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Ethiopia’s ex-PM urges Kiir to hand over power to new leadership

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Former Ethiopian prime minister Hailemariam Desalegn has called on South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir to resign and hand over power to new young leadership.

Desalegn resigned in February this year in a surprise move that came after protracted anti-government protests.

File photo: Hailemariam Desalegn during his visit to Juba in October, 2016 (Radio Tamazuj)

“Immediately after my resignation, I asked them, please would you resign because you failed to resolve the problem in South Sudan?” Desaleng said in his remarks at The Ibrahim Forum held by MO Ibrahim Foundation in Rwanda over the weekend.

The former top leader in Ethiopia, who was the head of the East African regional bloc IGAD, said according to a recorded video of his remarks seen by Radio Tamazuj that he had asked South Sudan leaders including President Kiir to resign.

“Leaders have to come to their senses to their mind and they should somehow leave so they give power to new blood leadership that can lead the country to the next level,” he said.

Desalegn expressed concern over the non-implementation of the 2015 peace deal that was mediated by the regional bloc during his time in office.

“Agreements are signed and never implemented and I see further more agreements can be signed but I don’t think they will be implemented as the history shows,” he said.

He emphasized the need to bring an end to the ongoing conflict in South Sudan. “This country has suffered for half a century now and still people are continuing to flow to Ethiopia, Uganda and Sudan as refugees,”” he said.

“I think this is a heartbreaking situation in South Sudan, and we tried our best as a chair of IGAD. We tried our best to resolve this issue,” he said.

The former premier urged the African Union and the United Nations to help bring peace in South Sudan, saying the country’s leadership failed to resolve the ongoing devastating civil war.

The tenure of the South Sudanese unity government led by President Kiir will expire in August this year if there is peace signed with the rebels.

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Ethiopia postpones national population census due to security challenges

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ADDIS ABABA, April 30 (Xinhua) — The joint session of the Ethiopian House of People’s Representatives and House of Federation on Monday postponed the Fourth National Population and Housing Census by a margin of one year period due to unrests.

The National Population and Housing Census, which was scheduled to take place during the current 2017-2018 Ethiopian fiscal year, was postponed to 2018-2019 Ethiopian fiscal year, due to security challenges that affected parts of the Eats African country.

The postponement of national census came weeks after the decision by the Ethiopian House of Peoples and Representatives, Ethiopian parliament’s lower house, to postponed local elections for a similar period due to security related challenges that, in some occasions, led citizens to forced displacement.

Yalew Abate, speaker of the Ethiopian House of Federation, while briefing the joint session on Monday, stressed that challenges attributed to recent unrests in parts of the country have affected the country’s preparation in various ways.

He further stressed that the postponement of the census “would help to obtain reliable and quality data regarding Ethiopia’s current states of affairs.”

The Ethiopian Central Statistics Agency (CSA), which undertakes the census, has recently disclosed that close to 180,000 tablets have been purchased from Chinese technology giants, Huawei and Lenovo, to conduct the census.

The CSA further revealed that the products had been tested and approved by the agency, in which Ethiopia will, for the first time, apply a modern population and housing census procedure, which includes the use of mobile tablets for data collection.

Biratu Yigezu, Director General of CSA, told Xinhua recently that the products were purchased as part of the 3.5 billion Ethiopian birr (128 million U.S. dollars) total budget that was secured for the census.

The two companies have provided 90,000 mobile tablets each as per the agreement made between the two Chinese companies and the Ethiopian Public Procurement and Property Disposal Services.

Experts at the CSA also told Xinhua that the use of mobile tablet technologies in the data collection procedure will ease the census process by establishing effective data registration system so as to avoid duplication and double counting.

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Ethiopian adds more Bombardier jets and expands network

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Ethiopian Airlines has concluded a firm order for ten new Bombardier jets at the same time as launching three new routes.

By David Casey

Flag carrier Ethiopian Airlines has placed a firm order for ten new Q400 aircraft, which includes purchase rights for an additional five. Based on the list price of the Q400 the order is valued at approximately $332m.

