First batch of team Ethiopia arrives in Doha

The first batch of the Ethiopian athletics team that will compete in the 17th IAAF World Athletics Championships arrived in Doha, Qatar.

Upon arrival, they were received by first vice President of Ethiopian Athletics Federation (EAF), Derartu Tulu, office head of EAF, Bililign Mekoya and Ambassador of Ethiopia to Qatar, Samia Zekaria.

Team Ethiopia will participate in middle-distance, long-distance, and cross country events at the championships.

The 17th edition of the World Athletics Championship will be held from 27 September–6 October 2019 in Doha, Qatar.

Guterres commends Ethiopia’s reforms

President Sahle-Work Zewde met with the United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres on the sidelines of the 74th United Nations General Assembly in New York.

The President and Guterres held a bilateral meeting, said Ethiopia at the UN on Twitter.

During the talks, the Secretary General reaffirmed his appreciation for the reforms in Ethiopia and Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s mediation in the Sudan.

Guterres also emphasized the need to pursue the same with South Sudan.

The Ethiopian President for her part highlighted the success of political, legal and economic reforms over the last year and a half.

She also reiterated Ethiopia’s commitment to support the peace process in South Sudan and the peaceful settlement of the situation between Eritrea and Djibouti.

President Sahle-Work, a former member of senior UN leadership, expressed pleasure at re-engaging with the UN in her capacity as Head of State.

She further promised to positively consider the Secretary General’s invitation to join his circle of leadership on prevention of sexual exploitation and abuse.

President Sahle-Work also attended a consultative meeting on the peace and development of Africa, which was presided over by Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The Ethiopian President has been participating in different events on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.

Why Ethiopia is the eighth wonder of the world

Until recently, Ethiopia was seen as a destination for backpacking hippies and Bob Geldof. We were missing out on an eighth wonder of the world in the fantasy cathedrals of Lalibela, a history-changing Second World War battle fought in an Arthurian castle, landscapes out of Tolkien and wildlife you won’t see anywhere else on the planet.

Ethiopia has transformed: free hospitals, 50 per cent of the cabinet are women and affordable internal flights let you hop from lush landscapes to tropical resorts in under an hour.

You can stay in five-star hotels or comfortable guesthouses, and the unusual experiences on offer are perfect for anyone bored with predictable holidays.

On the menu: Ben Abeba restaurant serves Ethiopian scotch eggs

We traveled with Exclusive Ethiopia, run by British holiday specialist Tamara Britten and Ethiopian expert Mulugeta Ababu. They create holidays to your budget, provide trusted guides or personally escort you. Tamara is also a fully qualified yoga instructor. I snaffled private sessions at each exotic location and even sorted my dodgy back.

Our tour began on a hill above Addis Ababa. Gentle polo ponies carry you to Washa Mikael, a romantic ruined church carved into the mountain more than 700 years ago.

At the palace of mischievous Emperor Haile Selassie, now a museum, Mulugeta swept us back to a royal party in the 1940s. Selassie had invited international dignitaries, then set his pet lions loose in the dining room.

We had an excellent night’s sleep at the Elilly hotel in the city and later feasted on spicy fish tibs at the Safari Lodge in Adama, under Africa’s most unique hotel room – it’s shaped like a spaceship.

The next day we had fresh guava cocktails overlooking a palm-fringed lake and a swim in an infinity pool at Haile Resort Hawassa, owned by the greatest long-distance runner in history, Haile Gebrselassie.

The rarest wolf on Earth – one of just 400 – came and had a good look at us on the Sanetti Plateau, an extraordinary moonscape that smells, bafflingly, of maple syrup.

The ultimate destination for birdwatchers and gardeners is Bale Mountain Lodge, which teems with endangered species. Here you can fall asleep in your own tree house to the sound of nearby waterfalls.

A night at the Sheraton Addis was reliably excellent, and we grabbed the best French pastries outside Paris for our one-hour flight to the bougainvillea-lined boulevards of Bahir Dar. Kuriftu resort on Lake Tana could grace a Bond movie, with a private cave and petal-strewn four-poster bed. We stepped on to a boat to find the source of the Blue Nile. It’s a view from a lost time: fishermen in bamboo canoes drifted past hippo ears wiggling in the water.

We walked through a coffee plantation to the 14th Century monastery Ura Kidane Mihret. Glorious Technicolor floor-to-ceiling paintings show Ethiopia’s version of the Bible: black angels protect a black baby Jesus. And do not miss an alternative reality experience – Awra Amba is a village that believes in being nice. I expected to find some grumpy hippies grinding corn at the roadside. Instead, the village is made up of dozens of modern families who look after elderly folk and anyone who has fallen on hard times. They fund the care by selling woven houseware that wouldn’t look out of place on Grand Designs. You can stay here for £6 a night.

The town of Gondar hosted what must have been the most surreal battle of the war. Tommies found themselves fighting like knights in medieval-style castles, alongside the legendary Ethiopian irregular forces. They were known for such pranks as carrying raw beef to eat over slain bodies to scare the enemy into thinking they were cannibals. It worked – the Fascists crumbled.

For a holiday to tell your grandchildren about, see Lalibela, though they might think you’re making it up. The first European visitor 500 years ago wrote: ‘I am wary of writing about these buildings because it seems to me that I shall not be believed.’

