Kenyan, Ethiopian Leaders Discuss Tigray Conflict Ahead of Blinken Visit

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken departs for Kenya on Monday, the first stop on a three-nation tour of Africa. Blinken will meet with Kenya’s president, who just returned from Ethiopia, to discuss that country’s internal war. Some experts fear Ethiopia’s political leadership will not agree to end the yearlong conflict.

This week, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken kicks off his visit to Africa by stopping in Kenya before heading to Nigeria and Senegal.

Blinken will meet Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta to discuss East Africa’s regional political and security situation.

Professor Chacha Nyaigotti Chacha, a specialist in diplomacy and international relations at the University of Nairobi, says Blinken’s visit shows the urgency needed for stability in the region.

“To show that there is peace and tranquility in the Horn of Africa, America recognizes the role that Kenya will have to continue to play to support the international community initiatives which are being undertaken by IGAD, the East African Community and by the African Union Commission and the world at large,” said Chacha.

The escalating war in Ethiopia has raised fears of a coup and instability in East Africa’s most populous nation.

The rebel Tigray People’s Liberation Front and other armed groups have threatened to march to Addis Ababa to overthrow Ethiopian Prime Minister Ahmed Abiy’s government.

Kenya has been pushing for a ceasefire in the yearlong war, and on Sunday, Kenyatta met Abiy and Ethiopian President Sehle-Work Zewde to discuss security issues ahead of Secretary Blinken’s visit to Kenya.

Murithi Mutiga is the Horn of Africa project director at the International Crisis Group. He says international efforts are being made to help Ethiopia.

“We understand that there is a very significant quiet mediation going on in the background including the Kenyans, the former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and we hope that this will continue and potentially a resolution will be found,” said Mutiga. “But you know the lesson of history has been that the Ethiopians usually try to settle their dispute internally by force. So, unfortunately, we have to be a little realistic about what is possible.”

U.S. Horn of Africa envoy Jeffrey Feltman came to the region early this month, but the security situation has remained the same.

Mutiga says the Ethiopian government and its opponents need to find a quick solution to the crisis.

“We now see that the war has entered its second year with no end in sight,” said Mutiga. “It’s more critical than ever given Ethiopia’s contribution to peace within the region. It’s more urgent than ever that they find a resolution, because continued instability in Ethiopia will definitely have a very significant spillover effect, not to mention the horrible cost internally in terms of lives lost but also an economy that is also in critical care.”

Last week, the U.S. government imposed sanctions on the Eritrean military, officials and businesses to show its opposition to the war. Eritrean troops have fought alongside Ethiopian troops in the north of the country.

The warring sides continue to dig into the crisis, as Tigray leadership push for the ouster of Prime Minister Abiy while the government is demanding recognition before any negotiation can take place.

Source: Voice of America

Attack in Burkina Military Outpost Kills 32, Heightens Pressure on Government

Burkina Faso’s government says at least 32 military police were killed Sunday in the latest attack on security forces. Analysts say security in the West African country has worsened this year and the opposition has threatened to hold protests if the situation doesn’t improve.

The dawn raid took place at a military outpost in war-torn Soum province on Sunday morning. While initial reports said 19 security force personnel and one civilian were killed, the government announced Monday night that the death toll had jumped to 32.

The attack is the latest in a long series against security forces and civilians in recent months and represents the deadliest single attack on Burkinabe personnel this year.

Burkina Faso has been battling armed groups linked to Islamic State and al-Qaida, as well as local bandits, since 2015. While 2020 saw a decline in violence, this year it has spiked again.

Mahamadou Sawadogo, a Burkinabe security analyst, said this attack is proof that the terrorists are able to bring the fight to the army and are able to lead complex attacks. He said it’s also a sign that the peace which was beginning to emerge in that area is disappearing and there will be more and more attacks there.

Late last year, negotiations took place between security forces and terror groups in the nearby town of Djibo. The sides reached a detente, but it now appears to have fallen apart.

Analysts say the Inata base, where Sunday’s attack took place, is one of the last bases in Soum province which is still operational, which points to a severely overstretched military.

