Sunday, April 17, 2005

Ethiopian Opposition Vows to Change Constitution if Elected



The opposition Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD), the umbrella organization of four multinational opposition parties, has proposed sweeping changes to the constitution of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (FDRE) as one element of its election platform in the Election Manifesto it released on Wednesday April 6, 2005.

The proposed changes are said to have been made with the view to making the constitution more friendly to human and democratic rights, curbing the powers of the executive and ensuring the independence of the judiciary.

The coalition, which is composed of the All Ethiopia Unity Party (AEUP), the Ethiopians Democratic Union Party-Medhin (EDUP-Medhin), the Ethiopian Democratic League (EDL) and Rainbow Ethiopia: Movement for Social Justice and Democracy (Rainbow), has proposed an extensive list of amendments to make in the current constitution, including the most obvious one to Article 39 which provides for the rights of peoples, nations and nationalities, including and up to secession.

CUD's Election Manifesto says that the way these rights are provided for in the present constitution fails to take into account and balance the multitude desires, interests and views of the Ethiopian people.

"Therefore," says the manifesto, "it will be amended in a way that will ensure the rights of citizens both in their individual and collective capacity to self-determination with the view of making it consonant with the desires not only of those who want to secede but also those who want to stay together."

The coalition intends to modify the regional administrative arrangement that is being followed by the present government and which has subsequently been enshrined in the constitution as well. According to the manifesto, the basis for these modifications would be the observance of the wishes, interests and desires of the people. The criteria, thus, would be the wishes of the people, the strength or otherwise of historical and cultural commonalties, language, settlement patterns and geography, etc.

The manifesto also makes clear that the leaders of the coalition will definitely go on to scrap the constitutional provision that makes land, both urban and rural, the property of the state as they have promised repeatedly to do.

CUD's proposals also include changing the voting system to proportional representation, stripping the power to interpret the constitution off the House of the Federation, limiting the tenures of the prime minister to two terms, amending the various constitutional stipulations to ensure the independence of the judiciary, and so on. CUD also promised the scrapping of laws proclaimed in violation of the supremacy of the constitution (Article 9).

The coalition's Election Manifesto deals also extensively with the various reform programmes in the social, economic, political and other spheres.

Sudan Tribune


Click to enlarge
Ethiopian artists gathered together at fund raising event on March 12, 2005 at the Washington Convention Center, Washington DC.

Ethiopian Human Rights Organization Reports Pre-Election Abuse

The Ethiopian Human Rights Council Friday released a report accusing local government and election officials of harassing members and supporters of opposition parties ahead of next month's general elections.

The head of investigation at the Ethiopian Human Rights Council, Birhanu Tsigu, tells VOA his group has documented what he calls "election abuses and irregularities," which he says were committed mostly by low-level government officials operating in local communities.

"Most of these abuses have been committed against members, candidates and supporters of the opposition parties,” he said. “The kinds of violations range from extra-judicial killings, unlawful imprisonments, beatings and eviction from land, and different sorts of abuses. Most of the abuses have been investigated by our investigators who have been deployed to the sites of these violations, and we do have first-hand information, first-hand evidence, on all of these incidents reported."

The most serious incident described in Friday's report occurred in January in the Amhara region, where, Mr. Tsigu says, two people were killed and six others injured by local government officials. Mr. Tsigu says the victims were members of an opposition party and were deliberately targeted.

VOA News

More on Human Rights Issues in Ethiopia (Human Rights Watch)

SUPPORT H.R. 935 – FREE AND FAIR ELECTIONS IN ETHIOPIA
The bill (H.R. 935) introduced in the House of Representatives of the U.S. Congress on February 17, 2005 by U.S. Representatives Michael M. Honda (D CA) and Edward R. Royce (R CA) and referred to the House Committee on International Relations urges the Government of Ethiopia to hold orderly, peaceful, and free and fair national elections in May 2005 and authorizes United States assistance for elections-related activities to monitor the Ethiopian national elections.

Past experiences as well as recent developments indicate that the Ethiopian Government would do everything possible to derail and defraud the upcoming national elections and the democratic process. To achieve lasting peace and democratic progress in Ethiopia, the United States and other democracies around the world need to put pressure on the regime to respect human rights, restructure the National Election Board in a manner that makes the Board impartial and independent, allow independent international observers to monitor the May 15, 2005 elections, respect the rule of law, and help ensure a genuine and transparent election process.

Democracy-loving people around the world respectfully request, with utmost urgency, that all efforts be made to ensure the passage of H.R. 935 by the U.S. Congress as soon as possible so that the noble and democratic purpose of this bill is realized and Ethiopia begins a new, fresh path toward peace and democracy.

Please sign this petition and also write to President George W. Bush, Secretary of State Dr. Condoleezza Rice, the U.S. Congress, the House Committee on International Relations, and the Congressional Black Caucus, in support of H.R. 935 (Free and Fair Elections in Ethiopia) and the spread of genuine democracy around the globe.


Sign This Petition

Malaysians Ask Ethiopian Government for Oil Exploration License in Ogaden

Representatives of the Malaysian oil company, Petronas, last month asked the Ethiopian Ministry of Mines for oil exploration rights that would enable them to prospect for crude oil in the Ogaden basin in the Somali Regional state.

Petronas, one of the top ten leading international oil companies in the world, signed a petroleum exploration and development agreement with the Ministry of Mines to prospect for oil in the Gambella basin, western Ethiopia. The agreement was signed in April 2003. And the Chinese company contracted by Petronas began to undertake geological survey in the Gambella basin last September.

Two years ago Petronas signed another agreement with the MoM that granted it a one-year exclusive study right in the Ogaden basin, which latter was extended for another one year. In the past two years, experts of Petronas were analysing the geological data collected from the Ogaden basin in the company’s headquarters in Kuala Lumpur. The MoM has been assisting the company in providing all the necessary information.

Ethiopian Reporter

Djibouti: Incumbent Wins One-Man Presidential Poll

Djibouti’s incumbent president, Ismail Omar Guelleh, won 100 percent of the vote in Friday’s presidential election - in which he was the sole candidate – according to the official news agency, Agence Djiboutienne d'Information (ADI).

Guelleh will now serve a second and final six-year term as leader of the tiny Horn of Africa nation.

ADI reported that 78.9 percent of approximately 197,000 registered voters cast their ballots - at 200 voting booths - across the country. Some 5.7 percent of the votes cast were reported void.

International news agencies said that police had used tear gas on Friday morning to disperse a crowd of between 300 and 500 pro-opposition demonstrators outside the headquarters of the umbrella opposition movement, the Union of Democratic Alliance.

IRIN Africa

Saturday, April 16, 2005

EU Concerned Over "Harassment" Ahead of Ethiopian Elections

The European Union on Saturday expressed concern over reports of "harassment" in the Horn of Africa nation, ahead of general elections scheduled for next month, officials said.

"Reports of harassment, imprisonment, and other activities of intimidation are worrysome," said Rob Vermas, the Dutch ambassador, representing the EU in Ethiopia, while welcoming about 50 EU observers who arrived on Friday.

EU officials said the decision by the Ethiopian government on March 30 to expel three US democracy groups, the National Democratic Institute (NDI) and the International Republican Institute (IRI) was disappointing.

"The recent issuance of a directive on local observers is disappointing," Vermas explained.

"The NEBE's (state-run National Election Board of Ethiopia) directives will virtually exclude many local NGOs (nongovernmental organisations) from observing the election," Vermas explained.

The election will be the third since the governing EPRDF's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi came to power in 1991. It will however be the first in Ethiopia to be held under international scrutiny amid complaints that local observers have been unfairly denied access.

There are 1,845 candidates representing 36 political parties and independent candidates running for the 480 seats up for grabs in the 547-member federal parliament, only 14 of which are held by the opposition.

About 100 more EU election observers are expected to arrive on May 10.

Sudan Tribune

Friday, April 15, 2005

Ethiopian Election Campaign Goes Digital

Two political parties contesting in Ethiopia's May 15 national elections have been making effective use of mobile phone short message service to campaign.

The ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front ( EPRDF) and the opposition Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD) have been campaigning via mobile short message service (SMS), calling people to vote for them.

Some residents in Addis Ababa said that the short messages request receivers to forward it to up to 10 other mobile users.

The ERPDF message reads, "Hi! I am confident enough that you love Ethiopia. No doubt, the future is too bright. Vote for EPRDF. Please send this message for 10 supporters of the party."

On the other hand, CUD's campaign message reads, "The moment of truth has come, vote for Kinijit (Coalition). Freedom is on the way. Ride with Kinijit."

Another CUD message also reads, "Vote Kinijit. I know you love Ethiopia. Pass this message for at least five Ethiopians who love their country."

Some residents of the capital appreciated the use of modern technology for the purpose of election campaigning.

People's Daily Online



Professors and research students in Addis Ababa developed two possible ways of mapping a limited set of 210 Ethiopic characters onto a mobile keypad, using a combination of keystrokes for each letter. They hope their work will open the door to text messaging in their country.A boy stands outside a mobile-phone shop in Addis Ababa, where Ethiopia's infrastructure minister, Kasu Yilala, recently called the country one of the least connected in the world. The state monopoly mobile-phone service provider, Ethiopian Telecommunications, is working to address the physical infrastructure shortfall.

