Saturday, December 7, 2013

ከሳውዲ ተመላሽ ዜጎች ንብረታቸው በጉምሩክ እንደተወሰደባቸው ተናገሩ

ህገወጥ ናችሁ ተብለው ከሳውዲ አረቢያ ወደ አገራቸው የተመለሱ ኢትዮጵያዊያን፤ ለበርካታ አመታት ለፍተን ያፈራነውን ንብረት ይዛችሁ መግባት አትችሉም ተብሎ ተነጥቀናል፡፡ የፍተሻ ሰራተኞች ሻንጣዎቻቸውን በመፈተሽ፣ ሞባይል ከአንድ በላይ ከያዙ ትርፉን በማስቀረት፣ አዳዲስ አልባሳት እና ኤሌክትሮኒክስ ቁሰቁሶች የተወሰኑትን ብቻ በመፍቀድ እና ያመጡትን ወርቆች ግራም በመቀነስ ንብረታቸውን እየወሰዱባቸው እንደሆነ ተመላሾቹ ገልፀዋል፡፡ መሃመድ አባመጫ የተባለ የሳኡዲ ተመላሽ፤ ከሳውዲ ስድስት ሻንጣ ይዞ መምጣቱን ገልፆ፤ ቦሌ አውሮፕላን ማረፍያ ሲደርስ ግን ከሁለት ሻንጣ በላይ ይዞ መግባት እንደማይችል፣ ከአምስት ሞባይሎችም ሁለቱ ብቻ እነደተፈቀደለት ለአዲስ አድማስ ተናግሯል፡፡ የሳውዲ መንግስት ከአንድ ኪሎ በላይ ወርቅ ይዛችሁ መውጣት አትችሉም የሚል መመሪያ ማሳለፉን የጠቆመው ተመላሹ፤ ንብረቱን እዚያው ጥሎ ለመመለስ መገደዱን ገልጿል፡፡ የሳኡዲ መንግስት እንኳን ከወርቅ በስተቀር ሌላ ንብረታቸውን ሁሉ ይዘው እንዲወጡ መፍቀዱን የገለፀው መሃመድ፤ በአገራቸው ንብረታቸውን እንዳያስገቡ መከልከላቸው እንዳሳዘነው ይናገራል፡፡
ኤሌክትሮኒክስና ለቤተሰቦቹ ያመጣውን ልብሶች ቀረጥ ከፍለህ ነው የምትወስደው በመባሉ፣ ለሁለት ቀን በስደት ተመላሾች በተዘጋጀው ድንኳን ውስጥ ያለምንም ፍራሽና ልብስ ተኝቶ ንብረቱን ቢጠብቅም ማግኘት እንዳልቻለ ገልጿል፡፡ “ሳዑዲም እዚህም ሀገራችን ስንደርስ እየበደሉን ያሉት ሃበሾች ናቸው” ያለው መሃመድ፤ መንግስት በሚዲያ በተሟላና በተደላደለ መንገድ እንደሚቀበለን ቢገልፅም እዚህ የጠበቀን ግን ሌላ ነው ሲል ቅሬታውን ገልፆ “ሌላው ቢቀር እስካሁን ተመላሾቹን የሚያመላልሰው እንኳን የሳዑዲ እንጂ የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት አይደለም” ብሏል፡፡ ከሳኡዲ ካመጣችው ወርቅ ላይ ሃምሳ ግራሙን ብቻ እንደምትወስድ የተነገራት ተኪያ ሙሃመድን ያገኘናት በቁጭት መሬት ላይ እየተንከባለለች ነበር፡፡