While Burkinabe security forces struggle, analysts say the government is reluctant to accept international military support, unlike other countries involved in the Sahel conflict, such as Mali and Niger, which have accepted French military personnel.

On November 9, Eddie Komboïgo, Burkina Faso’s opposition leader, called publicly for “urgent measures” by the ruling party to stem the violence and threatened to organize widespread protests next month if nothing is done.

Andrew Lebovich, an analyst with the European Council on Foreign Relations, said, “Politically, this is a very complicated time for Burkina Faso’s president, in part because he made the security situation and the fight against terrorism a really important part of his campaign for reelection and so there’s been quite a bit of anger among communities, among opposition parties.”

Speaking to VOA, Lassane Sawadogo, executive secretary for the ruling MPP party, called for patience.

He said these are painful events for the whole nation and the war against terrorism is a long one, but that the government, with President Roch Kabore, is determined to do as much as it can to overcome terrorism.

Kabore is the first president in Burkina Faso’s history without a military background.

Source: Voice of America

UN Announces $40 Million to Support Ethiopia Humanitarian Aid

U.N. humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths allocated $40 million on Monday to support life-saving aid and civilian protection efforts in Ethiopia amidst ongoing conflict and drought.

According to an announcement from the U.N., $25 million from the Central Emergency Response Fund will be allocated, as well as $15 million from the Ethiopia Humanitarian Fund.

The funds will be used to step up emergency operations in the northern regions of the country, where pro-government forces and Tigrayan rebels have been fighting for a year. Around 2.2 million Ethiopians have been displaced in Tigray, according to Reuters.

The funding will also be used to support early response efforts regarding a drought in southern Ethiopia.

In a statement, Griffiths noted that millions of Ethiopia are “living on a knife edge” as the country’s humanitarian crisis grows deeper.

“Across the country, needs are rising. This injection of cash will help aid organizations meet some of the most vulnerable people’s need for protection and relief,” Griffiths said.

The newly announced funding will support aid agencies providing protection and “other life-saving assistance” to citizens impacted by conflict in the northern Tigray, Amhara and Afar regions.

The U.N. said funding for the drought-affected Somali and Oromia regions will be used to provide drinking water and prevent waterborne diseases like cholera. It said agencies will also help pastoral communities preserve their livestock.

The allocations raise the Central Emergency Response Fund’s support to Ethiopia to $65 million, according to the announcement. It is now the second-highest recipient of support from the fund this year. The Ethiopia Humanitarian Fund’s support to the country also now totals $80 million.

The U.N. said there is still a funding gap of $1.3 billion for humanitarian operations in Ethiopia, which includes $350 million for the response in Tigray.

Source: Voice of America

Wisconsin Legislator From Gambia Measures Success by Others’ Access

On a warm August evening, assembly member Samba Baldeh mingled among the picnickers outside his home here, sharing laughs and making sure they’d had enough grilled chicken, meat pies and the West African pudding called thiakry.

Elected in America

VOA is profiling several emerging U.S. politicians with family ties to Africa who are helping to change the face of American politics. They include:

Esther Agbaje, Minnesota House of Representatives

Samba Baldeh, Wisconsin State Assembly

Omar Fateh, Minnesota State Senate

Adeoye Owolewa, D.C. ‘shadow’ member for U.S. House of Representatives

Naquetta Ricks, Colorado General Assembly

“It’s hard work, and usually it’s hard to satisfy everybody,” said Gaelle Kane, a home care coordinator, dressed in festive Senegalese attire. She was commenting less on Baldeh’s hosting techniques than on his political skills.

“Samba is a very good man,” she said. “Anything that happens, he informs us.”

Baldeh organized the picnic as belated thanks for supporters who helped elect him to the Wisconsin State Assembly — far from his birthplace in Gambia. In January, he became the first native African and first Muslim to serve in that legislature.

At age 50, Baldeh has a voice in shaping legislation for the Upper Midwestern state and its 6 million residents. It’s a limited voice, given that he’s a first-term Democrat in a legislature dominated by Republicans.

But he enjoys hearty support — 80% of the vote — in his heavily Democratic district, which includes part of the capital city of Madison, home to the University of Wisconsin. District 48 is majority white — 68%, according to the latest Census data — and a hub for recent immigrants from Latin America, Asia, Africa and elsewhere.

