^

More Pirate Tales…

ASMARA, Eritrea — One of the best kept secrets in the international media these days is the link between the USA, Ethiopia and the Somali pirates. First, a little reliable background from someone on the ground in the Horn of Africa.

This is an old Pirate Treasure Map I found…

The Somali pirates operate out of the Ethiopian and USA created enclaves in Somalia calling themselves Somaliland and Puntland. These Ethiopian and USA backed warlord controlled territories have for many years hosted Ethiopian military bases, which have been greatly expanded recently by the addition of thousands of Ethiopian troops who were driven out of southern and central Somali by the Somali resistance to the Ethiopian invasion.

A Pirate Party…

After securing their ransom for the hijacked ships the Somali pirates head directly to their local safe havens, in this case, the Ethiopian military bases, where they make a sizeable contribution to the retirement accounts of the Ethiopian regime headed by Meles Zenawi.

Of course, the international naval forces who are patrolling the Horn of Africa know all too well what is going on for they have at their disposal all sorts of high tech observation platforms, ranging from satellites to unmanned drones with high resolution video cameras that report back in real time.

The French commandos started to pursue the Somali pirates into their lairs last year until the pirates got the word that for the right amount of cash they were more than welcome in the Ethiopian military bases in their local neighborhoods. Ethiopia being the western, mainly USA, Cop on the Beat in East Africa put these bases off limits to the frustrated navies of the world, who are no doubt growling in anger to their USA counterparts about why this is all going on.

Now that the pirates have started attacking USA flagged shipping, something that was until now off limits, it remains to be seen what the Obama administration will do. One thing we in the Horn of Africa have learned all too well, when it comes to Ethiopia, don?t expect anything resembling accurate coverage by the media, especially those who operate under the cloak of ?freedom of the press.?

Stay tuned for more on this from the www.Onlinejournal.com, the only site willing to expose the truth on matters no one else will touch.

Thomas C. Mountain, the last white man living in Eritrea, was in a former life an educator, activist and alternative medicine practitioner in the USA. Email thomascmountain at yahoo.com.


This item provided by Everyone’s Blog Posts - 12.160Mhz

^

Ethiopians rally in rare protest

The main opposition parties in Ethiopia have held a march in Addis Ababa to call for the release of their imprisoned leader, Birtukan Medeksa. The demonstrators handed in a petition to the authoritie…

^

Das Dänische Institut für Militarische Studien (DIMS) legte einen Bericht mit Lösungswegen für das somalische Piraterieproblem vor. Das Papier soll auf einer internationalen Konferenz zum Thema am 27.4. in London vorgestellt werden.

Kern der Vorschläge: Alle Anrainerstaaten, von Ägypten, Saudi Arabien und Jemen, Eritrea, Djibuti, die somalischen autonomen Gebiete, Kenia und Tansania sollen eine gemeinsame Küstenwache bilden.

Diese hat sich aber nicht nur der Pirateriebekämpfung zu widmen, sondern auch Seerettung, Fischereiaufsicht und Umweltschutz. Nur wenn man das Aufgabenspektrum so breit wählt, versichern die Experten, werde man alle Anrainerstatten überzeugen können.

(via politiken) (pic google maps)


This item provided by 11k2

^

Ethiopians stage first protest since ‘05 violence

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Ethiopians marched on Thursday to demand the release of a jailed opposition leader in the first political protests since a disputed 2005 election ended in street violence that killed 199 people.

^

AGRICULTURE-AFRICA: Livestock Vital to Rural Livelihoods

NAIROBI, Mar 17 (IPS) - The Nairobi-based International Livestock Research
Institute estimates 250 million people in Africa - a quarter of
the population - rely on livestock for their livelihoods, yet
African governments invest almost nothing to support the sector.