The Q400 has a standard single-class configuration with an optional dual-class interior. There is also an extra-capacity configuration option offering up to 90 seats for higher-density markets.

“The Bombardier turboprops continue to deliver unmatched performance to our operators, and we are proud that the flag carrier of Ethiopia is once again recognising its tremendous value by increasing its fleet of Q400 aircraft,” said Fred Cromer, president of Bombardier Commercial Aircraft.

“The market trend for high-performing and larger turboprops is intensifying, and this fifth reorder is a great example of the Q400 turboprop success story and the value it creates for clients around the world.”

In addition to the Bombardier deal, Ethiopian has launched new routes from Addis Ababa to Kisangani and Mbuji Mayi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Nosy-Be in Madagascar.

Chief executive Tewolde GebreMariam said: “When we open these three destinations, we may look at only the direct services we are going to operate between Addis and these destinations. But what is more important and may not be visible is that we are connecting these destinations with more than 100 destinations all over the world.

“Kisangani and Mbuji Mayi will be two additional points to the already three points we fly in the DRC; so we are now flying to Kinshasa, Goma, Mbuji Mayi, Kisangani and Lubumbashi.

“The beautiful island of Nosy-Be is a popular tourist destination for Europeans, and since we announced that we are going to connect it with our network in a direct service, the Madagascar Embassy in Addis has been overwhelmed by visa requests.

“This shows that the trend is changing; nowadays Africans are visiting African friends for tourism which is very encouraging development.”

With the launch of the new flights, Ethiopian now serves 58 destinations in Africa and more than 100 destinations globally.

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Ethiopia dam talks resume as new prime minister sworn in

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GCR

Egypt’s foreign minister arrived in Sudan yesterday for a two-day summit with counterparts to discuss the massive Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), now under construction on the Blue Nile, which Egypt fears will cut its vital water supplies.

Talks on the controversial dam were suspended in February amid political turmoil in Ethiopia which led to the sudden resignation of Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn.

A new prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, was sworn in this week on 2 April. Hopes for stability are pinned on Ahmed, the country’s first prime minister from the large Oromo ethnic group, whose members have been protesting for a number of years for better representation.

Egypt’s foreign minister Sameh Shoukry arrived in Sudan for the meeting attended by chiefs of intelligence and ministers of foreign affairs and irrigation in Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia, Associated Press reports.

A spokesman for the Egyptian foreign ministry said the meeting, originally scheduled for February, would attempt to settle contentious issues over the dam, which is set to be Africa’s largest hydroelectric scheme.

Reported to be at least 60% complete, the dam is being built by Italy’s Salini Impregilo.

The dam has been a sore point in Egypt-Ethiopian relations since construction began in 2011.

Tensions spiked in November last year when talks over the scope of impact studies broke down.

Image: The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, under construction on the Blue Nile, will be the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa (http://www.geosociety.org/)

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How Ethiopian Americans changed US policy on their homeland

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An old Ethiopian aphorism propounds, “If spiders could gather up their silk in a single twine, they could tie up a lion.” In other words, many weak and powerless people could band together and defeat a mighty adversary.

Marian Wright Edelman, founder and president of the Children’s Defense Fund, said: “You just need to be a flea against injustice. Enough committed fleas biting strategically can make even the biggest dog uncomfortable and transform even the biggest nation.”

The spiders and fleas today are committed Ethiopian immigrants in the U.S. who teamed up with their House representatives to pass a human rights resolution for Ethiopia on April 10. The bite of the grassroots activists made the regime in Ethiopia so uncomfortable they secured the services of a lobbying firm to fight the resolution at the rate of $150,000 dollars a month. The firm’s recent report shows its lobbyists held “meetings with members of Congress, their staffs, and executive branch officials to broaden government outreach” on behalf of the Ethiopian regime.