CHECK out Wired News on SMS messaging in Ethiopic characters.

Landmine Challenges Peacekeeping Operation in Ethiopia, Eritrea

The United Nations on Thursday expressed deep concern over rising landmine accidents in the border areas between Ethiopia and Eritrea, where over 3,000 UN peacekeeping forces are monitoring.

Gail Sainte, spokeswoman of the UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE), told journalists that the problem is becoming worse in the western sector of the Temporary Security Zone (TSZ), created four years ago to monitor the two countries' border, where over 70,000 troops were killed in a bloody war.

"In a period of less than two weeks, four mine accidents reported from the western sector. The UNMEE mine action coordination center (MACC) continues to closely monitor the mine threat in the western sector," said Sainte.

It was reported that one civilian was killed last week by landmine in the area while others were wounded.

According to a UN mine threat assessment report in September 2004, the mine threat situation in the area is rated as high.

People's Daily Online

Previous post: Danny Glover on Ethiopia's landmine challenge

Ethiopia, Italy Sign 220 Million Euro Loan Agreement

The Ministry of Finance and Economic Development and the Italian Embassy signed an intergovernmental agreement for a soft loan worth 220 million Euro.

According to a press release sent to The Daily Monitor, the loan is to be used to co-finance a new hydroelectric power plant on Gilgel Gibe River.

The Italian funding was officially announced during Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's visit to Rome in November 2004, when it was agreed that energy will be one of the main sectors in which Italy supports Ethiopian development. It is envisioned that the new hydropower plant will play an unprecedented role in harnessing the huge hydroelectric potential of Ethiopia by increasing the country's generation capacity by almost 40 percent and making the tremendous benefit of electricity available to approximately 800,000 new customers, it said.

allAfrica.com

Letter from Senator McCain and Secretary Albright to the Prime Minister of Ethiopia

Washington, DC

Prime Minister of Ethiopia
Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Your Excellency:

We write to express our concern and dismay over the recent expulsion from Ethiopia of representatives of the International Republican Institute (IRI), IFES, and the National Democratic Institute (NDI) by your government. With support from USAID, the three organizations sought to assist the democratic process and preparations for your May 15 general elections. These organizations carry out nonpartisan programs and support a democratic environment in which the integrity of the election process can be ensured and all parties understand their rights and responsibilities.

IRI, IFES, and NDI were coordinating with the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia to support the work of the election commission, dialogue among political parties and election authorities as a means of enhancing confidence and participation in the electoral process, political party pollwatching, and the creation of a code of conduct for the elections. All three organizations have been making good faith efforts to gain registration in accordance with established laws and procedures and were assured by representatives of your government that their registration would be approved expeditiously.

In over 20 years of working around the world, until now no government has expelled NDI, IRI, and IFES. We are particularly perplexed by these expulsions at a time when your government has stated its intention to organize an open and democratic election process. This action will only raise questions about the credibility and transparency of these elections.

The United States and Ethiopia have a history of friendship and cooperation. We continue to support the democratic aspirations of the Ethiopian people, and look forward to returning to Ethiopia to assist with future elections. Until then, we urge the Government of Ethiopia to work towards creating an environment conducive to increasingly free and fair elections.

Sincerely,

U.S. Senator John McCain
Chairman of Board of Directors
International Republican Institute

Hon. Madeleine K. Albright
Chairman of Board of Directors
National Democratic Institute

This letter was delivered to the Ethiopian Embassy in Washington, D.C. April 13, 2005.

Ethiopia Authorises Gold Trade to Combat Smuggling

Ethiopia's central bank said on Thursday it will start buying and selling locally mined gold, seeking to combat the loss of more than 1,000 kg of the metal smuggled across its borders each year.

Small-scale mining in Ethiopia dates back centuries, but due to a lack of official marketing outlets tens of thousands of peasants who rely on mining for their livelihood tend to sell their produce illicitly, traders say.

Seife Desta, Director of the Banking Services and Foreign Exchange Department of the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE), said the new regulations will be effective from April 18, 2005.

"Under the new regulations, NBE will purchase locally produced gold from licensed traders and producers based on current international prices," Seifa said. "NBE will then sell gold to gold ware shops in the country," he told reporters.

Seife said the NBE is also prepared to offer loans and collateral to businessmen who would like to export gold.

Sudan Tribune

Sting in Addis Ababa Yields Ivory Stash

Ethiopian authorities have seized more than 500kg of illegal ivory, stuffed animals and ostrich eggs that were destined for collectors abroad, a police officer said on Thursday.

Police raided more than 66 shops in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, where they found the illegal wildlife products in January, but had only just finished assessing and cataloguing them, Inspector Tesfaye Eshete said.

All the shop owners were arrested and then released on bail. They face a $550 fine and two years in jail.

"This is one of the largest raids we have ever conducted," said Mohammed Abdi, a senior expert with Ethiopia's Wildlife and Conservation Authority.

Independent Online

Thursday, April 14, 2005

TV: Family Food Brings Love, Comfort, Memories

The meaning of food in our family truly is a way of expressing love, comfort, and memories just as Marcus Samuelsson says in the three-part series The Meaning of Food. The series is scheduled to air on PBS television stations at 10 p.m. beginning Thursday and continuing April 14 and April 21. It features the award-winning chef of New York City's Aquavit and Riingo traveling across America breaking bread with Americans of all backgrounds.

Chef Samuelsson says in Episode Two: Food and Culture that "America is called a melting pot, but I think it's more like a stew where individual flavors are still present yet create a whole." He was born in Ethiopia but was adopted and reared in Sweden and then became an acclaimed chef in New York City.

Ethiopia Vents Anger as Obelisk Stays in Italy

It took Benito Mussolini only two years to cart Ethiopia's most revered ancient monument from the ancient city of Axum to a busy traffic junction in central Rome. It has taken his democratic successors 58 years and counting to do what they promised and give it back. And it is still stuck in Rome.

This week the return of the Obelisk of Axum to Ethiopia, pledged by Silvio Berlusconi in the first flush of his election victory four years ago, was postponed yet again. It was supposed to take place yesterday. Foreign journalists gathered at the site of the ancient city. Anticipation was high.

Then came the news that for "technical reasons" the return had been postponed yet again.

One angry Ethiopian told the Daily Monitor in Addis Ababa: "This is a decision that would make no one happy. We have waited all these years to have our identity back. But now they are coming up with every small reason not to do so. That is a shame."

The 24-metre high monolith, weighing 180 tons, is the finest of more than 100 obeslisks which stood in the ancient city of Axum, birthplace of the Queen of Sheba. Ancient Rome was littered with monoliths removed from Egypt and other corners of the world and that now punctuate many of the city's piazzas. Mussolini wanted one of his own. For the best part of six decades it stood outside the building that is now the headquarters of the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organisation in central Rome.

The Independent

20 People Killed in Ethnic Clashes in Southern Ethiopia

Members of two ethnic groups have clashed in remote areas of southern Ethiopia, killing at least 20 people and forcing others to flee their homes, aid workers said Tuesday.

Clashes broke out after an ethnic Guji man killed a member of the Gebra community whom he accused of beating his wife. The conflict quickly sucked in other members of the two communities near Hagere Mariam, a town 400 kilometers (250 miles) south of Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa.

The two communities are part of Ethiopia's largest ethnic group, the Oromos.

Sudan Tribune

Ethiopian Expert to Discuss Population Growth, Environmental Damage, and Poverty at Wilson Center

Decades of population growth in Ethiopia have contributed to overfarming and deforestation, which have degraded the environment and undermined development. According to Sahlu Haile, senior program advisor and Ethiopia country representative for the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, "The key to achieving sustainable growth lies in reducing the rate of population growth, managing the environment, and building the platform for development.

What: Population, Development, and Environment in Ethiopia

Who: Sahlu Haile, Senior Program Advisor and Ethiopia Country Representative, David and Lucile Packard Foundation

When: Thursday, April 14, 2005, 12:00-2:00 pm

Where: Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 5th floor conference room. The Woodrow Wilson Center is located in the Ronald Reagan Building at 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue.

Environmental Media Services

US Study: Ethiopian Death Toll from AIDS May Double in Three Years

"The total population lost to AIDS was about 900,000 in 2003 and is projected to reach 1.8 million by 2008 if the present trends continue," it said, describing a dire situation in the impoverished Horn of Africa nation.

The disease is now responsible for about a third of all adult deaths in Ethiopia and will devastate the economy if left unchecked, said the study, conducted under the auspices of US President George W. Bush's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

"The loss of Ethipian citizens in the most productive years of their lives, and related HIV/AIDS morbidity has a detrimental impact on economic growth," it said.

Yahoo! News

Ethiopia Battles Deadly Meningitis Outbreak

At least 40 people have died and more than 430 taken ill with highly infectious meningococcal meningitis in Ethiopia over the past five months, the country's health ministry said on Wednesday.

"Since November 4 2004, 40 deaths have been reported out of 433 cases of meningococcal meningitis," said Tiruwork Tafesse, the director of the ministry's health-monitoring unit.

