skill capacity of citizens especially that of the youth.

The Chairperson of the Holidays Coordinating Committee in the region, Ms. Zeineb Omar on her part commending all that contributed to realize the colorful celebration event called for reinforced participation in the national development drives.

In related news, the 30th Independence Day anniversary was celebrated in Barentu on 20 May at the regional level.

Speaking at the occasion, Ambassador Mahmud Ali Hiruy, Governor of the region, indicating that in the past 30 years the Eritrean people have emerged victorious by foiling the various hostilities and challenges called on every citizen to strengthen participation and contribution in the nation-building process. The Chairman of the Holidays Coordinating Committee in the region, Mr. Idris Saleh on his part said that the Independence Day celebrations have been conducted in all sub-zones respecting the guidelines issued to control the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic and that attests to commitment and noble values of the Eritrean people.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Nigerians React to Loss of Nation’s Military Chief

Nigerians reacted Saturday to the sudden death of the country’s military chief and other officers in a plane crash Friday in central Kaduna state.

The military Beechcraft 350 aircraft was carrying Ibrahim Attahiru on official duty when it crashed near Kaduna international airport.

Ten others, including the military intelligence chief, provost marshal and crew members, were also on board. No one survived.

At least 17 military officers have died in plane crashes in the last three months, but Attahiru’s death marked the first time Nigeria had lost an active-duty military chief. He and the other officers were buried Saturday at the military cemetery in Abuja.

Many Nigerians reacted to the losses. President Muhammadu Buhari tweeted, “All of them are heroes who paid the ultimate price for peace and security in the land.”

‘I feel terrible’

Abuja resident Enimobong Edoho was still in disbelief.

“I feel terrible,” he said. “Opening my phone to see the news of the chief of army staff is rather devastating.”

Authorities said they thought the aircraft crashed as a result of bad weather.

Attahiru, 54, was appointed as military chief in late January to lead the army’s fight against Nigeria’s decadelong insurgency after Buhari retired his predecessor over growing security concerns.

Security analyst Senator Iroegbu said Attahiru’s death was a huge strike to the counterinsurgency effort.

“His death came at a time the country is grappling with so much insecurity,” Iroegbu said. “Every part of the country is facing one form of insecurity or the other. [The] majority of his focus has been towards the northeast, trying to reinvigorate the fight against terrorism.”

Iroegbu said a new chief must be appointed without delay.

The Nigerian army “can’t operate without a head, not even for a day,” he said. “There’s a big vacuum. If care is not taken, the enemies might take advantage of this.”

Source: Voice of America

Ethiopia says Eritrean troops killed civilians in Tigray

Ethiopia for the first time accused troops from neighbouring Eritrea of killing 110 civilians in a massacre in the war-hit Tigray region.

The attorney general’s office sharply contradicted law enforcement officials who claimed earlier this month that the “great majority” of those killed in the city of Axum were fighters, not civilians.

The killings in Axum in late November represent one of the deadliest incidents of the six-month-old war in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

The Tigray conflict erupted in early November when Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops to detain and disarm leaders of the regional ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).

Abiy said the move came in response to TPLF attacks on federal army camps.

In earlier reports on what happened in Axum, both Human Rights Watch and Amnesty blamed Eritrean troops fighting in Tigray and said the dead were mostly civilians.

Amnesty said the Eritreans “went on a rampage and systematically killed hundreds of civilians in cold blood.”

In Friday’s statement, the attorney general’s office said the Eritreans engaged in reprisal killings after pro-TPLF forces attacked them.

“The investigation indicates that 110 civilians have been killed on these dates by Eritrean troops,” the statement said, referring to Nov 27-28.

“The investigation shows that 70 civilians have been killed in the city while they were outdoors. On the other hand, 40 civilians seem to have been taken out of their homes and killed in home-to-home raids conducted by Eritrean troops,” it said.

Eritrea’s information minister did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.

Eritrean troops, who teamed up with the Ethiopian military, have been implicated in multiple massacres and other atrocities during the Tigray conflict, allegations Asmara denies.

The US and EU have repeatedly called for the Eritreans to withdraw.

“The continued presence of Eritrean forces in Tigray further undermines Ethiopia’s stability and national unity,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement last week.

“We again call upon the Government of Eritrea to remove its forces from Tigray.”