H.Res. 128, introduced in February 2017, aims to “support respect for human rights and encourage inclusive governance in Ethiopia.” A floor vote on the resolution scheduled for October 2, 2017 was deferred because the Ethiopian regime “threatened retaliation against the United States should it be passed.”

H.Res. 128 was a David vs. Goliath match-up between an informally organized small grassroots army of committed Ethiopian immigrant human rights advocates, activists and their champions in Congress and big money lobbying.

In February 2018, Reps. Christopher Smith (R-N.J.) and Mike Coffman (R-Colo.) issued a showdown ultimatum to put the bill to a floor vote unless the Ethiopian regime allowed “independent UN teams access” to investigate human rights abuses. Coffman reported he had a “lot of meetings with Ethiopian government” officials and they were “most opposed about having UN rapporteurs investigate” abuses.

Since 2007, the Ethiopian regime has denied entry to all UN special rapporteurs.

On April 22, 2018, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein visited Ethiopia at the invitation of the regime. On April 26, a jointMemorandum was signed to “strengthen the Regional UN Human Rights Office for East Africa to do human rights work in (Ethiopia) and the region.”

H.Res.128 is only the latest attempt in Congress to improve human rights in Ethiopia. The long time global human rights stalwart Rep. Christopher Smith (R-N.J.) introduced HR 5680 following the May 2005 Ethiopian parliamentary election in which hundreds of unarmed protesters were killed or wounded by security forces.

In April 2007, HR 2003, essentially a duplicate of HR 5680, was introduced by the late Representative Donald Payne (R-N.J.) and passed in October 2007, only to die in the Senate supposedly due to a hold by Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.). Inhofe recently urged the House to “reject the strongly worded resolution”.

Coffman not only led the battle on the hill to get H.Res.128 to a floor vote but also  negotiated with the Ethiopian regime and arranged negotiationswith the House majority leader’s office to persuade the Ethiopian government to allow “an independent examination of the state of human rights in Ethiopia.”

Coffman, whose district has a sizeable Ethiopian immigrant population, became their warrior on the hill. He identified with their cause and passionately and resolutely articulated their concerns and demands. He said failing to pass the resolution would send a wrong message to the “Ethiopian government that those Ethiopians in the United States have no power … they have no influence on the American government” and embolden the regime to “just continue what (they are) doing.”

In his floor speech, Coffman argued:

“The (Ethiopian) government has so often used the weapons that we have provided them not to fight terrorism but to terrorize their own people.”

The Ethiopians managed a smart grassroots campaign. They effectively educated their members of Congress and staffers about human rights abuses in Ethiopia as it affected  them personally. They invested time with their representative and made him part of their community. Coffman worked with the Ethiopians for over three years and gradually became acrusader for Ethiopian human rights. Smith called him “an outstandingleader on Ethiopian human rights”.

As Coffman got to know his immigrant constituents better, he called them “part of the fabric of our community in my congressional district.” He spent “weekends going to the Orthodox Church, the evangelical church and the Mosque” of Ethiopians in his district.

Coffman kept faith with his immigrant constituents as they did with him. He refused to submit to subtle pressures of colleagues.

The Ethiopian grassroots activists understood a clenched fist is far more powerful that five fingers on an open palm and dissolved their ethnic differences and advocated in solidarity to improve human rights for all Ethiopians. They also partnered with international human rights organizations and other Ethiopian activists throughout the U.S. They worked fast and furiously to line up the 116 cosponsors to ensure passage of H.Res.128.

Other African immigrant groups interested in congressional advocacy to improve human rights in their home countries may draw a few lessons from the grassroots efforts of the Ethiopian immigrant human rights advocates and activists: Reach out to their members of Congress; they don’t bite. Educate their representatives and their staff with personalized accounts of human rights abuses. Keep their eyes fixed on the human rights prize. That means speak in one voice, present a unified front and avoid enervating ethnic politics in congressional advocacy. Partner with international human rights organizations because they are powerful force multipliers. Use social media to mobilize broader support among Americans.