"We still have cases but vaccinations have started and we hope that the disease will be under control within 15 days," she said.

The affected areas include the northern region of Tigre, the eastern region of Afar, the western region of Benshangul-Gumuz and the eastern portion of the southern region of Oromo, the ministry said.

Hardest hit has been Benshangul-Gumuz, where 167 cases have been reported, it said.

Mail & Guardian Online

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Ethiopian PM Heads for France to Strengthen Economic Ties

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi is due in Paris on Thursday for his first-ever official visit to France, aimed at boosting languishing economic ties and trade now dominated by coffee exports.

Meles, the first Ethiopian government chief to travel to France on an official bilateral tour since the reign of former emperor Haile Selassie, wants to see Paris move up from 11th position as a trading partner, officials said.

"One of the main purposes of the visit will be to strengthen the economic relationship between the two countries, achieve more markets for Ethiopian goods in France and have more French investment in Ethiopia," said Grum Abaye, an Ethiopian foreign ministry official.

Last year, trade between the two countries amounted to some 64.4 million dollars (50 million euros) compared to 200 million dollars (155 million euros) between the impoverished Horn of Africa nation and China.

Both sides would like to see those numbers improved.

The Tocqueville Connection

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Ethiopia: Election Board Criticised for Barring Local Observers

Ethiopia's National Election Board (NEB) was criticised by a local watchdog on Monday for barring thousands of domestic observers from monitoring the country's parliamentary elections in May.

Netsanet Demissie, director of the Organisation for Social Justice (OSJ) - an umbrella group of 35 Ethiopian organisations - said new rules imposed by the board would exclude at least two-thirds of their planned observation team.

"This is going to have a very negative impact," Netsanet, whose body was hoping to field around 3,000 observers for Ethiopia's third-ever democratic ballot, told a news conference. "This is definitely a setback for holding free and fair elections."

Under new rules, local organisations wanting to monitor elections must meet two criteria: they must have registered with the government as election observers when they were originally founded, and they must also prove that they are independent.

Netsanet said only a handful of groups hoping to monitor the elections would have originally registered as observers because the idea was a new phenomenon in Ethiopia.

Reuters AlertNet

Saturday, April 09, 2005

UN Warns of New War in Horn of Africa

International failure to break the border stalemate between Ethiopia and Eritrea could lead to a renewal of conflict, a senior UN official warned yesterday.

The brutal 2½-year war ended with a December 2000 peace agreement under which the parties agreed to abide by the ruling of an independent boundary commission.

After initially accepting the peace deal, Ethiopia rejected the commission's April 2002 findings and prevented the physical demarcation of the border.

Legwaila Joseph Legwaila, head of the UN mission, said: "I'm urging the international community to wake up to the reality that, if the stalemate continues, we are going to run into problems."

FT.com

American University Shows Interest in Water Resources Management in Ethiopia

A four-man team, that includes the President and CEO of SkyBuilt Power, an Energy Company and lead by Professor Ben O. Latigo, Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at the University of the District of Colombia, has been visiting Ethiopia with the purpose of establishing a working relationship with Ethiopian institutions, including Addis Ababa University, Government Ministries and NGOs in addressing issues related to water resources management and the application of renewable energy technology.

"We are here purposely to talk to those potential partners as well as to do fact finding to allow us when we get back to Washington DC to see what we can do to address these issues," Professor Latigo told Addis Tribune in an exclusive interview.

While here the team had the opportunity to talk to pertinent officials at the Ministry of Water Resources, the Ministry of Mines and Addis Ababa University.

"Our team has been well received. We have been able to request and secure appointments with government Ministries, NGOs, and USAID on very short notice. I think we have been extremely well received," says Professor Latigo, adding, "At the end of our visit, as a fact-finding mission, we are hoping to have obtained data and information to allow us to design renewable energy technology to be used for the application in the various regions of Ethiopia."

Addis Tribune

Previous post: The Destruction of the Blue Nile Falls

Two Killed As Ethiopians, Eritreans Clash in Abha

Two people were killed and seven injured yesterday in an armed fight between two groups of Eritreans and Ethiopians in Al-Sheikha village in Abha, Saudi Arabia. Fifteen people were arrested.

The injured were taken to a nearby hospital for treatment while the two bodies were moved to Asir General Hospital.

A large number of police and special forces surrounded the area where the fight took place. According to security sources, the police managed to arrest 15 people after many of the belligerents had fled to nearby valleys away from their sight. What triggered the fight was not immediately known.

Addis Tribune

Ethiopia's Private Candidates Call for Access to Media Coverage

Hundreds of private candidates demonstrated Thursday demanding access to media coverage and fair fund distribution donated by the donors' community to all candidates for the May 15 elections.

The private candidates said that the concerned bodies denied them to give airtime on radio and television to introduce their programs and agendas to their supporters.

They said that they are unable to introduce their agendas even in the kebele's hall and public gathering areas.

"We have been asking the concerned bodies to have access to media and public gathering areas. But they refused to give us any cooperation yet. That is why we have organized this demonstration today," they said.

Major Sisay Tsegaye, chairman of the private candidates, said that the private candidates are currently at the crossroad to fairly compete for the May elections.

"We are in a very difficult situation at the moment. Even the NEBE (the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia) closed its door to talk us about any issue we are demanding," Sisay said.

People's Daily Online

Wednesday, April 06, 2005

EU Poll Observer Quits After Ethiopia's Bias Accusation

A senior European Union election observer monitoring Ethiopia's third democratic ballot has quit after the authorities accused him of bias, an Ethiopian official said Monday.

Siegfried Pausewang pulled out after the chairman of the National Election Board said he had been unjustly critical in the past and "lacked objectivity."

Pausewang, who said he had been observing elections in Ethiopia since 1991, insisted he would of remained objective, but he concluded it would be better that he leave at the end of the week

Three U.S. organizations helping to improve democracy in Ethiopia were ejected from the country last week after the government accused them of operating illegally.

All the elections have been convincingly won by the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front. The EPRDF and affiliated parties hold 519 of 548 seats in the federal parliament.

More than 25 million of Ethiopia's 71 million people have registered to vote.

Opposition parties have already accused the government of not providing a level playing field for the May 15 national elections.

SudanTribune

Network of African Water Journalists Launched

A network aiming to boost the quality and quantity of reporting on water issues in African countries was launched on 22 March in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

The Africa Water Journalists Network brings together more than 1,000 journalists who will be able to share information and story ideas through a forum on the network's website.

Later this year the network will begin producing an Internet-based newsletter called the Water Chronicle. Through this, the network's organisers intend to provide contributing journalists with on-the-job training.

James Dorsey of the Wall Street Journal, a US newspaper, and Rupert Wright of the UK-based Sunday Times will act as editors.

Speaking at the network's launch, Dorsey said that without access to clean water and sanitation, a developing country could not progress.

SciDev.Net

Ethiopia to Get Obelisk Back

Italy will return to Ethiopia the first piece of the ancient Axum obelisk on April 11, a government spokesman said Monday, ending a dispute over the religious monument taken to Rome 70 years ago.

The top piece of the 1 700-year-old obelisk will leave Rome by cargo plane on April 10 and be flown directly to Axum, Ethiopian foreign ministry spokesperson Solomon Abebe said.

news24.com

Ethiopia Plans Internet Expansion

Ethiopia may be one of the world's poorest nations but it plans to become information-rich with a massive investment in internet access.

Prime minister Meles Zenawi believes information technology has the power to counteract poverty. He is planning to provide universal net connectivity for the country over the next few years.

The government is working with US technology firm Cisco to make this a reality.

Ethiopia may be one of the world's poorest nations but it plans to become information-rich with a massive investment in internet access.

Prime minister Meles Zenawi believes information technology has the power to counteract poverty.

It will invest around $40m (£21m) in developing its internet service, which will involve laying 2,500km of fibre optic cables.

"We are fully committed to ensuring that as many of our poor as possible have this weapon that they need to fight poverty at the earliest possible time," Mr Meles said at a conference attended by government ministers and technology experts.

This will include access to the tens of thousands of rural districts over the next two to three years, he said. Currently there are around 30,000 internet lines serving a population of 71 million. Within six months that figure will be expanded to 500,000 lines.

BBC NEWS

In Related News, business.iafrica.com reports:

Paris- and New York-listed communications firm Alcatel announced on Monday that it had signed a turnkey contract valued at more than 14 million euros ($18 m) with Ethiopia Telecommunications Corporation, to extend the existing transport network in certain parts of the east African country.

The project will enable ETC — Ethiopia's leading telecommunications services operator — to expand the delivery of fixed, mobile, Internet and multimedia services to its subscribers.

Sunday, April 03, 2005

Ethiopia Takes on Polio

Ethiopia on Friday launched an emergency campaign to immunize nearly 15 million children from polio amid fears of an outbreak of the disease after two cases were reported near the Sudanese border.

Some 100 000 volunteers and health workers will go house-to-house across the nation inoculating 14,7 million Ethiopian children under the age of five in the first part of the drive set to end on Tuesday, officials said.

news24.com

Getting to Ethiopia

GETTING THERE: At least six airlines, including KLM, Northwest and Ethiopian airlines, fly from Washington Dulles to Addis Ababa, mostly with two stops. Round-trip fares start at about $1,700.

