Monday, 29 December 2008

Ethiopia: Birtukan arrested and Prof. Mesfin severely beaten

Ethiopia: Birtukan arrested and Prof. Mesfin severely beaten
Ethioguardian: The leader of UDJ (Andenet) Party, Judge Birtukan Midekisa, has been arrested today early in the moring around 8:20 Ethiopian local time. She was arrested this morning when she came out of Pastor Danile's office. As they took Birtukan, the EPRDF forces have severely beaten Prof. Mesfin Woldemariam, who was walking along with her. Until now, it is not known where Birtukan is held. The EPRDF forces are also rounding up other UDJ members and activists. Prof. Mesfin is taken to hospital because of the serious injuries. The Zenawi forces also arrested Birtukan's driver; they are also asking and trying to find the UDJ party structure to arrest other members of UDJ. The UDJ office was also searched without any court warrant.

On 23-12-2008, the Zenawi's EPRDF government asked Birtikan to distance herself from the speech she gave while she was on a work trip in Europe. On this meetings, Birtukan told Ethiopians that she signed more an agreement letter than a guilt acceptance letter before being released from the EPRDF prison last year. On 22 12-2008,her party ,UDJ, backed her position in a written statement. On 23-12-2008, Zenawi's government gave Birtukan three days to distance herself from her speech and accept the guilt apology.

In a letter written yesterday, Birtukan explained the content of her speech, her understanding about the whole negotiation and signing procedure. In her letter Birtukan also explained that she was granted a presidential pardon, which can not be taken back without any procedure.

Tuesday, 23 December 2008

Breakthrough of the Year 2008: Reprogramming Cells

By inserting genes that turn back a cell's developmental clock, researchers are gaining insights into disease and the biology of how a cell decides its fate

This year, scientists achieved a long-sought feat of cellular alchemy. They took skin cells from patients suffering from a variety of diseases and reprogrammed them into stem cells. The transformed cells grow and divide in the laboratory, giving researchers new tools to study the cellular processes that underlie the patients' diseases. The achievement could also be an important step on a long path to treating diseases with a patient's own cells.

Figure 1
CREDIT: C. BICKEL/SCIENCE
The feat rests on a genetic trick, first developed in mice and described 2 years ago, in which scientists wipe out a cell's developmental "memory," causing it to return to its pristine embryonic state and then regrow into something else. In 2008, researchers achieved another milestone in cell reprogramming. In an elegant study in live mice, they prompted cells to make the leap directly from one mature cell into another--flouting the usual rule that development of cells is a one-way street. These and other advances in tweaking cells to assume new identities add up to make the now flourishing field of cellular reprogramming Science's Breakthrough of the Year.

Figure 2
CREDIT: LESTER V. BERGMAN/CORBIS

See
Web links
on reprogramming
cells

This year's breakthroughs have done much to wipe out memories of a major scandal that erupted 3 years ago, after scientists in South Korea fraudulently claimed to have used somatic cell nuclear transfer--the technique used to clone Dolly the sheep--to generate stem cells from patients suffering from type 1 diabetes, spinal cord injury, and a congenital immune disease. The debacle dealt the field a huge setback; patient-specific stem cells seemed like a distant prospect.

The new developments build on two previous breakthroughs. Ten years ago last month, scientists in Wisconsin announced that they had cultured human embryonic stem (hES) cells--cells with the potential to form any cell type in the body. That power, known as pluripotency, opened up a world of possibilities in developmental biology and medical research, but it came with baggage: Because isolating the cells typically destroys the embryo, the research sparked fierce debates over bioethics. In many countries, including the United States, political decisions limited the work scientists could do with hES cells.

In 2006, Japanese researchers reported that they had found a possible way around the practical and ethical questions surrounding hES cells. By introducing just four genes into mouse tail cells growing in a lab dish, they could produce cells that looked and acted very much like ES cells. They called these cells induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. Last year, in a development recognized as the first runner-up in Science's 2007 Breakthrough of the Year issue, the same team and two others in the United States extended the reprogramming technique to human cells. That result opened the floodgates to new research.

