Sunday, October 29, 2006

Potent Plant Example of Why Free Science Access Will Aid African Researchers

Hareg Tadesse pictured viewing a remarkable 230-year-old preserved plant

Royal Society of Chemistry -- PhD chemist, Hareg Tadesse pictured viewing a remarkable 230-year-old preserved plant produced by the Linnaean Society after discussions with the Royal Society of Chemistry, its neighbours at Burlington House in London.

Ethiopian Hareg was in London to help launch the RSC Archives for Africa initiative by which scientists in developing countries will have free access to RSC journal archives.

During PR discussions with the RSC Hareg talked about an Ethiopian plant called Brucea antdysenterica named after an 18th century British explorer, James Bruce, whose life was saved when natives in Ethiopia fed him the powdered plant in camel's milk as he lay dying of dysentery.

Bruce survived to bring the plant's seeds to London and within a few years a stem of one plant was given to the Linnaean Society where it has remained since. When the RSC sought the plant in the UK it tried a number of organisations before the Linnaean Society found the original in its records and it was painstakingly presented with cotton glove care and a constant guard while Press pictures were taken by the national Press Association.

Hareg believes that the plant may also have anti-cancer properties which she is to explore when she returns to East Africa from England where she has been studying at the University of Nottingham. Hareg explains:

"The root barks of the tree known locally ‘Yedega Abalo’ were used by people living in northern Ethiopia for many centuries for treating dysentery. The British Explorer James Bruce, who stayed in Ethiopia from 1769 to 1771, was attacked by dysentery when he was about to leave Ethiopia. When observing that he would not be able to make it to Europe travelling through the hot landmass of Sudan and Egypt, the local people informed him to take a local drug known as Yedega Abalo. The root barks of this plant were cleaned, dried in the sun, and ground into powder. Bruce was then made to take two spoonfuls of the powder with camel’s milk. After the sixth or seventh day Bruce regained his health and was able to continue his journey. On his way back, he took some of the seeds of the plant which he delivered to the botanist Daniel Solander at the British Museum, who noting that it represented a taxon planted in several British gardens. The plant was later named Brucea antidysenterica in honour of James Bruce."

Later, at the House of Commons to help launch the RSC free archives scheme she told guests:

"It is a wonderful day for African Chemistry. The visa officer in the British Embassy of Addis Ababa told me that at the moment I am the only Chemistry research student from Ethiopia in the UK.

"I am studying in Nottingham for one year as part of my Ethiopian Ph.D. And I have been asked to explain how the archives will be useful to students like me in Ethiopia.

"So I am going to tell you about the project that I did last year in Addis. I was studying the extract from a plant called with a complicated name, Brucea antidysenterica. The plant has a very special connection with the UK, particularly with Scotland.

"It was first described by the Scottish Explorer, James Bruce, who went to Ethiopia in the middle of 18th century. Just before his return to Britain, he got terrible dysentery. Happily he was cured completely by a herbal extract from this plant. He was so impressed that he took some of the seeds back home. And the plant was named in his honour, Brucea.

"And several of the compounds have shown medicinal activity and some of them are possibly anti-cancer.

"I was the first student to study the extract in Ethiopia where the plant grows. I was doing this so that Africa can benefit from the plant’s exploitation.

"But in order to do my work, I needed to know the results from previous research. And it was really hard in Addis for me to get hold of the right papers. This is where the archives are going to be so useful. Now students like me in Addis can get the RSC Archives straight away, when we need them.

"On behalf of all my fellow students in Ethiopia, I would like to congratulate the RSC on such a gesture. However the RSC is only one publisher of Chemistry Journals. And some of my key papers were not from the RSC. Therefore, I would like to call on all publishers of Chemistry Journals to follow the lead of the RSC to support young Chemists like me with their archives so that we can bring the benefits of Chemistry to our great continent."

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Saturday, October 28, 2006

Is Africa the World's Septic Tank?

Sunday Tribune -- We talk of globalisation, of the global village, but here in Africa, we are under the impression of being that village's septic tank," says Senegalese ecologist Haidar al-Ali in Dakar.

Pollution scandals, ranging from the discharge of toxic waste in Ivory Coast to radioactive tanks in Somalia, show that Africa's poverty, corruption and non-existent or malfunctioning democracies make it the world's preferred dumping ground.

According to the French environment protection group, Robin des Bois, the waste sent to Africa - such as old tyres, cars and broken computers containing toxic parts - is "very difficult, if not impossible, to recycle".

"To Asia goes everything that can be salvaged and that is of high added value, such as copper wire and metal scraps," the group's director, Charlotte Nithart, said.

In Abidjan, Ivory Coast's economic capital, seven people died, 24 were hospitalised and there were 37 000 calls for medical help after an Ivorian firm, Tommy, dumped toxic waste at 11 public sites across the city in August.

The company had been hired to properly dispose of 500 tons of a highly toxic mixture of oil residue and caustic soda used to rinse out a Greek-owned ship's tanks. In the last days of 2004, the tsunami started by an earthquake in Asia hit the coast of Somalia, where it damaged toxic water containers on the northern coast.

Health problems were reported by the local population including "acute respiratory infections, dry heavy coughing and mouth bleeding, abdominal haemorrhages, unusual skin chemical reactions, and sudden death after inhaling toxic materials," according to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

Starting from the early 1980s and continuing into the civil war, the hazardous waste dumped along Somalia's coast includes radioactive uranium waste, lead, cadmium, mercury, industrial, hospital, chemical, leather treatment and other toxic waste, UNEP wrote in a country report.

In 1996, the European Parliament officially asked the governments of the United Kingdom, Italy and Spain to repatriate toxic waste exported to South Africa by Thor Chemicals.

The parliament noted that hundreds of tons of toxic mercury waste had caused damage to the environment and severe health problems among locals.

In the West African nation of Cameroon, about 5 600 litres of chlorine were dumped last year in a village near Douala, the economic capital. Authorities tried to dilute the chlorine at sea, but the operation turned disastrous when the mixture exploded, killing a soldier and injuring about 10 people.

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BAE Goes Big on 'Green' Weapons

BBC News -- Reduced-lead bullets and recyclable explosives are among the developments being put forward by arms manufacturer British Aerospace (BAE) as part of a major investment in ecologically-sound weaponry.

The company, one of the world's biggest arms-makers, says it has been making investments in creating products that reduce the collateral damage of warfare.

"We're looking across a range of all the platforms and areas we produce, and trying to improve all the mechanisms," Deborah Allen, director of corporate responsibility for the company, told BBC World Service's Culture Shock programme.

"Everything from looking at making a fighter jet more fuel-efficient and looking at the materials that munitions are made of and what their impact on the environment would be."

Bang-free bomb

BAE stress that the point of these developments is to make sure that they minimise the wider impact of the weapon's use.

In some cases, the weapons have been changed to reduce collateral damage and to make sure they are as accurate as possible.

In others, the environment has been the key factor. The idea behind the lead-free bullets, for example, is that if they get lodged in the environment, they "do not cause any additional harm".

Ms Allen said that this is partly a response to people becoming more environmentally aware.

"No company, regardless of what they make, can now just make a product, bung it out there, and then forget about it," she said.

"We all have a duty of care to ensure that from cradle to grave products are being used appropriately and do not do lasting harm."

Another of BAE's ideas is what has been described as a "bang-free bomb".

In fact, although the explosion is quieter, the bomb has been re-engineered so the risk to the user of exposure to the bomb's fumes is reduced.

"This is to ensure they are safe to use, that they only go off when they are supposed to go off, and that they do the minimum of collateral damage," said Ms Allen.

"What we have to do is ensure that the person deploying the bomb is not going to be put at extra risk for using it.

"These things are going to be used, and that, unfortunately, is an aspect of the modern world. We just have to make sure that our customer is safe using these things."

Contradictory

Future trends analyst Sarah Bentley told Culture Shock that she thought the changes to the weapons were a "very good thing."

BAE are developing landmines which turn into manure over time
"Unfortunately, as much as we hate the idea of war, it is a reality of life and it does happen," she said.

"I think it's only going to be beneficial if, for example, explosives have a limited shelf life, which does away with the problem of landmines exploding anything up to 20 years after the initial deployment has taken place."

For example, she cited explosives that eventually turn into manure, which essentially "regenerate the environment that they had initially destroyed."

"It is very ironic and very contradictory, but I do think, surely, if all the weapons were made in this manner it would be a good thing."

Smithsonian Refuses To Exhibit Ethiopia's Fragile 'Lucy' Fossil

Washington Post -- Plans for a six-year U.S. tour by "Lucy," one of humanity's earliest known ancestors, have hit a major snag.

Earlier this week the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of Ethiopia and the Houston Museum of Natural Science announced an agreement to include Lucy in a tour of several hundred Ethiopian relics. But at least two major U.S. museums now say the bones should not be moved and they don't want to show them.

Rick Potts, the director of the Smithsonian's Human Origins Program and an influential paleoanthropologist, said he and many other scientists agree that Lucy is too fragile to travel. He said the Ethiopian artifacts would not come to the Smithsonian.

The International Association for the Study of Human Paleontology, a group affiliated with UNESCO, passed a resolution in 1998 saying such fossils shouldn't be moved outside the country of origin. The resolution, unanimously approved by representatives of 20 countries, including Ethiopia and the United States, said replicas should be used for public display.

Potts, who has led major excavations in East Africa for more than 25 years, said fossils should be moved from their vaults "only under the most compelling scientific reasons." (He keeps a cast of Lucy in his laboratory at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History.)

A spokesman for the American Museum of Natural History in New York also said that museum would not accept the 3.2-million-year-old fossilized remains.

