HomeNews Exercising our Influence in the Upcoming Elections in Canada and in the United States
Exercising our Influence in the Upcoming Elections in Canada and in the United States
Thursday, 11 September 2008
Voting for Africa:
Exercising our Influence in the Upcoming Elections in Canada and in the United
States
Press Release:
September 10, 2008
This is a golden moment of opportunity for Ethiopians
and Africans! Both Canada and the United States will have national elections
within the next two months. Canada will hold theirs on Tuesday, October 14 and
the United States will do the same on Tuesday, November 4.
If Ethiopians mobilize and work together, we can press
candidates running for elections both in Canada and in the United States to
better represent our interests both here and in Ethiopia and Africa. This time
leading up to the elections is critical. It is the time when candidates are
most likely to listen to voters, especially if we come in solidarity with a
shared agenda.
In the past, we Ethiopians have undeniably confused
policymakers in our international capitals, such as in Ottawa and Washington
D.C., with our opposing political factions' proposals of opposing political
agendas representing opposing ethnic groups. This must now all be put aside for
the greater cause of freedom, justice, peace and opportunity in Ethiopia,
something that cannot be achieved without solidarity among Ethiopians that is
based on higher values-the kind of solidarity that can create a political
environment conducive to good governance, to respecting human rights, to
upholding the equal and fair application of the rule of law, to transparency
and to a "no tolerance" policy towards corruption and "tribal politics."
We Ethiopians should not let this opportunity slide by
without exerting pressure on candidates to address issues affecting Ethiopians
back home where changes in Canadian or US national policy could help relieve
the suffering, oppression and difficulties of everyday life they are now
facing.
There is no doubt that the direction of international
foreign policy taken by both Canada and the United States in the next years
could be catalysts for positive change or for the status quo-or even worsening
the situation. It is a critical and urgent time for us to become involved.
The Solidarity
Movement for a New Ethiopia is now organizing a campaign with two main
goals: 1) a "get out and vote" campaign and 2) a campaign to bring the concerns
of the Ethiopian people to the candidates and into the public debate. Let us
ask our candidates to define their plans for Ethiopia and for Africa should
they be elected!
We on the committee for Solidarity are attempting to reach the hundreds of thousands of
Ethiopians in these two countries to form a strong voting block who can get
behind the candidate(s) who best reflect(s) our interests. This is what it
means to live in a free, democratic society!
The committee for the Solidarity Movement has identified individuals in Canada, in the provinces of Ontario,
British Columbia, Alberta and Manitoba where most Ethiopians live, to mobilize
them to organize regional and city-based efforts. We are making plans to call
meetings in the following cities: Toronto, Ottawa, Windsor, Waterloo, Calgary,
Vancouver, Winnipeg and Edmonton. The Canadian election is coming up within
three weeks so we must move ahead quickly!
In the United
States, the Solidarity committee
has identified people willing to organize this effort within the following
states or cities: Minnesota, Boston, Washington DC, Virginia, Atlanta, Dallas,
Mississippi, California, New York and New Jersey. We have only fifty days left
before the election and to make this effective, you, the reader has to offer
what you can do to contribute, if you agree with the idea, by contacting the Solidarity committee or by starting to
organize in your area.
The committee for the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia will be organizing
teleconferences, like what was done during the Worldwide March in May, to
assist groups with strategies and resources.
Every eligible Ethiopian
should be registered to vote!
For our voice to be heard, we must have some "voting
clout!" To have voting clout, we must be registered to vote. It is so simple. Ethiopians
within communities, faith organizations and civic organizations should make
sure that their people are registered to vote, reminding groups that are
prohibited from endorsing one particular candidate (like faith organizations)
to be careful not to do so.
In America, the group, Ethiopians for Obama, has
done a remarkable job already to get people registered to vote and
committed to their candidate. The Solidarity committee is working together with
this group and we can all learn from
them. Groups that are limited by law from endorsing one candidate over
another, can discuss issues and educate the public regarding the candidate's
platforms so that the voter is able to decide which candidate best reflects
their values, aims and goals.
However, remember, that as Ethiopians collectively
become involved in working together regardless of ethnic, regional, political
and religious differences, we are all the more effective in pressing all of the
candidates to more closely consider our concerns. Additionally, these
"collective efforts" should also be directed towards others running for office
in the regional and local elections as well.
