Category: News

embassy news

Ethiopia Launches Online Entry Visa Application and Issuance of an E-Visa

The Ethiopian Immigration and Nationality Affairs main Department in collaboration with Ethiopian Airlines has finalized preparations of the initial phase to commence an e-visa service for international visitors to Ethiopia effective June 12, 2017.

The e- visa is processed and issued online on a single Web page where applicants apply, pay and secure their entry visa online.

Once the online application is approved, applicants will receive an email authorizing them to travel to Ethiopia and they will get their passport stamped with the visa upon arrival in Addis Ababa.

The CEO of Ethiopian Airlines, Tewolde Gebre Mariam, said this was part of a new national initiative to transform the tourism sector in the country.

The full commencement of the Online Visa application and issuance system will promote tourism, trade and investment to the country.

It will save time, energy and cost for travelers to Ethiopia in addition to the simplicity and convenience that it facilitates.

He thanked the Main Department for Immigration & Nationality Affairs for the commendable collaboration and a job well done.

Gebreyohannes Teklu, Director of the Main Department for Immigration and Nationality Affairs, said: “Now international visitors to Ethiopia, from countries provisioned for visa upon arrival, can make use of this service.” He added that there were separate counters to process the visas of travelers under electronic travel authorization.

www.evisa.gov.et

26th anniversary of Ginbot 20 celebrated at the Embassy of Ethiopia in Brussels

26ኛው የግንቦት 20 የድል በዓል በብራሰልስ ቤልጄየም በኢፌዲሪ ኤምባሲ በድምቀት ተከበረ!

በኢፊዲሪ የብራሰልስ ኤምባሲ 26ኛው የግንቦት 20 የድል በዓል በቤኔሉክስ ሀገራት ከሚገኙ ኢትዮጵያዊያን እና ትውልደ ኢትዮጵያዊያን ጋር በጋራ የኢትዮጵያ የፌደራል ስርዓት ባህሪያት፣ የዲሞክራሲያዊ አንድነት ግንባታ ሂደትና ስኬቶች በሚል ረዕሰ በሀገራችን  ባለፉት 26 ዓመታት ተግባራዊ እየሆነ የሚገኘው ህገ-መንግስታዊ ስርዓት እና የተገኙ ስኬቶች በሚል በቀረበ የመወያያ ፅሁፍ ከዲያስፖራ አባላቱ ጋር የፓናል ውይይት  በማካሄድ በዓሉ በድምቀት ተከብሯል፡፡

በበዓሉ ክቡር አምባሳደር ተሾመ ቶጋ በቤኔሉክስ እና ቦልቲክስ ሀገራት እንዲሁም በአውሮፓ ህብረት ተቋማት የኢፊዲሪ ባለሙሉ ስልጣን አምባሳደር በፓናል ውይይቱ ባቀረቡት ጽሁፍ እንዳሉት በሀገራችን ተግባራዊ እየሆነ ያለው የፌደራላዊ ዲሞክራሲያዊ ስርዓት በአህዳዊ ስርዓት አስተዳደር፣ በከፋ ድህነትና የዲሞክራሲ እጦት ውስጥ ከነበረች ሀገር እንዲሁም የሰላምና ፀጥታ ችግር በበዛበት የምስራቅ አፍሪካ ቀንድ ውስጥ ሆኖ በርካታ የኢኮኖሚ፣ ማህበራዊ እና ፖለቲካዊ ስኬቶችን በማስመዝገብ ላይ የሚገኝ በህገ-መንግስት የሚመራ ሰርዓት ነው ብለዋል፡፡

 

አያይዘውም የሀገራችንን የህገ-መንግስት ታሪካ ወደ ኋላ በማስተዋስ የንጉሱ ስርዓት ህገ-መንግስት ከንጉሱ ለህዝቡ የተሰጠና ስልጣን በዘር-ሀገርና መለኮታዊ ነው የሚገኝ ነው ብሎ የሚደነግግ እንዲሁም የአምባገነኑ የደርግ ስርዓት የነበረው ደግሞ ፀረ-ዲሞክራሲያዊ በመሆኑ ህዝቦችን ለጭቆና በመዳረጉ ሀገራችን ለከፍ ድህነትና ኋላ ቀርነት እንዲሁም ለተራዘመ የእርስ በርስ ጦርነት ተጋልጣ እንደነበር አብራርተዋል፡፡ በሀገራችን የመሬት፣ የብሔር እንዲሁም ጠንካር የአህዳዊ መንግስት እና የመልማት መብትን መንፈግ ጋር ተያይዞ የነበረውን ጭቆና በመቃወም በበርካታ የሀገራችን አካባቢዎች የተቀሰቀሰው የገበሪዎች፣ የተማሪዎች እንዲሁም የታክሲ ሹፌሮች ተቃውሞ እና አመፅ እንዲሁም የትጥቅ ትግሉ ተጠቃሽ ናቸው ብለዋል፡፡

