
By: Abdirahman Aynte
Fellow, The Center for Independent Media
“Our country is humiliated,” said Jumale, 51, who also blamed the
That “aggression” happened last week when Ethiopia, a country most Somalis hold animosity against it dating back to centuries of conflict, sent upwards of 20,000 soldiers to subdue the power of the unflinching Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), which was swiftly gaining control of most of Somalia, while the internationally-backed Transitional Federal Government (TFG) was rapidly losing soil and support.
UIC gained control of
In a stunning reversal of fortunes, TFG forces, riding Ethiopian tanks and armored vehicles marched into
Jumale was among a throng of Somalis, who after celebrating their holiest feast, Eid Al-Adha, flocked to
The U.S. State Department initially said that “
Ethiopian forces resurrected most of the thorny
“I’m aghast by [Ethiopian] actions,” said Abdirizak Haji Hussien, former prime minister of
One after another, protestors seemed to blame the

Women wearing colorful garbs and headscarves, and men wearing white robes, held signs that said “No more warlords,” and “Somali-Americans against Ethiopian aggression.”
The boisterous crowd, estimated at three thousand by some, was one of the largest in
“The reality is that there are many people who think
Some members of the Ethiopian community said they don’t sanction their government’s attack in
“Everyone knows that [Ethiopian prime minister] is deflecting attention away from his internal crisis,” said Sam Deganu, a businessman who said he came to the rally to show solidarity and to clarify that all Ethiopians aren’t in line with the war. “The Somali war has the hallmarks of Iraqi war, except that it has far less support among us.”
That view is echoed by many experts, who noted that the European Union has recently halted million of dollars in humanitarian aid to
Another fear, some protestors say, is that
Calls for withdrawal
In the
“I strongly condemn this aggression and call for the immediate withdrawal of Ethiopian and all foreign forces from
The African Union and the Arab League, both of which
But Ethiopian premier said that he wouldn’t heed those calls until he gets the job done—a statement seen by many Somalis as an open-ended stay in the country.
Abdirahman Aynte can be reached at [email protected]
Source: HOL, Dec 31, 2006