Neil Shubin, provost of the Field Museum in Chicago, said the museum's officials hadn't discussed the possibility of exhibiting Lucy on the planned tour. "This is a hot potato because there are a lot of issues institutions have to confront. These are rare fossils, very fragile, and they can be damaged or lost," he said. Shubin said the scientific group's aversion to Lucy being moved "would be front and center" in the museum's discussions.

Potts said he also objected to the use of the fossil as a tourist attraction. "The value of these things to the scientific community comes first," said Potts.

Joel Bartsch, president of the Houston Museum of Natural Science, said there are no plans to cancel the tour. The museum is paying most of the costs and expects other museums will want to display the artifacts. The agreement calls for 11 venues, including Houston.

"I am quite confident all the slots will be filled," Bartsch said. "I respect the opinions of the scientists, but museums travel irreplaceable, rare objects every day."

He said his museum has shown the Dead Sea Scrolls, treasures from the Vatican and other fragile objects with no problems.

Details of the tour, which will start in Houston next September, are not final.

About 40 percent of a female skeleton was discovered near Hadar, Ethiopia, in 1974 by Donald Johanson and Tom Gray. Lucy stood roughly 3 feet 6 inches tall and weighed about 62 pounds. The bones are kept in a vault in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. The fossil's name comes from the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," which was playing during the party celebrating the discovery.


The 3.2-million-year-old fossil shouldn't travel, scientists say.
The 3.2-million-year-old fossil shouldn't travel, scientists say.
Photo Credit: Tom Mchugh -- Photo Researchers Inc.

Friday, October 27, 2006

How Microbrew Can Save the World


Farmers inside Tej House drinking Tej
Photo Courtesy: Fiona in Ethiopia's photostream


Infoshop News -- The world's cup runneth over with living beer traditions. But this vast repository of cultural brewing capital is under attack by global corporations. The top five brewing companies, all of which are American- or European-owned, control 41 percent of the world market. Perversely, economists and politicians calculate the conquest by industrial breweries as economic growth while the value of small-scale traditional brewing goes uncounted. Much will be lost if this global "beerodiversity" is lost to the forces of corporate-led homogenization.

The globalization of beer not only destroys the social, spiritual, and health-related benefits of small-scale home beer production. It also undercuts the vital role that home brewing plays in sustainable development throughout the world. For 10,000 years, brewing has been conducted at home, primarily by women, who were entrusted with safeguarding traditions that strengthen social bonds and build community identity. As an important component of diet, beer was distributed by female household heads according to the values of the community, which moderated consumption to socially acceptable levels. As an inherently small-scale and local endeavor, brewing also has had a low impact on environmental resources, relying on renewable energy sources and requiring little or no packaging or shipping.

African Traditions

Despite the seemingly inexorable march of the global corporate beer industry, many African brewing traditions persist in the hands of rural women who brew at home. Throughout Africa, most brewing and drinking still occurs in the home, among family, and within the boundaries of community standards. Four times more homebrew than commercial-industrial brews is sold in Africa, which doesn't even include the great volumes of homebrewed beer consumed outside the cash economy. Women across sub-Saharan Africa use native grains like sorghum, millet, and teff, to brew drinks like rammoora, farsi, changaa, tella, and countless other uniquely African beer styles, often using homegrown and hand-malted brewing grains and handpicked herbs and spices.

This brewing provides a degree of economic empowerment to millions of African women. A study conducted in Uganda and Kenya found that 80 percent of the women included in the survey brewed beer, and about half of them had brewed beer for sale at some point in their lives. According to the survey, very few men brewed, and virtually none of them ever brewed beer for sale. Yet, men were found to account for a majority of the consumption. In this way, home-brewing beer accords women a degree of social and economic influence, helping to maintain a peaceful balance of power between the genders, providing women with a source of income and respect within the household.

Unfortunately, brewing traditions like these mostly go unnoticed and undervalued by scholars, economists, and policymakers. The little attention traditional drinks do attract tends to be negative. The development community typically regards traditional drinks as distasteful novelties at best and as destructive distractions at worst. Aid workers in Kenya, for example, have called for the prosecution of women who brew changaa, for reasons of public health and sanitation. Meanwhile, Kenya's main industrial brewing company has become part-owned by Diageo, the world's largest beer, wine, and spirits company, and SABMiller, the world's third largest brewing concern.

Africans, especially men, are fleeing the countryside in large numbers, seeking opportunity in cities. Those who find small success in the cash economy reach for a gleaming bottle of industrial beer as a low-cost symbol of their participation in the modern economy. Many more, though, find grinding poverty in Africa's megalopolises. Even the relatively inexpensive bottle of lager is out of reach for the many who resort to cheaper, highly potent modern versions of traditional drinks in desperate attempts to escape urban misery. Scenes of pre-Prohibition America and gin-soaked 18 th -century London are today being replayed in urbanizing Africa. Hard drinking is on the increase, while community and family disintegrate under the pressures of globalization.

Such scenes are found around the developing world. In South America, chicha, a traditional corn-based beer brewed by women, has become relatively scarce as industrial beers produced by global brewing companies fill the market created by the same urbanizing and modernization pressures felt in Africa. Traditional rice beers in Asia are only hanging on as western-owned brewing corporations move into the market. China in particular is at risk of losing its brewing traditions as foreign companies such as InBev buy up local breweries, temporarily making industrial beers cheaper and more attractive than traditional beers.

Regulations are necessary to prevent the predatory practices of corporate brewers and to preserve the role that indigenous brews play in sustainable development. Indeed, there is a long and noble tradition of just such regulatory practices that stretches back into the very origins of human society.

Effervescent Growth

The Sumerians, circa 4,000 BCE, established the world's first urban trading society by growing surpluses of barley and emmer wheat, which they fermented into copious supplies of beer for their own consumption as well as for trade with neighbors. Sumerians, and their successors the Babylonians, adopted policies to promote and regulate the beer trade, such as the Code of Hammurabi, which dealt specifically with matters regarding beer (and the agriculture that made it possible), fixing a fair price per unit, and setting daily rations for workers, civil servants, and religious ministers. It was a recipe for success. Sumer and Babylonia thrived for over three millennia.

Egypt followed suit, constructing a powerful civilization fueled largely by promoting the growth of brewing and trading beer. The pyramids were essentially vast beer storerooms, symbolizing Egypt's power over its neighbors, with whom they conducted large-scale trade in grains and beer. Brewing, and its regulation, eventually spread north into Europe where it became progressively more controlled and regulated by church and state.

In 1516, the city of Ingolstadt issued the Reinheitsgebot, or purity law, governing the production and sale of beer in the Duchy of Bavaria. The law effectively excluded foreign and small-scale domestic brewers by banning the ingredients customarily used in their beers. This law was finally repealed as the result of a 1987 European Court ruling, by which time it had become the world's longest-standing food regulation. During the intervening half millennium, Germany became the world's premier beer-producing country, in part because it had protected domestic brewers from foreign competitors.

Beer was similarly important to America's success. The Pilgrims, who quickly adapted to locally available brewing ingredients, eventually became heavily dependent on British beer imports because their population grew faster than their ability to produce adequate volumes of beer. This colonial economic dependence became a key lever in the war for independence. George Washington himself devised strategies for the brewing industry to help loose the yolk of Britain's economic enslavement.

Washington, whose penchant for English-brewed porter beer is well-documented, made the ultimate patriotic sacrifice when he supported the non-consumption agreement, a bill drafted by fellow patriot Samuel Adams (whose name now graces the labels of America's leading craft beer). The agreement encouraged the colonial population to abstain from imported goods such as ale and encouraged the consumption of American-brewed beer.

After the Revolution, brewers carried banners in victory parades proclaiming, "Home Brew'd Is Best." Washington immediately set about crafting policies to stimulate local brewing, exclaiming: "We have already been too long subject to British Prejudices. I use no porter or cheese in my family, but that which is made in America ..." In 1789, James Madison designed one of the first bills passed by the new House of Representatives to keep taxes low on beer production in order to trigger local brewing. Less than a hundred years later, in 1873, America could boast 4,131 commercial breweries, plus countless private home breweries.

The Return of T'ej

While both Europe and the United States currently support thousands of microbrews, their domestically spawned global beer corporations are destroying those same traditions in other countries by dumping low-cost product on the market and driving out local competitors. Fortunately, local and national brewers in the Third World are fighting back.

Consider the case of Ethiopian t'ej and tella. T'ej, Ethiopia's national drink, mixes fermented honey with a variety of herbs and sometimes fruits. Historically, t'ej drinking was reserved exclusively for royalty, but eventually it became a drink enjoyed by all on special occasions. Female household heads brewed t'ej for weddings, naming ceremonies, religious holidays, and other celebrations. Tella is for common drinking, brewed from locally grown grains and flavored with an indigenous plant called gesho, which has been shown to have medicinal benefits.

The brewing of tella is still widespread, especially in rural homes, where women earn a modest income from brewing as an occasional trade. In the city though, industrial beers have taken root. Although all five of the country's industrial breweries have been government-owned, the French brewing conglomerate BGI recently bought St. George Brewery in Addis Ababa. Although beer judges rate its product as by far the worst of Ethiopia's industrial beers, it has nonetheless quickly come to dominate the market due to inflated advertising budgets and artificially low prices.

Partly as a result of this marketing, many urban Ethiopians have come to regard tella as hopelessly provincial. Urbanites differentiate themselves from their poor rural countrymen by choosing the bland foreign-owned, factory-made beer over the homemade stuff. The fate of t'ej has been even worse. T'ej is stronger than industrial beer and much cheaper than imported spirits, so it has slowly become the drink of choice for impoverished men--the same refugees from the country-side who seek economic opportunity in the city, but instead find unemployment, loneliness, and despair. Nowadays, t'ej is more often associated with excessive drinking sessions in debauched t'ej halls than with royal ceremony. Having lost much of its dignified luster, the quality of t'ej has also plummeted. Processed sugar often replaces honey as the source of fermentation, and chemical food colorings are used to approximate the yellow glow that comes when real honey is used.