Our first major goal is to get people registered and
to the polling booths on Election Day. Task groups can be organized to go from
door to door, to call on people by phone or to send mailings or emails in order
to encourage Ethiopian Canadian and Ethiopian American citizens to register. As
Election Day draws closer, it will help to remind them again and to find out if
they might need assistance, such as transportation, to get to the polling
booths. Our motivation is to bring hope, life and change to Ethiopia and to the
African continent.
A team of experts is needed
to communicate "Ethiopian positions" to the candidates.
The committee for the Solidarity Movement is also organizing a team of spokespeople who
can make sure these candidates understand the facts about Ethiopia and how
Canadian or US foreign policy can positively enhance freedom, justice, peace
and opportunity in Ethiopia-the same benefits we enjoy here. Such a team of
spokespeople can press the candidates to better define and refine-based on new
information-their positions regarding Ethiopia and Africa should they be
elected.
That team will be made up of policy experts, both
Ethiopian and non-Ethiopian, who already know what is right and wrong with
current Canadian and US policy towards Ethiopia, what changes in policy will
better accomplish what is needed in Ethiopia and what could enhance our working
relationships. The only way we can effectively influence these candidates is if
we can present our case with solidarity.
We cannot ignore what is happening back home. It is
our responsibility to get our information and our questions to the discussion
table and to work together to do so. They need to become part of the public
debate.
In Canada, let's hear from
the three major political parties-the Conservatives, the Liberals and the
National Democratic Party (NDP)!
In Canada, the two parties most likely to win and create
the government is either the Conservative Party or the Liberal Party. In order
to become a majority government, they will have to claim a number of seats in
the Parliament, especially from the province of Ontario where most
Ethiopian-Canadians live.
In other words, the Ethiopian-Canadian can play a
significant role in this election if they can show these parties that they represent
a strong voting bloc. Some say that between 60,000 to 80,000 Ethiopians live in
Ontario. This is a lot of voters if they all exercised their right to vote and
because of that, the candidates from the major parties will not ignore them if they
speak out with one voice. It could lead to changing Canadian government policy
towards Ethiopia. This is something Ethiopian Canadians should not take for
granted.
In the US, let's hear from
both Obama and McCain camps!
In the United States, some Ethiopians have already
formed the group already mentioned, "Ethiopians
for Obama," but we should also have a group, "Ethiopians for McCain" or at least present our concerns to both
candidates to see what their plans are for Ethiopia, the Horn of Africa and for
Africa in general.
The debate between the two candidates will only
enhance the importance of the discussion. If you are for Obama, he might
increase his commitment towards Ethiopia if he learns more from us or if
McCain's position is equally or even more significantly, shows more openness to
listening to our concerns.
The reverse is true as well. If McCain believes it is
an important issue, backed by citizens who care about this region of the world,
he may become more responsive to our concerns regarding the issues affecting
Ethiopia as well as Africa. If he ends up being elected, we are in a much
better position to continue to influence policy in this arena if we engage him
early on in this matter.
Many Ethiopians and Africans are unified over Obama,
but few are capitalizing on it in a strategic way.Right now, he probably believes he has most
of the African votes, but let us not sit back and assume he will take the
actions we want without our taking responsibility to press him for commitment
to those things most important to us. Also, there are Ethiopians and Africans
who will recognize that McCain has taken a stand for human rights and African
issues in the past and yet will want to know what he will do if he is elected.
In summary, the goal of the Solidarity Committee is to present the questions related to
Canadian and US policies effecting Ethiopia, the Horn and Africa to the candidates
to better understand and influence their positions.If one or the other of the candidates takes a
stronger and better stand than the other, it will only put more pressure on the
other to improve their position.
Ethiopian citizens in Canada
and in the US should encourage African-Canadians and African-Americans to do
the same!
Let's invite other Africans and see if together, we
can even create a larger voting bloc to press the Canadian parties and American
parties to improve their policies towards Ethiopia. To do so effectively, we
should come, not as one country, one ethnic group, one religious group or any
other sub-group, but as one who has interests in advancing the freedom,
justice, equality, transparency and opportunity of Africans. Many new citizens
from Africa do not understand the potential political power they possess as a
group if only they organized.
Imagine if Ethiopians could take the initiative in
bringing together other Africans who could vote in order to press for the
protection of the rights of Africans, not by favoring dictators over the people
or by suppressing democratic movements within the continent when it conflicts
with their interests, but instead, to form genuine dialogue and honest
partnerships where the people of both Canada, the US and in Africa, all
benefit. If this could be done, it could greatly impact Africans. If Africans
were mobilized, it could be a powerful force to address the chronic corruption,
exploitation, conflicts, human rights abuses, poverty and misery faced by the
people of Africa.