When Muslims took over Jerusalem’s holy city in 1187, King Lalibela, a brilliant engineer, came up with a fantasy – his own Jerusalem up a hill in Africa. His ornate cathedrals are mind-blowing.

Hotel Maribela offers beautiful rooms – ours had epic views over the valley. We ended with sundowners in Ben Abeba, a restaurant shaped like floating flowers. It’s the creation of Lalibela native Habtamu Baye and hilarious Scot Susan Aitchison, who invented a culinary masterpiece that deserves its place in the cradle of mankind. If you try one Ethiopian scotch egg before you die, make sure to try it here.

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Premier receives Hessian Peace Prize

Minister of Peace, Muferiat Kamil, received the award on behalf of the Prime Minister at a ceremony held yesterday in the Landtag, Germany.

Prime Minister Dr Abiy was declared winner of the award by the members of the Board of Trustees of Albert Osswald Foundation last August.

“In his first year in office, he released dissidents, fired corrupt officials, and sealed a historic reconciliation. For this, he now receives the Hessian Peace Prize,” said the Foundation in a statement.

“Prime Minister Dr Abiy has become the hopeful, especially through the conclusion of a peace treaty with the neighbouring country of Eritrea, it said.

For 20 years, the two states had been at a state of no war no peace. Domestically, PM Dr Abiy initiated political and economic reforms in the multi-ethnic nation of 105 million people.

“Abiy has scheduled free elections for May 2020. This year, his campaign to plant four billion trees for residents across the country made headlines,” the statement noted.

The Hessian Peace Prize, endowed with € 25,000 was established in 1993 by Albert Osswald, the former Prime Minister of the German state of Hesse.

It is awarded annually to people who have rendered “outstanding services to international understanding and peace”

#FBC

Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew Delivers Opening Remarks at the Energy Action Forum

Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew delivered opening remarks at the Energy Action Forum hosted by Ford Foundation on the sidelines of the ongoing 74th Session of the United Nations General Assembly meeting (September 22,2019).
He noted that the Forum is a priority as it is taking place on the eve of the most high-level gathering of Heads of State and Governments dealing with urgent climate change issues since Paris Conference in 2015.

He further underscored Ethiopia’s commitment to build Climate Resilient Green Economy. He called for stronger focus on access to energy in the poorest and most vulnerable countries in the investment decisions of the Green Climate Fund. #EnergyAction #Climate Action Summit.

Ethiopia and Denmark will co-chair the Climate Action Summit of the ongoing 74th Session of the United Nations General Assembly.

Ethiopian Embassy in Brussels takes part in a Tourism Fair in Mechelen, Belgium

This 22 September 2019, the Embassy of Ethiopia in Brussels took part in the “Travel Africa” tourism fair which was held in Mechelen, a town located 31 km from Brussels.
Organized by Joker Travel Agency, the event attracted over 1000 potential tourists.
This Belgian tour operator, recently included Ethiopia under its tour package for the first time, used to focus only on the southern parts of Africa.
During the event, a separate session was dedicated for Ethiopia to present its tourist attraction sites to the visitors besides to an Info-booth which was providing information and explanations about Ethiopia’s historical, cultural and natural tourist attractions.
As part of the event, a traditional Ethiopian cultural coffee ceremony which caught the attention of many visitors, was also hosted.

Forum discusses privatization and share market in Ethiopia

A discussion forum on privatization and share market in Ethiopia opened today, organized by HST Consulting Plc.

The objective of the meeting is to provide a recommendation to the government on what kind of privatization and stock market should Ethiopia pursue.

In his opening remake, Teshome Tafese, State Minister of Finance, said such kind of discussions would help Ethiopia to get more experiences in how to involve in privatization and share market.

Strengths and weaknesses observed in the privatization practiced during the past years were discussed during the event.

Ethiopia privatized 381 state-owned enterprises in two phases during the past 27 years, generating 49 billion birr for the government.

However, due to lack of proper monitoring mechanisms, most of the privatized enterprises failed to achieve their target.

The participants recommend the government to take lesson from this failure and avoid considering privatization as the only option

They advised the government to avoid privatizing enterprises that generate good income, citing the Chinese ZTE Corporation and Huawei Technologies, as examples.

They also recommended the government to develop clear privatization roadmap and policy.

Great Ethiopian Run has won the “Best International Race” award

Great Ethiopian Run has won the “Best International Race” award.

The Great Ethiopian Run is an annual 10-kilometre road running event held in Addis Ababa every year since 2001.

The last event was staged on 18th November 2018 with 44,000 participants, which makes it the biggest 10km road race in Africa.

The 19th edition of TOTAL Great Ethiopian Run 10km will be on 17 November 2019.

Ethiopia’s Foreign Minister receives Norwegian delegation

The two sides held broad discussion on bilateral, regional, and global issues, Gedu said efforts are being made to further strengthen the longstanding ties between the two countries, and their cooperation in climate change and other related issues.

He thanked the Norwegian Government for the support it has been offering to Ethiopia’s socio-economic sectors.

The Foreign Minister briefed members of the Committee on the ongoing reforms in Ethiopia and the country’s efforts to maintain peace and promote regional integration.

He also called on Norway to provide support to the reform initiative.

Anniken Huitfeldt, Chair of the Standing Committee, commended Ethiopia’s ongoing reform initiatives, and its efforts to promote gender equality. She also hailed the country’s tree plantation campaign.

She further said the peace deal reached Ethiopia and Eritrea would contribute a lot for the stability of the region.