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Sudanese Public Diplomacy Mission Arrives Today for a Three-day Visit in Ethiopia

A 50-person Sudanese public diplomacy delegation arrives today for a three-day visit, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The visit is aimed to forge the relations between the peoples of the two countries and thank the Government of Ethiopia for its contribution in creating peace and stability to Sudan.

The delegation comprises government officials, religious leaders, prominent individuals, journalists, members of the business community, women, representatives of higher education, political parties, artists, and others, the release added.

During their stay in Ethiopia, members of the delegation will meet with various government officials, religious leaders, prominent individuals, journalists, the business community,  political leaders, artists, and visit different projects.

In addition, musicians from both countries will conduct a concert at the National Theater.

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Ethiopia, Djibouti Discuss Issues Related To Railway Linking Addis Ababa To Djibouti

Ethiopia’s Minister of Transport, Dagmawit Moges, held talks with a delegation led by Moussa Mohammed Ahmed, Minister of Equipment and Transport of Djibouti.

They discussed on achievements of the Ethio-Djibouti railway line on freight and passenger services over the last two years, plan for the future, and cost sharing for the project.

Safety of railway transport, tariffs, and provision of reliable electricity needed to power the trains were also among agendas of the discussion.

Dagmawit said joint management of railway, maritime, aviation and road transports that link the two counties would help both sides to facilitate their import-export trades.

Moussa Mohammed Ahmed for his part said his country is ready to work jointly with Ethiopia in the fields of transport.

The 752.7km Ethiopia-Djibouti railway is the first modern electrified railway line in East Africa. It is jointly owned the governments of Ethiopia and Djibouti.

The railway was 70% financed by China’s Exim Bank and built by China Railway Group and China Civil Engineering Construction.

The World Export Development Forum opens in Addis Ababa under the theme “Trade and Invest in One Africa.”

The World Export Development Forum (WEDF) was opened in Addis Ababa today under the theme “Trade and Invest in One Africa.”

Co-hosted by the International Trade Centre (ITC) and the Ethiopian Ministry of Trade and Industry, the forum was officially opened in the presence of high ranking government officials including President Sahle-Work Zewde.

The event attracted business leaders, policymakers, entrepreneurs, trade development officials, representatives of international organizations, trade and investment promotion agencies and business associations across the world.

The Forum is timed to contribute to Africa Industrialization Week, intended to help business make the most of the newly ratified African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement with a special focus on the role of women and youth and to address international business competitiveness issues and profile international investment in Ethiopia and beyond.

During the event, a business-to-business matchmaking platform that aims to create new business deals in agribusiness was also organized in partnership with the Ethiopian Chamber of Commerce and Sectoral Association.

#FBC

Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew Holds Discussion with EU Ambassadors

The Ethiopian Foreign Minister H.E. Gedu Andargachew today (November, 20) met and held discussions with resident European Union Ambassadors led by H.E. Ambassador Johan Borgsatm.

The meeting was held in accordance with Article 8 dialogue of the Cotonou agreement that was signed to regulate cooperation between the European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries in June 2000.

In his opening remarks, Mr. Gedu appreciated the EU for its unrelenting commitment with regard to development assistance.

“We in Ethiopia believe that our partnership with the EU is of great significance to the realization of various development goals Ethiopia is striving to achieve,” he added.

In explaining Ethiopia’s new course to its foreign policy, Mr. Gedu said that countries of the Horn are embarking on the new path of cooperation spearheaded by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and showing to the world that they are capable of solving their problems by themselves.

The Foreign Minister also briefed the EU Ambassadors on Ethiopia’s positive roles in promoting peace with its neighbours.

Mr. Gedu stressed that Ethiopia’s interests will be best served through the existence of peaceful and stable neighbouring countries.

Highlighting the Sidama People Referendum which is underway, Mr. Gedu reassured the Ambassadors that Ethiopia is preparing to conduct free and fair election in 2020.

“Making the upcoming election free, fair and credible will be the culmination of the democratic reform that the current Government has championed,” he added.

Concerning the Grand Renaissance Dam, Mr. Gedu stressed on the fact that the commencement of the construction of the dam was to support poverty alleviation and socio-economic development efforts which are matters of survival in the current state of the country.

In discussing the overall human rights environment in Ethiopia, Mr. Gedu highlighted positive developments that have been achieved since the implementation of the new reform agenda.

He also indicated that a lot remains to address challenges to the advancement of human rights including the weak capacity of institutions.

The Foreign Minister finally underlined his Government’s commitment to secure peace and stability in the country so that both foreign and domestic investments flourish.

The EU Ambassadors lauded the reform Ethiopia is undertaking and forwarded questions for further clarifications which were addressed in detail by the Foreign Minister.

The Cotonou agreement regulates the relationship between the two bodies in economic, political and development dimensions.

