MARCH 2010
|
| Selamawi Selfi on 13 April in Oslo S. Time 15:30
| |
|
| Information about mother language school in Oslo
| |
|
| Du og Jeg
Du og Jeg kjenner Gud, Allikevel hører vi ikke på ham,
Du og Jeg leser Bibelen, Allikevel handler vi ikke etter den,
Du og Jeg kjenner Satan, Allikevel har vi ikke kommet til enighet med han,
Du og Jeg erklærer vår kjærlighet for Paradiset, Allikevel gjør vi ingenting for å oppnå det,
Du og Jeg erklærer vår frykt for Ilden, Allikevel gjør vi ingenting for å unngå den,
Du og Jeg sier "virkelig er døden sann”, Allikevel er vi ikke forbredt på den,
Du og Jeg er opptatt med å finne feil hos andre, Allikevel ser vi ikke på våre egne feil,
Du og Jeg spiser det Gud har gitt oss, Allikevel takker vi Ham ikke,
Du og Jeg begraver våre døde, Allikevel lærer vi ikke av det.
Med vennlig hilsen Meaza fra Oslo
| |
|
| Forget about democracy
The Economist | March 25, 2010
THE United States, the richest and most powerful nation on earth, is also the most generous donor to one of the poorest, Ethiopia. America says it gives $1 billion in aid every year to Africa’s second-most-populous country, which also happens to host the African Union’s headquarters.
Yet Barack Obama’s administration has barely stirred itself to protest against recent attempts by Ethiopia to jam programmes in Amharic, the country’s main language, beamed by the Voice of America, a respected state-funded broadcaster. Ethiopia’s prime minister, Meles Zenawi, brazenly says he will continue to jam the signal for as long as it incites what he calls hatred. He has compared the Amharic service to the hate speech spewing from Radio Mille Collines, which helped provoke Rwanda’s genocide in 1994. The State Department called the comment inflammatory but seems loth to make Mr Zenawi suffer for it. ... >> full read more here
| |
|
| Eritrea should always be sanguine
Tuesday 23 March 2010
By Ibrahim A. Ibrahim
Lately the world body UNSC has slammed Eritrea with falsely fabricated forged accusation of helping military and monetary assistance to the Somali insurgents.
Helping the Somali citizens to come together to solve their cycle of violence since the early 90's is not wrong neither is bad. Especially from a country who benefits the fruit of peace in Somalia as part and parcel of the greater horn of Africa that comprises others who are directly or indirectly affected. With the exception of the minority regime in Ethiopia who is desperate to use and manipulate the chaos in Somalia and with that the threat of Eritrea to stay in power, the countries who border Somalia are either the leaders are corrupted themselves and sold their souls or did not know what a permanent peace based on the inter-Somali solution can bring to their countries ... >> full read more here
| |
|
|