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Matthews Suggests Trump Channel Mussolini, Murder Kushner; Compares Him to Ethiopian Dictator
2017-07-01
[NEWSBUSTERS.ORG] Go ahead and criticize President Trump’s Mika tweet, but there’s no denying this was disturbing. On Thursday’s Hardball, MSNBC pundit Chris Matthews compared the President to not only communist Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam and a modern-day Romanov but also channel Benito Mussolini having son-in-law Jared Kushner murdered.

As he’s previously done(documented here, here, and here), Matthews reiterated his belief that Kushner and wife Ivanka Trump are akin to the murderous sons of Saddam Hussein, Uday and Qusay.
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Africa Subsaharan
Mengistu to remain Zimbabwe's guest
2008-05-28
Ethiopia's former ruler Mengistu Haile Mariam, sentenced to death by his country's supreme court, will remain in Zimbabwe under the protection of President Robert Mugabe's government, a government minister said on Tuesday. "He remains our guest in Zimbabwe. He will remain in Zimbabwe and we will protect him as we've always done," Deputy Information Minister Bright Matonga said.

Mengistu, sentenced to death in absentia on Monday, has lived a life of comfortable exile in Zimbabwe since he was toppled in 1991. He is unlikely to face punishment unless Mugabe loses a run-off election next month and gives up power.

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change, whose leader Morgan Tsvangirai will face Mugabe in the presidential vote on June 27, said dictators like Mengistu were not welcome. "We don't want dictators on our land," MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa said, hinting Mengistu may be extradited if Tsvangirai wins next month.
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Africa North
Ethiopia Honors Victims of Marxist Junta
2007-05-28
Thousands of Ethiopians gathered in the capital on Sunday to remember victims of a brutal Marxist junta, weeping at the sight of flower-covered coffins with remains from mass graves across the country. The service marked the anniversary of the downfall of the junta's leader, Mengistu Haile Mariam -- known as "the butcher of Addis Ababa" -- who is living in exile in Zimbabwe.

Some experts say 150,000 university students, intellectuals and politicians were killed in a nationwide purge by Mengistu's Marxist regime, the Dergue, though no one knows for sure. Even those who were young during the 1974-1991 regime carried dark memories of the Red Terror, the 1977-78 siege when the government killed and imprisoned thousands of people.

Ahmed Hussein said that three decades ago police brought his younger brother home from jail and asked the family to gather outside. "They shot him in front of us," Ahmed said, his eyes welling with tears. "We were not allowed to cry."

Elderly women clutched black-and-white photographs of loved ones and wailed during the ceremony. "I used to see dead bodies on the street when I went to school," said Michael Melake, 35, an environmental activist. "It was like a kind of Holocaust for Ethiopia," he said.

The government is planning to erect a monument, library and museum in the capital to commemorate the victims.

Muluadem Assefa, 39, clutched a photo of her father, Assefa Casa, whom she believes was killed in jail in the 1970s. She never saw her father again after he was taken to jail.

Ethiopia, which has a long history of human rights abuses, will not see another Red Terror, said Deputy Prime Minister Addisu Legese, who attended Sunday's ceremony. "This will never, never happen again," he said. "We have fought for that."
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Africa Subsaharan
Zimbabwe Human Rights Group Urges Harare To Extradite Mengistu
2007-01-12
The Zimbabwean government refused again Thursday to consider extraditing former Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam following his sentencing in absentia by a court in Addis Ababa to life in prison for genocide. Ethiopian prosecutors had demanded the death penalty for Mengistu, whose Marxist government carried out political purges that killed thousands of Ethiopians.

Mengistu now lives in Zimbabwe, where he fled in 1991 after his ouster by rebels loyal to Ethiopia's current prime minister, Meles Zenawi. Acting Information Minister Paul Mangwana told Agence France Presse that “comrade Mengistu still remains a special guest of the Zimbabwean government.” He added that the former Ethiopian ruler had helped in Zimbabwe's liberation struggle.
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Africa Horn
Ethiopia’s ex-ruler Mengistu sentenced to life
2007-01-12
ADDIS ABABA - An Ethiopian court spared former Marxist dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam from the death penalty on Thursday, sentencing him to life in prison for genocide during a 17-year rule stained by “Red Terror” purges.

It is unlikely Mengistu, now nearing 70, will serve any prison time after the government in Zimbabwe, where he has been exiled for 16 years, said it would not extradite him.
Birds of a feather, professional courtesy, etc.
After a 12-year trial, Mengistu was found guilty in absentia last month of killing thousands of people during his years in power, which began with ousting Emperor Haile Selassie in 1974 and included war, brutal purges and famine.