Cells, made to order

For nearly a decade, stem cell biologists have sought a way to make long-lived cell lines from patients suffering from hard-to-study diseases. (Most adult cells do not survive culture conditions in the lab, so taking cells of interest directly from patients doesn't work.) This year, two groups achieved that goal. One team derived iPS cell lines from the skin cells of an 82-year-old woman suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease), a degenerative disease that attacks the motor neurons, causing gradual paralysis. The scientists then directed the cells to form neurons and glia, the cells that are most affected by the disease (photos, below).

Just a week later, another group reported making patient-specific iPS cell lines for 10 different diseases (see table), among them muscular dystrophy, type 1 diabetes, and Down syndrome. Many of these diseases are difficult or impossible to study in animal models; the reprogrammed cells give scientists a new tool for studying the molecular underpinnings of disease. They may also prove useful in screens for potential drugs. Eventually, such techniques might allow scientists to correct genetic defects in the lab dish and then treat patients with their own repaired cells.

Another paper published this year suggests that the reprogramming exit ramp does not have to lead back to an embryonic state but can take a cell directly to a new mature fate. American researchers, working in mice, reprogrammed mature pancreas cells called exocrine cells into beta cells, the cells in the pancreas that produce insulin and are destroyed by type 1 diabetes. The team injected a cocktail of three viruses into the pancreases of adult mice. The viruses primarily infected the exocrine cells, and each one carried a different gene known to play a role in beta cell development. Within days, the treated mice formed insulin-producing cells that looked and acted like bona fide beta cells.

The results are surprising because in living creatures, specialized cells almost never change course, changing, say, from a muscle cell into a lung cell. Such direct reprogramming, however, might be simpler and safer than using pluripotent cells to treat some diseases. The technique might also enable scientists to speed up the lab production of desired cell types, using defined factors to change one type of cultured cell directly into another.

Wanted: more breakthroughs
Although researchers made impressive progress in 2008, several more breakthroughs are needed before cellular reprogramming yields its first cure for disease. For reprogramming to be safe enough to use in cell therapy, researchers must find an efficient, reliable way to trigger it. They also want to understand exactly how the process works. Although dozens of labs have used the technique, what is happening inside the reprogrammed cell remains a mystery, and a combination of chance events seems to determine which rare cells end up being reprogrammed. A leading theory is that some of the reprogramming factors first help to loosen up the DNA in a cell's nucleus, making it easier to reactivate turned-off genes. Then the other factors help to set off a cascade of protein signals that give a cell its new identity (see the Review by Gurdon and Melton on p. 1811).

The original reprogramming recipe relies on viruses to insert the reprogramming genes into the infected cell's genome, altering the DNA permanently. Scientists are wary of that approach for a couple of reasons. First, the inserted DNA could interrupt existing genes--for example, those that guard against cancer, leaving the cells likely to form tumors. And although the inserted genes seem to turn off after reprogramming is finished, allowing the cell's own genes to take over, scientists worry that the inserted genes could be reactivated or could have other subtle effects on the cell.

For that reason, labs around the world are working on other ways to trigger reprogramming. This year, they made rapid progress. Several groups found that they could substitute chemicals for some of the inserted genes. Another found that adenoviruses could also do the trick, at least in mouse cells. Adenoviruses, which cause the common cold, do not insert themselves into the genome. The viruses express their genes long enough to reprogram the cells, but as the cells divide, the viruses are diluted down to undetectable levels, leaving reprogrammed cells with their original genomes unchanged. Researchers in Japan showed that rings of DNA called plasmids could also carry the required genes into the cell. The alternatives are much less efficient than the original recipe, however, and most have not yet worked in human cells, which are harder to reprogram than mouse cells.

Figure 3
CREDIT: DIMOS ET AL. (GROUP OF THREE)
To be useful, reprogramming also needs to become much more efficient. Most experiments have managed to reprogram fewer than one in 10,000 cells. In what seems to be a lucky break for the field, however, two groups showed this year that the skin cells called keratinocytes are particularly easy to reprogram. Researchers can reprogram roughly 1% of the keratinocytes they treat, and the process takes only 10 days instead of the several weeks that other cells require. Hair follicles (photo, above) are a rich source of keratinocytes, and researchers in California and Spain showed that they could efficiently derive personalized cell lines from cells taken from a single human hair plucked from the scalp--an even easier source of cells than cutting out a piece of skin.