Baldeh holds himself responsible for promoting the interests of all his constituents. Yet he remains mindful of the country and continent from which he came.

“I know I’m elected here in the United States,” he told VOA, “but I see it as part of my responsibility that Africa, as a whole, is my constituency.”

Linda Vakunta, Madison’s deputy mayor for housing, expanded on her mentor’s philosophy.

“Samba really is a shining light for us,” she said in brief remarks to the picnickers, many of them from the continent, like her. “He always says that we have two homes: back in Africa and here. We should be just as involved here as we would be if we were back home.”

Rural roots

Gambia is Africa’s smallest country, with 2.2 million residents on a sliver of land embedded in Senegal. Baldeh, one of nine children in a family of ethnic Fulani herders, grew up in the rural village of Choya.

“My parents were farmers. They mainly raised cattle and goats and sheep,” which he helped tend as a boy, he said.

He persuaded his family to sell off some livestock to cover costs of his high school education in another town. “I personally forced my way into school,” he said.

Afterward, Baldeh helped organize the Kanifing East Youth Development Society, which got some U.S. government funding for a youth center offering training in sewing, carpentry and other skills.

Baldeh’s growing experience in youth leadership later brought international travel opportunities, including to a conference in Washington, D.C., in early 1999 where he met a participant from the Madison Area Technical College. By year’s end, Baldeh had moved to Wisconsin to study at MATC, training that would launch his career as a software engineer and information technology project manager.

At first, Baldeh was shocked by Wisconsin’s winter cold — temperatures can drop to minus 28 degrees Celsius — but he grew to appreciate it. The former country boy said he quickly warmed to a different aspect of the state: “That it is called (America’s) Dairyland,” based on its reputation as a leader in U.S. dairy production.

A legacy of service

At MATC, Baldeh founded the African Students Association for students grappling with immigration issues, financing and cultural differences. Later, he volunteered with youth development programs such as Boys & Girls Clubs of America and with civil rights groups such as the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People). He witnessed struggles.

“Housing for communities of color particularly was very bad,” Baldeh said. He also saw shortcomings in race relations and government services.

“Inequalities (were) really what triggered me to consider running for office,” he said.

Baldeh sought and won a seat on the Madison Common Council, serving from 2015 to early 2021, including a term as its president. He ran for the Assembly in 2020.

Representative Sheila Stubbs, an Assembly colleague and chair of the Wisconsin Legislative Black Caucus, on which Baldeh serves as secretary, “worked closely on justice issues” with him, she said.

“He stands up for the rights of people [who] are marginalized,” she said. “He makes sure that immigrant voices are heard and responded to.”

In the Assembly, Baldeh has co-sponsored a bill to reduce the use of polyfluoroalkyl substances — long-lasting chemicals that can contaminate drinking water, food and air. He hopes to advance legislation to make affordable housing more accessible. He wants to reduce the high price of prison phone calls, which experts say deters inmates from maintaining important family ties. He has pressed the governor’s office for more assistance to immigrants.

Early in his council tenure, Baldeh got assigned to a committee on Sister Cities International, a nonprofit citizen diplomacy network. He helped Madison add its first African city — Kanifing, Gambia — to its roster of partners.

Kanifing faces a challenge that resonates with Baldeh and his legislative concerns about environmental hazards in Wisconsin.

The Gambian city harbors the sprawling Bakoteh dumpsite in a congested residential area. Kanifing sent a Gambian delegation to Madison to tour waste-management facilities and meet with engineers and others for ideas. Madison, working with private investors, has supplied Kanifing with some household garbage bins and garbage trucks. Experts at the University of Wisconsin also are working on solutions.

As a developing country, Gambia benefits from the exchange, Baldeh said, stressing that his adopted city and state do, too.

“Madison can also learn from them how diversity works within (Gambian) tribes,” he said.

Visit to Gambia

In August, Baldeh traveled to his home country with Jerreh Kujabi, another Gambia native, who leads the Madison-Kanifing Sister Cities pairing. Kujabi is Baldeh’s close friend, business partner and former campaign adviser. The two met with Gambian

officials, local leaders and the public to strengthen the sister-city bond, and to encourage education, trade and employment on both sides of the Atlantic.