ስለሆነም በተካሄደው መራራ የትጥቅ ትግል ግንቦት 20 ቀን 1983 ዓ.ም. በድል የተቋጨ ሲሆን፣ የኢትዮጵያ ብሔር ብሔረሰቦችና ህዝቦች ተወያይተው ያፀደቁትና የጋራ ቃል-ኪዳናቸው የሆነው ህገ-መንግስታዊ ፌደራላዊ ስርዓት ተግባራዊ በማድረግ በርካታ ለውጦችን በማስመዝገብ ላይ ይገኛሉ፡፡ የኢፊዲሪ ህገ-መንግስት ዲሞክራሲያዊ ባህሪያት ያሉት ሲሆን፣ ህዝቡ በአካባቢያዊ ጉዳዮች በተለያዩ ምክር ቤቶች በቀጥታ እንዲሁም በሀገራዊ ጉዳዮች ራሱ በወከላቸው የስልጣን ተሳታፊ እና ተጠቃሚ ያደረገ ሲሆን፣ ብሔር ብሔረሰቦችና ህዝቦች ራስን በራስ በማስተዳደር እስከ መገንጠል መብት ተጠቃሚ በመሆናቸው ከአሁን በፊት የመገንጠል ጥያቄ ያነሱ የነበሩ ጠባብ ሀይሎችም በአሁኑ ወቅት የመገንጠል ጥያቄ ለማንሳት የሚያስችል ምንም ሁኔታ ባለመኖሩ ህብረ-ብሔራዊነቱ የኢኮኖሚና ማህበራዊ እንዲሁም የፖለቲካ ጥቅሞችን ማረጋገጥ የቻለ ነው ብለዋል፡፡ ህገ-መንግስቱ የግልና የቡድን መብቶችን ያከበረ ሲሆን፣ ብሔር ብሔረሰቦችና ህዝቦች የመሬት ባለቤት ያደረገና የአናሳ ማህበረሰቦችንም መብትና አያያዝ እንዲሁም የፖለቲካ ተሳትፎ ያስከበረ ነው ብለዋል፡፡ ክቡር አምባሳደሩ በገለፃቸው እንዳሉት ህገ-መንግስቱ ዘላቂ ሰላምን ማረጋገጥ፣ዋስትና ያለው ዲሞክራሲ ማስፈን እንዲሁም ፍጣን ልማት በማረጋገጥ አንድ የጋራ የፖለቲካ እና የኢኮኖሚ ማህበረሰብን መገንባት ዓላማዎቹ አድርጎ በመንቀሳቀስ ላይ የሚገኝ ሲሆን፣ ዚጎች በህገ-መንግስቱ ዓላዎችና ይዘቱ ላይ የጋራ መግባባትን በማሳደግ የልማታዊነት አስተሳሰብ በመጎናጸፍና ኪራይ ሰብሳቢነትን በመዋጋት የሀገራችንን የህዳሴ ጉዞ ማፋጠን እንደሚገባ አብራርተዋል፡፡ ህገ-መንግስቱ ዋና ዋና መርሆዎች ያሉት ሲሆን፣ ከእነዚህም መካከል የኢትዮጵያ ብሔር፣ ብሔረሰቦች ህዝቦች የሉዓላዊ የስልጣን ባለቤቶች ሲሆኑ፣ የህገ-መንግስት የህጎት ሁሉ የበላይ ህግ መሆኑን እንዲሁም፣ የሰበአዊና ዲሞክራሲያዊ መብቶች መከበር፣ የመንግሰትና ሀይማኖት የተለያዩ መሆናቸውና የመንግስት ተጠያቂነትና ግልጽነትን ናቸው፡፡ ስለሆነም ዲያስፖራው በህገ-መንግሰቱ ላይ ለውን ግንዛቤ በማሳደግ በሀገር ግንባታ ሂደቱ የበኩላቸውን አስተዋፅኦ እንዲያበረክቱ ጥሪ አቅርበዋል፡፡

ክቡር አምባሳድ ተሾመ ቶጋ እንዳሉት የኢትዮጵያ የፌደራል ስርዓት ሀገሪቱን ከብተና የታደገና ባለፉት ሀያ ስድስት ዓመታት በለውጥ ጎዳና እንድትራመድ ማድረግ የቻለ ሲሆን፣ ብሔር ብሔረሰቦችና ህዝቦች በጋራና በራስ አስተዳደር የዲሞክራሲ መርሆዎችን ያረጋገጠ እንዲሁም፣ ሀገራችን ዓለም ባረጋገጠው መልኩ በዓለም ፈጣን የኢኮኖሚና ማህበራዊ እድገት በማስመዝገብ ተርታ እንድትሰለፍ ያደረጋት ስርዓት መገንባት ተችሏል ብለዋል፡፡