Figure 4
CREDITS: C. BICKEL/SCIENCE; JERRY COOKE/SPORTS ILLUSTRATED/GETTY IMAGES
Finally, reprogramming needs better quality control. This year, an American group took a major step in that direction by making cells in which the reprogramming genes could be turned on by the addition of the antibiotic doxycycline. They then used the reprogrammed cells to generate "second generation" iPS cells that are genetically identical--each contains the same viral inserts. These cells will allow scientists to study the process of reprogramming for the first time under standardized conditions and should help to reveal the biochemical processes that enable an adult cell to take an exit ramp from its one-way path of development.

A thorough understanding of reprogramming is not enough, however. Ten years after the discovery of human ES cells, scientists are still working on standardizing procedures for coaxing pluripotent cells to become mature tissue. It's a critical problem: Stray pluripotent cells used in therapies could trigger dangerous tumors. And even though scientists can easily prompt pluripotent cells to become beating heart cells in a lab dish, no one has yet perfected a way to get such cells to integrate into the body's tissues to replace or repair their diseased counterparts. But researchers are moving faster down the highway of discovery than many had expected or dared to hope.



Online Extras on Reprogramming Cells

Papers and Articles

I. Park et al., "Disease-Specific Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells," Cell 134, 877-886 (2008)

P. Gadue and G. Cotsarelis, "Epidermal Cells Rev Up Reprogramming," Nature Biotechnology 26, 1243 (2008)

N. Maherali et al., "A High-Efficiency System for the Generation and Study of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells," Cell Stem Cell 3, 340-345 (2008)

J. Hanna et al., "Direct Reprogramming of Terminally Differentiated Mature B Lymphocytes to Pluripotency," Cell 133, 250-264 (2008)

A. Marson et al., "Wnt Signaling Promotes Reprogramming of Somatic Cells to Pluripotency," Cell Stem Cell 3, 132-135 (2008)

M. Wernig et al., "A Drug-Inducible Transgenic System for Direct Reprogramming of Multiple Somatic Cell Types," Nature Biotechnology 26, 916-294 (2008)

R. Blelloch, "Short Cut to Cell Replacement," Nature 455, 604 (2008)

Q. Zhou1 et al., "In vivo Reprogramming of Adult Pancreatic Cxocrine Cells to β-Cells," Nature 455, 627 (2008)

T. S. Mikkelsen et al., "Dissecting Direct Reprogramming Through Integrative Genomic Analysis," Nature 454, 49-55 (2008)

D. Huangfu et al., "Induction of Pluripotent Stem Cells from Primary Human Fibroblasts with Only Oct4 and Sox2," Nature Biotechnology 26, 1269-1275 (2008)

T. Aasen, "Efficient and Rapid Generation of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells from Human Keratinocytes," Nature Biotechnology 26, 1276-1284 (2008)

J. T. Dimos, et al., "Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Generated from Patients with ALS Can Be Differentiated into Motor Neurons," Science 321, 1218 (2008)

M. Wernig et al., "Neurons Derived from Reprogrammed Fibroblasts Functionally Integrate into the Fetal Brain and Improve Symptoms of Rats with Parkinson's Disease," Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 105, 5856-5861 (2008)

M. F. Pera, "A New Year and a New Era," Nature 451, 135 (2008)

J. B. Kim, "Pluripotent Stem Cells Induced from Adult Neural Stem Cells by Reprogramming with Two Factors," Nature 454, 646 (2008)

M. Stadtfeld et al., "Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Generated Without Viral Integration," Science 322, 945-949 (2008);; published online 25 September 2008 [DOI: 10.1126/science.1162494]

T. Aoi et al., "Generation of Pluripotent Stem Cells from Adult Mouse Liver and Stomach Cells," Science 321, 699 (2008); published online 12 February 2008 [DOI: 10.1126/science.1154884]