 

L’image contient peut-être : 4 personnes, personnes assises, table et intérieur

L’image contient peut-être : 19 personnes, personnes souriantes, personnes debout

Ethiopia, Tanzania Discuss Ways To Cement Ties

Ethiopia’s State Minister of Foreign Affairs, Hirut Zemene met with President John Magufuli of Tanzania in Dar es Salaam.

The two sides discussed ways to further strengthen the existing age-old ties between the two countries.

President of Magufuli said his country is keen to take its relation with Ethiopia to a new height.

State Minister Hirut delivered a message from Prime Minister Dr Abiy Ahmed to the President, according to the Ethiopian Embassy in Dar es Salaam.

Discussion on Pros and Cons of African Continental Free Trade Area

The Foreign Relation Strategic Resources Center (FR-SIRC) of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in partnership with Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, held its monthly ‘Diplomacy Hub’ breakfast seminar on Tuesday (November 19) at the Hilton Hotel.

State Minister of Trade and Industry H.E. Dr. Misganu Arega delivered a presentation on ‘the Prospects and Challenges of the African Free Trade Area for Ethiopia.’

The presentation was followed by discussions based on questions forwarded by attendees.

#MFA

AU, WHO Sign MoU To Accelerate Vital Health Goals

The African Union (AU) Commission and the World Health Organization (WHO) today signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) cementing their mutual commitment to expand and deepen their relationship and cooperation.

The document was signed at WHO Headquarters by Moussa Faki Mahamat, Chairman of the African Union Commission, and Dr Tedros Adhanom, Director-General of the World Health Organization.

According to a statement issued by WHO, the MoU specifies three key areas of collaboration:

• Providing technical expertise to the African Medicines Agency (AMA) and creating an enabling environment to foster local production of medicines.

• Strengthening collaboration between the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) and WHO. WHO will also support efforts to strengthen the health workforce in AU countries, and to establish the African Volunteer Health Corps.

• Supporting the implementation of the Addis Ababa Call to Action on universal health coverage and the AU Declaration on Domestic Financing.

Speaking at the signing ceremony, Mahamat and Dr Tedros expressed a shared view that the partnership will help to facilitate the necessary political support, and implementation of country-level interventions, needed to improve the health and well-being of people across the African continent.

PM Invited to Visit Equatorial Guinea

President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo of Equatorial Guinea has invited Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to pay an official state visit of his country, according to the Office of the Prime Minister.

Equatorial Guinea Foreign Affairs of Cooperation Minister, Oyono Esono Angue, delivered today the personal message of President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

Foreign Affairs of Cooperation Minister Angue congratulated Prime Minister Abiy on behalf of the president of Equatorial Guinea on his Nobel Peace Prize win and appreciated him for the role he plays in promoting peace in the continent.

He also shared the message of gratitude for Ethiopia’s support of Equatorial Guinea’s nomination to the UNESCO Executive Council.

 

የኢትዮጵያ ዳያስፖራ ኤጀንሲ ከባለድርሻ አካላት ጋር የምክክር መድረክ አካሄደ

የኢትዮጵያ ዳያስፖራ ኤጀንሲ ከፌዴራልና ከክልል ከተውጣጡ ባለድርሻ አካላት ጋር ህዳር 6 እና 7 ቀን 2012 ዓም የሁለት ቀናት የምክክር መድረክ በኢትዮጵያ ስራ አመራር ኢንስትቲዩት አካሂዷል።

በኤጀንሲው ዋና ዳይሬክተር ወ/ሮ ሰላማዊት ዳዊት የመክፈቻ ንግግር በይፋ በተከፈተው የባለድርሻ አካላት መድረክ ላይ በቀዳሚነት ቀርቦ የነበረው የዳያስፖራ መረጃዎች በዘመናዊና በተደራጀ መልኩ የመያዝ አስፈላጊት ሲሆን፣ በሀገር አቀፍ ደረጃ ከዳያስፖራ መረጃ ጋር የተያያዙ መሰረታዊ ክፍተቶች የቀረቡበት ነበር፡፡ በሁለተኛው አጀንዳም የኤጀንሲው፣ የክልል ዳያስፖራ ማስተባበሪያ ጽ/ቤቶች እንዲሁም የዳያስፖራ ማህበራት የበጀት አመቱ የመጀመሪያ ሩብ አመት የስራ አፈፃፀም ሪፖርቶች ቀርበውበታል፡፡ በዚህም ወቅት በኤጀንሲውም ሆነ በባለድርሻ አካላት የተከናወኑ ዋና ዋና ተግባራትና ያጋጠሙ ችግሮች በስፋት ተዳሰዋል፡፡
የምክክር መድረኩ ተሳታፊዎችም በቀረቡት አጀንዳዎች ላይ ጥያቄና አስተያየቶችን ያቀረቡ ሲሆን፣ የኤጀንሲው አመራሮችም ለቀረቡት ጥያቄዎች ምላሾችንና ማብራሪያዎችን ሰጥተዋል፡፡
በመድረኩ ላይ በቀረቡ አጀንዳዎች ላይ ከተነሱት ዋና ዋና ሃሳቦች መካከልም በዘመናዊ መልኩ ሊደራጁ ስለታሰቡት መረጃዎች አይነትና ቅድሚያ ስለተሰጣቸው የመረጃ አይነቶች፣የዳያስፖራ ኢንቨስትመንት አፈጻጸም ላይ የሚገጥሙ ማነቆዎችን ከሚመለከታቸው አካላት ጋር በቅንጅት ለመፍታት ኤጀንሲው ስለሄደበት ርቀት፣በክልል ማስተባበሪያ ጽ/ቤቶች መካከል የሚታየው የአደረጃጀት ልዩነትና የአቅም ውስንነት ስለሚሻሻልበት ሁኔታ እንዲሁም በሃገር ውስጥ የሚገኙ የዳያስፖራ ማህበራት አደረጃጀቶች ጠንካራ የሚሆንበት ሁኔታን የተመለከቱት ጥቂቶቹ ነበሩ።
የምክክር መድረኩ ከተጠናቀቀ በኋላ ተሳታፊዎች ወደ ታላቁ ቤተ መንግስት በማምራት የአንድነት ፓርክን ጎብኝተዋል።

