Month: October 2016

EU keen to intensify cooperation with Ethiopia

cukjyzuxyaar3aoA high-level delegation from the European Union Commission met with State Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Taye Atske-selassie here today (Oct.07, 2016), during which Head of the delegation, Mr. Olivier Onidi, European Commission Deputy Director General, DG HOME stated the EU is keen to enhance cooperation with Ethiopia, particularly on issues of promoting regional peace and security and dealing with the challenge of migration.

The delegation said the EU welcomed Ethiopia’s positive engagement in the maintenance of regional peace and security and its efforts of dealing with the problems of migration, adding Ethiopia has played a constructive role in rallying countries to mitigate the challenge. The Delegation also suggested that Ethiopia as a signatory of Common Agenda on Migration and Mobility with EU should come up with more projects and initiatives on migration. Reiterating the fact that Ethiopia is going to take the chairmanship of the Khartoum Process from the current chair, the United Kingdom; the European Union pledged full support in due course. Touching upon current situations in Ethiopia, the delegation further welcomed the government’s engagement and consultations with citizens and communities.

State Minister Ambassador Taye Atske-selassie underlined the importance of the EU-Ethiopia and EU-Africa cooperation on issues of regional peace and security and challenges of migration. The State Minister mentioned Ethiopia has introduced a weekly reporting system on any attempt of trafficking and that an agreement has been concluded with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which he said allowed domestic workers to work in legal and dignified provisions. The State Minister reaffirmed that Ethiopia was keen to further intensify the partnership in tackling the challenges posed by migration. He said, “As a source, transit and destination of migrants Ethiopia will come up with projects which are close to communities,” adding: “we are only seeing the outcome of migration but we should see also the cause and source of migration and work on it”.

Source: MFA

Ethiopia-Djibouti electric railway line opens

ethiopia-djibouti-railway
On 5 October, Ethiopia and Djibouti launched the first fully electrified cross-border railway line in Africa. The new 750km line will link Addis Ababa to the sea in 10 hours, compared to several days by road. During the construction, nearly 40,000 local jobs have been created, and many of those have gained valuable skills and technics to operate sophisticated railroad machines. The railway is the first step in a vast 5,000km-long network of rail which Ethiopia hopes to build by 2020, connecting it to Kenya, Sudan and South Sudan.

Read the full article (BBC)

Ethiopian Ambassador: ‘Anti-peace elements’ took advantage of Oromia, Amhara protests

teshome-togaBy Matthew Tempest |  EurActiv.com
Ethiopia is a secure, stable country in the Horn of Africa, says the country’s Ambassador to the EU, Teshome Toga. However, he admits “gaps” in governance have fuelled year-long protests that have left hundreds dead.