M. Nakagawa et al., "Generation of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells without Myc from Mouse and Human Fibroblasts," Nature Biotechnology 26 101-106 (2008)

S. Yamanaka, "Strategies and New Developments in the Generation of Patient-Specific Pluripotent Stem Cells," Cell Stem Cell 1, 39-49 (2007)

K. Okita, et al., "Generation of Mouse Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Without Viral Vectors," Science 322, 949 (2008); published online 8 October 2008 [DOI: 10.1126/science.1164270]

C. Holden, "Biologists Change One Cell Type Directly Into Another," Science 321, 1143(2008)

A. G. Bang and M. K. Carpenter, "Deconstructing Pluripotency," Science 320, 58-59 4 April 2008 320: 58-59 (2008)

C. Holden and G. Vogel, "A Seismic Shift for Stem Cell Research," Science 319, 560-563 (2008)

D. Normile, "Shinya Yamanaka: Modest Researcher, Results to Brag About," Science 319, 562 (2008)

C. Holden and G. Vogel, "Nuclear Transfer: Still on the Table," Science 319, 563 (2008)

Interesting Web Sites

International Society for Stem Cell Research
A rich resource on stem cells including a news archive and information for scientists and general readers.

NIH Stem Cell Information
Comprehensive resource about U.S. federal research policy and stem cells that includes links to news and funding opportunities.

Information on specific diseases:

ETHIOPIA: Do they know it's (il)legal? clampdown on civil society?

ETHIOPIA: Do they know it's (il)legal? clampdown on civil society?
DAKAR, 23 December 2008 (IRIN) - Is a proposed law to regulate charities in Ethiopia an attempt to regulate a sprawling sector and block foreign political interference or a clampdown on civil society?

A draft proclamation published and revised several times this year has been criticised by African and international rights groups. Ethiopian civil society groups allege some provisions are unconstitutional.

Critics argue the proposed rules, especially on foreign funding of Ethiopian NGOs, will deliberately stifle local human rights groups critical of the government and could disrupt aid operations implemented by local groups.

The government disagrees. Meles Tilahun, a whip in parliament, told IRIN: "The law is needed to create a conducive environment for NGOs and CSOs [civil society organisations] and provide a separate legal framework for them. It does not mean to shut them down."

The government has, however, commented that the charity sector has been used by "political activists" who are working on "other issues", not "catastrophes that required aid and assistance", according to a communiqué released in September 2008.

The law, the Proclamation for the Registration and Regulation of Charities and Societies, has been passed by Ethiopia's Council of Ministers but has not yet been presented to parliament, where pro-government MPs command an overwhelming majority. A hearing is expected on 24 and 25 December.

A donor official told IRIN: "There is currently no standard operating procedure for CSOs to work in Ethiopia and having a common set of rules and regulations is a good thing."

But attempts to revise the law seem to be running out of time. "We've been lobbying to get the bill changed before it is enacted but we've almost come to the end of the road," said the head of an international NGO in Addis Ababa, who asked not to be named.

The (draft) law

The law establishes an oversight agency, rules and supervision for the establishment of trusts and endowments, societies and charities. Rules governing fund-raising, membership and governance are detailed. Strong powers to investigate and oversee CSOs and tough penalties are set out.

Most controversially, the law restricts activity in human and democratic rights, gender or ethnic equality, conflict resolution, the strengthening of judicial practices or law enforcement. Only Ethiopian charities or societies having no more than 10 percent of their spending from "foreign sources" would be able to work in those areas.

However, several categories of organisation are exempted, according to a copy of the draft law on the NGO consortium Christian Relief and Development Association (CRDA) website:
"Religious organisations, international or foreign organisations operating in Ethiopia by virtue of an agreement with the government of Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia; 'Edir', 'Ekub' [traditional cooperative schemes] and other similar cultural or religious associations; and societies governed by other laws."

The impact on international NGOs with government agreements may therefore be limited.

Objections

In November, a CRDA task force welcomed the concept of a legal framework for CSOs, but set out a number of objections to the draft: the definitions of charities and permitted activities; the lack of a right to judicial review or appeal and the requirement that CSOs must have branches in five regions; "discriminatory selection and privileging of mass-based organisations"; lack of recognition for self-regulation by the sector; a 30 percent restriction on administrative costs; too many board members nominated by the government; charities not exempt from taxes and duty; and requirement to register with the authorities within one year of the bill taking effect.