Sudanese hope Ethiopian dam ends Blue Nile floods

The Blue Nile is a renegade river, according to Sudanese farmer Osman Idris, its unpredictable flooding swallows crops and houses as it crashes through Sudan from Ethiopia on its way to Egypt.

“Tonight, the level of water will be low,” said Idris, a resident of Juref Gharb, a small village on the bank of the Blue Nile outside Khartoum.

“Tomorrow, it will swallow all the houses… It’s a renegade river, it rises so fast,” said the 60-year-old, dressed in a traditional Sudanese robe.

For Idris, Ethiopa’s construction of a controversial dam on the Blue Nile is a dream come true, as it promises to regulate the floods that inundate Sudan every rainy season.

This year alone, flash flooding has killed more than 60 and injured dozens in Sudan.

The Blue Nile joins the White Nile in Khartoum and supplies the overwhelming majority of the Nile’s water, which runs through Egypt to the Mediterranean Sea.

Construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam began in 2012, but since then Egypt has sounded the alarm that the project would severely reduce its water supplies.

Egypt depends on the Nile for about 90 percent of its irrigation and drinking water, and says it has “historic rights” to the river guaranteed by treaties from 1929 and 1959.

It sees the project as an existential threat, fearing Ethiopia’s rapid construction of the dam might lead to water and food scarcity for millions of Egyptians.

– More cash crops –

After several rounds of talks failed to resolve the issue, a new dialogue between Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan was mediated by the United States in Washington earlier this month.

The three delegations agreed to resolve the dispute by January 15, with ministerial-level talks being held this week in Addis Ababa.

Ethiopia insists the $4 billion hydro-electric barrage is essential for its economic growth given that most of its population still lives without electricity.

And in Sudan, farmers hope the dam will provide predictable flow.

Over the years, farmers like Idris who own farms along the Nile have been forced to change their crops due to flood devastation and tonnes of deposited silt.

Brickmakers fire blocks of mud in riverside kilns, producing smoke harmful to crops.

“I had to shift from cultivating fruits and vegetables to animal feed,” Idris told AFP.

Being reliant on flooding for irrigation means only one harvest per year and limits the kind of crops that can be grown.

If the river’s flow were regulated, more intensive agriculture could be practised, Idris said.

“We can plant crops through the year. It will be better for the environment and for marketing our products, which means more income for us,” Idris said.

Ekram Dagash, a professor at Khartoum’s Al-Zaiem Al-Azhari University, agreed that Sudan stands to gain from the dam, which will maintain water levels and block unwanted silt.

“Ethiopia is building the dam for one reason only, to produce electricity and export it, not only to neighbouring countries but to the whole African continent,” she told AFP.

– Worried brickmakers –

But one group of Sudanese are concerned about the dam: brickmakers, who depend on the silt for their livelihood.

Dozens of small kilns line the river, providing an income for hundreds of brickmakers like Yakoub Noreen.

“If the dam is built, this won’t arrive,” the 40-year-old said of the silt he was standing in, as he pressed wet clay into a mould.

Nearby, workers stacked bricks into a kiln belching thick smoke. Later they will be sold for 1,500 Sudanese pounds ($32) per 1,000 bricks, Noreen said.

Professor Dagash said workers can be compensated and provided alternative livelihoods if brickworks close, adding that benefits from the dam outweighed such losses.

Vast areas of land would open up for agriculture as well as industrial projects, she said.

“The dam will provide Sudan with low cost electricity… and low cost electricity means more growth,” she said.

JUREF GHARB (Sudan) (AFP)