This degradation of t'ej inspired Ato Dereje, a recently returned Ethiopian expatriate, to start a company called Tizeta T'ej. Dereje believes that it is possible for t'ej to retain what's left of its respectability and even to regain an esteemed place within Ethiopian culture. His approach is to maintain strict standards of 100 percent honey formulations and to give the beverage an attractive wine-like packaging, with labels indicating alcoholic strength so that customers can choose lower alcohol versions. Dereje holds that t'ej must exude a sophisticated image, appealing to mature customers that can still recall the days when the drink held a place of honor at high occasions.

His line of Tizeta T'ej is now marketed through grocery stores and restaurants around Addis Ababa, marking the first real attempt to bring t'ej into a modern economy where it can compete against expensive imported wines and liquors, while promoting a uniquely Ethiopian drinking custom. His efforts thus far have proven successful, and he is now looking forward to the day when, just like bottles of merlot, his t'ej is exported around the world to connoisseurs of excellent, regionally distinctive drinks. As a locally-owned business using locally-produced ingredients for a traditional drink, Tizeta T'ej serves as a model of how indigenous brewing traditions can serve as both cultural and economic capital.

Dereje's early success can be attributed at least in part to the fact that Ethiopia has been late to adopt policies that open its markets to foreign imports, ownership, and investments. Other African countries, which succumbed to the pressure of multilateral financing institutions and neoliberal trade policies, have not fared as well. Burkina Faso, where the locally brewed sorghum beer, rammoora, is forced to compete against a corporate monopoly created when the country's only industrial brewery was virtually given away to the same French company that now has a foothold in Ethiopia's brewing sector. Industrial beer can now be found in any corner shop in Ouagadougou, while rammoora brewers, lacking an infrastructure of support, are literally relegated to back alleys.

Brewing Solutions

As Herman Daly wrote in the September 2006 issue of Orion magazine, "Globalization serves not community among nations, but corporate individualism on a global scale." So how might we protect local, traditional beers from "globeerization?" Daly contends we need "a new protectionism that protects us not from efficient competitors but from destructive, standards-lowering competition." Emerging economies should utilize tariffs to counter-balance unfair advantages gained by countries that externalize social and environmental costs and rely on heavily subsidized agriculture and artificially low fossil-fuel energy costs.

Government-backed export investment and foreign credit, and huge agricultural subsidies, continue to help American and European multinational brewers enter and dominate developing markets. Industrial products compete for market share against traditional, indigenous beers that, when gone, will have taken important cultural capital with them. Domestic policies that favor small-scale, local production, just like the ones that now support the American craft-brewing renaissance, must be applied to foreign policy as well. Policies that burden small brewers with regulations must be reduced or removed, while tax incentives and public giveaways to industrial brewers are halted. Proven strategies can be used for promoting small business, such as low-interest loans and other community investments tools. Small-scale technology and structures must be prioritized in order to benefit the greatest number of domestic brewers, while subsidies favoring large-scale production and distribution should be eliminated.

What we stand to lose is more than just a tantalizing array of exotic beers. As is usually the case, women stand to suffer the most, since they will lose control over drinking when industrial products owned by foreign corporations replace their homebrews. If traditional drinks disappear around the world, the societies that produce them will lose a part of their identity as well as the intellectual property that can serve as a wellspring for future economic growth.

Chris O'Brien combines two favorite things: drinking beer and saving the world. He is author of the new book Fermenting Revolution: How to Drink Beer and Save the World, and serves as director of the Responsible Purchasing Network at the Center for a New American Dream.

China Defends its Expansion into Africa

FT.com -- China has rejected criticism it is ignoring environmental and anti-corruption standards in its courtship of Africa ahead of an unprecedented summit in Beijing involving more than 40 leaders from the continent.

China said Thursday that all 48 African countries invited to the two-day summit next week would send representatives, with most confirming their heads of state would attend.

The five remaining nations in the 53-strong African Union which recognise Taipei ahead of Beijing have also been invited to send observers.

The summit will attempt to give some political ballast to a relationship that has developed rapidly over the past five years, driven by China’s need for raw materials, especially oil, from the resource-rich continent.

But China’s expansion in Africa has also drawn criticism for overlooking human rights abuses in countries such as Sudan and declining to adopt a lending code followed by many global banks on social and environmental standards.

Wei Jianguo, a vice-minister for commerce, defended China’s engagement with Africa, saying its soft loans, infrastructure projects and commercial investments were “like sending firewood in the snow”.

“Chinese investments have greatly benefited the local people and have been popular among them,” said Mr Wei. “And compared to western products, Chinese products enjoy a better price-to-performance ratio and better meet the needs of consumers.”

China had invested about $6.27bn in Africa by the end of last year, about 10 per cent of all overseas investment. It has also financed ports, railways and other infrastructure projects.

The largest impact has been in two-way trade, which jumped from about $10bn in 2000 to an expected $50bn this year. The trade balance is slightly in African’s favour.

Angola, which has overtaken Saudi Arabia as China’s single largest oil supplier, and South Africa, the two biggest bilateral trading partners, make up for about a third of the $50bn.

The summit is expected to issue a broad declaration of amity between China and the continent, and also provide a forum for announcements about tariff reductions, aid, training programmes and debt forgiveness.

There will also be a large China-sponsored trade fair, flanked by a second “entrepreneurs’ summit” between African and Chinese business men and women.

However, African officials said the sheer size of the event will make it difficult for anything of detail or substance to be discussed.

“I don’t think you can get much engagement when everything has been so scripted in advance,” said a Beijing-based ambassador from an African country.

Aside from speeches from Hu Jintao, China’s president, and the leaders of Ethiopia, which is the co-host, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the chair of the African Union, other leaders get just five minutes speaking time.

Zhai Jun, an assistant foreign minister, indicated Chinese leaders would be meeting separately with Omar Hassan al-Bashir, the Sudanese president, when he is in Beijing.

Mr Zhai said China supported better protection for human rights in Sudan but was using its “own channels’ to try to bring parties to the table on the issue of Darfur.

China agreed that the United Nation should have a more “active role” in the issue but would not back any initiatives which went against its bedrock diplomatic principle of “non-interference” in the affairs of other countries.

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Ethiopia: City Land Deals Require Environmental Assessment

allAfrica.com -- The Lease Board of the Addis Abeba Caretaker Administration, chaired by Berhane Deressa, decided to impose an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) on investment projects that requested land from the city administration last month.

The Board requested that the Addis Abeba Investment Authority and the Land Development and Administration Authority implement the decision beginning October 11, 2006.

The decision came with the Parliament proclamation number 300/2002, which specifies that each project going into implementation has to go through an Assessment.

The idea behind the proclamation and policy is to avoid worsening the environmental standard of Addis Abeba. The rivers within the city, for example, are all polluted from the waste which comes from different factory, home and hospital wastage that cannot be used for any productive purpose.

"The rivers in Addis Abeba do not have oxygen in them," said an environmentalist. "Especially the ones polluted by the industrial waste, like the small and big Akaki rivers. There is no life in them."

According to the Administration's Environmental Protection Authority (EPA), the pollution has affected these rivers as projects who take up land did not have an Assessment included in the initial stage of the land lease requests and there is no controlling mechanism in place after the project enters production.

According to information obtained from the Authority, the Assessment is a crucial one as, if the situation goes as it is presently, the pollution will not only be in the water but felt in the air and in daily life overall.

Accordingly, developers who are planning to open factories which will have waste in some form will have to get Assessments for their projects from the Environmental Protection Authority.

Hailu Worku (PhD), general manager of EPA, told Fortune that the Authority is expanding the Assessment department. "We asked the city administration to add three more experts to facilitate the work. However, we are capable of doing the evaluation work with the existing human resource we have now."

With the new decision, the Assessments will gather information as soon as requests for land are received. The Assessments will help keep track of what type of land they are taking and where their factory will be located.

Since August 2006, the new Lease Board has started to make decisions and issue directives after a long period of transition from the previous administration's Lease Board.


The Little Akaki river loaded with suspended particles, solid wastes, toxic industrial and domestic effluents. More details can be found here.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Starbucks Denies Getting Heavy Over Ethiopian Coffee


Picture Courtesy: NOVO Coffee

AFP -- US coffee giant Starbucks said that attempts by Ethiopia to trademark three coffee bean types would be bad economics and bad for Ethiopian farmers.

Starbucks said it had written to the Ethiopian government to seek cooperation on giving geographic designations to the beans.

But it denied having sought to block the trademark application with the US authorities, after British charity Oxfam accused Starbucks of undermining the prospect of substantial new income for Ethiopian coffee growers.

"Starbucks has never filed an opposition to the Ethiopian government's trademark application, nor claimed ownership to any regional names used to describe the origin of our coffees," the chain said in a statement.

But it added: "According to the National Coffee Association of America ... the trademark application is not based upon sound economic advice (and) the proposal as it stands would hurt Ethiopian coffee farmers economically."

Starbucks, which extols its ethical business practices including fair trade with its suppliers in the developing world, has been thrown on the defensive by Oxfam allegations that it had tried to block the trademark bid.

Ethiopia has applied to trademark its most famous coffee names, Sidamo, Harar and Yirgacheffe, enabling it to capture more value from trade, control their use and allow farmers to receive a greater share of the retail price.