GETTING AROUND: Many travelers book tours -- not a bad idea. Bus rides are often grueling (the trip over dirt roads to Lalibela from Addis can take two days), but the excellent Ethiopian Airlines (said to be one of the best airlines in Africa) has frequent flights throughout the entire historical circuit -- and in-country fares are very economical, especially if booked ahead in the United States. (I did not book ahead, but my circuit of flights from Addis to Lalibela to Aksum to Gonder to the lake resort of Bahar Dar and then back to Addis cost only $318.)

WHEN TO GO: There is a rainy season from mid-June to mid-September, but Ethiopian weather is otherwise stunning -- in the low 70s during the day with brilliant sun. The great religious holidays, Christmas and Epiphany or Timkat, come during the January high season.

WHERE TO STAY: The Sheraton Addis (Taitu Street, 011-251-1-171717, www.Sheraton.com) is reputed to be the best hotel in Africa, with rooms starting at $181 a night for a double. Economical alternatives are the centrally located Ghion Hotel (011-251-1-513222 or -510240, www.ghionhotel.com.et, $60), with a nice pool -- or, in the Piazza district, the Taitu (011-251-1-553244 or -560787, $10-$25), thick with atmosphere. I loved the Baro (001-251-1-559846), also in the Piazza, with a leafy courtyard; a basic room with bath cost me $6 a night. In Lalibela, Harer, Gonder and Aksum, the hotels are often humble but clean and friendly, averaging $10 a night.

WHERE TO EAT: In Addis, real splurges at $20 a person are Dashen (behind the main post office), a great Ethiopian restaurant with a nice garden, chic decor and fantastic food, and Castelli (in the Piazza area), an Italian place as good as almost any restaurant in Rome. Blue Tops (opposite the National Museum), where I had lunch with Tigist Bekele (who has sung at Dukem Restaurant on U Street NW in Washington), serves fine Ethiopian and Italian food in a relaxed atmosphere. Good Ethiopian food is plentiful in the cities and towns for $5 to $8; in Addis you also find Italian, Chinese, Middle Eastern and the not-quite-recommended Burger Queen.

INFORMATION: The Web site of the Ethiopian Embassy is helpful: www.ethiopianembassy.org. The Ethiopian Tourism Commision offers good information on both historical and natural sights: www.tourismethiopia.org.

washingtonpost.com

Hotelview: Sheraton Hotel Addis Ababa Ethiopia
Sheraton Addis

Regal Palace in Africa's Capital
by A Yahoo! User from New York City, NY, USA.

PROS:
Everything about this hotel is down right regal

CONS:
The contrast with the poverty at it's very gates

Expanding into Africa, China Seeks Trade, Status

The Chinese government had a different reaction. Beijing saw the war - and the reduced U.S. presence - as an opportunity to expand its influence. It dispatched even more diplomats, engineers, executives and teachers to Ethiopia. New aid grants soon rolled in, followed by bank credits for Chinese companies operating there.

Today, China's influence in Ethiopia is overwhelming. Its embassy is among the largest in the country and hosts more high-level visits than any Western mission. Chinese companies have become a dominant force, building highways and bridges, power stations, mobile-phone networks, schools and pharmaceutical plants. More recently, they have begun exploring for oil and building at least one Ethiopian military installation.

It is all part of Beijing's broad push into Africa. Aiming to secure access to the continent's vast natural resources, China is forging deep economic, political and military ties with most of Africa's 54 countries.

www.dailystar.com

Israel Envoy to Ethiopia Dies of Wounds

Israel's envoy to Ethiopia Doron Grossman, 49, died from his wounds on Sunday morning several days after attempting suicide in Addis Ababa. Grossman shot himself last Tuesday apparently as a result of learning he was ill with an advanced stage of cancer.

Haaretz

Germany Earmarks Big Funds for Ethiopia

Germany said here Sunday it has agreed to allocate 80 million euros (about 104 million US dollars) to finance development projects in Ethiopia during the coming three years.

Ernst Axel Momber, country director of the German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ), told journalists that the governmentsof Germany and Ethiopia concluded an agreement three weeks ago in Berlin.

He said that one-third of the stated sum would be used for technical cooperation while the balance for capacity building, good governance, natural resources conservation, and other development projects.

Xinhua.com

Thursday, March 31, 2005

Over 5,000 Candidates Registered for National Elections

A total of 5,507 political and independent candidates have registered to run for seats in both the House of People's Representatives and eight regional assemblies in the upcoming elections in Ethiopia.

Officials of the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) told journalists on Monday that 1,845 candidates have registered to run for seats in the House of People's Representatives, the lower house of parliament, while 3,662 for seats in the regional assemblies.

Kemal Bedri, NEBE chairman said that both the candidates and voter registration process had successfully ended throughout the country.

He said that a total of 25.6 million people have been registered to vote in the national elections slated for May 15.

People's Daily

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

Eritrea: Mines and UXOs Still a Problem

Kesete Ghebrezghi, 40, is an angry man. Living in a dry, stony village just eight kilometres from the border with Ethiopia, he told IRIN that life in his Eritrean village had not been the same since the border war of 1998-2000.

He said he felt particularly angry about the destruction caused by the war, but he believed that it was the the mines, more than anything else, that had continued to complicate the situation.

"[The war] has really affected our life, because we lost our property, and our farmland near the border has been mined," Kesete said.

Ethiopia and Eritrea fought for two years over a border dispute that killed some 70,000 people from both sides, and left a nasty legacy of mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO).

www.alertnet.org

A Rising China Counters US Clout in Africa

The Chinese economic juggernaut and its thirst for minerals and markets has increasingly brought it to Africa, including here to Zimbabwe. The fertile hills of this Southern African nation are rich with gold and the world's second-largest platinum reserves. In Sudan, Angola, and along the Gulf of Guinea, the Asian giant is guzzling the continent's vast oil supply.

csmonitor.com

Lately, Beijing has begun winning projects that have geopolitical relevance, such as Ethiopia's Takazee Dam -- a massive, $300 million hydro-power station that is rising on the headwaters of the Blue Nile River. Set deep in a mountainous region near the border with Sudan and Eritrea, the Takazee Dam has been on Ethiopia's drawing board for over a decade. But getting it off the ground hasn't been easy, thanks to Egypt. Cairo has long feared any project that could affect the flow of the Nile, viewing its own access to those waters as a matter of national security. Indeed, so great was its concern over Takazee that Egyptian officials have made clear that any attempt to divert Nile water could result in military action, according to senior Chinese and Egyptian officials. (More on Ruskiboss Rants)

Russia Writes Off Ethiopia's 1.1-Billion-Dollar Debt

A 1.1-billion-US-dollar debt cancellation agreement has been signed between Ethiopia and Russia, the Ministry of Finance said Wednesday.

Getachew Admassu, public relations officer with the ministry, told journalists that Russia has canceled 1.104 billion dollars of Ethiopia's 1.268-billion-dollar debt.

Ethiopian Minister of Finance Sufian Ahmed and Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin signed the agreement at a ceremony held in Moscow last week, Getachew said.

People's Daily Online

Israeli Envoy Shot Himself - Ethiopian Police

Israel's envoy to Ethiopia was found in his hotel room bleeding from a bullet wound and Ethiopian police said yesterday he appeared to have shot himself. "There was no indication that other parties were involved in the injuries suffered by the ambassador," Ethiopian police said in a statement read on state-run television.

Citing diplomatic sources, Israel Radio said Ambassador Doron Grossman was believed to have attempted suicide, distraught at the discovery he had malignant cancer. He was airlifted to Israel in critical condition, officials said. Security guards heard the shot and found Grossman in his room at the Addis Ababa Hilton, bleeding from his head with his gun lying nearby.

SABCnews.com

Ethiopia Expels Three American Groups

Ethiopia on Wednesday ordered three private American groups that promote democracy to cease operations and gave their foreign staff 48 hours to leave, officials with two of the groups said.

Field missions from the groups — the National Democratic Institute, the International Republic Institute and IFES — were in Ethiopia helping prepare the Horn of Africa nation for May 15 general elections.

SFGate.com

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

"Whole Building" Approach to Sustainable Design

The first sustainable solar community development in South Africa was one of 15 projects worldwide selected for presentation at the UN Global Warming Conference in Kyoto, Japan. It was chosen as an example of how developing nations can grow and prosper while minimizing emissions of greenhouse gases, and is known as a "no regrets" project because it created sustainable economic growth and stable, healthy communities while costing no more to implement than a conventional development.

www.envirolink.org

Monday, March 28, 2005

ERIS Allocates Over 1.1 million USD for Candidates Campaigning for Upcoming Election

Electoral Reform International Services (ERIS), a London-based independent and non-political institute, announced on Friday that it has set aside over 1.1 million US Dollars to help political party and independent candidates campaigning for the upcoming national elections.

While making the announcement at the Office of the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia (NEBE), ERIS representative said the sum of money allocated for party and independent candidates is meant to be utilized for transportation, purchasing of various campaign materials as well as cover publication costs.

