7 reasons why Ethiopian people are way better than Somalian people

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SenseSays

Years to look forward to
@Canuck

*Types*

"Negative news on ethiopians"


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Ethiopian soldiers accused of war crimes in Somalia


MAY 6, 2008

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NAIROBI — Amnesty International on Tuesday accused Ethiopian troops in Somalia of killing civilians and committing atrocities, including slitting people's throats, gouging out eyes and gang-raping women.

In a new report, the human rights group, which is based in London, detailed chilling witness accounts of indiscriminate killings in Somalia and called on the international community to stop the bloodshed. The Ethiopian government said the report was unbalanced and "categorically wrong."

Amnesty said testimony it received suggested that all parties to the conflict had committed war crimes. But it cited Ethiopian troops, in the country to back Somalia's UN-sponsored government, for some of the worst violations.

The shaky transitional government invited Ethiopian forces into the country to help it battle Islamic insurgents. Somalia has been torn apart by years of violence between the militias of rival clan warlords.

The rights group said it had scores of reports of killings by Ethiopian troops. In one case, "a young child's throat was slit by Ethiopian soldiers in front of the child's mother," the report says.

The Ethiopian information minister, Berhanu Hailu, said the report was "totally unfounded."

"Normally, when they report, they do not balance it out. They have to go and see the reality for themselves. They shouldn't report from abroad saying this is happening," he said in Addis Ababa.

Amnesty said about 6,000 civilians had been reported killed and more than 600,000 had been forced to flee their homes in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, last year.

"The people of Somalia are being killed, raped, tortured. Looting is widespread and entire neighborhoods are being destroyed," Michelle Kagari, the Amnesty deputy director for Africa, said in a statement from Nairobi that accompanied the report.

The report quotes testimony from 75 witnesses as well as scores of workers from nongovernmental organizations. People are identified only by first name to protect them from retaliation.
 

DuctTape

I have an IQ of 300
Illegal Ethiopian Dons White Mask to Commit Crimes in Canada
Posted on January 22, 2015


Solomon Teklie

When the police are on the lookout for a suspect, race is the prime identifier. Example: The suspect is a black male, six feet tall, one hundred seventy pounds, wearing a red shirt and a blue cap.

OK, but what if the perp wore a mask that made him look like a white man? Then he’s home free.

Or so Solomon Teklie thought.

The dumb Ethiopian was driving around in a carjacked car. Race doesn’t matter then. What matters is that the driver of a stolen car is going to be arrested.

Teklie says he’s sorry. Yeah, right. Sorry for getting caught.

He claims to have been traumatized in his Ethiopian homeland. Sob. Sob. I’ll cry a thousand tears for him.

Ethiopia is where he belongs, but there’s serious doubt he’ll be deported after serving his sentence. So, Canada is stuck with the clever black man who wanted to be white. If only to escape from the cops.
Posting articles on isolated incidents of crime does nothing to further your argument :mjlol:
I don't even know what kind of source that is, it looks suspect with the article mocking the Ethiopian man :pachah1:
 
Ethiopia: TPLF’s troops the least popular of the AMISOM peace keepers in Somalia
Posted by: ecadforum January 1, 2017




6 6share1



10 years Ethiopia invasion: Ethiopia is the cause of our instability, Somalis say 10 years after invasion


Majority of Somalia nationals think Ethiopia’s invasion and alleged interference is the cause of instability in the Horn of Africa country.

From interviews conducted by Radio Dalsan in Mogadishu some 80% of residents in the capital believe Ethiopia undermines the sovereignty and security of its neighbor Somalia.

“As long as the Ethiopian army presence continues in my country I will not be optimistic that the conflict facing Somalia will come to an end soon” Ahmed Bille a Mogadishu resident said.

It is ten years now since neighboring Ethiopia sent its troops across the border end of 2006 to help the weak Transitional government rout out the Islamic Courts Union who had controlled the capital Mogadishu for six months. Locals still refer to that battle as Dagaalki Itobian-Ka Moqdisho ku qabsatay” or loosely translated “when Ethiopians Were in Mogadishu War”.