Oxfam accused Starbucks of blocking the applications for Sidamo and Harar with the US Patent and Trademark Office by asking the National Coffee Association, which represents US coffee roasters, to oppose approval.

The British charity alleged that opposition by the US coffee giant could deny Ethiopian producers an estimated 47 million pounds (70 million euros, 88.5 million dollars) a year.

Starbucks, however, said it "supports the development of robust geographic certification programs" to put coffee beans from Ethiopia and elsewhere on a par with Bordeaux wine and Florida oranges.

"These systems are far more effective than registering trademarks for geographically descriptive terms, which is actually contrary to general trademark law and custom," it said.

Starbucks added that it was "committed to paying premium prices for all our coffee". In the fiscal year ended last month, it said, it paid an average of 1.28 dollars per pound of coffee, 23 percent above the average New York price.

"Our approach to coffee purchasing, investment in social development projects and microfinance initiatives in coffee growing regions, has been recognized for its leadership within the industry."

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Saturday, October 21, 2006

Africa: US Arms Sales Increase

Photo

Soldiers of the Ethiopian army in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in 2005. Somalia's powerful Islamist movement declared "holy war" against neighboring Ethiopia after a Muslim-held town near the seat of the weak government fell to Ethiopian and Somali troops. (AFP/File/Marco Longari)

The Conservative Voice -- The United States has dramatically increased its involvement and arms sales to the Horn of Africa and East Africa in the last three years. In addition, the United States will soon consolidate it focus on Sub-Sahara Africa by unifying the military command structure.

US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has given initial approval to create a unified Africa Military Command. This consolidates the current split command structure of the US European Command controlling most of Africa, and the Central Command directing US military activities in Egypt, Sudan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya into a single command.

Direct US arms sales to East Africa and the Horn of Africa countries—Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda Uganda and Zambia--have increased from under one million dollars in 2003 to over $25 million in 2006. Djibouti leads the list with nearly $20 million in direct arms purchases in 2005 and 2006.

However, Ethiopia also shows a dramatic increase of arms purchases. In 2006, an estimated eight million dollars of weapons will be directly sold and with another five million dollars estimated in 2007. This is an increase from only $250,000 in 2005 and $750,000 in 2003.

Weapons sales by authorized private weapon companies, like the recently accused Select Armor, have also soared. Recently released US Defense Department figures show that private arms sales will hit an all time high of an estimated $9.5 million in 2007, which is down from a 2005 high of nearly $15 million. Uganda leads this list with nearly nine million dollars in purchases from US authorized private arms dealers, and Djibouti once again hits near the top of the list with nearly six million dollars in purchases in 2005, 2006 and an estimated 2007.

Uganda’s purchase of weapons through private companies like Select Armor, may be significant in light of a recent article by Africa Confidential that claimed US and Kampala-based Select Armor was being used to funnel weapons to Somalia’s government in their fight against the Islamic Courts Union. According to the reports, Select Armor promised to provide end user certificates as part of their service, which if true, may violate the current UN arms embargo on Somalia.

Overall, direct US weapons sales increased from $39.2 million in 2005 to nearly $60 million in 2006. In both years, East Africa and the Horn accounted for nearly 40 percent of US weapons sales to Africa, and this demonstrates the US military’s strategic shift to the region.

The United States has also increased its Djibouti’s counter terrorism base. The Special Operations Combined Joint Task Force at Camp Lemonier has grown from 800 soldiers in 2003 to 1,800 today.

Access to strategic airfields and ports has also increased for the US military. Beyond Camp Lemonier in 2003, the US had an agreement with Kenya that allowed it access to the port of Mombasa and airfields at Embakasi and Nanyuki. Since then the US has extended its regional influence with “cooperative security locations” that provide basing structures for regional operations when needed.

Zambia and Uganda have joined Kenya in this unique arrangement. At Entebbe, the US has constructed two K-Span steel buildings to house troops and equipment. The so called “Lily Pad” arrangement will allow the US military to use the base when needed in times of conflict or as a staging area for a conflict within the region. They are bare bone facilities surrounding an airstrip with installed communications equipment and warehoused supplies. Many times these facilities are manned by local soldiers, which lowers the US footprint but still provides security.

Strategically, the US military has developed a regional operations plan that centers on Djibouti to support the Horn countries. It anchors the southern flank with bases in Kenya, Zambia and Uganda to the west.

The US strategy in East Africa and the Horn is strategically positioned in two areas. First, it can immediately assist Kenya if the fighting in Somalia spills over into Northern Kenya. For the past month, a steady stream of Somalia refuges have crossed into Kenya challenging the drought stricken region further and increasing tensions between Kenya and Somalia.

Second, like in Nigeria, it can be used to ensure an uninterrupted flow of oil from the newly discovered fields of Uganda and Kenya, and it opens the door to the construction of a well-protected oil pipeline carrying oil for the interior of Central Africa to the port of Mombasa. It also provides a strategically located airbase to support future military operations to the north in Sudan or to the west.

The expansion of the United States military influence in the Horn of Africa is counter balanced by a growing French presence in Chad and the Central African Republic. France has increased its troop numbers in both countries to fight a growing rebellion in the region. Recent reports describe a rapid French military build-up in Chad with the arrival of 600 French mercenaries, four attack helicopters, and 12 Brazilian-made tanks at the end of September.The Great Lakes Centre for Strategic Studies (GLCSS) believes the French and US military build-up may be part of a unified Sub-Saharan strategy. Both countries currently cooperate in Djibouti in a resource sharing arrangement. In the last two years, the United States has aided the French-backed Chad government in the fight against Algerian Salafist guerrillas operating in Chad. In 2004, the US flew a P3 Orion surveillance aircraft from a base in Southern Algeria over Northern Chad. The intelligence from those flights was fed to the Chadian forces fighting the Salafist group.

Although there are indications that US arms sales to Africa may be drastically reduced in 2007, this appears to be highly unlikely considering the increased fighting in Somalia and an unstable situation in Sudan. If the Sudan government is destabilized over the international confrontation in Darfur, the repercussions for the region, and Sudan, will be drastic and fuel an increased influx of weapons to the region.

William Church is director of the Great Lakes Centre for Strategic Studies, a London-based think tank with offices in Central and East Africa. You may contact William Church at wchurch@glcss.org. GLCSS trains African journalists, offers an on-site internship to foreign African studies students, and manages an exchange program with journalists from the United Kingdom, the United States and Europe.


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Friday, October 13, 2006

The Farce of the "Ethiopian Millennium"

Ethiomedia.com -- Just as the Woyane regime drumbeats its statistics to create a delusional and none existing economic leap in the country, I just read a World Economic Forum report which declares that Ethiopia has slid to the rank of 120th out of 125 countries in 2006 in Global Competitive Index, from the 116th that it stood at a year ago. The UNICEF also reports that another false promise of development, the so called Millennium Development Goal (MDG), is far off for Ethiopia to approach let alone achieve. I know these are top secrets in Ethiopia where the entire media is ordered to tell the people only the good news that, very soon, bread will be raining from the sky. Ethiopians are not allowed to know that the number of their absolute poor, defined by the World Bank as those earning les than a dollar a day, have nearly tripled since the EPRDF came to power fifteen years ago and the rank of the unemployed is continuously swelling to limits of explosion.

Yes, we Ethiopians love our unique heritages including the way we subdivide the solar cycle into thirteen months and often pride ourselves of this uniqueness. In many cases the brutal autocratic rulers that we have had to live under over these long years of our history have used every bit of our heritage to perpetuate their own myths and extend their repressive systems. Now it is the Woyane’s turn.

This celebration is planned to be a diversionary tactic and spread the delusion that everything in the country is going well. The TPLF/EPRDF is saying, “listen people of Ethiopia, ask not your freedoms and democratic rights, and complain not when we sometime mass-kill you and your children since we do that in order for the bread to rain from the sky, don’t demand the release of the innocent representatives you elected against us, forget them for you are, after all, poor people who need care takers like us determined to feed you like pigs. Read the statistics, oh! people of Ethiopia we have grown 10% ….That is the meaning of democracy and good governance and that is why we put your elected leaders in jail and killed some of you. Seek not human dignity people of Ethiopia, for that brings you in conflict with us and would lessen the amount of bread you are going to get, ….”. This is the theme of this sham celebration. Remember that sham call by Foreign Minister Syum Mesfin and the Meles government to celebrate the Award of Badame to Ethiopia by the International Arbitration Court? This is the same thing folks. This shameless people are asking us to forget their crimes and dance with them on the streets that are still blood stained from their massacres.

Obviously this planned festivity is meant to divert attention from the widespread human rights abuse and repression that have become routine in Ethiopia since the ill fated May 2005 election. The TPLF seems to have settled on running a police state now, because it appears that there is no other way it is going to survive this mass distaste and rejection. The festivity is obviously meant to help throw some anesthesia on the Ethiopian people into forgetting their serious grievances and anger at being led by a certified illegitimate government.

Already the countdown and the celebration of this Orwellian drama have begun and the government media are devoting a lot of time for it. The firecrackers and the champagne and scotch are ordered. A so called Secretariat of the Millennium Celebration is established and will be overseen by the Minister of Foreign Affairs. There is a council of 120 people to deliberate on the kind of celebration. Millions of dollars taken out of the mouths of hungry children are diverted to fund the drama. The former office of the USIS is now the headquarters of this sham celebration. A four man committee is set up to do the choreography. Some of these are well known empty headed blowhards who have demonstrated, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that they wear enough blinders to make them believe freedom, democracy and economic progress are flowing in Ethiopia like a mighty river. They have demonstrated that they believe the massacres of June and November 2005, the genocidal killings in Gambella and Awassa and elsewhere as well as the incarceration of thousands of innocent people and their elected leaders are fabrications in the minds of some confused Ethiopians in Diaspora. They believe people like the 93 year old Oromo prisoner in Kaliti, who suffers nearly a decade in prison without seeing a day in court accused of having a son that joined the OLF, is a fiction on Dr. Berhanu Nega’s book, “The dawn of Freedom”.