When the chips are down, grassroots underdogs holding the right cards can sometimes outplay the top dogs on Capitol Hill.

Alemayehu (Al) Mariam is a professor of political science at California State University, San Bernardino, with research interests in African law and human rights. He is a constitutional lawyer and senior editor of theInternational Journal of Ethiopian Studies.

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Ethiopia Could Open Important Projects to International Bidding

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Agencia Informativa Latinoamericana Prensa Latina
Addis Abeba, Apr 30 (Prensa Latina) Ethiopia plans to offer in international tender some of the most important projects of the country, among them one for fertilizer production, after cancelling the contract of a military-industrial conglomerate, it was known today in this capital.

The measure is part, in the opinion of experts, of a plan of the new administration, headed by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed of reducing favoritism to security forces, in response to recurrent protests over the last months.

Some weeks ago, a similar norm was announced, but with the Project Tana Beles II, of the sugar industry ‘for its low yield and delay’.

Now, according to the spokesperson of the Ministry of Public Enterprises, Wondefrash Assefa, when assessing the advances achieved on the plan that involves the production of fertilizers, called Yayu and located in the region of Oromia, it was found that Metals & Engineering Corp., in charge of it for the last six years, only achieved to complete less than half the work in that complex.

The office Cherifien des Phosphates, contractor of the sector based in Morocco, could be one of the enterprises considered to take charge of the project, said Wondefrash.

However, he said that they have not reached definite conclusions yet as to what will be done.

ef/mem/rrj/gdc

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PRESIDENT RIVLIN WILL NOT VISIT JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER IN ETHIOPIA

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Reuven Rivlin. (photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

“We are very disappointed with the Foreign Ministry’s recommendation not to visit the Jewish community.”

BY IRIS GEORLETTE

President Reuven Rivlin will not visit the Jewish community center in Addis Ababa during an official state visit to Ethiopia, the Foreign Ministry announced. To the dismay of the Jewish community in Addis Ababa, residents were disappointed to hear that the Israeli president will not come to their community building because of opposition from the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem.

Rivlin is scheduled to leave for Ethiopia on Monday for an official visit with President Mulatu Teshome.

Coordinators and leaders of the Ethiopian aliya program published a statement on Friday criticizing the Foreign Ministry for their decision: “We have heard that the Foreign Ministry opposes President Rivlin’s visit to the Jewish community during his trip to Ethiopia on Tikkun Olam. This action will harm future relations between the Ethiopian community and representatives of the Israeli government.”

In addition, the leaders praised Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, who, despite the opposition of the Foreign Ministry, visited the community during a trip to Ethiopia last week. She was warmly welcomed during what was hailed as a historic visit by a senior Israeli figure.

Agriculture Minister Uri Ariel, who visited Ethiopia a few months ago, did not come to the community building. However, he met with representatives of the community at his hotel. The official explanation for declining to visit the community building was “security reasons.”

A month ago, the president of the Jewish community of Addis Ababa, Melissa Sideseto and former Supreme Court president Meir Shamgar sent an official invitation to the Israeli president to visit the Jewish community building in Addis Ababa.

“I appeal to you to find time to at least visit the residents waiting to make aliyah in Addis Ababa. They look forward to your visit,” read the letter.

“We respect President Rivlin for all his work on behalf of the Ethiopian community, but in the same breath we are very disappointed with the Foreign Ministry’s recommendation not to visit the Jewish community, as is customary in every visit to the Diaspora.”

“The meeting with the leaders of the remaining Jewish communities in Ethiopia will take place at the President’s hotel, an arrangement that was agreed upon by all parties,” The Foreign Ministry said in response.

 

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Ethiopia to take stake in Port of Djibouti, its trade gateway -state media

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The size of Addis Ababa’s stake was unclear.

State-owned Ethiopian News Agency said the agreement, reached at the weekend during a visit by Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to Djibouti, involved the joint development of facilities. In return, Djibouti would have the option of taking stakes in state-owned Ethiopian firms.