Baldeh, who serves on a committee of the U.S. State Department’s Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI), wants to see more opportunity in Gambia and elsewhere in Africa — in part so fewer people feel compelled to leave.

One of his nephews died in 2018 while trying to make his way to Europe to find work. Baldeh said his family’s tragic loss is far too common in Gambia, where nearly 60% of its population is under age 25. “Basically, there are no job opportunities,” he said.

For Baldeh, the Gambia trip’s highlights included visits with his mother and other relatives, as well as a lunch meeting with President Adama Barrow.

“To me, that is very special and humbling, and something that I would remember for a very long time,” he said of Barrow, who seeks a second term in the country’s December 4 elections.

Baldeh returned to Wisconsin carrying ideas about expanded markets, technology consultation, and investment “that goes beyond just Europe or the Americas or Asia.” He’d like to see a Wisconsin trade mission to Africa that includes Gambia.

Nearing the end of his first year as a state legislator, Baldeh said he’s grateful for “the opportunity to introduce legislation that has serious consequences on people’s lives. … I really enjoy going out there and meeting with constituents and talking about things that they care about.”

He chafes at “the political part” of his job. “This country is so polarized, even at the local level, at the state level,” he complains.

Yet Baldeh has joined in the fray. In an opinion column for the Wisconsin State Journal, he called a Republican tax cut proposal “a sleight-of-hand trick,” one that “includes a bombshell that will detonate in two years.”

Asked whether he would consider a lengthier return to Gambia, Baldeh paused.

“Honestly, I hold myself accountable to making this world a better place,” he said. “And so, if the impact from Africa will be much bigger than what I’m able to do in the United States, it’s a big possibility.”

Gaelle Kane, one of the Madison picnickers, imagines an utterly different path for Baldeh.

“I think he should run for the U.S. Senate,” she said.

Source: Voice of America

Housing Issues Hit Home for New Minnesota Lawmaker

For attorney Esther Agbaje, the desire to make a difference sealed her case for seeking elective office.

“I have always had jobs that were in this space of helping people,” said Agbaje, who worked on human rights cases with the U.S. State Department, defended tenants from eviction as a law student and currently tries to aid sick or injured individuals through medical malpractice lawsuits.

But those roles left her asking, “How do we help more people at once? Often that means going to a lever of government.”

Agbaje is wrapping up her first year in the Minnesota State Assembly, helping pull the legislative lever in the Upper Midwestern state. Elected in November 2020 as a member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party — Minnesota’s version of the Democratic Party — she represents District 59B, encompassing downtown Minneapolis and parts of the city’s near north side.

“It’s a pretty vibrant district. It’s got diversity in its economic classes, and it’s got diversity in its ethnic groups and racial groups,” Agbaje said. “And it’s really just a fun place to live.”

The 35-year-old was born a few kilometers away, across the Mississippi River in St. Paul, the state’s capital. Her parents had come from southwestern Nigeria — he from Ekiti state, she from Ogun state — and met as students at the University of Minnesota. They married and had Esther and two younger sons.

Agbaje’s father, John, is an Episcopal priest. Her mother, Bunmi, a retired librarian, at one point ran a homeless services center.

“As a child of parents whose mission was to serve others, I have followed in their footsteps throughout my life,” Agbaje wrote on her campaign website.

While majoring in political science at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., she advocated for labor rights. While earning advanced degrees — a master’s in public administration from the University of Pennsylvania, and a law degree from Harvard — she worked on building healthy communities, preventing homelessness and assisting renters. In between, she worked for the State Department’s U.S.-Middle East Partnership Initiative managing projects to build more independent judiciaries and to advance women’s and minority populations’ rights in Egypt and in Gulf countries.

“After law school, I wanted to come home,” Agbaje said. “And home to me is Minnesota.”

‘Hands in the dirt’

Agbaje returned to Minnesota in 2017, joining the Minneapolis law firm of Ciresi Conlin as an associate, mostly working on its medical malpractice team. She also volunteers with Hennepin County Housing Court, St. Mark’s Episcopal Cathedral and local environmental justice organizations.