The representative said the allocated sum of money has been apportioned for 29 independent and political party candidates fielded by political parties, including those under the umbrella of a front, a coalition or a union.

www.ena.gov.et

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Ethiopian Furniture Has Beauty, Texture


photo courtesy: courier-journal.com

"If I were looking for Ethiopian artifacts, I would definitely target neck rests, coffee tables -- Ethiopia is about the only place with a tradition of coffee tables -- and textiles"
Doris Athineos, Features and antiques editor, Traditional Home magazine

courier-journal.com

World Marks TB Day Today - Ethiopia 2nd in Africa in TB Infection

The 'World Stop Tuberculosis Day' will be celebrated today in Ethiopia with themes Frontline TB care providers: Heroes in the fight against TB and Open windows and prevent TB.

This was disclosed at a one day workshop organized for editors and journalists by Panos Ethiopia yesterday.

The workshop organized under HIV/AIDS-TB project has the purpose of highlighting the magnitude of tuberculosis, TB/HIV co-infection and identifying the media's role in stopping TB/HIV through advocacy, publication and broadcast.

allAfrica.com

Previous Post: Supermodel Liya Kebede Named UN's Goodwill Ambassador

UN Envoy: Ethiopia, Eritrea Risk Starting New War

Ethiopia and Eritrea run the risk of starting a new war over a long-running border dispute, with tensions being fueled by irresponsible arms sales to both impoverished African nations, a senior United Nations official said on Thursday.

"Time is running out. Both countries are acquiring additional arms, increasing the number of forces at their borders," said former Canadian foreign minister Lloyd Axworthy, the special U.N. envoy for Ethiopia and Eritrea.

"I still believe however that war can averted," he told Parliament's foreign affairs committee in Ottawa.

Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a two-year border war from 1998 to 2000 in which more than 70,000 people died.

metronews.com

African Well Fund Launches 3rd Annual “Build a Well for Bono’s Birthday” Fundraiser

The African Well Fund will launch its third annual Build a Well for Bono's Birthday fund-raiser on March 27 at the Hard Rock Cafe in San Diego — the same night and city where U2 kick off their Vertigo Tour. The AWF raises funds to build wells in African countries like Uganda and Ethiopia, where clean drinking water is scarce. Donations will be collected until March 10, Bono's birthday.

For more information, check out AfricanWellFund.org.

Friday, March 25, 2005

Parts of Looted Manuscripts Return to Ethiopia

Two pages ripped out of an old Ethiopian holy manuscript and looted during the British invasion in 1868 were returned to Ethiopia on Wednesday.

Though the two pages made their way home 137 years after being plundered by British soldiers, the whereabouts of the original holy manuscripts is not yet known by those working for the return of Ethiopian treasures.

The two pages were returned by a prominent member of the British legal profession who felt strongly about the cause of restitution, according to the Association for the return of the Maqdala Ethiopian Treasures (AFROMET).

Professor Richard Pankhurst, Vice Chair of AFROMET handed over the centuries old torn pages to the Institute of Ethiopian Studies Museum.

allAfrica.com

The Very First Pre-Election Survey Conducted in Ethiopia

The first ever pre-election survey conducted by Initiative Africa with the participation of Addis Ababa Women Entrepreneurs' Association and Build Ethiopia is said to be completed with the final version expected to be out next April 10.

The main objective of the survey, according to Initiative Africa, is to explain why voters vote the way they do and why some parties are more successful than others.

The survey was conducted in 138 enumeration areas and the samples are representative of the urban areas of the four major regions of Tigray, Oromia, Amhara, and SNNP in addition to Addis Ababa, Dire Dawa and Harar cities.

allAfrica.com

History Lesson: The Battle Of Magdala

By Thomas Keyes

In antiquity, the name Ethiopia did not denote what is today called Ethiopia, but instead referred to Nubia or Cush, which is mentioned in the Bible in various places and corresponds more nearly to today's Sudan, or part of it. There were some few references and legends possibly referring to today's Ethiopia from about 3000 BC, including the Biblical story of the Queen of Sheba, who is variously thought to have come from either Ethiopia or Yemen. Until the 20th century, Ethiopia was called Abyssinia. Continue...

Government to Start Irrigation Project On 200,000 Hectares of Land

The Ethiopian government has announced plans to undertake irrigation projects on 200,000 hectares of land as part of the country's food security program.

The announcement was made yesterday during the second day of marking this year's 'Water Day'. Ato Shiferaw Jarso, Minister of Water Resources said that the full development of 97,000 hectares of irrigation project was well underway in the Awash and Koqa basins.

The 90,000 hectares of the total irrigation project is in construction in Awash while the 7,000 hectares is in Koqa...

Ethiopia is endowed with the potential of huge water resource, with 122 billion m3 annual surfaces runoff and 2.9 billion m3 of ground water.

However, the country's water resource has contributed little to the country's socio-economic development where the average access to clean and safe water supply stands at 34 percent, which is said to be very low even by Sub Sahara African countries standards.


allAfrica.com


UNICEF:: Majority in Ethiopia lack access to clean water

Previous post: The Destruction of the Blue Niles Falls

Government Troops Committed Crimes in Gambella, Says HRW

Ethiopian troops committed widespread killings, rape and torture against the indigenous Anyuak population in an oil-rich western province, a rights group said on Thursday. Human Rights Watch (HRW) said numerous attacks by soldiers and civilians from other ethnic groups killed more than 500 people in the Gambella region in 2003 and 2004, bordering Sudan. However, the government dismissed the report. "The situation in Gambella is settled and everything is peaceful now," government spokesman, Zemedkun Teckle, told IRIN. "The people there are living peacefully right now. We are very surprised [and] do not understand why Human Rights Watch is now trying to ignite this issue."

Reuters AlertNet


Previous post: Gambella...The New Oil Rush?

WaterCan Runs Postcard Campaign

WaterCan@Queen’s presented students with an awareness campaign Tuesday to commemorate World Water Day.

The club, a branch of the international WaterCan organization, provided information about the challenges of obtaining clean water in third-world countries.

In 2000, the federal government pledged to give 0.7 per cent of Canada’s annual GDP to development aid, said WaterCan co-chair Salima Gilani, ArtSci ’05. However, she said only 0.2 per cent is being used.

WaterCan@Queen’s has dedicated most of their energy this year to raising money towards building a well in the village of Enseno in Ethiopia, Burnier said.

Engineers from Ethiopia will design the well—which will cost $75,000 to construct and maintain—using readily available tools and materials. When completed, the well will provide water for 3,000 people.

WaterCan@Queen’s hopes to contribute $20,000 to the project. The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) will contribute $2 for every dollar raised, for a final contribution of $60,000.

Queen's Journal

Unhappy Masses and the Challenge of Political Islam in the Horn of Africa

by Professor Said S. Samatar, Rutgers

I'd like to start, if I may, with a personal confession: my friend and fellow alumnus of Northwestern University , Professor Alessandro Triulzi, has, by flying me across the Atlantic, made a considerable investment in me. Although he surely will not get his money's worth out of me, that fact does not weigh heavily on my mind. More than this, thanks to Bin Laden and Co., the ghost of political Islam has lately drawn academic attention to my professional interests and, in doing so, has turned out to be my premiere meal ticket, a manna from heaven to ensure earthly prosperity.

Somalia is once again, as indeed is the Sudan , the object of attention by the West. The once-neglected villages of Somalia are, as we speak, crawling with CIA agents, looking for the elusive specter of Bin Laden hideouts, presumably in the bushes and in the grazing grounds of camel herds. I am loath not to welcome this development, if only for the enormous employment opportunities it has opened up for us, the Somali elite, as well as expatriate fellow travelers. Who needs, from now on, to trouble with the teaching of complacent, overfed, gum-chewing American undergrads when the CIA pays better--and with far less exertion of the mind as of the body. Continue...

In The News...
Holy war threatened in Somalia
An Islamic leader on a U.S. terrorist list threatened a holy war Friday if an African peacekeeping force enters Somalia to try to install a new government and stop more than decade of clan warfare.

Meles Zenawi Endorses China's Anti-Secession Law

Meles Zenawi's parliament has now endorsed the People's Republic of China's anti-secession law on Taiwan. How come? The foundation of the Ethiopian constitution, to be more exact, the Meles Zenawi constitution, is based on what the prime minister has been saying is the universal right of "nations and nationalities to self-determination up to secession." Meles fought for Eritrean independence based on what is now Article 39 of the constitution, or it is said so. Those who opposed Meles were put to death. Period. (If there are lingering doubts, consult the History Book of TPLF authored by none other than Meles himself). What does endorsing China's anti-secession law mean vis-a-vis Meles Zenawi?

Ethiomedia.com

Article 39 The Right of Nations, Nationalities and Peoples:

1. Every nation, nationality or people in Ethiopia shall have the unrestricted right to self determination up to secession.

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Ethiopian Opposition Complains That EU Election Observers Arriving Late

The European Union will be sending too few elections observers and too late to ensure free and fair elections in Ethiopia, an opposition leader said Monday, adding that the government has already taken steps to guarantee the ruling party a victory.