“A joint committee of ministers would meet to thrash out details,” Ethiopian New Agency said.

The government had previously said that the port would remain “in the hands of our country” until it found new investors.

Djibouti handles roughly 95 percent of all inbound trade for landlocked Ethiopia, Africa’s second most-populous nation and an economic power in East Africa.

The deal with Djibouti follows Ethiopia’s agreement to acquire a 19 percent stake in the Port of Berbera in the breakaway Somali region of Somaliland. DP World retains a 51 percent stake there, while the government holds the rest.

Ethiopian state companies that Djibouti may look to invest in following the bilateral agreement could include Ethiopian Electric Power and Ethio Telecom – one of Africa’s last remaining telecoms monopolies. (Reporting by Aaron Maasho; Editing by Omar Mohammed and Susan Fenton)

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Ethiopia hit by power cut as dam’s circuit breaks

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BBC

A nationwide power cut hit Ethiopia overnight after a technical fault at a massive hydroelectric dam.

A technical fault at a controversial hydroelectric dam caused the blackout

Power cuts are common in Ethiopia, but rarely on such a big scale.

The dam has caused controversy in Ethiopia and has been blamed for cutting the water supply to northern Kenya, causing Lake Turkana to shrink.

Ethiopia is currently building an even bigger dam on the River Nile, which has led to a diplomatic spat with Egypt and Sudan.

State media says the power went out when a circuit breaker tripped at Gibe III dam in southern Ethiopia and engineers have now rectified the problem.

But BBC Ethiopia correspondent Emmanuel Igunza says that many areas across the country still do not have electricity.

Gibe III is Ethiopia’s main source of power and was described as Africa’s biggest dam when it was built in 2016.

Ethiopia is currently building the bigger Grand Renaissance Dam along the River Nile. It will cost $4bn (£2.9bn).

But the project is opposed by Egypt, which says the dam threatens the water supply to downstream countries.

Talks to solve the dispute between Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan have stalled.

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Referee attacked by Ethiopian footballers for goal decision

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The referee was punched by a team coach, who has since been fired

BBC

A referee has been attacked by players after making a controversial decision in Ethiopia’s football premier league.

The military team Defence and Welwalo Adigrat University were drawing 1-1 when the referee ruled the ball crossed the line and gave a goal to Defence.

Welwalo Adigrat players then chased him down, and he was punched to the ground by one of their coaches.

The coach has been fired, and the Ethiopian Football Federation has suspended all games in the league.

A video posted online by state broadcaster ETV shows the referee attempting to defend himself with a corner flag.

There have been several instances of violence in the Ethiopian game recently, and this latest incident triggered the ban on games.

Federation officials will meet the league’s 16 teams on Thursday.

Rivlin lands in Ethiopia for first visit by an Israeli president

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Set to meet with Falash Mura community waiting to emigrate to Israel, president tells welcoming committee he is ‘returning the visit’ of the biblical Queen of Sheba to King Solomon

Rivlin said he wanted to develop and deepen cooperation between the two countries in some of the many fields in which Israel excels, as well as in the battle against terror.

The president, who will return to Israel on Thursday, is set to meet with his Ethiopian counterpart Mulatu Teshome, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, the Ethiopian Patriarch Abuna Mathias, and other senior figures.

On Tuesday evening, he was due to meet with representatives of the Ethiopian Falash Mura community waiting to emigrate to Israel.

Members of the Falash Mura Jewish Ethiopian community wait for prayer service before attending the Passover seder meal, in the synagogue in Gondar, Ethiopia, April 22, 2016. (Miriam Alster/FLASH90)

Falash Mura is a colloquial, albeit pejorative, term from the Ge’ez language that describes Ethiopian Jews who converted to Christianity in the 19th and 20th centuries, largely due to persecution and economic strife, but who maintained a distinct communal identity.