The CRDA-sponsored report also argues that the foreign funding provisions restrict the participation of the Ethiopian diaspora and the constitutional freedom of assembly.

The CRDA commentary is only one of several critiques published by Ethiopian civil society, including prominent groups such as the Ethiopian Human Rights Council, which is frequently critical of the government and heavily dependent on foreign funding.

Reactions

The US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) alleged the law represented "a complex web of arbitrary restrictions on the work civil society groups can engage in, onerous bureaucratic hurdles, draconian criminal penalties, and intrusive powers of surveillance" and urged parliament to reject the bill.

Amnesty International, the development committee of the European Parliament, and the civil society lobby group CIVICUS, also criticised the law, as did the US government.

"I am not aware of an NGO law elsewhere that is more restrictive,"
said Chris Albim-Lackay, senior researcher in HRW's Africa division. "It will render the activities of most international and local human rights organisations Illegal."

However, despite reservations, many NGOs and donors agreed that regulation was needed.

But ultimately the law could end up weakening Ethiopian civil society, some argue.

"Everyone respects sovereignty. But it depends what you define as national interest. We think it's healthy that people complain about the government and provoke citizens to complain because it leads to better outcomes for societies as a whole," the NGO representative said.

Other NGO laws

Ethiopia is not alone in coming under fire for its NGO law. In 2004, Zimbabwe passed a law banning domestic groups working on human rights and governance from receiving foreign funding, including Zimbabweans abroad. The law set up a government oversight mechanism that the US Bureau of Public Affairs called "highly intrusive and subject to political manipulation".

Russia's 2006 NGO law means the government can decline to register branches of foreign organisations where their "goals and objectives create a threat to the sovereignty, political independence, territorial integrity, national unity, unique character, cultural heritage and national interests of the Russian Federation".

And in the countries hosting western critics, there are restrictions too. In the UK, foreign NGOs must register under one of six categories: prevention or relief of poverty; advancement of education, religion; health or saving lives; citizenship and community development; human rights; conflict resolution or reconciliation, and can lobby for political or legal change only if it would further one of these goals.

The Ethiopian government has mentioned US law in its defence. In the USA, tax-exempt NGOs can lobby but "may not attempt to influence legislation as a substantial part of their activities and may not participate in any campaign activity for or against political candidates". However, "social welfare" tax-exempt organisations are not limited in this way.

Impact

Ethiopia receives more than US$1 billion of humanitarian and development aid every year, and reports indicate some 3,300 NGOs operate around the country.

"A significant number of programmes under the new law could be prohibited," a donor official told IRIN, referring to those focussing on strengthening the judicial system, conflict resolution, and democracy and governance. "If the law is implemented in black and white, some non-profits might have no future," an NGO head told IRIN.

International NGOs are concerned about the status of local non-profits that play a major role in implementing projects (and might fall foul of the 10 percent rule) and the "rights-based" discourse and advocacy element in NGO work. Some argue that over the past two decades NGO work has inevitably become more "political". Others have been reassured they will not have to leave or curtail their "classic humanitarian" operations and advocacy relating to food, health, education and water and sanitation.

"While regulation is needed, the law could have a 'chilling' effect on aid operations in Ethiopia, by creating an atmosphere of fear, distrust and potentially weakening innovation. That is where the law is quite threatening," a donor representative told IRIN.

Lobbying

Advocacy may have paid off in small ways.

There have been some improvements to the latest draft bill, issued in December, according to Catherine Shea, programme director with the US Center for Not-for-Profit Law, with the punishment of a prison sentence dropped for unregistered NGOs.

However, employees of charities that fail to keep proper accounts, or whose administration costs exceed 30 percent of overall programming costs, can still be imprisoned.

One aid official said the restrictions followed apparent meddling by NGOs after the 2005 elections - the move is designed to ensure outsiders do not interfere in 2010 elections.

