Saturday, July 21, 2012

Americans had tried to save Meles


Americans had tried to save Meles
Ethiomedia | July 21, 2012


A frail Meles shakes hands with Mexican President Calderon Los Cabos, Mexico, on June 18, 2012. Photo courtesy of Getty images)
WASHINGTON, DC - American officials had asked a prominent Ethiopian American medical doctor to help treat Prime Minister Meles Zenawi after the premier collapsed following his return from the G-20 Summit in Mexico last June, a source informed Ethiomedia on Saturday. The source said the doctor declined the request to travel and treat Meles because of previous commitments to treat young patients he had on schedule.
It was not immediately known whether the American officials were trying to help Meles privately, or upon the orders of the Obama Administration.
The physician, who sought anonymity, reportedly expressed displeasure over how Meles has been running Ethiopia, particulaly his latest treatment of religious groups, both Moslems (who have been the target of a brutal crackdown that has resulted in the arrest of some of the
leaders) as well as Christians (whose ancient and sacred monastery, Waldeba, has been bulldozed for a sugar factory despite widespread resentment and protests in the country).
The physician was in the past involved in the treatment of a leader of a country considered by the US a very close ally.


Meles is "clinically dead": reports

Editor's Note - Meles Zenawi has been 'clinically dead' since July 14, 2012, unconfirmed reports say. An email that reached Ethiomedia from a recognized source a few days ago reads:

"He definitely has brain tumor, probably glioblastoma multiforme, stage 4; the tumor (slow growing) has been deemed inoperable from initial diagnosis in 2006; he is in hospital in Belgium; recent physical appearance probably due to intense regime of chemo and or radiation; similar diagnosis and prognosis as Sen Ted Kennedy."
Other indepedent sources also add their voice that Meles Zenawi, who is at St. Luke Clinic in Brussels, has been in a vegetative or coma-like state on a life-support system from which recovery is nearly impossible.
Meanwhile from the government side, Communications chief Bereket Simon said Meles is in "good and stable condition."
Such statements are easily dismissed by the public as non-sense. Meles has been the one and only engine of the eprdf existence. His death means the death of the entire EPRDF structure. The tough question for Bereket Simon and other officials is how they can stay in power in post-Meles Ethiopia. The only option they have is to stand together and repeat the lie that Meles is alive and will come back to office.
If Meles is in "good and stable" condition, as Bereket Simon claimed, why not he shows the public a TV footage that Mr Meles is at least alive?
The answer could be: 'He is not.'

Meles on "sick leave" - Bereket Simon


The Meles Men - Clockwise: Newai Gebreab, Berhane Gebrekristos (front runners) Bereket Simon and Gen. Samora Yonus -- profoundly Meles loyalists who will try to perpetuate Zenawi's destructive, anti-Ethiopia rule even after his death.
Ethiopia says Prime Minister Meles Zenawi is taking "sick leave" but will remain in power while he deals with an unspecified illness.

Government spokesman Bereket Simon briefed reporters Thursday in Addis Ababa, following media reports that the Ethiopian leader was critically ill at Saint Luc Hospital in Brussels, Belgium.

Bereket specifically denied reports on Ethiopian dissident websites that Meles has brain cancer. The spokesman did not identify the prime minister's illness or say where he is being treated, but said he is in "good and stable condition" and remains in charge of the government.

A government statement said Mr. Meles' sick leave was prescribed by his doctor, and noted he will resume work when he recuperates.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia David Shinn told VOA the press conference signals a "significant health issue."

"You wouldn’t make a statement like that - that is so open-ended - unless the problem is significant" Shinn said. He noted he has no information about the prime minister's health.

He added that Meles is the kind of leader who plans ahead. And if he is ill, he says the 57-year-old prime minister likely has a plan in place.

"I'd be willing to bet very good money that he has been planning some way to deal with this issue in order to ensure some kind of reasonable succession of government in Ethiopia," said Shinn.

Meles has led Ethiopia for more than 20 years, since taking power in a 1991 coup. He has not been seen in public for more than two weeks, and did not attend an African Union summit last Saturday and Sunday in the Ethiopian capital.

In an interview with VOA, Sibhat Nega of Ethiopia's ruling party said Meles is in better shape than reported.

"I can tell you for sure that there is no undesirable eventuality regarding his health," he said. "I am 100 percent sure that he's recovering health-wise, and he will be back to his official duty in a number of days."


Nega's statements are consistent with those of government officials, who said Wednesday the prime minister is sick, but not gravely ill.

Nega, who is a friend of the prime minister's, said the government has been functioning normally during Meles' absence, insisting that the "system does not depend on one person."

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