ተኪያ እያለቀሰች እንደነገረችን፤ ለ14 ዓመት ሰርታ ከሶስት መቶ ሃምሳ ግራም በላይ ወርቅ እንዳጠራቀመች ገልፃ፤ በተፈጠረው ችግር ምክንያት ከሳውዲ እንድትወጣ ከመገደዷ በፊት ሙሉ ንብረቷን አስቀድማ ብትልክም እስካሁን እንዳልደረሰላት ትናገራለች፡፡ አሁንም፤ ከተመለሰች በኋላ የያዘቻቸውን ሻንጣዎች ለመውሰድ እንዳልቻለች የምትገልፀው ተኪያ፤ በፍተሻ ስም ሰራተኞቹ ሻንጣዋን በርብረው በማየት፣ ያመጣቻቸውን የኤሌክትሮኒክስ እቃዎችና ሶስት ሞባይሎች መውሰዳቸው ሳይንስ፣ ሶስት መቶ ግራም የሚመዝን የወርቅ ንብረቷን እንዳታስገባ መከልከሏን በጩኸት ትናገራለች፡፡ ለምን ንብረቷን እንደከለከሏት ስትጠይቅም “እናንተ ነጋዴዎች ናችሁ፤ በስደተኞች ስም ያለቀረጥ ንብረት ለማስገባት ትፈልጋላችሁ” በማለት ሰራተኞቹ እንደመለሱላት ገልፃ፤ ጉዳዩን ለአለቆቻቸው ለማመልከት ብትፈልግም የሚያናግራት ሰው አለማግኘቷን ጠቁማለች፡፡ በዚሁ ስፍራ ያገኘናቸው በርካታ ተመላሾች፤ የንብረታቸው ጉዳይ እንዳሳሰባቸው ይናገራሉ። ንብረታቸውን ሳይዙ ወደቤተሰቦቻቸው ላለመቀላቀል በሚል የተሰበሰቡበት ካምፕ፣ ምንም ለማረፊያ የተመቻቸ አገልግሎት ባለመኖሩ መቸገራቸውንም ገልፀዋል፡፡ መንግስት የሚሰጣቸውን 900 ብር፣ በትራንስፖርትና በስልክ አገልግሎት እንደሚጨርሱ አክለው ተናግረዋል፡፡
በርካቶች በእቃዎቻቸው መታገድ በመበሳጨታቸው ጭቅጭቅና አላስፈላጊ ውዝግብ ውስጥ ለመግባት መገደዳቸውን ተመላሾቹ ይናገራሉ፡፡ “ስንመጣ የሚሰጠንን ሊሴ ፓሴን አይተው ማስተናገድ ሲገባቸው እነሱ ግን ንብረታችንን እየወሰዱብን ነው” በማለት የሚናገሩት ተመላሽ ዜጎቹ፤ “ምናልባትም ንብረት የላቸውም ብለው አስበውን ይሆናል፤ ነገር ግን በርካታ አመታት ስንቆይ መቼም ባዶ እጃችንን አንመጣም” በማለት በምሬት ይናገራሉ፡፡ “ዛሬ እቃችንን የከለከሉን ነገ ምን ተስፋ ይዘን ነው ተደራጅታችሁ ስራ ስሩ ለሚሉን?” የሚሉት እነዚህ ተመላሾች፤ “በመንግስት ላይ አመኔታ የጣልነው ሳውዲ ድረስ በተወካዮቹ አማካኝነት መጥቶ ባናገረን መሰረት ነበር፤ ነገር ግን የተገባልን ቃል ታጥፏል” ይላሉ፡፡ መንግስት ለጉዳዩ ትኩረት ባለመስጠቱ እና ለቤተሰብ መርዶ ባለመነገሩ፣ ለሚያውቋቸው ቤተሰቦች መርዶ ለመንገር ጭንቀት ላይ መሆናቸው ሌላ ችግራቸው እንደሆነ የተናገሩት ተመላሾች፤ አሁንም ቢሆን ሳውዲ ላይ ሃበሻዎችን በመኪና እየገጩ መግደል የሳውዲ ፖሊሶች የቀን ተቀን ስራ መሆኑን ገልፀዋል፡፡ ታዲያ በዚህ አጣብቂኝ ውስጥ አምልጠው የሚመለሱ ዜጐችን ንብረት መቀማት ምን የሚሉት ተግባር እንደሆነ አልገባንም፤ በማለት አማርረዋል-ተመላሾቹ፡፡ ምናልባትም የፖለቲካ ማራመጃ ሊያደርጉን ነው በማለትም ስጋታቸውን አንፀባርቀዋል፡፡