The government's September commentary pointedly objected to aid operations being used by "political actors... which can sway votes in national elections".

Ethiopia: Disputed Ethiopia-Eritrea border town still stirs war fears


By Emmanuel Gujon, AFP Writer | December 23, 2008
Every morning at dawn, groups of Ethiopian soldiers poke long metal-tipped poles into the soil on the dirt track linking Badme, a dusty border town, with civilization, looking for landmines.
Major Shale Taame says Eritreans sneak across the border to plant the landmines at night, and it falls to the border guards on the dawn shift to clear them up.

"It's a real danger and it is our duty to ensure the safety of the citizens," says the major.

Officials insist this is no idle fear-mongering, and point to the September 11th killing of three civilians, blown up when their jeep hit a landmine as Ethiopians celebrated their New Year.

But there are no landmines today, and the road can be opened to traffic, as it is every day at 7am, once the soldiers have made their checks.

Later, Badme dozes in the heat of the afternoon, the hot wind making a small whirlwind of the dust lifted by a herd of sheep picking at the dried brush.

An Ethiopian flag stretches above the village and its red earth main street, the sun beating down on the rows of corrugated iron rooftops.

This dust-blown settlement in Ethiopia's far north is an unlikely cause celebre. Yet it remains a symbol of the country's bitter border war with neighbouring Eritrea that cost a staggering 80 000 lives between 1998 and 2002, and of the continuing distrust between the two sides.

The international commission charged with tracing out a border handed Badme to Eritrea. Addis Ababa provisionally accepted the decision, on condition further negotiations would be opened to settle other disputed areas.

When Asmara protested, Ethiopia retained its grip on Badme, regardless of international decision.

"This place is an Ethiopian place since ancient times, so how could we give it to Eritrea?" asks Tilahun Gebremedhin, the local administrative leader.

"It is our land, and we'll never give it to them and we are ready to fight for it, to keep it," he adds.

The message is clear and because this zone is under close military surveillance, no one dares to say otherwise. Locals prefer to talk about the prevailing calm, but they also fear a reprise of the war that can only be prompted, goes the refrain, by Eritrea.

'The blood is the same on both sides of the border'

"We are not very afraid now because we have our army here to protect us. We are settled peacefully in our place and are trying to leave a normal life," says 45-year-old Letay Kidane, who runs a small shop in the main street.

It is the Eritrean government of Issaias Afeworki she distrusts, not the Eritrean people. "The blood is the same on both sides of the border," she says.

The military presence is overpowering, with army sources saying 15 000 men are stationed here. The hills around Badme are heavily fortified, ringed with trenches. Surveillance posts loom up every few kilometres of the main road, as well as checkpoints where each vehicle is meticulously searched.

The UN mission for Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) withdrew from the buffer zone on the border when its mandate ended in July.

"In some places now, the positions are so close that we can see each other," says Shale. "For example in Dida, since the blue helmets left, the Eritreans took over their position, but we don't attack, and they don't either. The Eritrean army doesn't have the capacity to attack us anymore," adds the major.

Before the war, the Badme district comprised 10 000 people, "but today, there are only 3 960", said Tilahun, noting that some people left after the withdrawal of the UN peacekeepers.

"When UNMEE was around there was no problems, but after they moved there is more risk, even if so far nothing has happened," he explains.

Former rebel and militia member Negussa Guebreselassie (65) admits to fearing "that it can all begin again". He says that in 1998, his wife was hit in the head by a bullet. "Today the bullet is still in her body," he said.

"It is my homeland, where else can I live," said 55-year-old Mamite Guebresarkan, surrounded by her five children. The trauma of the war is still palpable for this farmer.

"I'm afraid because they came at that time by surprise. Anytime they can come again, and kill us. So yes I'm afraid and I don't want the war to start again.

"At the time of the war I ran out. The Eritrean army came and destroyed the goods, killed the cattle, killed people, so many in this town, very dangerous times," she said.