EurActiv.com’s development correspondent Matthew Tempest spoke to the Ethiopian Ambassador to the EU, Teshome Toga, about the death toll, the causes of the unrest – and the government’s controversial response.
[NB – this interview was conducted before the deaths at the weekend of people at a religious festival in the Oromia region outside Addis Ababa.]
Having been to Ethiopia, I can see a lot of the positives of what is going on in the country. But it seems that since last November, there’s been a large death toll of protesters that has started to worry people in the development community and in the EU itself, so I wanted to start by asking for the government figure of how many people have died in the past 12 months.
Firstly, thank you for coming, and secondly, thank you for your interest in Ethiopia. Regarding the question, AU (African Union), EU institutions, member states, are concerned on this question on Ethiopia – we are concerned.
Regarding the unrest in the last few years, we need to put it in some perspective. The first is that in the last 15 years, Ethiopia has made remarkable progress in the economy, infrastructure, social progress, that’s the bigger picture. That has benefited farmers, people in urban centres, the private sector. And these policies have delivered.
Those who benefited are now demanding more infrastructure, more energy. In the last 15 years, we have reduced poverty by 50% – meeting every one of our MDGs (Millennium Development Goals). When we started on these goals 15 years ago, the poverty level was 44%. Now it is 22%.
Even so, that still leaves us with around 22m people in poverty, and this is because of huge demographic [challenges] we have in the country. If you look  at our achievement in education, we have also expanded access, facilities and infrastructure.  We met our MDGs, and we tried to link education with industry and manufacturing, but today we have significant [numbers] of unemployed graduates, particularly because of the demography in the Oromia and Amhara regions. That is one perspective I want to put in the right setting.
Secondly, as the economy expanded, the question of economic governance becomes a huge issue. And we have a problem of course creating efficient and good governance. People are not satisfied with the level of delivery. As much as we have delivered, there are people have not benefited enough from our programme – the youths. So there have been grievances.
And the grievances from unemployment, and more demands from the public – that, and other issues, led to the problems we had last November.
Of course, you remember the Addis Ababa masterplan issue – which was one of the triggering factors for the demonstrations that took place in the Oromia area. What happened after that was we tried to engage the public in the two regions. The issue of identity has been responded to by the pertinent regional authority, and the issue of the masterplan – after seeing the discontent of the Oromia people, we did put off.
Related to this was the issue of land. Land has been taken from the private sector – always with compensation, of course – for areas for investment, in the regions of Oromia and Amhara. Farmers have been complaining they have not been paid sufficient compensation. Or after getting compensation, they were not getting support to make their next move or next opportunity.
So we have seen gaps there. All this led to the unrest we have seen in both regions. Youth unemployment and good governance  – but those are an issue everywhere, not just those two states.
But later on, a Human Rights Commission investigated, and it came up with a finding, that was public and presented to the house of representatives in the federal parliament, in the first report, that found yes, there was loss of life, destruction of property and also loss of life of law enforcement agents.
Coming back to the recent unrest in the two regions, this time in Amhara, it was not identity or employment, there was a question of particular development in Gondar, so we witnessed unrest in that part. But later, as other cities joined in the demonstration, most of it, frankly, (was) illegal, because nobody took responsibility for who organised it. It was organised on Facebook, most of it was violent, and that’s totally illegal in the context of Ethiopian law. Because demonstrations need permission, a time, and a place – and this was not the case.
Secondly, there were anti-peace elements who took advantage of the demonstrations, and it was not peaceful anymore. That can clearly be seen.
Now, how many people have died? Even if it is a loss of one person, it is too much. We do not want any loss of life, whether it is a civilian or law enforcement agency.
About the numbers, I cannot tell you exactly. The second part of the unrest has not been investigated. When it transpires who did what, and who is responsible, that has to be investigated by the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission. It has a constitutional responsibility to undertake that. We are waiting for that.
Now, are our partners worried? Yes, they are worried. Ethiopia’s stability is extremely important – first and foremost for us in Ethiopia, and secondly for the entire Horn of Africa region in a geopolitical context. Everyone looks at Ethiopia as an anchor of peace and stability. So this destabilisation of Ethiopia is not in the interests of anyone, the EU or anyone else, that is why they are expressing their concern.
Secondly, there is concern by EU member states whether the government has overreacted, or whether there has been any excess use of force. I’ve been talking to many of them, I clearly indicated, let’s give the Human Rights Commission an opportunity to investigate. Prejudgement will make the investigation complicated. We share their concern and take it very seriously.
When it comes to human rights issues, when it comes to democracy, we started not because we were pushed, but because we believe it is the right thing to do for Ethiopia. We started democratising Ethiopia because the people of Ethiopia deserve it. And we have done much work – we have a very progressive constitution that protects all sort of rights – not only individual, but all groups. This is a country of identity, diversity, culture, languages, regions.
But look at the context in which we are democratising Ethiopia. We inherited a situation with no democracy at all. We are proud of our millennia-long civilisation, but when it comes to democracy, there was nothing. That’s why we are concentrating on the fundamentals – a strong constitution, a strong parliament, institutions, and the media. That work is not an easy one.
But we cannot put police next to every citizen. So there should be a citizenry that respects the rights of others, too. We addressing the right to education, the right to food, the right to clean water, so it’s not just a question of political rights, but rights in their entirety and comprehensively.
On democracy, there was the Italian occupation, followed by Emperor Haile Selassie, and the Marxist regime in the 1970s and ’80s, so obviously it is a process. On the economic front, I’ve seen the new electric railway, the new metro system in Addis Ababa, plans for a new airport, huge infrastructure projects like the new dam in the west of the country. But on the political front, if people are still willing to protest when there have been deaths, when they know they are risking their lives, that would suggest there is a failure on the politics. They don’t feel their voice is being heard in the capital, and by the government.
In terms of politics and people being heard, we have parliaments starting at the district level , then at regional level. Elected representatives there do hear the people, and the demands of the public. So it’s not only at federal level that the voices of the people are heard.
Whether those institutions are responding or not, that’s a different issue. I confess I cannot say whether all institutions have responded effectively. That’s why we are trying to address issues relating to capacity, issues relating to delivery, and to efficiency, of the grievances that have been presented by the public. Now coming to the protests – that is one way of expressing a grievance, so long as it is peaceful, so long as permission is given, yes it’s one element, and it’s a right guaranteed in our constitution.
But I can’t sit in Brussels and tell you each grievance should have been addressed this way, or that way.
You said to wait for Ethiopia’s own Human Rights Commission to report. The figure that Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have cited is that 400-500 people died in the last 12 months. Is that broadly correct?