- See more at: http://ecadforum.com/2017/01/01/eth...eace-keepers-in-somalia/#sthash.WKdemDkW.dpuf
 
(Nairobi) - Ethiopian, Somali and insurgent forces are all responsible for rampant violations of the laws of war in Mogadishu, causing massive suffering for the civilian population, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Human Rights Watch urged the UN Security Council during its current deliberations on Somalia to include a strong civilian protection mandate in any peacekeeping mission.

The 113-page report, "Shell-Shocked: Civilians Under Siege in Mogadishu," is the first independent, on-the-ground investigation of the fighting that wracked Mogadishu in March and April 2007, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of civilians and the displacement of 400,000 people.

"The warring parties have all shown criminal disregard for the well-being of the civilian population of Mogadishu," said Ken Roth, executive director for Human Rights Watch. "The UN Security Council's indifference to this crisis has only added to the tragedy."

Human Rights Watch documented numerous war crimes among many other violations of the laws of war by all parties to the armed conflict in Mogadishu.

Violations by the insurgency, a loose coalition of Somali armed groups, include: the indiscriminate firing of mortar rounds into civilian areas; deployment of forces in densely populated neighborhoods; targeted killings of civilian officials of the transitional Somali government; and summary executions and mutilation of the bodies of captured combatants.

Ethiopian forces backing the Somali transitional government violated the laws of war by widely and indiscriminately bombarding highly populated areas of Mogadishu with rockets, mortars and artillery. Its troops on several occasions specifically targeted hospitals and looted them of desperately needed medical equipment. Human Rights Watch also documented cases of Ethiopian forces deliberately shooting and summarily executing civilians.

Somali transitional government forces played a secondary role to the Ethiopian military, but failed to provide effective warnings to civilians in combat zones, looted property, impeded relief efforts for displaced people, and mistreated dozens of people detained in mass arrests.

"The insurgency placed civilians at grave risk by deploying among them," said Roth. "But that is no justification for Ethiopia's calculated shelling and rocketing of whole neighborhoods."

The launch of the report coincides with today's UN Security Council deliberations on Somalia. The Security Council is due to discuss the 1,500-member African Union mission in Somalia and proposals to turn the mission into a UN force.
 

Khathead

tfw no habesha gf
Stop begging the cannibals and little babies eaters
How can you call this cutie a cannibal?
ethiopiangirl.jpg


If you keep spamming these hateful articels to tarnish the Ethiopian name, I will post qt Habesha girls! Got my USB drive just for you. This means war:gunsmiley:
 
Under darkness in the Somali region of Ethiopia
27th April 2013 Africa, Highlights
Silence-in-Ogaden.jpg

By Graham Peebles

No matter how tightly the truth is tied down, confined and suffocated, it slowly escapes. It seeps out through cracks and openings large and small, illuminating all and revealing the grime and shame that cowers in the shadows.

The arid Somali (or Ogaden) region of Ethiopia, home to some five million ethnic Somalis, has been isolated from the world since 2005, when the Ethiopian government banned all international media and most humanitarian groups from operating in the area.

State criminality
Human Rights Watch (HRW) reports that the Ethiopian government “has tried to stem the flow of information from the region. Some foreign journalists who have attempted to conduct independent investigations have been arrested, and residents and witnesses have been threatened and detained in order to prevent them from speaking out“. Aid workers with the United Nations, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and the International Committee of the Red Cross, plus journalists from a range of Western papers, including the New York Times, have all had staff expelled and/or detained, by the Ethiopian regime, which speaks of democracy yet fails to act in accordance with its own liberal constitution and consistently violates international law, with total impunity.

Under the cover of media darkness and donor country indifference, the Ethiopian government, according to a host of human rights organizations, is committing wide-ranging human rights abuses that amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity. Serious accusations, based on accounts relayed by refugees and interviews with Ogaden Somalis on the ground, give what could be only a hint of the level of state criminality taking place in the troubled and largely ignored region. HRW makes clear the seriousness of the situation, stating that “tens of thousands of ethnic Somali civilians living in eastern Ethiopia’s Somali Regional State are experiencing serious abuses… Ethiopian troops have forcibly displaced entire rural communities, ordering villagers to leave their homes within a few days or witness their houses being burnt down and possessions destroyed – and risk death.”