በዚህም ውስጥ ሀገራችን ለሁለት አስርት ዓመታት ባለሁለት አሀዝ የኢኮኖሚ እድገት ስመዘገበች ሲሆን፣የዜጎች የነፈስ ወከፍ ገቢ በ2002 ከነበረበት 373 ዶላር በ2008 ወደ 794 የአሜሪካን ዶላር ከፍ ብሏል፡፡ ሀገራችን  በመሰረተ ልማት መስክ በተለይም በመንገድ ፣ በኢሌክትሪክ ሀይል ልማት እና በባቡር ልማትና በኤርፖርቶች ድርጅት ግንባታ ተጨባጭ የልማት ውጤቶች ተገኘተዋል ብለዋል፡፡ በማህበራዊ ልማት መስክ ሀገራችን በጤናው መስክ በተከተለችው ውጤታማ ፖሊሲ 100 ፐርሰንት የጤና ሽፋን በማድረስ፣  በመስኩ ዋና ዋና የምዕተ ዓመቱን የልማት ግቦች ያሳካች ሲሆን፣ በትምህርት መስክ እንዲሁም የአንደኛ ደረጃ የትምህርት ሽፋን 100 ፐርሰንት በማሳካት በሁለተኛ ደረጃ እንዲሁ 41 በመቶ ያደገ ሲሆን፣ የከፍተኛ ትምህርት ተቋማት ወደ 35 በማሳደግ በመቶ ሽዎች የሚቆጠሩ ተመራቂ ተማሪዎችን በየዓመቱ በማሰልጠን የኢኮኖሚና ማህበራዊ እድገቱን በማሳለጥ ላይ ትገኛለች፡፡

የዲያስፖራ አባላት በበኩላቸው  ለተሰጣቸው ገለፃ በማመስገን በሀገራችን የህግ የበላይነት እንዲከበር በውጭም ይሁን ውስጥም ለሚገኙ የሀገሪቱ ዜጎች ስለ መብትና ግዴታ እንዲሁም ስለ ፌደራላዊ ስርዓቱ፣ ስለ ህገ-መንግስቱ አጠቃላይ ባህሪት፣ መርሆዎች እንዲሁም እሴቶች ትምህርትና ስልጠና ሊሰጥ ይገባል፡፡ በሀገሪቱ የተጀመረው ልማትና የህዳሴ ጉዞ በአደናቃፊ ሀይሎች እንዳይሰናከል መንግስት በተለይ መሪ ድርጅቱ ኢህአዴግ አበክሮ ሊሰራ ይገባል፡፡ አያይዘውም በሀገሪቱ በህገ-አውጭው፣ በህግ-ተርጓሚው እና በህገ- አስፈፃሚው መካከል ያለው የተጠያቂነትና ግልፅነት እንዲሁም የስልጣን ቁጥጥር መርህ መሰረት ባደረገ መልኩ ሊከናወን ይገባል ብለዋል፡፡

በመጨረሻም ክቡር አምባሳደር ተሾመ ቶጋ ለተነሱ ጥቄዎችና አስተያየቶች ምለሽ በመስጠት በቤኔሉከስ ሀገራት ነዋሪ ለሆኑ ኢትዮጵያዊያንና ትውልደ ኢትዮጵያዊያን በሀገራችን በተጀመረው የፌደራላዊ ዲሞክራሲያዊ ስርዓት ግንባታ እንዲሁም እየተመዘገበ በሚገኘው ኢኪኖሚያዊና ማህበራዊ ልማት ተሳታፊና ተጠቃሚ እንዲሆኑ ጥሪ በማስተላላፍ በዓሉ ፍፃሜ አግኝቷል፡፡ ስለሆነም በዕለቱ የተካሄደውን በዓል አስመልክቶ የተዘጋጀውን ሪፖርት የላክን መሆኑን እንገልፃለን፡፡

የኢፌዲሪ ኤምባሲ

ብራሰልስ

Brussels’ iconic Manneken-Pis dressed in traditional costume from Ethiopia

On the 9th of June 2017, Brussel’s iconic Manneken-Pis received an Ethiopian traditional costume. A colorful ceremony including Ethiopian dances and cuisine was organized at the Brussels Town Hall for the handing-over of the costume, in the presence of Ethiopian Ambassador H.E. Teshome Toga and Mrs Clémentine Barzin, Brussels Municipal Councillor. About fifty guests from the Brussel’s Manneken-Pis Order, universities, and other friends of Ethiopia attended the ceremony.

Welcoming the guests, Mrs Clémentine Barzin noted that Ethiopia was a country with a long and grand history, and that it was especially pleasant to see that this Ethiopian culture was going to be linked to Brussels through Manneken-Pis.

In his remarks, H.E. Ambassador Teshome Toga underlined the longstanding and close friendship between Ethiopia and Belgium, which is particularly intense in the field of academic cooperation and people-to-people relations.

A procession then went to the statue of Manneken-Pis where the costume was unveiled to the participants.

Manneken-Pis is one of Brussels landmark and symbols since the year 1619.

See all the pictures of the event on Facebook

Assessment and perspectives of a successful academic cooperation

This article was originally published in the 6th issue (April 2017) of The Ethiopian Messenger, the quarterly magazine of the Embassy of Ethiopia in Brussels.

After two successful Institutional University Collaborations (IUCs) between the five Flemish universities and Mekele and Jimma universities, two new IUCs are now on track with Bahir Dar and Arba Minch universities.