I also hear from insiders that the biggest stumbling block to the expected colorful celebration in Addis Ababa are the many symbols of poverty that swarm Addis Ababa, the rag wearing beggars and miserable poor street children that flood the streets. This serious problem has to be dealt with before this great day of delusion. God knows where they would take them, but if previous reports by the Ethiopian Human Rights Council that some street dwellers were thrown into hyena infested eucalyptus forests on the outskirts of Addis are any lead, the hyenas would have the best millennium celebration of all living creatures in Ethiopia next to the affluent TPLF/EPRDF officials, their cronies and some heartless individuals who would fool themselves into this celebration. The mass media, radio and television have started administering the anesthesia already.

I am not against marking or commemorating this day at all. But I see another way of marking it. It is fitting to mark the day by making it a day of reflection and introspect. A day where we examine what has gone wrong with us in the past. I would have liked to mark it with bringing peasants, intellectuals and all the bright people in our country into a discussion forum where we can rock our head and see our past and vow to do better in the future.

The millennium day may be an opportune time where we have to look at ourselves with sincerity and brutal honesty and ask ourselves many why questions. Why is this beautiful country condemned to live in misery when it is endowed with everything we need to live a descent life? What is wrong with us that we have more than 30% forest covered land a millennium ago and left with less than 1% of that today? Why are we at the bottom of every global measure of development and why do we keep being ruled by brutal dictators that are hardly different from the tribal barons that ruled Ethiopians hundreds of years ago? Why, in Gods name, have we turned our country into a virtual hellhole where every young person’s dream to flee out of it at their earliest convenience.

Serious and self-respecting Ethiopians should despise and boycott this farce. It is a humiliation to be a part of it. Let’s instead plan for a day of reflection and introspect, perhaps a day of prayer to ask God to help us leave a better country for our children than we currently have and dream a collective dream for something better. In my view this is the best and appropriate way to celebrate the millennium.

Fellow Ethiopians in Diaspora, cancel your planned trips to Ethiopia on September 7. Fellow Ethiopians inside Ethiopia, stay home and pray for your country and the coming generation on the millennium day and avoid being a party to this Orwellian farce. Do some personal work to commemorate the day. Don’t be a part of this sick joke. The Ethiopian Millennium to be marked in September 2007 has more of a metaphorical meaning than the farce the Ethiopian government is planning to make off of it.

What a coincidence that we trail most of the countries of the world by seven years into the celebration of the millennium and still also trail behind almost all of them in nearly every index of societal development. I have a friend who seriously asks if this has to do with our socioeconomic and political backwardness.

Just as the Woyane regime drumbeats its statistics to create a delusional and none existing economic leap in the country, I just read a World Economic Forum report which declares that Ethiopia has slid to the rank of 120th out of 125 countries in 2006 in Global Competitive Index, from the 116th that it stood at a year ago. The UNICEF also reports that another false promise of development, the so called Millennium Development Goal (MDG), is far off for Ethiopia to approach let alone achieve. I know these are top secrets in Ethiopia where the entire media is ordered to tell the people only the good news that, very soon, bread will be raining from the sky. Ethiopians are not allowed to know that the number of their absolute poor, defined by the World Bank as those earning les than a dollar a day, have nearly tripled since the EPRDF came to power fifteen years ago and the rank of the unemployed is continuously swelling to limits of explosion.

Yes, we Ethiopians love our unique heritages including the way we subdivide the solar cycle into thirteen months and often pride ourselves of this uniqueness. In many cases the brutal autocratic rulers that we have had to live under over these long years of our history have used every bit of our heritage to perpetuate their own myths and extend their repressive systems. Now it is the Woyane’s turn.

This celebration is planned to be a diversionary tactic and spread the delusion that everything in the country is going well. The TPLF/EPRDF is saying, “listen people of Ethiopia, ask not your freedoms and democratic rights, and complain not when we sometime mass-kill you and your children since we do that in order for the bread to rain from the sky, don’t demand the release of the innocent representatives you elected against us, forget them for you are, after all, poor people who need care takers like us determined to feed you like pigs. Read the statistics, oh! people of Ethiopia we have grown 10% ….That is the meaning of democracy and good governance and that is why we put your elected leaders in jail and killed some of you. Seek not human dignity people of Ethiopia, for that brings you in conflict with us and would lessen the amount of bread you are going to get, ….”. This is the theme of this sham celebration. Remember that sham call by Foreign Minister Syum Mesfin and the Meles government to celebrate the Award of Badame to Ethiopia by the International Arbitration Court? This is the same thing folks. This shameless people are asking us to forget their crimes and dance with them on the streets that are still blood stained from their massacres.

Obviously this planned festivity is meant to divert attention from the widespread human rights abuse and repression that have become routine in Ethiopia since the ill fated May 2005 election. The TPLF seems to have settled on running a police state now, because it appears that there is no other way it is going to survive this mass distaste and rejection. The festivity is obviously meant to help throw some anesthesia on the Ethiopian people into forgetting their serious grievances and anger at being led by a certified illegitimate government.

Already the countdown and the celebration of this Orwellian drama have begun and the government media are devoting a lot of time for it. The firecrackers and the champagne and scotch are ordered. A so called Secretariat of the Millennium Celebration is established and will be overseen by the Minister of Foreign Affairs. There is a council of 120 people to deliberate on the kind of celebration. Millions of dollars taken out of the mouths of hungry children are diverted to fund the drama. The former office of the USIS is now the headquarters of this sham celebration. A four man committee is set up to do the choreography. Some of these are well known empty headed blowhards who have demonstrated, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that they wear enough blinders to make them believe freedom, democracy and economic progress are flowing in Ethiopia like a mighty river. They have demonstrated that they believe the massacres of June and November 2005, the genocidal killings in Gambella and Awassa and elsewhere as well as the incarceration of thousands of innocent people and their elected leaders are fabrications in the minds of some confused Ethiopians in Diaspora. They believe people like the 93 year old Oromo prisoner in Kaliti, who suffers nearly a decade in prison without seeing a day in court accused of having a son that joined the OLF, is a fiction on Dr. Berhanu Nega’s book, “The dawn of Freedom”.

I also hear from insiders that the biggest stumbling block to the expected colorful celebration in Addis Ababa are the many symbols of poverty that swarm Addis Ababa, the rag wearing beggars and miserable poor street children that flood the streets. This serious problem has to be dealt with before this great day of delusion. God knows where they would take them, but if previous reports by the Ethiopian Human Rights Council that some street dwellers were thrown into hyena infested eucalyptus forests on the outskirts of Addis are any lead, the hyenas would have the best millennium celebration of all living creatures in Ethiopia next to the affluent TPLF/EPRDF officials, their cronies and some heartless individuals who would fool themselves into this celebration. The mass media, radio and television have started administering the anesthesia already.

I am not against marking or commemorating this day at all. But I see another way of marking it. It is fitting to mark the day by making it a day of reflection and introspect. A day where we examine what has gone wrong with us in the past. I would have liked to mark it with bringing peasants, intellectuals and all the bright people in our country into a discussion forum where we can rock our head and see our past and vow to do better in the future.

The millennium day may be an opportune time where we have to look at ourselves with sincerity and brutal honesty and ask ourselves many why questions. Why is this beautiful country condemned to live in misery when it is endowed with everything we need to live a descent life? What is wrong with us that we have more than 30% forest covered land a millennium ago and left with less than 1% of that today? Why are we at the bottom of every global measure of development and why do we keep being ruled by brutal dictators that are hardly different from the tribal barons that ruled Ethiopians hundreds of years ago? Why, in Gods name, have we turned our country into a virtual hellhole where every young person’s dream to flee out of it at their earliest convenience.

Serious and self-respecting Ethiopians should despise and boycott this farce. It is a humiliation to be a part of it. Let’s instead plan for a day of reflection and introspect, perhaps a day of prayer to ask God to help us leave a better country for our children than we currently have and dream a collective dream for something better. In my view this is the best and appropriate way to celebrate the millennium.

Fellow Ethiopians in Diaspora, cancel your planned trips to Ethiopia on September 7. Fellow Ethiopians inside Ethiopia, stay home and pray for your country and the coming generation on the millennium day and avoid being a party to this Orwellian farce. Do some personal work to commemorate the day. Don’t be a part of this sick joke.

In Defense of Development

Seed Magazine -- The destruction of the rainforests is often blamed on development—human activities such as logging, farming, and urban expansion. This destruction is often framed as an inevitable conflict over resources, pitting a human population's economic wealth against its natural wealth. But the equation of human prosperity with deforestation is too simple. Economic development is not the forests' worst enemy.

It's easy to see the real enemy when looking at the Caribbean island of Hispaniola, along the border that the Dominican Republic shares with Haiti. By any measure, the Dominican Republic is more developed than Haiti. Haitians live on just a quarter of their Dominican neighbors' average income. While the Dominican Republic has a stable government, Haiti has changed governments nearly once a year for the last two decades. But despite its higher consumption of electricity, greater rates of employment, and heavier industry, the Dominican Republic is the nation that has preserved its forests.