In a detailed study conservatively titled Concerns Over the Ogaden Territory, the African Rights Monitor (ARM) found “that the Ethiopian government has systematically and repeatedly arbitrarily detained, tortured and inhumanly degraded the Ogaden people”. Women and children, they report, “are raped, sexually assaulted and killed”. The ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), they found, “systematically attacks the women and children as they are the weakest in a civil society” and are unable to defend themselves. Documenting a series of specific cases of violence, HRW reports that “an Ethiopian government-backed paramilitary force [the Liyuu police] summarily executed 10 men during a March 2012 operation”. HRW “interviewed witnesses and relatives of the victims who described witnessing at least 10 summary executions. The actual number may be higher.”

Accounts such as these clearly warrant investigation by independent agencies, and yet they are resolutely ignored. Supporters of the regime know well what is occurring throughout the Ogaden, and yet they remain silent. America – the single biggest donor to the country, with military bases inside Ethiopia from where their deadly drones are launched into Somalia and Yemen – and Britain are close allies of the Ethiopian government but not of the Ethiopian people, it seems.

A regime of abuse
Page after page could be filled with detailed accounts of abuse from refugees who have fled the region, human rights groups and members of the Ogaden diaspora. According to Genocide Watch (GW), atrocities meted out to innocent civilians suspected of supporting the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) amount to “war crimes and crimes against humanity”. These include beating people to death, hanging people from trees, tying people with wire and holding them over burning chillies, rape and repeated false imprisonment – unjustifiable acts that are justified by the government as part of a “counter-insurgency operation” against the ONLF, which is predictably branded as terrorist.

Documented reports of human rights violations amounting to state terrorism are dismissed by the EPRDF government, which has a notoriously dismal human rights record. However, as Leslie Lefkow, HRW’s deputy director of Africa, says “if the Ethiopian government doesn’t have anything to hide, why don’t they allow independent investigators and journalists into the region”. There is, she says with understatement, “a lot of concern about the human rights situation on the Ogaden”. GW are more blunt, claiming unequivocally that Ethiopia is committing genocide in the Somali region, as well as to the “Anuak, Oromo and Omo” ethnic groups (or tribes). And it calls on the EPRDF regime to cease all attacks on the Ogaden Somali people and immediately release all prisoners, urging it to “adhere to it’s own constitution and allow its provinces the legal autonomy they are guaranteed”.
 
:wtfdis::camby:
meeshu miyaad leedahay? If you don't want to read, exit, it is that easy.
Quit trying to silence people. Isn't it strange how you were quiet while so much qashin was being posted about somalis until @Canuck came in? FOH
@Canuck you could just link the articles. No need to copy and paste the damn thing.


@Canuck keep doing you and don't let these slave minded people tell you otherwise. They'd rather throw their own people under the bus and run to defend others.
 

TheLibertarianQuiche

Quintessentially negroid: Your problem?
Nice try @Canuck. Feel free to attack Ethiopian people and beg Saudis since that is your right. I will never believe a Saudi. They will attack and abuse Somali maids like they did to the Ethiopians. Saudis have killed many maids.

You lived in Saudi Arabia and they kicked you out of their country which is why you live in Canada now. Have some dignity. They didn't even let you stay, forget about giving you a passport

Actually Somali citizens are the one of the only countries that can become a Saudi citizen. But they choose on a selective basis so its not guaranteed.
 

SenseSays

Years to look forward to
:wtfdis::camby:
meeshu miyaad leedahay? If you don't want to read, exit, it is that easy.
Quit trying to silence people. Isn't it strange how you were quiet while so much qashin was being posted about somalis until @Canuck came in? FOH



@Canuck keep doing you and don't let these slave minded people tell you otherwise. They'd rather throw their own people under the bus and run to defend others.

If she can express her opinions then so shall we :manny:

No one is silencing her, but let's be real- it's a pain in the fuuto to scroll down her Great Wall of hate in every thread. :O27GWRK:
 
If she can express her opinions then so shall we :manny:

No one is silencing her, but let's be real- it's a pain in the fuuto to scroll down her Great Wall of hate in every thread. :O27GWRK:
ok. You accused her of being negative, she didn't post until the fifth page and everything before that was a pile of xaar about somalis, wellfare, unemployment, scamming the government and etc.., why didn't you tell those folks to quit the negative depiction of somali? You reak of self hate because you have no problem with your people being dragged and insulted but you feel the need to defend when it is others, what is that?
 
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