The Commission investigated the first round of unrest and their figure is about 177 dead. The second part is not investigated. I don’t want to really fight over the figures that Human Rights Watch has reported recently.
But the figures from the first round of unrest in the report is actually greater than what the opposition was reporting, so you can see the Human Rights Commission presented its findings in a very transparent manner. As the ambassador, I can only comment on the information provided by the [human rights] Commission. And I’m asking you, ‘give us time’.
This issue for a lot of people will be unfamiliar, but this summer we saw at the Olympics the Ethiopian runner Feyisa Lilesa make a symbol of solidarity with the protests – now, would he be safe going back to Ethiopia?
I can tell you to convince him to go to Ethiopia. His family live in Ethiopia. The government, despite what others might think, cannot threaten anybody’s life. But as we have said, he is entitled to his views and actions. But I can assure you that if he wishes to come back to Ethiopia, he will be safe. Nothing will happen to him because he expresses or showed his disapproval of the government. But we will not take any action against him because he has done that.

International Agro-Industry Investment Forum starts today

State Ministers Ahmed Shide and Dr. Mebrhatu Meles giving the joint press conference.
State Ministers Ahmed Shide and Dr. Mebrhatu Meles giving the joint press conference.

In a joint press conference organized with the Ministry of Finance and Economic Cooperation, State Minister of Industry Dr. Mebrhatu Meles said that the government is determined to mobilize resources of all types to the expansion of agro-industrial parks during the second Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP II) to boost agro-industry investments in the country.

The Ministry of Industry said Ethiopia is keen to enhance the agro-industry sector to advance the transformation of manufacturing sector. The 1st International Agro-Industry Investment Forum is to be held from October 5-7, 2016.

Twenty-two corridors have been identified to launch an integrated agro-industry investment parks throughout the country, State Minister of Industry Dr. Mebrhatu Meles said. Additional 13 corridors have also been selected for the Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Agency.

An additional 17 corridors of potential agro-processing industry such as coffee, sugarcane, sesame, cotton have been identified. Some 13 of these are integrated to process more than one commercially surplus commodity and the remaining are special corridors to animal husbandry.

To avoid shortage of raw material in the textile industries, highly mechanized cotton production activities have been launched in Shinle, Omo and Amibara localities of Somali, SNNP and Amhara States respectively.

According to Dr. Mebrhatu, additionally four pilot corridors in Baeker, Bure, Zeway and Sidama areas in Tigray, Amhara, Oromia and SNNP states have been selected for the integrated agro-indusrial parks development to transform the agriculture-led economy to industry one.

He added that the international forum will help align potential resources areas and agro-processing industries for effective sub-sector development.

He said the Forum will also come up with solutions for constraints in transforming the agricultural sector and effective utilization of raw materials.

Finance and Economic Cooperation State Minister Ahmed Shide also said the Forum is an opportunity for the government to showcase its commitment in realizing vision 2025, and the potential of the economy to became Africa’s leading light manufacturing hub by the reported period.

The Forum would bring together over 1,000 participant investors, industrialists, leaders of international business and investment, international development agencies and financial companies and senior government officials from FDI source countries.

Ahmed said: “ The Forum will have sessions showcasing the country’s conducive investment climate, opportunities for financing investment in the agro-industries and three separate sessions dedicated to leather, textile and agro-processing industry respectively.”

Source: The Ethiopian Herald

Opinion Piece: Ethiopia-EU strategic cooperation remains strong

This opinion piece was initially published on euractiv.com on 4 October 2016.