Ethiopia has said it is committed to investigating human rights abuses committed during the conflict.

Friday’s statement said that while Ethiopian troops had tried to minimise civilian casualties, “several allegations concerning the killing of civilians, sexual violence, [and] the looting and destruction of property have since been reported.”

It said the government takes those allegations “seriously” and has begun prosecuting suspects.

Military prosecutors have pressed charges against 28 soldiers “suspected of killing civilians in a situation where there was no military necessity,” it said.

“The trials of these suspects are underway and the verdicts are also expected to be handed down shortly.”

An additional 25 soldiers have been charged with “committing acts of sexual violence and rape.”

Three soldiers have already been convicted and sentenced for rape, while one soldier has been convicted and sentenced for killing a civilian, the statement said, without providing details. — NNN-AGENCIES

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Migrant Surge on Spain-Morocco Border Brings More Suffering

FNIDEQ, MOROCCO – Desperate teenagers and jobless men from Morocco’s coastal towns, its mountainous east or even farther away converged on the border town of Fnideq this week, part of an extraordinary mass effort to swim or scale barbed-wire fences to get into Spain for a chance at a new life.

More than 8,000 migrants made it into the city of Ceuta, an enclave in North Africa that is separated from the rest of Spain by the Mediterranean — but for most of them, it was a short-lived success.

The extraordinary surge of migrants crossing from Morocco into Spain came amid the chaos of a diplomatic spat between the two countries.

Spanish troops forced over half of them back to Fnideq, putting additional strain on the Moroccan town whose limited resources are overwhelmed by the coronavirus pandemic.

“We will keep trying. We will find one way or another, even if the ocean turns into ice!” said Badreddine, 27.

He and his fellow Moroccans — Salah, 22, and Hosam, 24 — all have diplomas but no jobs. Like most seeking to get into Spain, they spoke on condition their last names not be published for fear of their security because they are risking illegal migration.

Being stuck in Morocco “is like being dead, so why not risk your life anyway? We’re currently living on streets, sleeping in the cold. Our parents know that we’re here, they pray for us. They told us, ‘Go, may Gold help you,’ ” Salah said.

Sleeping outside, eating handouts

They and others sleep in Fnideq’s parks, on benches and outside mosques. Some hang out near hotels and restaurants, begging for food and whatever people can spare. Volunteers hand out bread and sandwiches.

Some have fled the impoverished countries of sub-Saharan Africa, but most are from Morocco, generally seen as one of the continent’s economic engines that has made strides in lowering poverty in recent years.

Still, inequality is rife, the pandemic has worsened unemployment and average incomes are a small fraction of those in Europe, which sits tantalizingly close — just across the Fnideq-Ceuta fence.

Amid tighter security by Spain in recent years, some would-be migrants have abandoned the effort, but others are determined to find a way around the security checkpoints or battle bad weather at sea.

“We want to leave [Morocco] because there is nothing left for us in the country, nothing to do, no future. We go to school but don’t want to stay here,” said Khalid, 15.

This week, many of them saw an opportunity as word spread quickly in Morocco about the tensions with Spain.

When the government in Madrid gave medical treatment to a Western Saharan independence fighter that Morocco considers a terrorist, the decision led to chaos in Ceuta. The port city has always drawn those seeking to cross into Europe, but thousands were seen streaming toward Fnideq on highways and through forests and hills.

On the march

“Spain, here we come!” a group of Moroccans cried as they marched, singing soccer chants and hurling expletives at their native country. In central Fnideq, thousands lined the corniche that looks toward Ceuta, and they ended up swimming or taking small boats around breakwaters separating the countries.

While Moroccan security forces normally are spread out on the beach and in nearby hills patrolling a wide perimeter, there seemed to be fewer guards earlier this week. As large groups of youths scaled the fence and wrapped clothes on their hands to get over the barbed wire, Associated Press reporters saw border police standing by idly.

While Morocco has said little about the relaxed border controls, it was widely seen as retaliation for Madrid’s allowing militant leader Brahim Ghali to receive medical treatment inside Spain. Two Moroccan officials made that link in comments Wednesday.

Spain eventually sent in military forces and pushed most of the migrants back to Morocco. The Red Cross says one young man died and dozens were treated for hypothermia.

