Eng .by training, IT professional by career. “Show forgiveness, speak of justice and avoid the ignorant” .Twit = my thoughts 💡 | RT = FYI 📢 | Like = I agree .
No democracy can flourish if political disagreements are settled through the barrel of a gun instead of the ballot box. The path to lasting legitimacy runs through elections, not armed confrontation.
Strong institutions, not only stronger militias, are what preserve nations. Ethiopia's future depends on constitutional government, professional security forces, and equal justice under the law.
The greatest victims of armed conflict are never politicians. They are farmers who cannot harvest, children who cannot attend school, and families forced to flee homes they built over generations
If allegations of foreign interference prove true, every responsible government has a duty to strengthen border security, protect national sovereignty, and pursue diplomatic accountability through lawful means.
No country, large or small, can build schools, hospitals, or attract investment while armed conflict spreads across multiple regions. Stability is not the enemy of freedom; it is its prerequisite.
Negotiation has value, but dialogue without accountability can embolden those who reject peaceful politics. Lasting peace requires both justice and the rule of law.
Restoring security does not mean abandoning human rights. A strong state protects civilians, respects the law, and holds every armed actor accountable regardless of political affiliation.
A government's first constitutional duty is protecting its citizens. Peace cannot exist where armed groups roam freely and civilians live in constant uncertainty. Security is not optional, it is the foundation of every democracy.
History is clear: Haile Selassie defended national unity, the Derg used overwhelming force, and the EPRDF rarely tolerated armed defiance. Ethiopia's current security crisis raises difficult questions about consistency in enforcing federal authority.
A sovereign nation cannot function when armed factions dictate who governs entire regions. If the rule of law collapses, ordinary citizens, not politicians, pay the highest price through insecurity, displacement, and fear.
Every day conflict continues, Ethiopia loses lives, investment, opportunity, and international confidence. Delay carries a cost measured not only in money, but in human suffering.
Every Ethiopian government, from Emperor Haile Selassie to the Derg and EPRDF, would have treated any armed group openly defying the state as an existential threat. No government can survive while parallel armies replace constitutional authority.
True stability requires domestic reform in Eritrea. The regime must implement its constitution, open its economy, and end the slavery of indefinite national service. Once the state builds internal legitimacy, it will no longer need an "Ethiopian bogeyman" to survive.
Eritrea is playing a dangerous game, selling its soul to regional rivals like Egypt just to spite Ethiopia. This isn't strategic genius; it’s a toxic alliance born out of pure malice, turning the Horn of Africa into a volatile proxy battleground for outside powers.
This isn’t rocket science, #Tigrenya wants to control #Dankalia to keep #Ethiopia landlocked & dictate their own terms on them and milk #Ethiopian economy to further strengthen their power grid over #Afar territory.
Think about this: The global elite pumps billions into completely collapsed basket cases like Somalia or Eritrea and calls them "nations." Meanwhile, #Somaliland actually built a functioning, peaceful democracy from nothing, yet the UN pretends they don't exist. Why? Because the establishment hates self-reliance. Happy Independence Day to Somaliland. You deserve your freedom.
@Ternafi Shabiya & TPLF are masters of deception, weaponizing fake victimhood to mask heinous crimes. Isayas’ obsession to destroy TPLF (not the Red Sea) & TPLF’s desperate plot to erase 27 years of brutal atrocities not land issue, have both utterly failed. The truth cannot be buried.
@martinplaut Like Getachew Reda said, you’re just a fair-weather friend. You hate Isaias because you despise African unity, but now you back him because you want Ethiopia trapped landlocked and Eritrea stuck in a permanent, crippled status quo. Hypocrisy at its absolute finest.