This cooperation is coordinated through the Flemish Interuniversity umbrella organization for development cooperation, VLIR-UOS. The VLIR-UOS cooperation framework includes the provision of an extensive scholarship scheme and implementation of inter-university projects that are formulated to develop the teaching, research, institutional management and community services of partner country universities. The projects support the development of high-level scientific knowledge and skills through the collaboration between Belgian and Ethiopian universities, among others. This unique arrangement has enabled Flemish Universities to share and transfer their expertise, experience and know-how in fields like agricultural technology, public health, water and sanitation sciences, natural resource conservation with two Ethiopian

Universities, Mekele (2003-2014) and Jimma (2006- 2016), selected under the first Institutional University Collaboration (IUC) framework. Today, this first IUC is currently in its phase-out, but cooperation will continue for research and educational capacities of Jimma University. Two new IUC’s have also been approved between Bahir Dar University and Arba Minch University and the five Flemish universities, coordinated by Ghent University and KU Leuven respectively.

We interviewed Pr. Dr. Luc Duchateau (Gent University), Pr. Dr. Roel Merckx (Leuven University) and Pr. Dr. Jan Nyssen (Gent University) to ask their assessments about these past programs and their insights about the future IUCs and cooperation.

Pr. Dr. Luc Duchateau: “We are happy to collaborate and support Ethiopian universities”

Pr. Dr. Luc Duchateau, Gent University.
Fields of research: statistics and biostatistics, malariology, Coordinator of
the IUC with Jimma University.

WHAT ARE THE AREAS OF COOPERATION FOR THE IUC BETWEEN JIMMA AND FLEMISH UNIVERSITIES?

The Institutional University Collaboration project between Jimma University and the different Flemish universities under the umbrella of the Flemish Interuniversity Council (VLIR-UOS) lasted from 2006 to 2016 and is curretnly in its phase-out. The program included many projects across about 30 disciplines, each involving a number of PhD students. The general focus of these projects was about remediating the side-effects of the Gilgel Gibe Dam. Fifty PhDs will have been awarded in the framework of this program, some from Flemish universities, and some jointly between Jimma and Ghent university. We had seven projects:

1. Zoonotic and animal diseases with subprojects on trypanosomosis, mastitis, animal nutrition and aquaculture. Tryanosomosis or sleeping sickness is epidemic in cattle in many locations. The PhD students studied the resistance of the parasite against trypanocidal drugs. Drug resistance abounds but nonetheless the drug still helps an animal to deal with the disease and survive.

2. Child health and nutrition with sub-projects on food supplement and psychometric stimulation. Malnourished children obviously need food supplementation but also  psychometric stimulation, as starvation also leads to mental retardation.

3. Ecology with sub-projects on forest and aquatic ecology and environmental sanitation. One of the sub-projects focused on biodiversity of coffee. In fact, the genetic pool of coffee is more diversified in Ethiopia than in the rest of the world, as coffee originates from Ethiopia! It is important to conserve the gene pool.

4. Infectious diseases with sub-projects on tuberculosis, HIV and malaria, soil-transmitted helminths (worms) and drug quality. The malaria research led to an important finding that completely changed the way the malaria vector is controlled in Ethiopia. It was shown that the DDT insecticide used until then against the malaria mosquito was inefficient because the mosquito was completely resistant and therefore was banned in a new regulation by the Health Ministry. Research is continuing now to find new ways of controlling the malaria mosquito, mainly based on zooprohylaxis. Although it is often assumed that dams like the Gilgel Gibe dam act as large breeding sites for mosquitoes, the Gilgel Gibe dam had no impact on malaria incidence.

5. Soil with sub-projects on soil fertility and sedimentation. Erosion makes that rivers are filled with sediment which eventually can lead to siltation of the dam. PhD students investigated which locations contributed most to this siltation process and worked out solutions to avoid excessive sedimentation and erosion, for example by growing special trees or grasses to fortify the river banks.

6. Statistics. A master of biostatistics was set up at Jimma university, which was the first to be established in Ethiopia. About a hundred students have already finished their Masters in this programme.

7. ICT and library. Due to the trainings set up in this project, Jimma University is at the forefront of the country when it comes to ICT.

The IUC-JU programme also established local PhD schools, notably in ecology, horticulture, infectious diseases and nutrition, so that academic staff members can also obtain their PhD in Ethiopia or a double-degree PhD from Jimma University and a Flemish university.

The IUC-JU programme also built substantial infrastructure. In addition to ICT, we also established a national lab

in tuberculosis, in collaboration with the Ethiopian government, a molecular biology lab, a malaria lab and a drug quality lab that is already WHO pre-qualified and should be soon qualified by WHO to test the quality of drugs in the whole country. It will be a decisive step for the Ethiopian pharmaceutical sector, since it will be the first WHO-certified lab in Ethiopia.

The Ministry of Education wanted to go ahead with such activities after the IUC-JU programme was finished and proposed a Tripartite Agreement between Jimma University, Ghent University and the Ministry of Education of Ethiopia. This agreement will enable to start up joint PhDs where the Ministry of Education of Ethiopia sponsors the PhD student. Within 2017, about 25 students will start but the number will grow to about 100 students within the coming four years. PhD students will be selected from the academic staff of all Ethiopian universities, whereas the local supervisor will come from Jimma University.