The president’s delegation includes two Knesset lawmakers of Ethiopian extraction  — Avraham Neguise (Likud), chair of the Knesset Immigration and Absorption Committee and a member of the Caucus for the Jewish Community in Ethiopia, and Penina Tamanu-Shatahair (Yesh Atid), chair of the Caucus to Promote the Status of Jews From Ethiopia.

Also accompanying the visit is popular Israeli singer Ester Rada.

Soul singer Ester Rada. (Courtesy Sharban Lupo)

The president is also travelling with a substantial delegation of public, business, and community leaders from Israel and overseas — among them Shraga Brosh, President of the Manufacturers Association of Israel.

“Ethiopia is experiencing huge growth,” Brosh said, “and we want to be part of it.” Israeli companies could partner with Ethiopian ones in projects to improve infrastructure, agriculture, water, and energy management, he added.

Gadi Arieli, Director General of the Israel Export Institute, said his organization was heading a delegation of 35 representatives of businesses dealing with water, health, agriculture, energy, homeland security, and cyber, some of whom were already active in the African country.

He said he hoped the visit would open many doors and expose the Israeli companies to more senior levels of management than they had encountered to date.

Ethiopia PM visits GERD site, heads to Sudan on official visit

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Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban

Ethiopia PM Abiy Ahmed has visited the Grand Ethiopia Rennaissance Dam (GERD) site. The PM was accompanied by his deputy Demeke Mekonnen and other top government officials on the trip.

The entourage were given an update on work at the facility being built in the Benishangul Gumuz regional state. They were conducted around by manager of the project Engineer Simegne Bekele, the state run Fana broadcasting corporate said.

The report added that the Prime Minister is expected to hold discussion with representatives of residents of the Benishangul Gumuz regional state in the capital city of Asossa.

Addis Standard@addisstandard

– PM has arrived in town, in Benishangul-Gumuz Region of Ethiopia, for public consultations with the residents, including from , the capital, and its environs, the PM’s office said. pic.twitter.com/NFPcTzzwWq

Addis Standard@addisstandard

– In , PM took aim at Ethiopia’s polarized (& vitriolic) use of social media & said the world has twice as much social media users as the people of Ethiopia; but, he said, the kind of polarization that exists in Ethiopia doesn’t exist elsewhere. pic.twitter.com/NJyMB0vKLu

View image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on Twitter

Abiy is expected to fly to neighbouring Sudan for a two-day official visit starting May 2 (exactly a month after he took office.)

During his visit to Khartoum, he is expected to hold talks with President Omar al-Bashir and with the Sudanese vice-president Hassabo Abdel-Rahman, the Sudan Tribune reported.

It will be the second time Abiy is meeting Bashir, the two met in Ethiopian city of Bahir Dar in April on the sidelines of the 2018 Tana Forum.

The Sudan visit comes days after he returned from his first trip abroad, he spent last weekend in Djibouti where he met with president Omar Guelleh and also addressed the Djiboutian parliament. Talks between the two leaders also centered on economic cooperation between the two countries.

Tesfalem Waldyes@tesfalemw

It seems PM Abiy Ahmed gave priority to nehibouring countries on his yet to be unveiled foriegn policy. He spent 2 days in Dijibouti over the weekend & will travel to Sudan tomorrow, May 2. On his 2 days long visit, he will talk with President Omar Al-Bashir & have a field visit.

 

Ethiopia, Djibouti May Swap Stakes in Airlines, Ports

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 Corrected 
  • Deal politically endorsed while details pending, minister says
  • Landlocked Ethiopia views tiny Red Sea state as key partner

Ethiopia and Djibouti agreed to swap stakes in strategic public enterprises including airlines, ports and telecommunications companies, as the Horn of Africa neighbors pursue deeper economic integration.

The deal would include exchanges of shares in Ethiopian Airlines Enterprise, Africa’s biggest carrier by revenue, Djiboutian Finance Minister Ilyas Dawaleh said in an interview. Shareholdings in companies such as the Doraleh Container Terminal and in a new oil terminal, Ethiopian Telecommunications Corp. and Djibouti Telecom SA will also be swapped, he said.