Haiti lost nearly a tenth of its tree cover during the 1990s, and the trees keep falling. Haiti gets about half of its energy from burning wood or charcoal, so those forests weren't cut for sale. The poor, rural population lacks the infrastructure for electricity or other fuels, which forces them to destroy their forests to cook their food. Deforestation leaves the soil loose. Because of those looser soils, mudslides after hurricanes cause more damage in Haiti than in the Dominican Republic. Haiti's environmental damage undermines its economic growth, keeping the nation unstable and poor.

The root of the deforestation problem is social and economic. Rather than creating a conflict over resources, economic growth has given the Dominican Republic the opportunity to protect its wild places and to plan its development around them. The Dominican Republic has national parks, and eco-tourists enjoy a wide range of wild areas and the native plants and animals they support. This is due in large part to development—as measured in roads built, high wages, and industrial production. The existence of a stable government encouraged this sort of long-term thinking and has made the ongoing protection of forests possible.

Around the world—in Africa, Asia, the Pacific, and the Americas—poverty and weak governments allow the destruction of wild places. Refugee crises, failed regimes, and raging wars leave natural spaces without reliable defenses. Refugees fleeing wars in Africa and elsewhere resettle in the only open places available, often in areas that were once designated as parks.

The solution to deforestation cannot simply be to demand that people stop cutting down trees. Too often, that is the only way people can survive at all, and no calculus can justify allowing them to starve in order to preserve a few acres of forest.

The solution, like the problem, is political and economic. Strong governments that see value in their nations' natural heritage can and do establish conservation systems that encourage citizens to take an active role in protecting, rather than abusing, wild spaces. People in industrialized nations can support these efforts by buying fair trade goods, allowing farmers to make a living without employing slash-and-burn techniques. In doing so, we can encourage stability and the move towards conservation that comes with it.

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Related Post: Extensive Flooding in Ethiopia

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Oxfam: Ethiopia's indigeneous trees have been almost entirely depleted.
Check out Stephanie Linakis' photostream on Flickr.

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More info: The Environmental History of Africa

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Somali Islamists Declare 'Jihad' on Ethiopia

Ethiomedia via Reuters -- Somalia's powerful Islamists on Monday declared holy war against Ethiopia, which they accused of invading their country to help Somalia's government briefly seize a town controlled by pro-Islamist fighters.

Both sides confirmed the takeover of Buur Hakaba, the first military counterstrike by President Abdullahi Yusuf's interim government since the Islamists took Mogadishu in June and went on to seize much of Somalia's south.

"Starting from today, we have declared jihad against Ethiopia," Islamist leader Sheikh Sharif Ahmed told a news conference, while wearing combat fatigues and clutching an AK-47 assault rifle.

Ahmed, usually viewed as a more moderate voice among the Islamists, appeared angry as he addressed reporters.

"Heavily armed Ethiopian troops have invaded Somalia. They have captured Buur Hakaba. History shows that Somalis always win when they are attacked from outside," he said.

The Islamists and residents of Buur Hakaba, seen as a potential flash point because it had put the Islamists within 30 kilometers (20 miles) of the interim government's base in Baidoa, said Ethiopian troops accompanied government fighters who took over the town early Monday.

A government militia commander in Buur Hakaba denied that, and Addis Ababa has consistently said it has not sent any soldiers except for military advisers.

The Islamists, unaccustomed to losing since their spectacular rise, said the government move was the first salvo in a longer -- and long-expected -- conflict.

Sheikh Yusuf Mohamed Siad "Inda'ade," the Islamists' defense chief, told reporters Ethiopia had 35,000 troops inside Somalia. "This is a clear war. We are telling the Ethiopians to leave our country or be responsible for whatever happens," he said.

Ethiopian and Somali government officials were not immediately available for comment.

The takeover of Buur Hakaba appeared to be short-lived. Residents said the pro-Islamist militia had returned by midday after the government contingent left inexplicably.

"The government and Ethiopian troops who this morning captured the town have left. The local militias who had fled are back," resident Omar Jaware told Reuters by telephone.

The Islamists, keenly aware of Somali resistance to foreign -- especially Ethiopian -- interference often accuse the government of being a puppet of Ethiopia, the top military power in the Horn of Africa region.

Ethiopia says the Islamists are led by terrorists, and witnesses say its troops have crossed the border to support the government in recent weeks.

Western governments fear any incursion by Ethiopia, viewed by many Somalis as a Christian imperialist power, could give foreign jihadis a reason to flood Somalia as the newest battleground of Islam against the West.

The Islamist defense chief Inda'ade said it appeared the government intended to march further.

"It looks like they are not done and are planning to attack Kismayu, and other towns in the Lower Shabelle regions," he told Reuters earlier.

The warlord alliance the Islamists removed from Kismayu last month has also threatened to take back the strategic southern port, rocked by repeated protests against the new rulers.

The Islamists have all but dashed the aspirations of the Western-backed government to restore central rule to Somalia for the first time since the 1991 ouster of a dictator.

The Islamists say sharia law is the solution to Somalia's anarchy, but critics say they harbor al Qaeda-linked militants.

"Lesotho Promise" Sells for $12.36 Million

Model displays rare 603 carat white diamond in Antwerp
A model displays a rare 603 carat white diamond that sold for $12.36 million during a news conference in Antwerp, Belgium Monday. The diamond will be cut up and sold for an expected $20 million. Francois Lenoir / Reuters

Professional Jeweler -- The Lesotho Promise, the largest uncut diamond excavated this century and the 15th largest diamond ever excavated on Earth, changed hands today in Antwerp for the amount US$12.36 million. The new owner of the stone, which weighs 603 carats and is about the size of a hand, is Safdico.

The diamond is notable for its color as well as its size: It is virtually clear in color and has been graded "D", the most exceptional color a diamond can be.

The African kingdom of Lesotho is famous for its diamond finds. The previous largest find dates back to 1967, when a 601-ct. diamond was found: the Lesotho Brown, so named because of its color.

The Lesotho Promise was found on August 22, 2006, in the Letseng mine, 30 percent of which is owned by the government. The mine was closed from 1982 to 2004 (De Beers closed the mine in the 1980s). It is no coincidence that the diamond was put onto the market on October 4, the day that the small kingdom of Lesotho celebrates its independence.

"We are proud that a diamond from Lesotho is making history for the second time," states Minister of Natural Rrsources Mamphono Khaketla. "That such a unique diamond was sold here proves ... that Antwerp is still the international diamond capital of the world," added Freddy J. Hanard, managing director of the HRD.

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Here's an economic background on the Kingdom of Lesotho:

GDP (2003): $1.43 billion.
Annual growth rate (2004): 3.4%.
Per capita GDP (2003): $550.
Average inflation rate (2003): 10%.
Natural resources: Water, agricultural and grazing land, some diamonds and other minerals. Lesotho is an exporter of excess labor.
Agriculture (2003 est.): 16.8% of GDP. Products--corn, wheat, sorghum, barley, peas, beans, asparagus, wool, mohair, livestock. Arable land--11%.
Industry (2003 est.): 43.1% of GDP. Types--apparel, food, beverages, handicrafts, construction, tourism.
Trade (2003): Exports--$450 million; clothing, furniture, footwear and wool. Partners--South Africa, United States, Botswana, Swaziland, Namibia, EU. Imports--$661 million; corn, clothing, building materials, vehicles, machinery, medicines, petroleum products. Partners--South Africa, Asia, EU.
Fiscal year: 1 April - 31 March.
Economic aid received (2002): $972.6 million. Primary donors--World Bank, IMF, EU, UN, U.K., Ireland, U.S.

Source: US State Department, October 2006

The Poverty Factor

Lesotho has been wracked by acute poverty, with a per capita GDP of 402 dollars. About 29% of the adult population is HIV positive and the country has more than 100 000 orphans, most of whom lost their parents to Aids. More on News24.com.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Blood Diamonds: Going Behind the Gem Industry


Diamonds: The billion dollar industry has worked hard to eliminate the trade in 'conflict diamonds' which have financed wars

Daily Mail -- When Lindsay Lohan flashed a $1 million diamond on her engagement finger last week at the Venice Film festival, she knew it would make headlines around the world.

After all, there is nothing quite like a huge sparkler to get tongues wagging as any celebrity worth their salt knows well.

"Call me old fashioned but nothing says ‘I love you’ more than a big rock," Catherine Zeta Jones openly declared after her engagement to Michael Douglas which resulted in a 2 million pound dazzler.

And, Jennifer Lopez – the undisputed queen of ‘bling’ has received a dazzling diamond ring from each of her three husbands, and currently sports a £3 million pink diamond from her latest one.

Controversy

But diamonds are no longer every girl’s best friends. In recent years have seen their image tarnished after they were linked to a range of controversial issues from arms funding in Africa, to slave child labour in India and significant environmental damage.

A new film – 'The Blood Diamond', set around the violent civil war in Sierra Leone and the role played by illicit diamond trading, is about to be released.

Starring Leonardo DiCaprio it shows how diamonds mined in Africa by outlaws were sold onto the Western market to finance the purchase of arms by machete wielding rebel groups who slaughtered innocent people including children.

Like the anti-fur, movement that sprung up in the eighties and was endorsed by celebrities from Naomi Campbell to Christy Turlington who publically shunned its use and triggered a drop in sales, an anti-diamond movement is in full swing.

Lily Cole, previously the face of the most famous diamond producer – DeBeers, openly refused to model their jewellery after discovering that the manufacturer had evicted indigenous Bushmen in Botswana in order to mine diamonds from their land.

David Bowie’s wife Iman, also previously the face of the company, followed suit while celebrities from Erin O' Connor to Julie Christie spoke out against buying ‘conflict diamonds’ – those sold onto Western countries by African warlords to fund civil wars in their own countries.