ተመላሾቹ የተሟላ መጠለያ ተዘጋጅቶላችኋል በተባለበት ቦታ ሳይቀር፣ መተኛ ሥፍራ እንኳን እንዳልተዘጋጀ ሲረዱ ተስፋ መቁረጣቸውን እና ንብረታቸውን እንዳያስገቡ ሲከለከሉ፣ ተመልሰው በህገወጥ መንገድ ለመሰደድ ሙከራ መጀመራቸውን ይገልፃሉ፡፡ በጉዳዩ ላይ መልስ እንዲሰጡን የጠየቅናቸው የውጪ ጉዳይ ሚኒስቴር ቃል አቀባይ አምባሳደር ዲና ሙፍቲ በበኩላቸው፤ “ተመላሾቹ ስለንብረት የሚያነሱትን ጥያቄን በተመለከተ፤ እኛ ተመላሾች በሙሉ ንብረት እንደሌላቸው ነው የምናውቀው“ በማለት ተናግረዋል፡፡ አምባሳደሩ አልፎ አልፎ ባዶ እግራቸውን ከሳዑዲ የተመለሱ እንዳሉ ጠቁመው፤ በሳኡዲ መንግስት ጓዛችሁን ይዛችሁ እንዳትወጡ ተከልክላችኋል በመባላቸው፣ መጀመሪያውኑም ንብረት ይዘው ባለመምጣታቸው ነው፤ ብለዋል፡፡ እነዚህ ዜጎች ከመደበኛ የአየር መንገዱ ተጓዦች እኩል እንደማይስተናገዱና ለብቻቸው ተጠብቀው እንደሚስተናገዱ ገልፀው፤ ምናልባት ከነዚህ ዜጎች ጋር ተቀላቅለው የሚመጡ ሌሎች ሰዎች ስለሚኖሩ እሱን ለማጣራት ንብረታቸው ይፈተሻል እንጂ ማንም የእነሱን ንብረት የሚወስድ እንደሌለ የተናገሩት አምባሳደሩ፤ እንኳን በሀገር ውስጥ የገባ ንብረት፣ ሳዑዲ ያለውንም የላባቸውን ውጤት ለማስመጣት እንደሚሰሩ ተናግረዋል፡፡
የሟቾችን ቁጥር እና ለቤተሰቦቻቸው መርዶ አለመንገርን በተመለከተ አምባሳደሩ በሰጡት ምላሽ፣ አሁን ሙሉ በሙሉ ትኩረታችን በህይወት ያሉ፣ ንብረታቸውን ያጡ እና ጉዳት የደረሰባቸው ላይ ነው፤ ብለዋል፡፡ የሟቾቹን ቁጥር በተመለከተ ግን መንግስት ከገለፀው በኋላ፣ የተፈጠሩ ነገሮች መኖራቸውን አምነው፤ ነገር ግን ቁጥሩ ላይ ተመላሾች የሚሉትና አንዳንድ ሚዲያዎች የሚያወሩት ትክክል ሊሆን ቢችልም የተጣራ ነገር እስካላገኘን ድረስ የሞቱበትን ሁኔታ ለማወቅ ያስቸግራል፤ ብለዋል፡፡ የሳውዲ አየር መንገድ እንጂ የኢትዮጵያ አየር መንገድ በመመለሱ ሂደት ምንም አስተዋፅአ ለስደተኞቹ አላደረገም ለተባለው አምባሳደሩ መልስ ሲሰጡ፡- የሳውዲ አውሮፕላን የሚያመላልሰው እራሱ በማባረሩ ምክንያት ነው፤ ወጪውን የሚችለውም እራሱ ነው ብለዋል፡፡
 source >> addisadmassnews.com