WHAT ARE THE MUTUAL BENEFITS?

The IUC-JU programme has given me a lot of scientific and human joy. Every time again it gives deep satisfaction to have an Ethiopian student finishing his PhD knowing that it will strengthen Jimma University. Much of the research that is done in Ethiopia is quite unique and it allows us also with simple interventions to have much more impact than our research results in Belgium typically have. It is also benefiting Ethiopia, where PhD students are worth gold. We are therefore happy to collaborate and support Ethiopian universities in the two areas in which Flemish universities excel: research and teaching.

Pr. Dr. Roel Merckx: “The impact of some projects has been enormous”

Pr. Dr. Roel Merckx, KU Leuven University. Division Soil and Water Management, Department Earth and Environmental Sciences; Coordinator of
the IUC with Arba Minch University.

WHAT ARE THE COOPERATION’S PROJECT AREAS?

The main goal is to address the needs of communities in the Southern Rift Valley of Ethiopia, and improving ecosystem services.

The VLIR-UOS has a specific framework. It is about cooperation, not about organizing a paid course. All parties have a stake in the programs. For the Belgian side, the essential part is the academic research in scientific fields such as science, agronomy, food security, water resources, environmental conservation where the challenges are huge in Ethiopia. The conflict between an increasing population, expansion of farmland and conservation of natural ecosystems, puts pressure on resources like water which are very important in Ethiopia. It is natural that we seek cooperation with academics to jointly set up research programmes that are of benefit for both parties.

The IUC programme with Arba Minch University focuses mainly on capacity-building. The number of universities is increasing rapidly in Ethiopia. However, the number of trained staff is limited. Training in order to organize education which is research-based is the main reason for setting up this cooperation. In the first year, there will be 13 PhD students in the program, and they are the core of the program. In these programs, students focus on field research in Ethiopia on – among others −nature conservation, agriculture, soil science, sociology and anthropology. They do their experimental work and survey in Ethiopia. Hence, their stay in Belgium is limited, first because it is expensive, and secondly because the goal is to empower them to do research in their country. This is why this program is so relevant for the Belgian development cooperation: the money is going to those who need it.

WHAT ARE THE MUTUAL BENEFITS?

Benefits for universities in Belgium are real: expanding knowledge on major global challenges, expanding research capacity on the ground and learning how to ask the right questions. We are dependent on the Ethiopian partners and PhDs to teach us and introduce us to the context. On our part, we can share our experience about scientific standards and expose them to state-of-the-art technologies and information. This turns this partnership into an excellent symbiosis.

I see another important benefit: thanks to this kind of exposure, I think that my teaching to Belgians students is improving. The relevancy and quality of what I teach is improving, because of this field experience on the topics. I can teach based on real-life situations and personal impressions. Only for this aspect already, it is really important that Belgium continues sponsoring this programme, because it lifts the quality of higher education in Belgium to a higher level.

VLIR-UOS programs are rather modest finance-wise compared to large programs such as those set up by USAID or the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. We have a budget of 500,000 euros per year for six different projects. It is comparatively little money in comparison with our ambitions. Yet, the money does not tell the complete story as our programs are based on large amounts of good will and commitment.

The IUC with Mekele that started 12 years ago has been a real success in all the mentioned aspects. Soon, our university will visit Mekele to discuss continuing collaboration, for instance with all the KU Leuven alumni.

DID PAST PROJECTS SUCCESSFULLY IMPROVED THE LIVES OF THE COMMUNITIES?
There is a well-documented story of the VLIR-IUC program with Mekele to improve food-security. The impact has been

enormous. It changed the university, boosted the research findings and it changed the life of communities. Local people are still very grateful when we pass by. Before this program, there were each year about four or five months where the food was not sufficient in these communities. Today, this problem is resolved, and they can grow enough food to sell the surplus.

HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ETHIOPIAN ACADEMIC SECTOR?
I have seen the government’s five-years plan for the education. It is very ambitious and based on correct principles like gender equality and increasing the number of PhDs in the professorship. It is a very good policy document. The challenges, of course, are huge: the number of people wanting to have a degree is enormous, and there are concerns on how to make sure there is a sufficient number of qualified teachers. Kenya, for example, has a similar problem. It is not easy to fill the positions with qualified professors. But the policy document is very good, like other policies of the government: the swift reply to the invitation from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) to submit the so called ‘Intended Nationally Determined Contributions’ (INDC) to substantially reduce its Greenhouse Gas emissions was commended by Europe.

From my limited experience with Arba Minch University so far, I can tell you that I am quite impressed from the level of cooperation. The promises and the deadlines are being kept by our Ethiopian partners, and this is quite promising.

I have experience with several programs in Vietnam, Congo, Tanzania, Kenya and Nigeria among others. In terms of making solid appointments and agreements, as well as to have committed responses, Ethiopia is among the best in Africa. Of course, like in Kenya, it depends from case to case. Ethiopia still has a huge gender imbalance. But so far, I am very pleased with the way we cooperate. In other countries, it can be slower and more difficult.