Jean-Claude Juncker, Hailemariam Desalegn
Ethiopian Prime Minister H.E. Hailemariam Dessalegn and Mr Jean-Claude Junker, President of the European Commission at the signature ceremony of the Ethiopia-EU Strategic Engagement Agreement on 14 June 2016 in Brussels. Picture © European Commission

Since spring 2015, the European Union has been facing an unprecedented peak of illegal migration from the Middle East and Africa, in particular from countries of the Horn of Africa, writes Teshome Toga.

Teshome Toga is the ambassador of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia to the Benelux and Baltic countries, as well as to the European Union.

The EU has defined a set of strategies and policies to deal with this challenge internally, but also to help countries of origin and transit to manage reception and hosting of migrants. Ultimately, the goal is to address the root causes of illegal migration in the countries of origin by creating better living conditions at home.

For African countries, the most significant tool of this policy was set up in Malta at the Valletta summit in November 2015 with the EU Emergency Trust Fund for Africa, endowed with €1.8 billion for 23 African countries.

At the same summit, Ethiopia and the EU signed a joint declaration on a Common Agenda on Migration and Mobility (CAMM) that acknowledges the importance of Ethiopia as a key country of transit, destination and origin of irregular migrants and refugees from the Horn of Africa on the route to Europe.

However, this agreement faced critiques from some media outlets and political commentators who believed that through this solidarity fund with African countries, the EU was “compromising” itself by “funding authoritarian governments”.

Clarifications are thus needed regarding the relevance and use of this financial support as well as on the political partnership between the EU and African countries, and more specifically Ethiopia.

First, the EU acknowledged Ethiopia’s special role as a major host of refugees in the Horn of Africa long before the European continent itself faced a migration crisis and provided funding to the country to deal with this challenge.

With political instability and war in Somalia, South Sudan and Eritrea among others, Ethiopia has been welcoming hundreds of thousands of refugees in the last decade from different countries in the Horn of Africa region.

Today, Ethiopia is hosting more than 800,000 refugees, which is significantly more than several major European countries. As the largest host of refugees on the continent and fifth in the world, it is not surprising Ethiopia receives a coordinated support from the EU to face the challenge.

Besides, the regular cooperation support provided in the framework of the European Development Fund, as well as this support package are project-oriented and have the objective to solve specific problems.

The National Indicative Programmes are signed by the European Commission with the government of Ethiopia, and in this framework projects are implemented through the signature of Financing Agreements, which foresee different implementation modalities consisting of various degrees of decentralisation and use of government’s structures.

After implementation, the projects are screened by the Commission and the member states. More specifically, projects funded under the EU Trust Fund for Africa are being implemented through EU member state agencies, international organisations, the private sector and non-governmental organisations.

The Commission already contracted projects amounting to €67 million in Ethiopia to support most vulnerable communities and refugees in the Oromo, Amhara, Tigray, SNNP, Afar and Somali regions, while the remaining €30 million project is undergoing a competitive call for proposals.

This European support to Ethiopia’s development in the last decades has contributed to several achievements of the country recognised by the international community. According to the World Bank, poverty rates were reduced by 33% in the country between 2000 and 2011. This international organisation also recognised that health, education, and living standards have been improved, with undernourishment rates passing from 75% to 35% since 1990 and infant and child mortality rates falling considerably since 2000.

A middle-income country by 2025

Education rates and access to health facilities have also dramatically improved. More than 30 new universities opened throughout the country in less than 20 years in which more than 25 million students are enrolled; 38,000 health extension workers were trained and deployed; 3,000 health centers were built in recent years.

Among other achievements, this helped the country to reach several Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Besides this, construction of infrastructure such as roads, railway and hydroelectric dams have created the conditions for the further development of the economy and quality of life of Ethiopians and also plays a crucial role in terms of regional integration. The country has grown at a rate of about 10% in the last decade and hopes to reach the status of middle-income country by 2025.

Alongside these developments, new challenges have arisen: access to jobs for young graduates, equal access to the benefits linked with economic growth and lack of good governance.

The Ethiopian government is well aware of the legitimate demands of the Ethiopian people linked to these challenges and is determined to address them in effective ways.