The first of 159 EU election observers arrived over the weekend, the first outsiders to officially monitor balloting in Ethiopia. The May 15 vote will only be the third election in the Horn of Africa nation's history.

"There are too few observers," said Brehanu Nega, the campaign manager for the Coalition for Unity and Democracy, one of the largest opposition groups. "We don't think 159 observers can effectively monitor voting in 38,000 polling stations."

Sudan Tribune

Ethiopian Jews Battle Poverty, Prejudice in Israel

Once a poor immigrant from Ethiopia, Mehereta Baruch has leapt to fame in Israel as a star on a reality television show.

The 30-year-old actress is one of a tiny minority of the tens of thousands of black arrivals in the past two decades to achieve even a measure of prominence in a country where Ethiopians complain of routine discrimination by fellow Jews.

Some 60 percent are considered to be living in poverty compared to 20 percent of the general population, according to figures from Meyers-JDC-Brookdale, a prominent Israeli social research institute.

Jews of Ethiopian descent, tracing their roots to the biblical King Solomon, number about 105,000 among Israel's 6 million people today.

Another 20,000 Ethiopians are expected through 2007 after a pledge to speed up immigration of the Falasha Mura, Jews whose families converted to Christianity in the past 200 years and now want to come to Israel.

Reuters.com

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Internships Developing Leaders of Tomorrow

Avery, now a sophomore in animal science at Iowa State University, was one of 13 students who participated in the World Food Prize's internship program this past summer.

The Borlaug-Ruan Internship, named after World Food Prize (WFP) founders John Ruan and Norman Borlaug, allows students to work in research centers in Latin America, Asia or Africa during the summer.

"This is a working internship that allows them to work for eight weeks doing whatever the centers need them to do," said Lisa Fleming, WFP youth programs manager.

"It really does open their eyes and help them decide what they want to do."

Avery spent her summer in Addis Ababa, Ethopia, at the International Livestock Research Institute.

She is interested in red meat and meat consumption, and Ethiopia is the largest livestock producer in Africa. Even so, Avery found it was rare for poor farmers to have much access to meat.

Iowa Farmer Today


STATS: Ethiopia's large livestock resources include 35 million cattle, 11.4 million sheep and 9.6 million goats.
-www.ethiopiandiaspora.info


MEANWHILE, ReliefWeb reports...

Ethiopia may have underestimated the amount of food aid it will require this year, the US ambassador to the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation said on Friday.

During a five-day visit to the country, Tony Hall said he believed the scale of food aid needs was "a lot more serious" than the government had estimated - it had aimed to provide help to only 2.2 million people.

"I think the issue of people that need help has probably been underestimated," he told reporters. "All I know is the food is not here yet, and I think the word will have to go out to the donors that it is probably a lot more serious than anticipated.

"[Some Ethiopians] aren't getting any food. They don't have any money. They can't buy it and they are slipping," he warned.

China-Ethiopia Trade Exceeds 200 Million Last Year

The Chinese ambassador to Ethiopia said Tuesday the trade volume between China and Ethiopia exceeded 200 million US dollars for the first time by the end of 2004.

Ambassador Lin Lin also said the investment climate of Ethiopia is considered favorable to Chinese entrepreneurs.

In an interview with Chinese and Ethiopian journalists, he said that with a stable political climate, a conducive macro-economic policy, a steady exchange rate and a huge local market of about 70 million people, the investment climate of Ethiopia proved favorable to Chinese entrepreneurs.

He said China imports natural gum, coffee, hides and skins, and oil seeds like sesame from Ethiopia, while it exports light industry products, machinery, chemicals, medical products, building materials, textiles, and rubber products like tyres.

The Chinese government has been providing Ethiopia with development assistance in the area of infrastructure construction, technical cooperation, humanitarian aid, education, and health, he said, adding that the Chinese government has also been dispatching medical teams to Ethiopia in the past three decades.

People's Daily


FACT
Chinese and Serbian contractors helped Ethiopia divert the Blue Niles Falls.

UN Calls Time on Phone Cheats

United Nations peacekeepers enforcing a December 2000 accord between Ethiopia and Eritrea defrauded the body of more than $500,000 in telephone calls, UN auditors have reported.

The news comes as the UN finds itself under growing criticism following alleged mismanagement of its discredited UN oil-for-food programme for Iraq and for sexual abuse of minors by peacekeepers in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The New Zealand Herald

Montrealer Sues Hospital Over Kidney Transplant

A Montreal man says his will to live is driving his lawsuit against a hospital that has refused to perform a kidney transplant on him.

"I want to save my life, I want to live, like everybody,'' Baruch Tegegne, 61, told a news conference Tuesday.

Tegegne has been waiting more than a year for a transplant. found a kidney donor, but the donor was found in India using a website called matchingdonors.com.

However, the Royal Victoria Hospital is concerned that money might change hands and that the potential donor isn't a family member.

Michael Bergman, Tegegne's lawyer, launched legal action on Tuesday to force the hospital to conduct compatibility tests on Shree Dhar, the 30-year-old donor, and if he is a suitable match, to perform the transplant.

Tegegne's kidneys are in such bad shape he must undergo four dialysis treatments per week.

While he has seven brothers, the ailing man says they aren't healthy enough themselves to help him.

The Ethiopia-born Tegegne was overjoyed when Dhar stepped forward.

www.ctv.ca

Water Becoming More Precious Than Oil in Arab World

While one of the most pressing political and social issues facing the Arab world rarely makes headlines, it is an issue that some political analysts believe could lead to the next great confrontation in the region. Rapidly expanding Arab populations are making water far more precious than oil.

From a historic perspective, the modern Arab world was built on the back of oil.

Since the first oil well gushed in Bahrain in 1932, countries have argued over boundaries and borders in hopes of gaining a piece of land that might produce instant wealth.

But during a decades-long process, borders have been set, oil fields have been mapped, and accurate estimates have been made of oil reserves in the region.

Now, many political analysts are saying the next source of possible conflict in the region will likely be water. That is because many countries in the Arab world are becoming increasingly concerned about how they will continue to supply water to rapidly expanding populations and industries, not to mention agriculture, which consumes up to 85 percent of the water in the Middle East.

For example, the greatest source of water in the region comes from the Nile River, which runs for more than 6,600 kilometers, flowing through nine Arab and African countries. But, while the amount of water produced by the Nile has remained the same for thousands of years, the populations along its path are expected to almost double over the next 20 years.

In 1955, three Middle Eastern states, including Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait were listed by international agencies as water-scarce countries. By 1990, Algeria, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Somalia, Tunisia and Israel/Palestine were added to the list. U.N. studies anticipate another seven Middle Eastern countries will be added to the list by 2025 including Egypt, Iran, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Syria, and Ethiopia.

www.iwar.org.uk

Two Imprisoned Journalists Continue to Be Detained in Run-Up to Elections

RSF has voiced concern that, with general elections due to take place in just two months, on 15 May 2005, two journalists, Shiferraw Insermu and Dhabassa Wakjira, continue to be detained. Insermu and Wakjira, journalists for the Oromo-language service of the state-owned Ethiopian Television (ETV), are accused of having links with an Oromo separatist group.

"As Ethiopians get ready to vote, two journalists continue to languish in a prison where cases of torture and mistreatment are regularly reported by international organisations," RSF said.

"Ethiopia is violating the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights just a few kilometres away from the African Union's Addis Ababa headquarters," the organisation added. "Whatever the charges against them, these two journalists have rights, which have clearly been denied by authorities who have defied the federal High Court's decisions. Under Ethiopian law, Insermu and Wakjira should be released immediately. The circumstances under which they were thrown in prison leads us to suspect that there is absolutely no basis for the charge of terrorism that has been brought against them."

allAfrica.com

Ethiopia Threatens to Grab Uganda's Flower Investments

UGANDA risks losing flower investments to Ethiopia unless the Government offers similar incentives to attract investors, Uganda Flower Exporters Association officials have warned.

A flower exporter, who recently visited Ethiopia with a group of 30 Dutch investors, said unless Uganda offered similar incentives, he would not recommend his company to expand here.

allAfrica.com

KLM to Begin Amsterdam - Addis Flight

KLM Royal Dutch Airlines will start flying to Ethiopia with its first flight taking place on March 31, 2005, the airlines officials stated on Friday.

The flight service - Amsterdam-Khartoum-Addis-Amsterdam will take place twice a week - on Thursdays and Saturdays- on an extended Boeing 767 airplane.

"Starting flight services in Ethiopia has been on our minds for the past ten years, but it never happened due to duty constraint and economic downsize," Pieter de Man, General Manager of KLM Eastern Africa said.

"We believe that this new flight service will assist the blooming flower industry in Ethiopia. Our flights have the capacity to transport flowers, vegetables and fruits via its direct return route," he added.

allafrica.com

UNESCO to Assist Return Of Iconic Aksum Obelisk

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) is sending an evaluation team to Ethiopia to prepare for the return of one of the country's most iconic monuments, the celebrated obelisk of Aksum, which Italian soldiers carted off to Rome during Mussolini's invasion nearly 70 years ago.

