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Notes
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36. A. Jalata,“Oromo Nationalism in the New Global Context.”
37. A. Jalata, Oromia and Ethiopia, pp. 152–153.
38. A. Jalata, ibid., p. 153.
39. M. Hassen, “The Macha-Tulama Association 1963–1967 and the Development of
Oromo Nationalism,” in A. Jalata, ed., Oromo Nationalism and the Ethiopian Discourse
(Lawrenceville, N.J.:The Red Sea Press, 1998), p. 194.
40. Ibid., p. 193.
41. Ibid., p. 189.
42. See A. Jalata, Oromia and Ethiopia.
43. Anthony D. Smith,“Nationalism, Ethnic Separatism and Intelligentsia,” in National Sep-
aratism, ed. C. H.Williams (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1982), p.
31.
44. See A. Jalata, ed., Oromo Nationalism and the Ethiopian Discourse.
45. O. Zoga, Gezatena Gezot and Macha-Tulama Association (Addis Ababa, unknown pub-
lisher, 1993), pp. 75–77.
46. M. Hassen, op. cit., p. 183.
47. Quoted in op. cit., pp. 205–206.
48. O. Zoga, op. cit., pp. 118–133.
49. C. Greetz, “Primordial and Civic Ties,” in Nationalism, eds. J. Hutchinson and A. D.
Smith (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), p. 30.
50. A. P. Wood, “Rural Development and National Integration in Ethiopia,” Review of
African Political Economy, 26 (1983), p. 516.
51. P. Gilkes, The Dying Lion: Feudalism and Modernization in Ethiopia (New York: St. Mar-
tin’s Press, 1975), pp. 217–218.
52. M. Hassen, op. cit., p. 196.
53. B. K. Holcomb and Sisai Ibssa, The Invention of Ethiopia:The Making of a Dependent Colo-
nial State in Northeast Africa (Trenton, N.J.:The Red Sea Press, 1990), p. 299.
54. A. Jalata, “Sheik Hussein Suura and the Oromo National Struggle,” The Oromo Com-
mentary, vol. 4, no. 1 (1994), pp. 5–7.
55. See The Political Program of the Oromo Liberation Front, Finfinne, 1976; OLF,“Statement
on the Current State of the Oromo People’s Struggle and the Situation in the Horn of
Africa,” June 1996.
56. See Sue Pollock, “Politics and Conflict: Participation and Self-Determination,” in
Ethiopia: Conquest and the Quest for Freedom and Democracy, eds. Seyoum Y. Hameso,T.
Trueman and T. E. Erena (London:TSC Publications, 1997), pp. 81–110;T.Trueman,
“Democracy or Dictatorship?,” in Ethiopia: Conquest and the Quest, pp. 11- 150.
57. See Reuters Business Briefing, July 5, 1994; Reuters, May 15, 1995.
58. Ibid.; J. Gibbs, “Conceptualization of Terrorism,” The American Sociological Review, 54
(June 1989), pp. 329–340.
59. See A. Oliverio,“The State of Injustice:The Politics of Terrorism and the Production
of Order,” International Journal of Comparative Sociology, vol. 38, nos. 1 and 2 (June 1997),
pp. 48–63.
60. The Oromia Support Group, November 1997, p. 1.
61. See Seifa Nabalbal, no. 94, Nov. 8, 1996; Urjii 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997 series; Amnesty
International, 1995 and 1996; Oromia Support Group, 1996 and 1997 series.
62. See Oromia Support Group, 1997.
63. A. Jalata,“Oromo Nationalism in the New Global Context.”
64. See Amnesty International, 1995; Human Rights Watch/Africa, 1997; Survival International,
1995; Oromia Support Group,1997 series.
65. See B. Fossati, L. Namarra, and Peter Niggli, The New Rulers of Ethiopia and the Persecu-
tion of the Oromo: Reports from the Oromo Refugees in Djibouti, Dokumentation, Evange-
lischer Pressedienst Frankfurt am Main, 1996.