Many Saturday mornings find her alongside youngsters in lower-income neighborhoods, pulling on work gloves to plant saplings or clean up debris.

“She’s showed up to do the work with us, to plant the trees, to start a new garden,” said Analyah Schlaeger dos Santos, who coordinates youth programs for Minnesota Interfaith Power & Light. The nonprofit organization’s projects include building up the tree canopy to improve climate and community health.

Schlaeger dos Santos praised Agbaje’s ongoing engagement.

“She puts her hands in the dirt with community members, and that speaks volumes,” she said.

Agbaje, whose lawmaking duties are considered part time, also volunteers at pop-up workshops on rental assistance and legal aid.

“My role is really to help the community where I can,” she said, “whether that’s putting forward policies and legislation to (address) problems that help all Minnesotans or directing people to resources at other levels where they can receive direct help.”

Changing demographics

Agbaje’s district has sleek and soaring downtown buildings, sports stadiums and parks, businesses large and small, tidy neighborhoods and tent communities.

Its nearly 50,000 residents are minority-majority, with white residents accounting for the largest share (42%), then Black residents (37%), followed by a mix of Asian, Hispanic and other residents, Census data show. There’s “a significant population of African Americans, East Africans, Hmong Americans and some Latin people as well,” Agbaje said.

Agbaje said she wants to make sure “that the voice of this community also resonates with the rest of the state.” She stressed that Minnesotans are “people from all types, all walks of life, and that our policies across the state should reflect that.”

One in five Minnesotans identify as “other than white,” state data show, While earlier waves of immigrants came from Europe, in recent decades they’ve come from Mexico, Somalia, India, Laos and Vietnam, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

As the general population’s composition has shifted, “the demographics have been changing in the legislature in some pretty important ways,” said Christina Ewig, a professor at the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs and director of its Center on Women, Gender and Public Policy. She has analyzed data from the current state legislature, where 12.4% of its members self-identified as Latino or Hispanic, Hmong, Native American and Black or Somali American — up from 3% two decades ago.

Agbaje represents part of that change, Ewig said, adding, “It’s really important to have a diversity of views in your legislature for a healthy democracy.”

Lessons in negotiating

In the Minnesota Legislature, Republicans control the Senate, and the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party controls the House. The division has taught Agbaje more about the art of negotiating.

“When you’re campaigning, you’re very full of ideas, and you’re full of hope, and you’re full of vision, which stays with you once you start legislating,” she explained. But then, it’s a matter of convincing Minnesota’s 200 other state legislators “to bring your idea and your constituents’ ideas into fruition to create policy and change. So, there is much more negotiating once you become a legislator.”

Agbaje has brought forward ideas shaping a handful of new measures. Most involve housing, given her service on the Assembly’s Housing Finance and Policy Committee.

One measure protects renters from eviction for nonpayment, through June 2022, if they have applied for pandemic-related federal aid. Another, which Agbaje said she is “really proud” of sponsoring, allows individuals to retrieve personal records and medical equipment from rental storage units before the contents are auctioned off because of nonpayment. It’s aimed at helping vulnerable people, such as those fleeing domestic violence or who otherwise are homeless.

Agbaje was disappointed when Minneapolis voters in early November defeated a controversial and closely watched proposal that she endorsed to revamp the city’s policing and fold it into a new Department of Public Safety. The proposal arose from demands for racial justice following the May 2020 killing of George Floyd by a white Minneapolis police officer who knelt on the Black man’s neck.

“It’s unfortunate that it didn’t pass,” Agbaje said of the proposal, which she said nonetheless may have laid a foundation for change.

“The fact that 44% of people said that they wanted to try something different is good news. And also, even the people who voted it down, if you talk to them, do still want some type of police reform.”

Asked about Nigeria’s #EndSARS protests last year against police brutality, Agbaje drew a parallel.

“Young people were rising up, standing up against a government” that should work for them, she said.

“I applaud their efforts,” she added, along with those of “young people across the United States and across the world who are standing up and saying, ‘You know, our rights count for something.’ I wholeheartedly agree with them and want them to succeed in their efforts.”

Source: Voice of America