“Considering the age of the accused ... and the state of their health ... the court has rejected the prosecution’s call for the death penalty and passed life imprisonment,” a panel of judges told the court in Addis Ababa.
Since when should the defendant's health matter? If he's alive before, he'll be dead after.
“The court also decided that passing the death sentence on people who are aged and suffering from sickness could not be considered as jurisprudence but rather as a vendetta.” The prosecution said it had appealed against the sentence.

Mengistu fled to Zimbabwe in 1991 after he was toppled by guerrillas led by now Prime Minister Meles Zenawi.

Zimbabwe’s acting Minister of Information and Publicity Paul Mangwana said the sentence “does not change anything”. “He still remains our guest. We do not have any request for extradition as far as I know,” he added.
"And we don't want to establish any precedents."
Some in Ethiopia criticised the sentence. “As a Christian, I forgive, but as an Ethiopian and a victim of the Derg’s nightmarish rule, I will never forget it,” said Mulugeta Asrat, whose father was killed by Mengistu’s Derg junta. “Today’s sentence makes a mockery of justice. Mengistu no doubt will be opening a bottle in Zimbabwe.”
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Africa Horn
Mengistu Convicted of Genocide in Ethiopia
2006-12-13
An Ethiopian dictator known as "the butcher of Addis Ababa" was convicted Tuesday of genocide in a rare case of an African strongman being held to account by his own country.
Not a bad precedent, though...
Mengistu Haile Mariam, who has been living in exile in Zimbabwe since 1992,
and whose kids and hangers-on have been emailing me since 2002,
was convicted in absentia after a 12-year trial. He could face the death penalty at his Dec. 28 sentencing, but Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe said he won't deport Mengistu if he refrains from making political statements or comments to the media.
Birds of a feather, flocking together...
The trial focused on Mengistu's alleged involvement in the killing of nearly 2,000 people during a 1977-78 campaign known as the Red Terror that targeted supposed enemies of his Soviet-backed regime.
2000? That's it? I suspect that's an indication of poor corpse counting, rather than the actual total.
A panel of judges, sitting before a packed courtroom, convicted him of instigating genocide, committing genocide, illegal imprisonment and abuse of power.
Wonder what Omar thinks of all this, in Sudan?
Mengistu ruled from 1974 to 1991 after his military junta ended Emperor Haile Selassie's reign in a bloody coup. Some experts say 150,000 university students, intellectuals and politicians were killed in a nationwide purge by Mengistu's Marxist regime, though no one knows for sure.
That's more the figure I heard than that piddlin' 2000 they actually tried him for...
When deposed in 1991 by rebels led by Meles Zenawi, now Ethiopia's prime minister, Mengistu fled to Mugabe's authoritarian regime in Zimbabwe, where his army had helped train guerrillas in their struggle for independence from white rule. The asylum was brokered by the United States and Canada to end the Ethiopian civil war as quickly as possible. Mengistu has been seen in public in Zimbabwe only twice since 1992, once in a restaurant and then browsing in a bookshop. In 1998, he told The Associated Press over the telephone in a rare interview that he was a "political refugee" who spent most of his time "staying at home and reading and writing something about my country."
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Africa: Horn
Execution for Ethiopia torturers
2005-08-12
Two senior members of Ethiopia's former military government have been sentenced to death after an 11-year trial.
Cheeze. And I thought the Michael Jackson trial would never end!
Former Security Minister Tesfaye Woldeselassie and ex-police chief Legesse Belayneh were found guilty of torturing thousands of dissidents. The two men had played prominent roles in setting up torture camps during the "Red Terror" under Mengistu Haile Mariam, the court said. Eight other defendants were given prison sentences from 10 years to life for their part in the abuse of political prisoners.