Charm offensive

Just this week saw the worldwide £50 billion diamond industry kick back with a huge charm offensive taking out full page advertisements in newspapers from London to New York to advertise the launch of a new website www.diamondfacts.org dedicated to countering bad publicity.

In the last five years the diamond industry has made a desperate bid to clean up its act. Campaigns against ‘conflict diamonds’ or ‘blood diamonds’ have put significant pressure on the leading diamond producers to make sure their diamonds come from ethical sources.

An industry backed UN embargo on diamonds from rebel-held areas in Angola and Sierra Leone has, according to DeBeers which controls 40 per cent of the worlds diamond market, halted the trade eliminating conflict diamonds from the market.

This certainly applies to respectable traders who have signed up to a government run diamond certification scheme – the Kimberly Process.

The Kimberley Process

A ring from such a supplier who complies will come with a sticker to certify that it meets the requirements.

But with no country of origin labelling system, consumers who buy diamonds from non-reputable sources on the internet or abroad cannot be 100 per cent sure if the diamond they have bought comes from a responsible source or if it was traded by corrupt government or rebel military forces to fund conflict.

But while the big producers have fought against being tarnished by their association with civil wars, recent investigations have uncovered a variety of environmental factors that are leading more and more women to question how ethical it is to have a diamond ring at all.

Recent reports have focused on the human rights abuses and environmental costs involved in diamond and gold mining.

This may all seem a long way off from the sparklers in the window of your local jeweller but with such high profile celebrities raising awareness of the issues, it has taken a little of the shine out off the diamond and gold market.

Child labour

More than half of the world’s diamonds are processed in India where many of the cutters and polishers are bonded child labourers. Bonded children work to pay off the debts of their relatives, often unsuccessfully. When they reach adulthood their debt is passed onto younger siblings or their own children. And it doesn’t stop there.

"To date, there are a million diamond diggers working for less than a dollar a day in dirty, dangerous conditions around the globe," says Corinna Gilfillan of Global Witness - an NGO that works to expose the links between natural resources, conflict and corruption.

"In many diamond-rich countries, people are extremely poor and are not benefiting from the wealth in their soil."

Diamond mines in Australia, Canada, India and Africa are situated on lands traditionally associated with indigenous people.

Many of these communities have been displaced, while others remain at great cost to their traditional cultures, livelihoods and health.

After all, diamond mines are open pits where salts, minerals, oil and chemicals from mining leak into ground water endangering people, food supplies, local vegetation and wildlife.

Gold mining

And it isn’t just the diamond that is causing environmental damage. Recent reports have revealed that the average gold engagement band, even without a diamond, generates approximately 20 tons of cyanide-infused waste as sodium cyanide solution is used to separate the gold ore from the rock.

This seeps into the ground water of the land where it is mined wrecking havoc on the eco culture of continuous streams and rivers.

With 2500 tonnes of gold mined every year, this is a huge cost to the environment. Environmental campaigners argue that we already have enough gold mined (and simply sitting in vaults) to satisfy the industry for another 50 years, yet extensive mining continues.

Mines leave enormous scars on the earth’s surface so devastating that they can be seen from outer space, while toxic by-products of gold mining are often dumped into nearby lakes polluting the wildlife.

Dirty gold

In Peru, the federal ministry of Health recently identified smelting facilities used in gold production as the cause of high incidences of lead poisoning in children.

Waste chemicals from gold mining have often been overlooked in the past, but following on from the huge campaign to stamp out unethical mining in the diamond industry the past year has seen 8 of the worlds top gold retailers including Tiffany pledge their support for the 'No Dirty Gold' campaign.

This promotes environmental and social justice reforms throughout the gold mining industry. But since most gold, unlike diamonds can be melted and remoulded it is more difficult to trace the origins.

But while trends come and go, the diamond’s unique qualities make it a symbol of purity, strength and passion; it will never go out of fashion. The challenge for now, is keeping fair trade fashionable too.

How to make sure your jewellery is ethical

So how can you make sure that the ring you are buying is not stained with unethical production? Femail reveals what you should look out for and the best ‘ethical’ and ‘eco friendly’ jewellery on the market.

Diamonds are certified by four Cs - carat, colour, clarity and cut - to give an overall measure of quality. But an ethical jeweller must also comply with the fifth C - conflict-free sourced.

But a recent survey by Amnesty International and Global Witness which visited over 330 high-street shops and questioned staff about their policy on conflict diamonds revealed nearly half of UK diamond retailers are failing to provide consumers with assurances that the diamonds they sell are not 'conflict diamonds'.

According to Hatton Garden specialist Peter Sherwood, of Sherwood Diamonds and Gems, when buying a diamond, you should make sure that the jeweller who supplies you is a member of the London Bourse, which is affiliated to the World Federation of Diamond Bourses – the trading exchange for diamonds.

This will ensure that he complies with the ‘The Kimberly Process’. This monitoring system is tightly regulated and prevents diamonds from areas of conflict or exploitation entering the legitimate diamond supply chain. A reputable jeweller will have a certificate in his shop.

Several jewellery companies including Bulgari, Cartier and Tiffany have also signed up to the Council for Responsible Jewellery practices, which is pushing for a strict ethical code for the production of gold.

Buying your gold from them will ensure that every part of the gold chain from the miners and refiners through to the retailers have followed tight ethical an environmental guidelines.

However, GreenKarat.com – an online American company is currently leading the way in fair trade ethical gold.

With aims to end destructive diamond and gold mining permanently, it specialises in exquisite recycled gold wedding rings increasingly popular among ecologically aware New Yorkers.

Meanwhile, in London, fellow eco-warriors are following in the steps of celebrities including, Liz Hurley, Madonna and Julia Roberts shunning diamonds altogether in favour of semi precious stones such as sodalite and Tanzanite.

"Demand for semi-precious stones has soared,"says a spokesperson for Asprey. "We’ve recently been designing with agate, jasper, coral, carnelian, rose. Customers really are looking for a unique style."

Toxic Waste Adds to Ivory Coast's Woes

Close up of scum produced by toxic mixture floating in an Abidjan lake

The foreign company that owns the vessel said an Ivorian firm had been put in charge of the waste after it was discharged several weeks ago. Local papers are alleging corruption.

BBC NEWS -- The mass resignation is unprecedented in the country.

It is a strange and fragile institution, composed of the ruling party, the political opposition, civil society and the rebels who control the north of the country.

It was set up following the Marcoussis peace agreement of January 2003 which ended the bulk of the fighting in the civil war but is frequently criticised as un-natural and inefficient.

The anger over the government's slow response to the scandal is real enough.

Furious Ivorians, many of them wearing facemasks to protect themselves from the toxic threat, took over many streets in the main city, Abidjan, over the last few days.

Some held placards: "They are killing us for money," read one.

"They sold off our health," was another.

Feinted

The mainly young protesters occasionally burnt tires, and complained they were driven off by heavy-handed police.

But the protests, fervent as they were, were localised, and not of a scale to make a government tremble, especially one used to dealing with many crises.

At the university teaching hospital of Cocody, which has set up a special unit to deal with the toxic waste victims, the mood swung between anger and fear.

"I am ill, I was intoxicated in my neighbourhood, Akouedo," said Guy.

"The smell is very strong, like a mixture of gas and steel. I am asthmatic, and I passed out.

"It is a crime against humanity. They sold away the lives of the people of this country, for crumbs," he said, referring to the belief that people employed by the state knew the products were toxic but were paid off to turn a blind eye.

More than 1,500 people have sought treatment so far, and three people have died.

Doctor not sure

"I am very scared," said Eric, who - like many - complained that he would have to pay for his medicine, despite a government promise that it would be free.

The last act of Prime Minister Charles Konan Banny's government was to create a special fund to help those affected by the waste.

One doctor confided that he and his colleagues were not completely sure of the content of the toxic waste, and advised concerned patients not to drink milk in case the waste was radioactive.

Prime Minister Charles Konan Banny
The mass resignation of the PM's cabinet was unprecedented

Pauline, a young mother accompanied by four children, received even more startling advice.

"The doctor gave me a prescription, and then told me the only real cure is to move house.

"I live in an affected area - but I cannot afford to move, so what can I do?"

Prime Minster Banny's new government will need to deal with just this problem.

But the frenzy of mutual accusation which this scandal has thrown up - in which the port authority and the ministry of transport are each blaming the other - indicates some of the problems of a government of national unity.

The port is in the hands of the ruling FPI party, while Transport Minister Anaky Kobena leads the opposition MFA party.

The mudslinging has strong political undertones, and hints at the difficulties of running a country with a divided government.

That will not change in Prime Minister Banny's new cabinet, and though Ivory Coast's messy peace process has taken a back seat, this toxic waste scandal shows yet again just how urgent it is that the Ivorian crisis be resolved.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Support Mehret



Emily Abt, Director/Producer
Reva Goldberg, Producer

Mehret -- A documentary film about a young doctor and the fight against HIV among black women. For more information about the film and to support Mehret, click here.

In the South Bronx, where Dr. Mehret Mandefro is a medical resident, black women are becoming infected with HIV/AIDS at alarming rates. For the women Mehret treats here, love and sex are a life-and-death struggle and she believes gender inequity is at the root of the problem. Mehret has created a cutting-edge research project to investigate issues of power and sex in the lives of her female AIDS patients. As her research into her patients' lives deepens, she begins to make discoveries about control and relationships in her own life as well. Mehret's two degrees from Harvard did not prepare her for this.

This summer, Mehret, who has ventured far from the hospital in her efforts to understand the feminization of AIDS, will go much further. She will return to Ethiopia, her birthplace, to investigate the epidemic in a place where gender inequality is overt and its effect on infection rates widely acknowledged. Mehret suspects that the struggle of women with AIDS in Africa is deeply linked to that of her patients in the Bronx.