At the end of the afternoon, in the dying heat of the day, the soldiers flock into the little town. Generators are fired up, and multicoloured fairy lights flicker on in the half a dozen bars where for a few Ethiopian birr they can have a beer and choose their company for the night. -- AFP

Ethiopia:EPRDF army 'killed villagers'

Ethiopia's Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) rebel group has accused EPRDF government forces of killing about 50 people in an attack on a village. The ONLF said troops had rounded up the villagers, before gunning them down.

It said more than 50 other people were wounded in the attack in the village of Moohaya in the south-east. Ethiopia's government has not reacted so far.

The EPRDF military was accused of carrying out atrocities in the region by a rights group this year.

Human Rights Watch said in June the military had subjected civilians to executions, torture and rape in an attempt to put down the ONLF's rebellion.The government denied that allegation and has dismissed similar accounts as "rebel propaganda". The ONLF, founded in 1984, says it is fighting for the rights of the local Somali-speaking population.

Ethiopian clerics seek constitutional ban on homosexuality

ADDIS ABABA (AFP) — Religious leaders in Ethiopia on Monday urged lawmakers to amend the country's constitution to ban homosexuality in a move they argue could further strengthen existing codes. At a meeting in the Ethiopian capital, nearly a dozen religious figures, including heads of Ethiopia's Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Protestant churches, adopted a resolution against homosexuality, which they termed as "the pinnacle of immorality."

Editors Note
Dear Clerics,
Homosexuals did not choose to be homosexual as heterosexuals did not choose to be heterosexual.
Homosexual orientation is as natural as heterosexual orientation, that sexual orientation is determined by a combination of yet unknown pre- and post-natal influences, and that it is dangerous and inappropriate to tell a homosexual that he or she could or should attempt to change his or her sexual orientation. If we see the history of these three churches, it is the church that is a "pinnacle of immorality".


They also blamed homosexuality for the rise in sexual attacks on children and young men.

"This is something very strange in Ethiopia, the land of the Bible that condemns this very strongly," said Abune Paolos, the patriarch of Ethiopia's Orthodox Church.

"For people to act in this manner they have to be dumb, stupid like animals," he told reporters. "We strongly condemn this behaviour. They (homosexuals) have to be disciplined and their acts discriminated, they have to be given a lesson."

Homosexuals can be jailed for a minimum of six months in Ethiopia, where hostility towards gays is high and sexual practices are very conservative.

But while homosexuality is illegal under the country's penal code, it is not mentioned in the constitution.

"We urge parliamentarians to... endorse a ban on homosexual activity in the constitution," the resolution read.

It also urged the government to establish more rehabilitation centres and to place strict controls on the distribution of pornographic materials.

The head of local NGO United for Life Ethiopia said homosexuality was not a human rights issue.

"Here we don't believe that it is and we don't believe that it is related to creation -- it has no biological base," head Sium Antonios said.

"It is unacceptable, it is immoral. Every religious leader said in one voice that it is the pinnacle of immorality," he added.

Editors Note
Dear Clerics,
Homosexuals did not choose to be homosexual as heterosexuals did not chose to be heterosexual.
Homosexual orientation is as natural as heterosexual orientation, that sexual orientation is determined by a combination of yet unknown pre- and post-natal influences, and that it is dangerous and inappropriate to tell a homosexual that he or she could or should attempt to change his or her sexual orientation. If we see the history of these three churches, it is the church that is a "pinnacle of immorality".


Do you think this words from the bible should also be included in a constitution
DEUTERONOMY 22:13-21
If it is discovered that a bride is not a virgin, the Bible demands that she be executed by stoning immediately.
DEUTERONOMY 22:22
If a married person has sex with someone else's husband or wife, the Bible commands that both adulterers be stoned to death.
MARK 10:1-12
Divorce is strictly forbidden in both Testaments, as is remarriage of anyone who has been divorced.
LEVITICUS 18:19
The Bible forbids a married couple from having sexual intercourse during a woman's period. If they disobey, both shall be executed.
MARK 12:18-27
If a man dies childless, his widow is ordered by biblical law to have intercourse with each of his brothers in turn until she bears her deceased husband a male heir.
DEUTERONOMY 25:11-12
If a man gets into a fight with another man and his wife seeks to rescue her husband by grabbing the enemy's genitals, her hand shall be cut off and no pity shall be shown her.