At one such torture facility, known as Bermuda, "victims of excessive torture were wrapped [in] plastic sheeting to protect the torturers from getting splashed with blood or pus of the victims in successive round of tortures," the court said. "Apart from the routine whiplashes and beatings, victims also used to be electrocuted." Many other trials are under way of those accused of being involved in the Red Terror. Some 150,000 people were killed before Mr Mengistu was deposed in 1991. Mr Mengistu, who has been living in exile in Zimbabwe since he was overthrown, ...
That figures.
... has been charged with genocide and human rights abuses.
He's probably working as a consultant...
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Africa: Subsaharan
Paved With Good Intentions
2005-07-12
The first time Bono and Madonna got together to save Africa, the unintended consequence was the death of perhaps as many as 100,000 people. That's aid expert David Rieff's conclusion in the July 2005 issue of the resolutely liberal American Prospect magazine regarding the end result of Live Aid in 1985. Billed as "The Greatest Show on Earth," Live Aid was a multi-venue rock concert held on July 13, 1985 in London and Philadelphia in order to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia. With an estimated 1.5 billion viewers watching the live broadcast in 100 countries, the event reportedly raised $250 million.
The money was supposed to go towards relieving hunger. In reality, argues Rieff, the rock stars and well-intentioned donors became unwilling participants in a civil war and unwitting supporters of a Soviet-style resettlement project that vastly increased the severity of the famine.
Humm, African resettlement program, now why does that sound familiar?
Rieff points to three causes of Ethiopia's famine, one natural, a two-year long drought, and two "entirely man-made." The man-made contributing factors were, first, "the dislocation imposed by the wars being waged by the central government" against rebel groups in the north of the country, and, second, "by far the most serious, the forced agricultural collectivization policy pursued with seemingly limitless ruthlessness by Mengistu Haile Mariam and his colleagues who had overthrown emperor Haile Selassie in 1974, and officially adopted communism as their creed in 1984." The impact of this government-mandated collectivization, contends Rieff, was "every bit the equal in its radicalism to the policies Stalin pursued in the Ukraine in the 1930s, where, as in Ethiopia, the result was inevitable famine."

As Francois Jean of the medical aid organization Medecins Sans Frontiers (MSF) described it at the time, the Mengistu regime was employing "shock treatment in order to transform Ethiopian rural society." Comparing the Ethiopian resettlement policy to its Chinese and Soviet predecessors, Francois Jean wrote that all three terror famines "proceeded from the same approach to reality, the same vision of the future, the same extreme commitment to radical social transformation." This famine-inducing resettlement policy in Ethiopia, the movement of 600,000 people from the north and the "villagization" of millions of others, was "at least in part a military campaign, masquerading as a humanitarian effort," concludes Rieff. "And it was assisted by Western aid money."

Initially, few people came forward when the authorities in Ethiopia called for volunteers for the resettlement plan. "The response was swift," explains Rieff. "A campaign of systemic round-ups in towns and villages across three targeted provinces began. Those caught up in these sweeps were either airlifted south or transferred by land, sometimes in vehicles the authorities had requisitioned from international relief agencies -- vehicles that were there to transport foodstuffs. The trip usually took five or six days. To this day, no one knows how many people died in route. The conservative estimate is 50,000. MSF's estimate is double that." "We are witnessing the biggest deportation since the Khmer Rouge genocide," charged MSF's president, Claude Malhuret, in late 1985. In an exercise of deadly compassion, humanitarian "aid to victims was unwittingly transformed into support to their executioners."
Seems like I've read about that happening again somewhere. Nah, no one would be that stupid.
In other words, Madonna sang, activists bemoaned the self-absorption of life in the rich world, Bono felt good about himself, and music fans phoned in the money that would buy the trucks that would deliver the bodies to the Marxist murderers in the Mengistu regime.

When asked about these unintended consequences, concert organizer Bob Geldof seemed to have few second thoughts. "The organizations that are participating in the resettlement program should not be criticized," he told the Irish Times on November 4, 1985. "In my opinion, we've got to give aid without worrying about population transfers."
"Pay no attention to those people being forced into trucks, we've got a show to put on!"

This time around, Chris Martin, the frontman of Coldplay and a former student in World Studies at London's University College, told the Live 8 audience that the July 2, 2005 concerts were "the greatest thing that's ever been organized, probably, in the history of the world."

Imagine that! Getting Bono and Madonna together for another afternoon shot at saving Africa is bigger than D-Day, a bigger and greater achievement in organization than the putting together of the invading force of 11,000 airplanes, 5,000 ships, and over 150,000 troops that broke Germany's grip on western Europe and foreshadowed the end of Hitler's dream of turning the planet into a Nazi hellhole.