Extensive consultations with the public and different parts of the society after the recent unrest in the country [editor’s note: this op-ed was written before the violence at the weekend in Addis Ababa] have led the government to improve and reorganise government bodies and structures to make them more effective and responsive and to ensure transparency and accountability.

The government is taking measures to address these challenges through deep political reforms including restructuring of some government offices.

Some of this progress, especially regarding the reduction poverty, growth of the economy and infrastructure, has been recognised by the EU. It also fully supports Ethiopia’s constructive role in peace and security in the Horn of Africa, amongst others in Somalia and South Sudan and as chair of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), and as the number one contributor to UN peacekeeping operations in Africa, as well as on thematic international debates such as climate change.

It is thus not without reason that the strategic partnership between Ethiopia and the European Union is highly valued on both sides and considered as a successful one among the ACP countries.

On this ground, it has been considerably intensified during the past years following a set of high-level political consultations. After significant milestones such as the Common Agenda on Migration and Mobility in November 2015 and the establishment of a friendship group within the European Parliament in March 2016, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and Jean-Claude Junker, European Commission President signed an Ethiopia-EU strategic engagement document in Brussels on 14 June 2016.

The Strategic Engagement Agreement aims at structuring the reinforced cooperation between the two partners, and will be followed by an Ethiopia-EU Business Forum, to be organised in the next months.

Prime Minister expresses sadness over loss of lives at Irreecha

14468203_1474438509250054_1574437324570241214_oPrime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn extended condolences over the death of people because of violence occurred at the thanksgiving festival of the Oromo people, Irreecha, today.

The Prime Minister expressed sadness over the loss of lives at the festival that promotes peace, stability and tolerance.
Hailemariam expressed sorrow over the death of 52 people at the festival, which was going smoothly until the violence started.

He said this shouldn’t happen at a festival that signifies tolerance and unity.

Noting that spectators were converging on Bishoftu since early in the morning to take part in the observance, Hailemariam said the festival was peaceful.

14468486_1474439312583307_6237809877025054746_oBut, the peaceful celebration has turned into a violence that took the lives of many people, because of the violence instigated by anti-peace elements, he added.

Instigating violence on the day that the Oromo people thank their creator is an activity against the principle of the Oromo and an act that undermines identity of the people, he added.

Saying the government will bring the perpetrators of this act into justice, the Premier called on the Oromo people to stand with the government.

Noting that the government has exerted maximum effort to control the situation peacefully, he appreciated the police for the work they have done.

Source: MFA Ethiopia

EU, US authorities press charges against intruders into Ethiopian Embassies

Countries hosting Ethiopian embassies have begun filing charges against Ethiopians who trespass the vicinities of the embassies in those countries.

Ethiopian protesters in U.S. and Europe have repeatedly stormed embassies in those countries.

Previously angered protesters have also briefly took control of the Ethiopian Embassy in London.

Tewolde Mulugeta, Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs told journalists that the Ethiopian government is working closely with US and European countries to bring perpetrators to justice.

Government officials allege that the protests in Ethiopia and elsewhere are being organised by exiled opposition movement such as the US based Ginbot-7 which had long been designated by Addis Ababa as terrorist entity.

Tewolde said the western countries are filing charges against the perpetrators in accordance with the Vienna Declaration that provides the premises of a diplomatic mission, such as an embassy, to be protected by the host country from intrusion or damage.

The Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961 is an international treaty that defines a framework for diplomatic relations between independent countries.

The Convention provides that the premises of a diplomatic mission are inviolable and the host country must protect the mission from intrusion or damage.

Contrary to the provisions of the Convention that provides for the invincibility of embassies and missions, Ethiopians in the Diaspora intruded into the compounds and created havoc on the compounds of the Ethiopian embassies in London, Stockholm, Washington and Canberra.

“Some Diasporas violated international law of immunity of the Ethiopian embassies abroad by intruding into the embassies compounds when they have every democratic rights to present their issues to the embassies in a formal legal manner,” Tewolde stated.

According to the spokesperson, the Australian government has already filed a charge against intruders into the Embassy in Canberra, while the respective governments in London, Stockholm and Washington are processing legal actions against perpetrators.

The official further said the doors of the Ethiopian government are always open to engage in dialogue with Ethiopians in the Diaspora on the policies and the development strategies of the government based on visible evidences.

Source : Sudan Tribune