Pr. Dr. Jan Nyssen: “Universities in Ethiopia have developed tremendously”

Prof. Dr. Jan Nyssen, Gent University. Teaching: Geomorphology, Hydrology, Physical Environment and Development, Microclimatology, and Regional Geomorphology. Research (mainly in Ethiopia): identification and quantification of changes in the coupled system “humans- environment”Coordinator of the IUC with Bahir-Dar University.

WHAT ARE THE AREAS OF COOPERATION FOR THE IUC BETWEEN BAHIR DAR AND FLEMISH UNIVERSITIES?
I would say there are two main goals: one goal is to have a cooperation between our university and Ethiopia, and a second goal is to improve the research capacity. Bahir Dar University for example has a large staff, but relatively few of them have a PhD degree. In this cooperation, we are going to train 17 Bahir Dar University staff to the level of PhD. The research itself is mostly related to development issues. Many research projects are related to the land, to the water, to the socioeconomic, environment and food processing. Therefore, this research has a direct relevance for the community and contributes to a sustainable livelihood, while on the same time uplifting the capacity of Bahir Dar University.

For example, we had a project with Bahir Dar University about Lake Tana where we tried to calculate the water balance: how much water is coming in, how much is evaporating, pumped out, or diverted for hydro-power? Another question was: how much sediment is entering into the lake? Two PhDs and six MSC holders worked on the question. At the end, we were able to organize a big international academic conference on the Lake Tana to show the findings. More than 100 academic guests and other stakeholders came from Ethiopia and many other countries to attend the conference, and a book was published, both in Amharic and in English. This conference was an opportunity to share the outcome of our research both to the decision makers, other stakeholders and to the scientific community.

WHAT ARE THE MUTUAL BENEFITS?

The professors involved in such a program are interested to contribute to the development of Ethiopia and generally they are also «Africa-minded», with a personal commitment to make things better. But we also see a lot of opportunities, for the research that we could not do otherwise. It enables us to do research about the landscape, to get a real natural environment. For example, opening a soil profile for some research is very difficult in Belgium, both to find a good location and in terms of procedures. In Ethiopia, the landscape is very favourable for this kind of research and the observation can start very soon if you have good communication with the local people.

As a university, cooperation with Ethiopia is very positively evaluated, as we get very good MSc and PhD students. This is important, since we have our objectives like having strong research results, publishing papers, etc. PhD candidates

from Ethiopia have a good success rate. It has maybe to do with the fact that Ethiopia is a big country, where the selection is very competitive, with high selection criteria.

HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ETHIOPIAN ACADEMIC SECTOR?
Since I started visiting Ethiopia in 1994, universities have developed very rapidly, in line with other developments in society. The difference between that time and today is tremendous. When we started working in the rural areas in Ethiopia, at that time, we only found 3rd or 4th grade students to assist us. Today, university students are taking part in our research. There is a school in every village now, and girls go to school although they still drop out a bit early.

The fast development of the Mekele University is a good example. Twenty-two years ago, they were lecturing under the tree. Today, they have numerous university buildings, and the campuses keep on expanding. At the time, the professors were lecturing based on case-studies from the US, while today they have case-studies and examples from Ethiopia. In general, you see there is a lot of capacity in the country. You see it when you travel: there are dams, electricity, roads. A lot of people are being trained. In the field of agriculture for example: the mapping of the soil fertility in the country enables fertilizer recommendations to the level of every farmland. Such developments indicate that there are trained people available to support it. Of course, this fast development comes with challenges. The intake of students is increasing tremendously, maybe even too fast; the buildings are not sufficient for the needs. When you enter a university, you have the feeling to enter a building site, with lorries driving up and down. The expansion is continuous, but of course the infrastructure needs to be built fast to meet the needs.

Ethiopia, France tackling global challenges: Ambassador Bontems

Ethiopia and France have been sharing a common vision of the world and tackling global challenges, France’s Ambassador to Ethiopia and African Union said.

In exclusive interview with ENA, Ambassador Frédéric Bontems said the two countries are working closely to address global challenges.

“Ethiopia, for example, has been very instrumental in the success of COP 21 (the Paris Climate Conference) negotiations and the agreement. In security too, our two states have taken responsibility in Sahel and the Horn of Africa”, he elaborated.

According to him, the countries are also cooperating in the UN Security Council where France is a permanent member and Ethiopia a non-permanent member for the year 2017-2018. “We are working together to try to solve international crisis,” he said.

Ambassador Bontems further pointed out that the new president of France has always shown a particular interest in Africa, which he perceives as a continent of future.

President Emmanuel Macron had, before being elected, expressed desire for strong partnership between France, Europe, Mediterranean and Africa, the Ambassador noted.

“In some fields of mutual interest such as climate change, trade, security, I am sure we are going to work very well together, taking at the same time into account such challenges as democracy, good governance, and respect for the law”, he stated.

Regarding investment, Ambassador Bontems said that France is working very closely with EU to promote increased investment of Europe in the development of the African continent.

He revealed that the development assistance of EU and its member states to Africa is around 1 billion Euros this year.