At the request of the Ethiopian and Italian Governments, UNESCO will draw up the re-installation project for the 1,700-year-old, 24-metres-high, 160-ton funeral stele and the development of the site in northern Ethiopia, which will be funded by Italy.

www.harolddoan.com

'One-Dollar U.N. Girls'

BUNIA, Congo -- She's known in the community as a "one-dollar U.N. girl." At night, she sleeps on the cracked pavement outside a storefront. In the mornings, she sashays through the dusty streets, clutching a frayed parasol against the blinding sun.

Yvette and her friends are also called kidogo usharatis, Swahili for small prostitutes. They loiter outside the camps of U.N. peacekeepers, hoping to sell their bodies for a mug of milk, a cold soda or -- best of all -- a single dollar.

"I'm sad about it. But I needed the dollars. I can't go farm because of the militias. Who will feed me?" asked Yvette. At 14, she has a round face with wide eyes beneath a cap of neatly shorn hair, and her hands rest on her hips in an older girl's pose...

The United Nations is investigating 150 instances in which 50 peacekeeping troops or civilians in the Congo mission are suspected of having sexually abused or exploited women and girls, some as young as 12.

Washingtonpost.com (subscription required)

Why and how could this happen?

EU Pledges to Observe Ethiopian Elections Impartially

The European Union (EU) said Monday its observers will discharge their duty impartially and professionally in Ethiopia`s May 15 national elections.

The EU will delegate more than 160 observers in the country`s upcoming elections, said Anna Maria Gomes, the EU chief observer.

After talks here on Monday with Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, Gomes told journalists that so far nine EU observers have come to Ethiopia.

AngolaPress

Sunday, March 20, 2005

Cargo Plane Crashes in Lake Victoria

An Ethiopian Airlines cargo plane crashed into Lake Victoria near Uganda's Entebbe International Airport while attempting to land on Saturday, an airport official said. The five crew members suffered minor injuries.

www.iol.co.za

A Double Win for Ethiopia


photo courtesy: IAAF.org

On a tide of emotion, Kenenisa Bekele swept to the greatest victory of his sensational career when he collected a fourth consecutive IAAF World Cross Country Championships short race title on St-Galmier Hippodrome on Saturday (19 March) infront of over 18,500 spectators.

He cast aside the burden of a broken heart, following the death of his teenage fiancee, World Youth 1500 metres champion Alem Techale, to win a breathtaking race in 26-degree heat.

"Joy comes frequently in life but grief on this level is something that you encounter very rarely," he said, "so to come here to this competition, where I first made my name, and to win after losing Alem is a very significant victory for me."

Also, Ethiopia's Tirunesh Dibaba emulated her compatriot Kenenisa Bekele in landing the world cross-country double today as she added the short title to the long one she won the day before.

UN Urges Africa Go Geothermic

As heavily indebted Africa sinks under rising oil prices, a UN-sponsored project aims to give the continent access to vast reserves of cheap, clean energy.

The African Rift Geothermal facility project aims to tap the heat trapped in rocks deep beneath the floor of the geological feature that runs from the Red Sea to Mozambique.

The Rift Valley
runs through Sudan, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti, Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania and Malawi through Mozambique.

Aljazeera.Net

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Ethiopia's AIDS Hotline Ringing Off the Hook

Thousands of Ethiopians are taking advantage of a new toll-free telephone hotline to educate themselves about the dangers of HIV and Aids, how to avoid getting it and how to treat it, officials said on Thursday.

The service, known as "Wegen AIDS Talkline," has been accessible to telephone users at no charge since last week and has been receiving between 1 800 and 2 200 calls per day, the officials said.

www.iol.co.za

Fund Raising Launched for Cardiac Treatment Center Construction

A fund raising project for the construction of a cardiac treatment center for children was launched on Sunday at the Hilton Hotel, Ethiopian News Agency (ENA) reported.

Organizers of the fundraising through a ticket sale called "One Birr for One Heart", plan to collect 12 million birr to help children with heart diseases.

The tickets, with the theme "Let's Mend a Broken Heart", are available for sale at one, five, ten, fifty and hundred birr at the Zewditu Hospital, ENA reported.

This is interesting. This project was launched in 2003. Why is it taking so long to raise this money?

Special Forum on Contemporary Ethiopia

What is the status of Ethiopia, 20 years after famine relief? Why hasn't Ethiopia progressed as predicted? Former Clinton advisor for Africa, Gayle Smith, along with leading Ethiopian scholar, Edmond Keller, lead a panel discussion focusing on the state of Ethiopia.

Where were you when "We Are the World" dominated the radio waves? Marcia Thomas of USA for Africa discusses the 1984 famine relief effort and pop culture.

ucla.edu

Sir Geldof Returns To Africa

SIR BOB GELDOF is retuning to Africa 20 years after the LIVE AID extravaganza which he organised to alleviate famine and poverty in Ethiopia.

The charismatic Irish rocker will be touring the country for a series of BBC documentaries focusing on Africa to air on TV over the summer (04).

www.contactmusic.com

Monday, March 14, 2005

Animal Remains as Old as 4.5 Million Years Discovered in Ethiopia

More than 400 animal remains and artifacts including a high number of primate findings estimated from 3.7 to 4.5 million years of age have been discovered in Galili area in Ethiopia, scientists said on Saturday.

At a news briefing held on Saturday, Professor Gerhard Weber of the Paleo-Anthropological Research Team, said the diverse fauna that include antelopes, giraffes, pigs, elephants, among others, would make Galili a very important paleontology and paleoanthropolgy locality in Africa.

The PAR-Team, an international consortium of research institutes, had begun work in February 2000 under principal investigators Professor Horst Seilder and Professor Gerhard Weber.

The most important finding of the season 2005 is a partial hominid thighbone which was possibly not adapted to upright walking, heavier and taller than later hominids like the almost one million years younger Lucy, the world famous humanoid fossil, according to Professor Weber.

"Apart from this unique fossil, other findings include a partial skull of a medium sized monkey, skulls and jaws of pigs and antelopes," he said.

The Galili area produced more than 1,400 catalogued specimens which are housed at the National Museum of Ethiopia since the starting of the research, Professor Weber said, adding that many localities that produce abundant faunal remains and hominids have been identified.

Angola Press

Ethio-Jazz: Leaving a Legacy

Listen to Ethiopian music legend Mulatu Astatke, and Russ Gershon, the director of the Either/Orchestra, about Ethiopia's fascinating musical tradition on The Leonard Lopate Show.

Events:
Mulatu Astatke & the Either/Orchestra
with guest DJ Timaj Sukker
Monday, March 14th at 9:30pm & 11:30pm
Joe's Pub 425 Lafayette St, NY

Ethiopia Tries to Woo its Emigrants Home

According to Arizona Central, government officials said at least 1,500 emigres had returned to Addis Ababa and that they were launching an aggressive campaign to woo more, offering tax breaks on importing belongings and flexible land ownership laws. In Washington, they said, embassy officials had been going door-to-door in Ethiopian-American neighborhoods, urging patriotic entrepreneurs to move back...

Driven Away by Upheaval, Drawn Back by Success
The cigar smoke was thick at the swank Office Bar. Danny Davis, a stylish businessman raised in Washington, D.C., huddled with other Ethiopians visiting from the United States, sharing tips about the best local neighborhoods, most promising investment opportunities and best restaurants to munch a burger.

"I am so happy I am moving back," said Davis, 37, wearing a buttery leather jacket and sipping a whiskey. He's the owner of Pearl Restaurant and Lounge in Washington, but he plans to move with his wife, who is now pregnant, back home to Ethiopia next year. "There is real energy and movement in Addis. I tell my Ethiopian friends in D.C. they've got to go back and see what's going on."

A few blocks away, Woosen Ayalew, 44, a former resident of Fairfax, Va., runs the City Café, a coffeehouse that serves American-style doughnuts along with tiny cups of Ethiopian espresso.

"Ethiopia is experiencing a brain gain," Ayalew said. "Even just five years ago, no wanted to come back. Now everyone wants to come back and be a part of helping to build the country."

In many parts of the world's poorest continent, the chatter among ambitious people is usually about which Western embassy issues the fastest visa. About 20,000 skilled professionals leave Africa for Europe or the United States every year, according to the International Organization for Migration, a United Nations agency.

Among Ethiopians, however, many young emigres from the business and professional set are looking to return. This unique situation can be attributed in part to the financial success of Ethiopians in the United States, and in part to a campaign by the government to woo them back, said Kinfe Abraham, president of the African Economist magazine.

The greater Washington area has the world's largest concentration of Ethiopians outside of Africa, many of them driven away by protracted periods of famine and political instability. Last year, Ethiopians in the United States sent home $6 million in remittance money, eclipsing coffee, the country's biggest export, which earned $4 million.

But increasingly, Ethiopians who made their fortunes in the strip-mall spice stores and bakeries of Fairfax and the packed restaurants of Adams Morgan say they want to do more than send money home. All over Addis Ababa, eateries and offices are opening with such names as The Olive Garden, New York, New York, and The Boston Professional Building.