Taken alone, the stories of Mehret and her patients merit attention. Together they form an explosive account of the things most women don't say about sex and the deadly risk of that silence.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Ethiopia's Flood Misery Deepens as Rains Threaten Dams

Photo
AFP

Ethiomedia -- ADDIS ABABA (AFP) - Ethiopia braced for more damage from deadly nationwide flash floods as the government warned that unusually heavy seasonal rains could force the release of water from dangerously swollen dams.

A task force set up to deal with flooding crises that have affected nearly 75,000 people said three dams in the west, south and north of the country were close to the breaking point and advised residents in their vicinities to leave.

It said that, although controlled, the release of water from the threatened dams on the Omo, Awash and Blue Nile rivers could compound devastation from floods that have already killed at least 626 people in the south, east and north.

"Currently, the main dams are planning to release some waters, and the national task force is advising people living near the dams and downstream to take precautionary measures and, if possible, move to higher ground," it said Sunday.

The facilities are the Gilgel Gibe dam on the Omo River, which has already flooded huge areas in the southwest; the Koka dam on the Awash River that has flooded in the east; and the Tise Aby dam on the Blue Nile in the north.

The release of water from these dams "may flood some areas," the task force said in a statement released by the information ministry.

In addition to the confirmed deaths, some 250 people are missing and 73,000 are affected, many of them left homeless by the raging waters that have killed thousands of valuable livestock and flooded huge tracts of farmland.

Officials said they had relocated at least 15,000 people to safer areas in view of the increasing threat of fresh flooding across the country, according to state television.

Some 13,000 people in the northern region and another 2,000 in the south had been relocated for fear of further flooding and landslides.

Overwhelmed authorities have appealed for international aid, and US soldiers began relief work on Saturday in the town of Dire Dawa, about 500 kilometers (300 miles) east of Addis Ababa, which was hit by floods on August 6.

The 35 Djibouti-based US naval engineers were setting up 52 large tents to house many of 6,000 people displaced by the waters, which killed 256, and erecting sanitation facilities amid growing fears of the spread of water-borne diseases.

"I am very impressed with what the Ethiopians and the others are doing to help the displaced. I am glad that we are part of this operation," Richard Hunt, head of the Djibouti-based Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa, told AFP by phone.

With poor weather continuing to hamper relief efforts, particularly in the southwest Omo River valley where 364 drowned last week and up to 8,000 remain marooned in 14 inundated villages, officials feared a rise in the death toll.

"The rain in the highlands has continued, and the river waters are showing no signs of decreasing," said Major Solomon Gebere Michael, commander of army relief operations in the Southern Nationalities, Nations and People's state.

"It is hurting the search and rescue mission," he told AFP by phone from Amorate, some 800 kilometers (500 miles) south of Addis Ababa.

Military helicopters dangling special forces troops from ropes and ladders continued to fly over affected areas, dropping food and water and attempting where possible to pluck survivors from roofs and tree tops, Solomon said.

At the same time, he said rescue teams in boats had begun to face difficulties due to powerful currents and obstacles in newly created vast marsh areas in the Omo basin.

Meteorologists have warned that six areas in the north, west and south of the country will likely face further flood threats from the downpours that are expected to continue until the end of the June-to-September rainy season.

Ethiopia has repeatedly suffered heavy floods and droughts in recent years, devastating agriculture that provides a livelihood for the majority of the 70 million people living in the Horn of Africa nation.


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Saturday, August 19, 2006

Extensive Flooding in Ethiopia: WFP Update

Reuters AlertNet -- Above normal rainfall has caused several rivers in Ethiopia to burst their banks and overflow, resulting in extensive flooding in many areas and subsequent loss of life.

To date, 618 people are officially confirmed dead after two major floods in separate regions – in southern and eastern Ethiopia. This figure is likely to rise as hundreds of people are still unaccounted for.

Floods are relatively common in Ethiopia during the rainy season between June and September when heavy rains from the highlands flow unchecked into the low lands. But in recent weeks, the flooding has been unusually intense and extensive.

Flooding (of varying intensity) has been reported from nearly all parts of the country.

Over 70,000 people have been affected; including some 16,000 who are known to have been displaced.

The National Meteorological Agency has indicated that normal to above normal rainfall, over large parts of the country, is likely in the next few days, which may induce severe flash floods.

Dire Dawa

In the early hours of 6 August, a flash flood hit Dire Dawa, Ethiopia’s second largest city, 500 kms east of Addis Ababa.

Some 254 people died and more than 200 are still missing. However, there has been no further flooding in the affected areas. Relief operations continue.

Huge quantities of mud and sand were dumped in Dire Dawa town and the surrounding areas after the Dechatu River burst its banks. The floods swept away houses, vehicles and animals, destroying markets and shops and damaging infrastructure.

Some 10,000 people have been affected or displaced by the flooding in Dire Dawa, and thousands are still camped in temporary shelters such as schools and tents. Many say these are the worst floods to have hit the town since 1997.

WFP activities

Registration and assessment of the displaced and affected was completed by WFP and the government at the end of last week (11 August) and WFP targeted food distributions began on 15 August.

WFP is providing beneficiaries with a one month ration, consisting of cereals, vegetable oil, CSB and salt.

Non-food items: plastic sheeting, cooking utensils and jerry cans from WFP’s warehouses in Dire Dawa, are also being distributed.

WFP is taking the lead among UN agencies and NGO’s in coordinating the delivery of general relief assistance.

WFP Ethiopia has deployed logistics officers, field monitors and staff from Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa offices to assist the local administration and other UN agencies.

A WFP flood task force is supporting and monitoring emergency operations not only in Dire Dawa, but throughout the country. The emergency response is complicated by the huge logistical challenges involved in finding temporary shelter and accommodation for such large numbers of people.

The local authorities in Dire Dawa have banned the rebuilding of settlements on the river banks and have declared the area a disaster zone.

Omo River, Southern Ethiopia

The Omo River, which flows into Kenya’s Lake Turkana, burst its banks between 8 and 13 August. Extensive flooding occurred in one district of south Omo zone with heavy loss of lives and property. Around 14 villages are flooded and cut off. To date, 364 people have been confirmed dead. As of 17 August, the number of displaced has risen to 8,350 from 6,000.

The Omo region is a remote area about 800 kilometres south of Addis Ababa.

Lack of communications and infrastructure in this large, relatively barren region, mean that details of the flooding only emerged at the beginning of the week (14 August).

A WFP field monitor on the scene said that some 2,700 heads of cattle and 760 traditional silos of grain have been washed away. As news comes in from remote villages now encircled by flood waters, the number of dead will undoubtedly increase.

The loss of so many heads of livestock is a disaster for the predominant pastoralists since livestock is their main source of income.

WFP’s field monitor is travelling by boat, to the affected islands dotted in and around the river, assisting with the search and rescue operations.

The government has sent high energy biscuits, grain, vegetable oil, pulses, and CSB and non-food items including jerry cans, blankets and plastic plates to the region. Helicopters have apparently started to drop food to flood victims.

WFP has some food stocks in its nearest warehouses in Awassa (approximately 600 kms from south Omo), and is ready to provide assistance as soon as the needs have been assessed.

WFP’s field monitor says there is an urgent need for tents, mosquito nets, medicine.

With corpses and carcases still floating in the flood waters, waterborne diseases are a threat. The only other UN agency represented on the ground is WHO.

Since 15 August, soldiers have been deployed and are assisting in search and rescue operations; 15 boats and one helicopter are being used, as well as army divers.

WFP Ethiopia’s logistics unit is in close contact with the government and is ready to offer support.

The government is urgently procuring life jackets on the local market. They are also purchasing half a million bags to be filled with sand to contain the floods.

A high level mission from the federal government in Addis Ababa and the regional government is in the affected area to assess the severity and magnitude of the disaster.

Poor weather conditions have hampered relief operations, preventing helicopters from landing and forcing rescue workers to use boats to help survivors. Uncertainty about the depth of the flood waters has also prevented helicopters from landing.

Amhara Region, Northern Ethiopia

Five districts are now affected by floods in this region. At least 2,200 people have been displaced in the Tana region. More and more people are being relocated by local authorities out of the flood-prone areas.

The total population affected by the current floods in this region alone is reported to be 34,000. Unconfirmed reports put the number of deaths at between 2 and 5 people.

The government has allocated food and non-food items for the displaced.

On 17 August, WFP staff joined an assessment team to visit one of the severely affected areas.

Reports of flooding and displacements have come from many other areas in Afar and Tigray, in northern Ethiopia and even in one district of Somali region, where until recently, was suffering from drought.

The Ethiopian government has appealed for help from the international community in swiftly responding to the disaster.

According to the government, the water levels of many major rivers (as well as Lake Tana and the major dams) have been rising and are threatening to burst their banks, causing substantial flooding.

More rains could cause the dams to spill over. To protect the country’s power generation plants, the government is likely to release water from the dams, which would seriously affect communities down stream and along the rivers banks. Precautionary measures such as strengthening or repairing of dykes and moving residents from the most vulnerable areas need to be done well in advance. The government has told people living around the most flood-prone areas to, “take precautions to avoid what could be a nationwide flood catastrophe.”

A team, comprising representatives from government, WFP and USAID are preparing an assessment along the Awash River (which is hundreds of kilometres long). The mission will determine the potential numbers who might be affected, if the Awash rises above its current level.

The Koka Dam which provides most of Ethiopia’s hydro electric power, is upstream of the Awash River, and is expected to release some of its waters in the coming days.

With many state farms and plantations along the Awash River, the economic impact could be massive if these were damaged or destroyed.


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