World mourns South African peace icon Mandela

December 7, 2013
JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - South Africa began preparations Saturday to welcome US President Barack Obama and fellow world leaders eager to pay their respects to Nelson Mandela during 10 days of mourning for the anti-apartheid icon.

On Friday President Jacob Zuma announced the mourning period for Mandela, the founding father of modern South Africa and its first black leader, after he died late Thursday aged 95, surrounded by friends and family.
Obama, America's first black president, will travel to South Africa next week, the White House said, joining a raft of world leaders for a huge December 10 memorial service.
Mandela's body will lie in state in Pretoria for three days before he receives a state burial on December 15 in his boyhood home of Qunu.
The logistics are daunting for hosting all the great and the good who plan to fly in from around world to honour the universally respected statesman.
The official SAPA news agency put the word out early Saturday that all hotels in the area around Mandela's Johannesburg home "will be virtually booked out" for the coming weeks by the South African government and various consulates.
Memorial events begin Saturday with thousands expected at a wreath-laying event in a Johannesburg park.
Obama and his wife Michelle will travel to South Africa next week together with former first couple George W. and Laura Bush.
Ex-president Bill Clinton, who was in office when Mandela took power to become South Africa's first black president, also said that he would be making the trip with his family.
White House press secretary Jay Carney said the Obamas would "participate in memorial events" without giving details.
In a tribute shortly after the revered statesman's death was made public, Obama mourned Mandela as a "profoundly good" man who "took history in his hands and bent the arc of the moral universe towards justice".
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff will be among those attending Mandela's funeral next week, her office said.
On Friday ordinary South Africans across the country poured out onto the streets in a riot of colour, dance and song to celebrate the life of their beloved ex-leader known affectionately as Madiba.
In Cape Town, a crowd of thousands from all races and ages gathered for a multi-faith celebration at the site where Mandela made his first public speech after nearly three decades in apartheid jail.
"Tonight we stand in solidarity as the people of Cape Town -- black, white, coloured, Indian, all the religions together," said mayor Patricia De Lille.
South Africa's archbishop emeritus Desmond Tutu, a fellow Nobel prize winner, praised Mandela as an "incredible gift that God gave us".
Fighting back tears, Tutu said his old friend was "a unifier from the moment he walked out of prison".
Mandela spent 27 years in an apartheid prison before becoming president and unifying his country with a message of reconciliation after the end of white minority rule. He shared the Nobel Peace Prize with South Africa's last white president, F.W. de Klerk, in 1993.
Palestinians and Israelis, Beijing and the Dalai Lama, Washington and Tehran all paid heartfelt tribute to Mandela, describing him as one of the towering figures of the 20th century who inspired young and old with his fight for equality.
In its first official reaction North Korea on Saturday sent its condolences to South Africa, praising Mandela's "struggle against racism and for democracy."
Flags flew at half-mast in numerous countries, including the United States, France and Britain, and at the United Nations headquarters in New York.
In Paris, the Eiffel Tower lit up in green, red, yellow and blue to symbolise the South African flag, while India declared five days of mourning for a man the premier labelled "a true Gandhian".
And a Paris summit of some 40 African leaders was overshadowed by Mandela's death. An old associate, African Union Commission president Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, said Mandela "was a son who became larger than the continent".
South African Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane said the best way to remember Mandela was to free the African continent of poverty, unrest and disease.
"We will do it in your name," she said.
In Brazil, organisers of the 2014 football World Cup flashed Mandela's image up on a giant screen and held a minute's silence before the groups' draw.
Even Syria's beleaguered president, Bashar al-Assad, ventured a homage on his official Facebook page, calling Mandela "a torch for the resistance and liberation from racism, hatred, occupation and injustice" and "an inspiration for all the downtrodden people of the world".
While the ailing former statesman's death had long been expected after a spate of hospitalisations, the announcement came as a burst of searing sadness nonetheless.
Mandela had waged a long battle against a recurring lung infection and had been receiving treatment at home since September following a lengthy hospital stay.
Mandela's two youngest daughters were in London watching the premiere of his biopic "Long Walk to Freedom", along with Britain's Prince William, when they learned of his death.
British actor Idris Elba, who portrayed Mandela in the film, said: "We have lost one of the greatest human beings to have walked this Earth."
Mandela's eldest grandson Mandla expressed gratitude for the international outpouring of support, saying the messages had "heartened and overwhelmed" the family.
Outside his house in the upmarket Houghton suburb and at his former residence in the once blacks-only township of Soweto, scores of well-wishers danced and sang old songs of struggle to celebrate the man they lovingly call Madiba. His December 10 memorial service will take place in a 90,000-plus capacity Soweto stadium.
Once considered a terrorist by the United States and Britain for his support of violence against the apartheid regime, at the time of his death he was an almost unimpeachable moral icon.
He was freed from prison in 1990 to lead the African National Congress (ANC) in negotiations with the white minority rulers, which culminated in the first multi-racial elections in 1994.
A victorious Mandela served a single term as president before taking up a new role as a roving elder statesman and leading AIDS campaigner. He retired from public life in 2004.
Born in 1918, Mandela started a career as a lawyer in Johannesburg in parallel with his political activism.
He became commander of the armed wing of the then-banned ANC and underwent military training in Algeria and Ethiopia in the early 1960s.
He was arrested and sentenced to life in jail for sabotage in 1964. At his trial, he delivered the speech that was to become the manifesto of the anti-apartheid movement.
"During my lifetime, I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society," he said from the dock. "It is an ideal for which I am prepared to die."
He served most of his sentence on Robben Island, where he was held in spartan conditions. When he was finally released on February 11, 1990, he walked out of prison with his fist raised alongside his then-wife Winnie.
After the ANC won the country's first multi-racial elections, Mandela declared his intention to establish "a rainbow nation at peace with itself and the world".
Critics said his five-year presidency was marred by corruption and rising levels of crime. But his successors have never enjoyed the same levels of respect or affection.
Mandela divorced his second wife Winnie in 1996. He found new love in retirement with Graca Machel, the widow of the late Mozambican president Samora Machel, whom he married on his 80th birthday.
Mandela is survived by three daughters, 18 grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and three step-grandchildren. He had four step-children through his marriage to Machel.
His death has left his family divided over his wealth. Some of his children and grandchildren are locked in a legal feud with his close friends over alleged irregularities in his two companies.

Associated Press writer Terry Wallace in Dallas contributed to this report.

source : Ethiomedia