Ralph R. Reiland is an associate professor of economics at Robert Morris University and a columnist for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
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Home Front: WoT
Ethiopian "Red Terror" suspect arrested
2005-01-05
An Ethiopian man suspected of torturing and murdering political opponents in the 1970s has been arrested near Atlanta, say United States officials. Kelbessa Negewo fled to the US in 1987 and now faces deportation proceedings. In 2002 in his absence, he was sentenced to life imprisonment for multiple murders by an Ethiopian court. His wife denies charges made against him when he was an official during the deposed dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam's "Red Terror" campaign. "These are all false accusations. He is a good man. He didn't kill anybody," his wife, Athena Negussie, told Reuters news agency shortly after his arrest. In 1993, a US district judge ordered Negewo to pay $1.5m to three women who accused him of torturing them under Ethiopia's Marxist regime between 1977 and 1978. Negewo, who works at an Atlanta hotel has paid only a small amount of the fine, pleading poverty. Tens of thousands of people died during Mengistu's 17-year rule - especially in the late 1970s. Mengistu lives in exile in Zimbabwe.
And feel's right at home.
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Africa: North
Not Even a Band-Aid
2004-11-22
Following the week that Band Aid released Band Aid 20, an all-star recording to aid the starving Sudanese in Darfur, the documentary-maker Daniel Wolf argues that the first Band Aid fundraiser of 1985 only made matters worse for the victims of famine ["The Myth of Band Aid, "Sunday Mail (Brisbane, Queensland), November 21]. By the release twenty years of another all-star recording, "Do They Know It's Christmas?" and the associated Live Aid concerts, Bob Geldof raised $150 million for famine relief in Ethiopia. At the time, many fans of rock music believed that they had accomplished great good, saved Ethiopia, and "fed the world." They did not.

Ghastly images of starving Ethiopians in 1984 shocked the world. What was not understood at the time was the famine was largely created by the government of Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam. After a severe drought in the region, Mengistu withheld food supplies to the area and destroyed crops in order to suppress a rebellion. In October, 1984, Mengistu launched a major offensive into the famine-stricken areas in the north. Troops set up road blocks to prevent the aid shipments of food.

Excerpt from headland
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East/Subsaharan Africa
Village boundary dispute threatens Ethiopia peace deal
2003-04-05
Fears are growing that a dispute over a remote village could reignite the war between Ethiopia and Eritrea that ended three years ago. An argument over Badme, a mountain hamlet in a barren border zone, provoked the 1998 conflict, which in more than two years of trench warfare claimed at least 80,000 lives.
Ain't worth it, guys.
Both sides subsequently agreed to accept the findings of an international panel to determine the border issue. The Boundary Commission, based in The Hague, said last month that Badme belonged in Eritrea. That decision angered the Ethiopian government, which threatened to renege on the deal on borders.
"We'll abide by the decision of an impartial mediator, as long as it goes our way..."
The ruling was unacceptable, an Information Ministry spokesman said, adding that the commission's failure to correct its "mistake" was viewed with grave concern. In contrast, Eritrean state media has carried reports proclaiming its victory in Badme. Observers are concerned that the stand-off could deteriorate and bring an end to a peace deal struck in Algiers in 2001. Most of the 620-mile border is now peaceful but Badme remains a sticking point. The commission failed to pinpoint Badme's location when it issued its findings one year ago; then clarified that, under a 1902 Italian colonial treaty, it belonged in Eritrea. This ruling provoked Ethiopian officials, who issued veiled threats of violence if physical demarcation of the new border went ahead in July. "It is possible there will be trouble when they come to put the pillars in. We cannot imagine the consequences," Tsirgay Berhe, President of the Tigray region, said. The threats have alarmed peace workers in the region. An official working for the United Nations in Asmara, the Eritrean capital, admitted: "We are a bit lost. It is not clear where to go from here."
That sounds like a UN official.
One possible solution under consideration is to put Badme under international supervision while the remainder of the border is demarcated. But those behind the plan were not optimistic. "Personally I don't think it would work. But we don't have any better ideas," said the UN official.
"In fact, we don't have any ideas at all..."
Badme has crystallised rivalries between the neighbours, who once fought together to overthrow the Communist dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam in 1991. Both countries can ill afford further confrontation. More than 11 million Ethiopians and 1.4 million Eritreans – 40 per cent of the population – are at risk of starvation this year because of a severe drought. "We Can't Afford Another War" read the headline on an article in the Addis Tribune newspaper.
You'd think they might have more important things to worry about, but apparently they don't...
Meles Zenawi, the Ethiopian Prime Minister, is under intense pressure to claim Badme. Ethiopia won the war, but at a massive cost – his army lost an estimated 60,000 troops. Opposition politicians have accused President Zenawi of being "soft" on Eritrea – partly, they say, because his family comes from there.
It's a gawd-forsaken hamlet, a pile of stones. It's not worth a single life.
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