Government officials said at least 1,500 emigres had returned to Addis and that they were launching an aggressive campaign to woo more, offering tax breaks on importing belongings and flexible land ownership laws. In Washington, they said, embassy officials had been going door-to-door in Ethiopian-American neighborhoods, urging patriotic entrepreneurs to move back.

"There is the sentimental pull of home and at the same time a thriving business atmosphere," Kinfe said. "Successful people feel they owe something back to their country. Ethiopians love their culture. They want to come back. They just want to know they can also support their families here."

Despite a history of poverty and political problems, Ethiopia has long been regarded as a cultural capital of Africa. A recent celebration here, honoring the late reggae singer Bob Marley's 60th birthday, drew Africans from around the world. Many praised Ethiopia, the country Marley honored in his songs. "Babylon is falling, Ethiopia is calling," a Jamaican reggae group sang at the festival, encouraging Africans living abroad to move here.

One reason the country holds emotional resonance for Africans is because, unlike its neighbors, it was never colonized and was able to retain its cultural and religious traditions. Ethiopians have their own way of telling time and their own calendar.

The country has a long history of art and crafts, with a unique style of thick furniture, gauzy white cotton fashions and cuisine served around a low table, where diners use napkin-like injera bread to scoop up vegetables, sizzling fish and meats. While MTV-culture has had some impact, Ethiopian music stars are far more popular than foreign imports. The country has its own music awards.

It's also a place where literature has been highly respected, even during repressive times. While imprisoned from 1977 to 1987 for running a student movement, Nebiy Mekonnen, now editor of the newspaper Addis Admas, gained international honors for translating the entire text of "Gone With the Wind" on 3,000 torn cigarette packets. He recently visited the Washington area for poetry readings and to persuade emigres that the political situation was better and that they should come home.

It was political oppression that caused many Ethiopians to flee in the early 1980s, when the now-exiled communist dictator, Lt. Col. Mengistu Haile Mariam, confiscated the property of the upper classes and put opposition party members in jail.

Tadiwos Belete, an energetic man of 40, left Ethiopia when Mengistu took over. His family fled to neighboring Sudan, where he washed dishes and scraped by as a refugee. After securing a U.S. visa, he settled in Boston and worked as a waiter while going to school. He saved enough to open a small Ethiopian restaurant, which did well. Then he opened a hair salon, and it became so popular that he opened a second.

With money in the bank and a stable political situation in Ethiopia, Belete returned recently to Addis Ababa, where he built the gleaming Boston Day Spa. The $2 million club houses a full-service spa and salon with steam rooms, vibrating massage chairs and a hair-braiding room. Upstairs is a posh bar with puffy velvet couches. Belete also plans to build another spa in Debre Zeit, a town 33 miles southeast.

"It's not charity work," Belete said, a wearing white linen shirt, beige pants and a wide smile as he showed a visitor the Ethiopian mosaic artwork in the spa's lobby. "There is a lot of opportunity here, and a lot of people who are happy to have these services."

The Boston Day Spa is located on Bole Road, a lively strip so filled with Ethiopian-American businesses that it's called "wha's up avenue," a reference to the slangy English a lot of returning emigres speak.

Yet for all the buzz, Ethiopia remains one of the poorest countries in the world, with an average life expectancy of 42 years, a per capita annual income of $100, and 172 of every 1,000 children dead before age 5, according to the World Bank's World Development Report for 2004.

But officials hope that after the first investors come, doctors, lawyers, educators and other professionals will follow. The government is especially eager to attract those in the medical profession. At present, there are more Ethiopian doctors living in the United States than in Ethiopia.

"Most of the friends I graduated with are now in the U.S.," said Dr. Abdu Ibrahim, who was rushing off to deliver a baby in a private Addis Ababa clinic. "I want to tell the medical profession to come back. But I also understand why they left. It can be frustrating."

T. Dosho Shifferaw, 51, is the inventor of the exercise machine Bowflex. He moved to California's Bay Area in the 1970s and became a millionaire. Recently he has been visiting his homeland often, setting up water pumps in poor rural areas and hosting an inventors' conference last month to encourage young scientists to come back. Now, he said, he, too, was feeling the pull to return.

"The whole country is changing. I want to be part of a place where things are really happening," said Shifferaw, 51, during a recent evening at the Office Bar. "Maybe some of us are like Polish-Americans and Greek-Americans and feel we will never really move back," he said. "Then again, you don't forget your heritage. Sometimes if you have a chance to go home again, you take it."

Washington Post

Ethiopia Starts Broadband Internet Service

Good News!

The Ethiopian Telecommunications Corporation (ETC), the country's only internet service provider, has announced it started providing broadband internet service as of March 13.

According to an ETC news release on Sunday, the corporation has transformed the narrowband service, which has so far been in, to a broadband internet service.

The project, which was launched six months ago, has cost some 7million birr (about 800,000 US dollars), the news release said.

The previous service was inefficient and it was serving not more than 15,000 clients, it said, adding that the broadband internet service can provide quality and efficient service to some 100,000 customers.

The news release said the corporation has worked out low price tariff to attract more customers and that the existing post-payment customers would be linked to the new pre-payment service to enable them get high quality services.

It also said the broadband internet service would enable watch live or recorded transmissions of television and radio programs, educational media transmissions, and attend exhibitions, meetings and forums apart from video and other services.

People's Daily Online

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Kenyan President Due in Ethiopia for Talks on Somalia

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki is to visit Ethiopia this week for talks with top Ethiopian and African Union officials amid controversy over the AU-authorized deployment of regional peacekeepers to lawless Somalia, officials said Tuesday.

Update
The visit broke ground for increased trade and investment interchanges between the two countries.

Acknowledging the role of trade and investment in development, the two leaders underscored the need to enhance economic ties between Kenya and Ethiopia.

Supermodel Liya Kebede Named UN's Goodwill Ambassador



CNN.com -- Supermodel Liya Kebede, best known as the face of cosmetics giant Estee Lauder, has been named a goodwill ambassador by the U.N. health agency.

The Ethiopian-born model said Monday she hoped her efforts for the World Health Organization would raise awareness of the difficulties mothers and children face in the developing world -- where millions die each year, often from easily preventable conditions.

Traveling to Ethiopia?
GET the latest health-related information on UNDP-ET.

Government Intervention
The government is facing a rise in heterosexual transmission of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other tropical diseases.

FIND out why tropical diseases kill more people than HIV/AIDS.

News
Officials scramble to halt the spread of polio in Ethiopia. It had been polio-free since 2002.

Humanitarian crises continue in Afar; new cases of measles are being reported.

Saturday, March 05, 2005

Ethiopian Archaeologists Make Important Fossil Find

Archaeologists studying human origins in eastern Ethiopia have discovered 12 fossils that appear to be older than the famous fossil "Lucy," the team leader said on Saturday.

"The discovery of 12 early hominid fossil specimens estimated to be between 3.8 to 4 million years old will be important in terms of understanding the early phases of human evolution before Lucy," Ethiopian archeologist Yohannes Haile Selassie told a news conference.

"It is hoped that the new discoveries will allow scientists to connect the dots, furthering our knowledge of the time period in human evolution," he added.

"This is the world's oldest biped," Bruce Latimer, director of the natural history museum in Cleveland, Ohio, told a news conference in the Ethiopian capital, adding that "it will revolutionize the way we see human evolution."

Lucy is Ethiopia's world-acclaimed archaeological find. The discovery of the almost complete hominid skeleton, estimated to be at least 3.2 million years old, in 1974 was a landmark in the search for the origins of humanity.


RECOMMENDED READING
Some Worry Public Display Could Harm Lucy's Bones

Thursday, March 03, 2005

Turkey Will Contribute To The Economic Development Of Ethiopia

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has stated that Turkey will strongly contribute to the economic development of Ethiopia in the upcoming months and years...

Erdogan added that both Turks and Ethiopians wish to cooperate in the areas of textiles, industrial products, defense matters and energy related sectors. ''Turkey will send engineers to Ethiopia to assist Ethiopians in building dams across the country. As water is becoming more and more important in international relations, we want to help our Ethiopian friends utilize their precious water resources effectively and in a planned way,'' said Erdogan.

RECOMMENDED READING

The Destruction of the Blue Niles Falls

Celebration
The Ethiopian government said on Monday it has cleared 16 million square meters of land from landmines since 2002....

March 1 is celebrated internationally since the ratification in 1997 of the Landmine Ban Treaty in Ottawa, Canada. Ethiopia has ratified the Landmine Ban Treaty in November 2004.

Auctions...
Ethiopia has turned to the Internet to help sell its finest beans, the agriculture ministry said on Tuesday. In the first move of its kind in the country, the ministry is to start auctioning nine of its best quality coffee brands to help boost sales and reach a wider audience, officials added.

Upcoming Election
As democratic currents flow through the nearby Middle East, Ethiopia is trying to overcome its own hurdles as a nascent democracy.

A major Human Rights Watch report issued in January charged the Ethiopian government with continuing to "deny many of its citizens' basic human rights."

According to Human Rights Watch, "The continuous intolerance of dissent on the part of many officials raises serious concerns as to whether opposition candidates will be able to contest [the May 15] poll in an environment free of fear."