While the deal has been politically “endorsed,” the two countries will form a committee to work out the details, Dawaleh said by phone April 30. Ethiopian Information Minister Ahmed Shide confirmed the agreement in a text message.

The pact came as Ethiopia’s new prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, made his first foreign visit at the weekend to Djibouti, the tiny state located where the Indian Ocean meets the Red Sea and that’s become a strategic hub for the U.S. and China. Landlocked Ethiopia — which the International Monetary Fund ranks as the fastest-growing economy on the continent — is trying to boost its export-oriented manufacturing, making it reliant on neighboring nations with ports.

Dawaleh said Abiy told Djiboutian officials that both countries should start referring to their state-owned enterprises as belonging to all, rather than one nation.

Abiy said in a statement on his Facebook page that officials from both countries “underlined the importance of working towards the realization of complete economic integration of the two economies.” He didn’t elaborate.

Ethiopia to acquire portion of Djibouti port

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ETHIOPIA’S NEW PRIME MINISTER ABIY AHMED. AFP PHOTO | ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER

Business Daily Africa

Djibouti has agreed to Ethiopia’s proposal to acquire a share of the Horn country’s port, a deal secured by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on his first foreign visit as Head of State over the weekend.

The agreement comes after Djibouti unilaterally annulled a contract with the United Arab Emirates’ giant Dubai Ports World (DP) two months ago.

Mr Abiy held talks with the host President Ismail Omar Guelleh and also addressed the Djibouti parliament.

Ethiopian government spokesman, Ahmed Shide, said the percentage apportioned was yet to be determined by experts after assessing the value and profit margins of the port.

Major firms

Formal agreements will be signed within two months and experts from both countries have been tasked to do the paper work, according to Mr Ahmed.

Ethiopia also agreed to apportion to Djibouti shares in its major firms of their choice, including Ethiopian Airlines. Djibouti also showed an interest in agricultural activities in Ethiopia.

The tiny Horn country has previously been allowed to pump 200 metric cubes of drinking water daily from Ethiopia’s Somali region.

More than 95 per cent of Ethiopia’s import and export trade passes through Djibouti’s Port.

A serious disagreement erupted between DP-World, the main port administrator, and the Djibouti government last January.

Two private shipping companies, Singapore’s Pacific International Lines (PIL) and France’ Compagnie Maritime d’Affrètement (CMA)- Compagnie Générale Maritime (CMA/CGM), were negotiating with Djibouti to further develop the recently inaugurated Doraleh container terminal, at an estimated $600 million.

DP-World has filed a lawsuit in London against Djibouti, demanding that the government honour the previous agreement until the case is resolved.

The Ethiopian acquisition is likely to heighten the row.

Djibouti has previously accused DP-World of funding an exiled opposition leader and businessman.

Lost its access

Earlier this year, Ethiopia acquired a share of Port Berbera from Somaliland, along with UAE, DP-World and the Somaliland government.

The agreement has been opposed by Mogadishu, but both Ethiopia and UAE have strongly defended the deal.

Ethiopia, with an estimated 100 million population, lost its access to the sea after Eritrea seceded in 1991.

Apart from Djibouti, Ethiopia also uses Port Sudan and Port Berbera for its import and export activities.

Ethiopia and Djibouti are connected by a railway and a Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) pipeline project was underway to export gas from the Somali region.

Ethiopian state of emergency must end, says journalist freed from jail

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Israeli president praises Ethiopian Airlines on arrival for official visit

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Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban

Israeli president, Reuven Rivlin, on Tuesday May 1 arrived in Ethiopia for an official visit on the request of his Ethiopian counterpart, Mulatu Teshome.

He flew in on board an Ethiopian Airlines flight and was received at the Bole International airport by top government officials.