Khalid, 15, and Amin, 16, came to Fnideq on Sunday in a bus with about 40 others from Temara, a coastal town outside the capital, Rabat. They said they crossed into Spain three times, but were pushed back. The last time, they were forced to swim back along the shore back to Morocco.

Back on duty

By Thursday, Moroccan border guards seemed to be back in their positions, but hundreds of youths have remained, and the men and boys in Fnideq haven’t lost hope of crossing over.

“I am the eldest of my brothers. My mother sells vegetables in the market” and can’t afford to support them, said Ayoub, in his early 20s, who arrived Thursday from the inland city of Meknes. “I had to try and help my mother.”

While Morocco’s government has focused on the Western Sahara in its limited public statements this week, it hasn’t addressed the poverty and despair that is driving so many to want to leave the country.

Fnideq, meanwhile, is suffering under the sudden influx of would-be migrants.

The town relied heavily on trade with Ceuta before the pandemic, but Morocco’s strict border closure since March 2020 has deprived residents of livelihoods and access to Spain. Protests broke out earlier this year by residents demanding government aid or an open border.

Human rights groups and opposition lawmakers accused the Moroccan government of using migrants as pawns instead of solving their problems. The opposition Istiqlal party urged “an economic alternative that guarantees the population their constitutional right to the necessities of a decent living.”

Despite the scenes of tear gas and troops on the border this week, the dream of getting out of Morocco remains strong for many struggling youths, even in the relatively prosperous capital.

“If you ask anyone in Rabat … that person will tell you that he wants to go to Europe,” said street vendor Mohammed Ouhaddou. “…Politicians are not doing anything. They are asleep and no one listens to us.”

Source: Voice Of America

Increasing Food Security in Africa

PCUSA guest host Kim Lewis speaks with Atsuko Toda, acting vice-president of the African Development Bank’s Agriculture, Human and Social Capital about the latest breakthroughs to boost food production and ensure food security in Africa. Toda also shares highlights from the recent high level virtual “Leaders’ Dialogue” presented by the African Development Bank and the International Fund for Agricultural Development, IFAD.

Source: Voice Of America

BAL President Talks About League’s Future

As the inaugural season of the National Basketball Association-sponsored and VOA-affiliated Basketball Africa League reaches its halfway point, VOA’s Cheick Thiero spoke to league President Amadou Gallo Fall about the games and the future of the league. The interview was edited for brevity and clarity.

VOA: Is this what you expected from the NBA to organize a historical moment in Africa right now?

Amadou: First of all, really, the footprint in terms of these games, being distributed in 215 countries in 50 languages all across Africa and around the world, is a big first step. It’s about really creating a compelling product on the court. And in terms of a lot of these teams coming out of the gate, the talent they have and also the discipline, and the level of expertise that I see from the sidelines from different coaches from different backgrounds, it’s a good step. … [After] a good few days of games, I can only see this getting better and more difficult as we move to the playoffs next week.

It’s been a long time coming, as we wanted to set the start in March 2020. But we used that time to really stay engaged and connected with our teams. We did a lot of work in terms of referee training and building capacity. We had some of the best basketball minds in the country in the NBA coming in … general managers in the league, who came and, you know, just shared their experience, talking about how they build culture in the organization, the winning organization that they lead today.

We have very ambitious goals. We’ve got to continue to work and to put forth the effort to make sure that this league in a few years is going to be one of the absolute professional basketball leagues in the world.

VOA: Do you think we’re going to see any change in the future?

Amadou: We’re going to, you know, have a lot of learning because there will be so many firsts in this inaugural season. It’s going to be a learning experience on a lot of levels. But as far as just the talent, I think the talent can only improve. I mean, again, I am largely satisfied with most of what I’ve seen. Obviously, there’s room for improvement always.

VOA: Do we expect any surprising recruitment from the NBA from this league?

Amadou: Ultimately, we’re looking to grow a basketball industry right here and on the continent. We always know there is tremendous talent here and the talent has always been exported. And now we want to make sure that that talent also gets to be showcased on the continent. What was lacking is a platform like the Basketball Africa League. Now that it is here, I think the trickle-down effect is going to be much improved local leagues, because you have to win in your national league to qualify for the Basketball Africa League.

Source: Voice Of America