With respect to trade relations between the countries, the Ambassador said “French companies have a growing interest in Ethiopia. In 2014 we had 28 French companies active in the country, today the number has doubled with roughly 50 French businesses established in Ethiopia”.

Ambassador Bontems however insists that the countries can even go further. “When we speak of business climate, we have to have a conducive regulatory environment to reinforce the attractiveness of Ethiopia. And I think there is still improvement to be made in this respect” he added.

The Ambassador admits that the trade balance is now in favor of France. But he adds that “the real challenge here for Ethiopia is to develop its export by developing the industrial sector in order to address the French and Ethiopian market.”

Ethiopia and France established their diplomatic relations in 1897. The relation was naturally marked by the construction of the famous railway between Djibouti and Addis Ababa.

Source: ENA

President and Premier congratulate the new Director General of WHO, Dr. Tedros Adhanom

President Mulatu Teshome and Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn have congratulated Dr Tedros Adhanom who was elected as the new head of World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday (May 23), becoming the first African to lead the Geneva-based United Nations agency.

President Mulatu congratulated all nations and nationalities of Ethiopia and added that this historic election epitomizes the outstanding changes Ethiopians have accomplished over the years on social and economic issues holding hands together.

Prime Minister Hailemariam passed congratulatory words to Ethiopians at home and abroad as well as friends of Ethiopia. Premier noted Dr Tedros’s election is a proof of Ethiopia’s notable recognition by the global community.

Noting Dr. Tedros’s achievement as part of Ethiopia’s success story in the diplomatic arena, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ethiopia Dr Workneh Gebeyehu dubbed the election of Dr. Tedros as an African victory.

Dr. Tedros was able garner an outstanding support on the basis of his firm position to shake up an agency seen as needing major reform.

26th anniversary celebration of Ginbot 20

በቤኔሉክስ ሀገራት ለምትገኙ ኢትዮጵያዊያንና ትውልደ ኢትዮጵያዊያን በሙሉ!

በብራሰልስ የሚገኘው የኢፊዲሪ ኤምባሲ እ.ኤ.አ. ጁን 10 ቀን 2017 ከቀኑ 14:00 እስከ 20:00 ስዓት 26ኛውን የግንቦት 20 በዓል በቤኔሉክስ ሀገራት ከሚገኙ ኢትዮጵያዊያንና ትውልደ ኢትዮጵያዊያን ጋር በጋራ በመሆን ʺየህዝቦች እኩልነትና ፍትሃዊ ተጠቃሚነትን ያረጋገጠ ፌዴራላዊ ስርዓት እየገነባች ያለች ሀገር – ኢትዮጵያʺ በሚል መሪ ቃል በዓሉን በደማቅ ሁኔታ ለማክበር ዝግጅቱን አጠናቋል፡፡ በበዓሉ ሀገራችን ባለፉት 26 ዓመታት በተከተለችው የፌደራሊዝም ስርዓት የተገኙ ለውጦችና ውጤቶች አስመልክቶ ውይይት ይካሄዳል፡፡ እንዲሁም በበዓሉ የሀገራችን የብሔር ብሔረሰቦችና ህዝቦች ባህላዊ ጨዋታዎች ይቀርባሉ፡፡

ስለሆኑም እርስዎ ከቤተሰብዎ ጋር በመሆን ከዚህ በታች በተገለፀው የስብሰባ አድራሻ፣ ቀንና ስዓት በመገኘት፣ የበዓሉ ተሳታፊ እንዲሆኑ ኤምባሲው በአክብሮት ይጋብዛል፡፡

To confirm your participation, please make sure to register here: https://goo.gl/forms/ieSUOuXrdYVGm7m62
You may also want to check the event on Facebook for more information:

Press Release: Ethiopia believes its ties with the European Union ought to be based on the principles of mutual interest and equality

Ethiopia and the European Union have already jointly embarked working on the “strategic engagement” signed on July last year aimed at transforming the longstanding relations to a much comprehensive, reinforced and structured tie. The strategic engagement focuses on six sectoral dialogues ranging from issues of countering terrorism and violent radicalization to good governance and human rights. This year a consultative forum on good governance and democracy was held successfully.

Meanwhile, at this critical juncture the European Parliament, the legislative body of the Union on May 18, 2017 made forethoughts on Ethiopia, praising the longstanding generosity the country has extended towards refugees from troubled neighboring countries, the unrelenting role it was playing on fighting terrorism and bringing tranquility in Somalia, the commitment the country was showing in ensuring long lasting peace in South Sudan, etc.

While Federica Mogherini, High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice-President of the European Commission, was in Addis on March 2017, the Government of Ethiopia has made an enormous effort to make the discussion between the official and opposition political parties possible.

However, the press release that was, to a significant extent, flawed by bogus information which called for the immediate release on bail and dropping of all charges against Dr. Merera Gudina was not fair and appropriate. The press release wouldn’t do more than undermining the constitutional system of the country.

The release of the press during this crucial time where the Government of Ethiopia was aggressively working towards bringing about the necessary changes that were apparently required to fill the already identified gaps between the public and government institutions wouldn’t do-good to the mounting spirit of cooperation between Ethiopia and the European Union. Such remarks made on suspects who are in jail and whose cases are being taken care by the law of the land lack an obvious understanding of the judicial system and procedure of the country.