A visibly excited Rivlin said he was exchanging a visit after Queen Sheba, that he was coming in the name of (king) Solomon. Asked about his flight, he responded: A very pleasant flight … (Ethiopian), they are a very good airline.

On Wednesday morning, he held meetings with Ethiopia president at the national palace. State media report that he also met with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. The PM is currently on a two-day visit to Sudan.

President Rivlin is expected to address the Ethio-Israel business forum to be held in the capital Addis Ababa.

He was accompanied by a business delegation led by Shraga Brosh, President of Manufacturers Association of Israel.

View image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on Twitter
emmanuel Igunza

✔@EmmanuelIgunza

President @PresidentRuvi is in where he’s met the new PM, President Mulatu and the Ethiopian Orthodox Patriarch Abuna Mathias. Pics courtesy Mark Newman/ @GPOIsrael

About Ethiopian Airlines

They are the first operators on the continent to take delivery of the Boeing 787-9 dreamliner. The airline currently flies to over 50 African cities in what is the largest network by a national carrier.

Two major decisions made recently by the carrier include switching fully to digital processes in its operations and also the provision of free Wi-Fi access for travellers using its main hub, the Bole International Airport in the capital Addis Ababa.

Ethiopian – a member of the Star Alliance group in its seven decades of operation has become one of the continent’s leading carriers in terms of efficiency and operational success.

They command the lion’s share of the pan-African passenger and cargo network operating the youngest and most modern fleet to 95 international destinations across five continents.

Abiy’s Ethiopia: Opportunities and Challenges – Pt 1 & 2 – SBS Amharic

Nile dam won’t harm Egypt, says new Ethiopian leader

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Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed reviews the honour guard following his arrival in Khartoum for an official visit to Sudan on May 2, 2018 (AFP Photo/ASHRAF SHAZLY)

AFP /

Khartoum (AFP) – Ethiopia’s newly appointed prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, said on Thursday that the controversial dam his country is building on the Nile will not harm Egypt’s share of water supplies.

Egypt relies almost totally on the Nile for irrigation and drinking water, and says it has “historic rights” to the river, guaranteed by treaties from 1929 and 1959.

It insists the Grand Renaissance Dam will reduce its water supplies from the Nile, and talks on the issue involving Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan have been deadlocked for months.

“We don’t have any intention to harm Sudan or Egypt,” Ahmed told reporters in Khartoum after meeting Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir.

“In our opinion, utilisation of Nile would benefit the three countries with insignificant harm,” Ahmed said in English with Bashir standing next to him.

“The most important thing is to reduce, to minimise the downside of the project and we are doing that in a very responsible manner.”

Ethiopia began building the $4-billion dam in 2012, but the mega project has triggered tensions primarily with Egypt as Cairo fears that once commissioned the dam will reduce its water supplies.

Cairo argues the treaties grant it 87 percent of the Nile’s flow, as well as the power to veto upstream projects. It fears any reduction of water supplies to the biggest Arab country will affect its agriculture.

Egypt is primarily concerned at the speed at which the dam’s reservoir would be filled.

To ease Cairo’s concerns a tripartite meeting between the foreign ministers and intelligence chiefs of Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan was held last month in Khartoum but it failed to reach a breakthrough.

Bashir reiterated Khartoum’s support for the project.

“We have fully supported the dam since it was at its planning stage,” said the Sudanese president.

“We are assured that the share of Sudan and Egypt in Nile water is completely guaranteed.”

The Blue and the White Nile tributaries converge in Sudan’s capital Khartoum and from there run north through Egypt to the Mediterranean.

The project aims to produce 6,000 megawatts of hydro-electric power — the equivalent of six nuclear-powered plants.

The dam was initially expected to be commissioned in 2017, but Ethiopian media reports say only about 60 percent has so far been built.

Ethiopian Journalist Eskinder Nega Undeterred by Threats to Press Freedom

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Ethiopian Journalist Eskinder Nega Undeterred by Threats to Press Freedom

World Press Freedom Day 3 May

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World Press Freedom Day 3 May

 

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