Canadians and Americans are giving millions to
Ethiopia and to other countries on the continent. Yet, Africans are not
achieving even close to the same kind of freedom, stability, democracy, rule of
law, development, property rights, protective economic laws directed against
corruption as we have in North America.
We Ethiopian and African citizens in North America
desire that what we treasure here, be brought back to Africa to be enjoyed by
our families and by future generations-something that would dramatically stop
the "drain brain" of those wanting to leave their countries for the freedom and
opportunity of the west.Instead, as
citizens here, some of our tax money is being used by dictators to kill and
oppress our people, to block the media and to exploit the people and their
natural resources. These are the questions we want to ask these
candidates:how will they fundamentally
alter foreign policy in Africa in a way that it would enhance the freedom and
democracy on the continent-not merely band-aid solutions?
Once the election is over, a unified effort to address
international policies in Africa should continue being driven and energized by
those who have a stake-citizens of free countries who still have family, interests
and compassion for these countries. This collective effort should not
disintegrate once the election is over, but instead should be carried on
through a foundation, based on these principles, that can build a more powerful
voice that is not only under one African nation's name. It cannot only have the
name of Liberia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan, Zambia, Senegal,
Uganda, Burundi, Tanzania, Mozambique, Angola, Zimbabwe, Ghana, Eritrea,
Algeria, Togo, Nigeria or the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It must
represent African interests more than the African Union, a union of dictators
for life, an organization that should be replaced with those who uphold one
people and the respect of human rights for all.
Change in Africa cannot be
achieved without our involvement and commitment!
Change cannot come without us Ethiopians and the rest
of us Africans. In the next weeks, we call on community leaders to set up a
committee in your areas that can take immediate action. Anyone who reads this
and agrees with it, you are a leader and there is a job for you to do. If you
are outraged by what is going on in Ethiopia, we are calling on you. If you are
heartbroken because of stories coming out of Ethiopia, we are calling on
you.
The Solidarity
Committee will help, but the local people must take the action. We will
organize a teleconference on this very soon, but before that, we are attempting
to contact individuals known to us who might initiate action. We welcome calls
from interested persons as well so that you can be included if we do not know
you or call you ourselves. Please reach out to us so we can reach back to you.
Do not let us be held back by differences or lack of
previous communication with each other. Let us be focused on our goals and keep
in mind those attitudes and values that will free us as a nation and as a
continent: "Humanity before Ethnicity"
and "No One can be Free Until We All are
Free!" This can apply to all of Africa.
The African people have been exploited by our
dictators as well as by their collusion with outsiders who end up both
trampling on the rights of the people. From country to country and from region
to region in Africa, we have much in common. It is time for us to come
together. Think of what it would mean if Africans combined forces and together
would say, "Africans deserve much better than what they have been getting. It
is time for Africans to rediscover their God-given destiny and to call to halt
these corrupt, exploitive and oppressive practices in Africa!"
This opportunity is for all Canadian and American
citizens of African background or those non-Africans who are sympathetic to the
African, to develop policies that hold African leaders accountable and which do
not align with dictators at the expense of the people. This is the way to
eradicate tribal thinking and to send a loud message to African leaders
belonging to the gang of dictators for life in the African Union that "enough
is enough!"
At the end of the day, it comes back to us individual
Africans and Ethiopians. It is our God-given moral responsibility to organize
and act for justice, freedom, equality, peace and prosperity so deeply yearned
for on the continent of Africa. No one else will do it for us.
Remember, there is much to be done and many are needed
to complete the tasks. A leader is someone who sees the job to be done and does
it.Be that person. If the Solidarity Movement can empower you to
do what needs to be done, please contact us. We believe that in solidarity we
can thrive and exponentially multiply the results of our joint efforts.
Let us work together for a New Ethiopia and for a New
Africa where humanity comes before
ethnicity and where we all work to free our brother and sister Africans
since "No one is free until we all are
free!"
May God open up opportunities and guide us as we seek
to organize this election campaign and to influence candidates to accomplish
God's purposes through this election in North America for His purposes in
Ethiopia and in Africa.
May you, Almighty God, hear the cries of your people
and free us from whatever hinders us from within ourselves or from what hinders
us from outside of ourselves so that we might become your instruments of peace,
justice and righteousness in the world both far and near.
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For more information contact the
committee for the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia by E-mail at:
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