Albeit the press release that will have a lesser significance on the enduring growth of the country, Ethiopia will continue to do its level best towards ensuring an upward spiral and mutually beneficial relationship with the European Union built on the principles of equality and measured remarks based on realities on the ground.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs

The EP Resolution on Ethiopia lacks understanding on important issues

Press Release

On the 18th of May 2017, the European Parliament issued a resolution condemning Ethiopia for not respecting its own Constitution and human rights. Though this resolution underlines the role of Ethiopia in stabilizing the region and the improvement of the economic situation of the population, it lacks some understanding of the situation in the country on topics such as the state of emergency, the human rights and the arrest of Dr. Merera Gudina.

  • On the arrest of Dr. Merera Gudina: The resolution of the European Parliament ignores the fact that Dr. Merera Gudina exceeded the rights of political opposition by allegedly meeting with the leader of an armed group at the European Parliament. The directive issued to implement the state of emergency, under Article 2, clearly stipulates that, among other things, meeting with individuals or organizations proscribed by the Ethiopian Parliament as terrorists is prohibited. Dr. Merera Gudina knows very well that Ginbot-7 was designated as a terrorist organization by the Ethiopian Parliament due to its numerous terrorist actions in different parts of the country. By meeting and discussing with the leader of this organization in Brussels from 7-9 November 2016, Dr. Merera Gudina deliberately violated the state of emergency. As a leader of a political party, he is particularly supposed to respect and protect the laws and to know that anyone who breaches the law will be held accountable, and the European Parliament should also acknowledge this.
  • On the state of emergency: The state of emergency was not decided for political motives, but to preserve the stability of the country. It is to be recalled that Ethiopia has seen unprecedented violent protests and unrest during the last year. Considering the fact that the existing normal law enforcement mechanisms were insufficient to contain the problem, the Council of Ministers of Ethiopia, declared a state of Emergency on 9 October 2016. This was approved by the Ethiopian Parliament in conformity with the provisions of the Ethiopian Constitution. In the meantime, several restrictions imposed by the state of emergency were lifted, which should be seen as a positive signal, including as control on mobile data network and social media, curfew on movements around major infrastructural facilities, arrest of suspects and conducting searches without search warrants, restriction and control of messages broadcasted on different medias.
  • On the investigations into the protests: While the resolution of the European Parliament is calling an international investigation into the protests, it has to be noted that Ethiopia is endowed with its own investigation mechanisms. On the 18th of April 2017, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) presented the results of the investigation it carried out following the violence in some parts of Amhara, Oromia and SNNP regional states in 2016 to the House of Peoples Representatives. The EHRC said a total of 669 people were killed in the unrests, 495 people (465 civilians, 33 security personnel) in Oromia, 140 people (110 civilians and 30 security personnel) in Amhara and 34 people in the SSNP regional states. While the Commission said that in most cases, measures taken by security officers were legal and proportionate, it also indicated that security officers used unnecessary force in several cases. Finally, it has to be noted that close to 90% (20,000 individuals) of the people who were detained in connection with the violent demonstrations have been released following a briefing on the constitutional rights and obligations of citizens.
  • On the human rights in Ethiopia: Ethiopia has developed its own framework to improve the respect of human rights in Ethiopia. It can only be hoped that the European Parliament will find ways to positively support the Ethiopian Parliament and other Ethiopian government institutions in the implementation of the this framework, not by criticizing, but through a constructive support. The second National Human Rights Action Plan (NHRAP II) was approved by the House of People’s representatives and it will develop a comprehensive and structured mechanism to advance the respect, protection, and fulfilment of human and democratic rights, which are explicitly guaranteed by the country’s Constitution. The NHRAP II deals with civil, political economic, social and cultural rights, as well as the rights of vulnerable groups. It raises issues like the right to life, the right to personal security, the prohibition against inhuman treatment, the rights of persons arrested, persons held in custody and convicted prisoners, the rights of persons accused, the right of access to justice, the freedom of thought, opinion, expression, and of association among others.
  • On the political space: The resolution fails to mention that a dialogue between ruling and opposition political parties was initiated in January 2017. After meeting several times, the 17 political parties, including the ruling coalition EPRDF, have ratified a common regulation in April to give a sustainable framework to the dialogue, and selected three negotiators to chair the dialogue. It is also planned to reform the electoral law  to introduce an part of proportionality into the majority rule. It is saddening that the European Parliament did not support this initiative until now.

Despite these elements, it is to be hoped that the European Parliament will be willing assist the broad and deep reform programs in Ethiopia and support implementation of the rule of law. Only a constructive approach can support the country on its path to democratization and development.

Ethiopia is located in a turbulent neighborhood and surrounded by several conflicts. Its destabilization would be detrimental not only to the Horn of Africa, but also to Europe. Ethiopia is doing its level best to stabilize the region by contributing peacekeeping forces, hosting over 800,000 refugees and fighting terrorism and radicalization.