The European Union Training Mission in Somalia (EUTM Somalia) has said it aims to train another 1,200 soldiers for the Somali National Army in 2015. This would approximately match the number of soldiers it has trained this year. The 128-strong EUTM Somalia team in Mogadishu has already completed 11 training courses involving 1,150 trainees, and in the coming weeks another 250 Somali soldiers are expected to complete their training. An EU military official said on Wednesday that the mission had set itself a target of training a further 1,200 soldiers in 2015. He added that getting the instructors from their living quarters to the training site remained an onerous problem due to the heavy protection required to guard against attacks by Al-Shabaab.
Ethiopia to deploy 210 volunteers to Ebola-hit countries within two weeks
Addis Ababa, 26 November 2014 (WIC) – Ethiopia on Tuesday announced that it will be deploying about 210 volunteers to Ebola-hit West African countries in two weeks.
Responding to the call of the African Union (AU) and the World Health Organization (WHO) in the country’s commitment to the African solidarity, Ethiopia earlier pledged to provide support to the Ebola-affected West African countries by deploying health professionals, said Ahmed Imano, Director of Public Relations and Communication at the Ministry of Health.
Ahmed said the East African country had also pledged to provide financial support amounting half a million U.S. dollars to support the intervention in addressing the epidemic. To implement the pledge, Ethiopia has recruited the 210 volunteers out of the 1,100 registered volunteers, according to the director, who was speaking to the press in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa. The volunteers would be deployed in the three most affected countries — Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea.
“As a member country to WHO and African Union, we prepared volunteers, preventive measure takers to these affected countries. We already recruited 210 volunteers from 1,100 registered volunteers totally and we are trying to send them,” said Ahmed. Ethiopia’s mission comprises doctors, public health officers, nurses, field epidemiologists, psychiatrists, psychologists, laboratory and health education experts among others. In addition to their assistance in addressing Ebola, the volunteers will share Ethiopia’s best practices in public health development towards community. mobilization to halt the spread of the virus within shortest time possible in the mission countries, according to the Ethiopian Ministry of Health.
The director also reiterated that Ethiopia has been undertaking various activities and preventive measures since the news of the Ebola outbreak was heard. Screening is being undertaken at Bole Airport in Addis Ababa, he said, adding training and awareness raising activities are being carried out throughout the country by varied means. “We tried to establish national committee to prevent Ebola virus from Ethiopia, and we also established technical taskforce to plan and implement preventive measures within the country,” he said. He said Ethiopia has been implementing the preventive measures in a strengthened manner to prevent the virus from entering the country.
The volunteers from Ethiopia will stay for about three months in the mission countries. (Xinua)
Ethiopian Airlines eyes African aviation liberalisation in 2015
Addis Ababa, 20 November 2014 (WIC) – Ethiopian Airlines hopes a decision to open up intra-African aviation routes will be fully implemented in 2015, the airline’s chief executive said on Thursday.
Many African states adopted the Yamoussoukro Decision in 1999 to open up intra-African aviation routes but so far the decision has not been implemented by governments, meaning air travel between countries in Africa largely remains restricted.
“The hubs that we see today in South Africa, Kenya, and Abuja are not developing as well as they should because inter-Africa traffic is still restricted,” Tewolde Gebremariam, CEO of Ethiopian Airlines, told the CAPA World Aviation Summit in Antwerp.
He said he hoped a meeting between heads of state in January 2015 would deliver progress.
“Ethiopian will of course be taking advantage of that but the biggest beneficiary will be Fastjet ,” he said, referring to the low-cost airline that has plans to create Africa’s first pan-continental airline.
Gebremariam said this and other problems, including heavy taxation and poor infrastructure, meant African carriers had not developed as fast as they should to take advantage of predicted market growth.
Airlines body IATA says eight of the 10 fastest growing markets in terms of percentage growth in passenger demand over the next five years will be in Africa.
Gebremariam said non-African carriers now accounted for 80 percent of travel between Africa and the rest of the world, up from 40 percent in the 1980s. (Reuters)
Dr Tedros meets EU representative Ms. Federica Mogherini (Nov 20, 2014)
Dr Tedros, Minister of Foreign Affairs, held discussion with the European Union Foreign Affairs High Representative, Ms. Federica Mogherini in Copenhagen on Wednesday (November 19). Dr Tedros said Ethiopia appreciated the continued cooperation and the support provided by the European Union to help the country achieve development, democracy and good governance. The Minister said the good relations between Ethiopia and European Union member countries could be strengthened by boosting investment, trade, tourism and technical cooperation. He briefed Ms. Mogherini on the situation in South Sudan and Somalia. Dr Tedros said European Union support for Somalia should continue to enhance efforts to realize a developed, democratic and stable Somalia. He also noted that the comprehensive and inclusive IGAD-led peace talks on South Sudan were bringing the warring parties towards a resolution to their conflict. Ms. Mogherini welcomed Ethiopia’s commitment and efforts to realize a developed, secure and stable state in Ethiopia as well as provide for these benefits for the region, for Africa and more widely. She reiterated the EU’s commitment and support to the development of Ethiopia.
Authority plans to construct 43 road projects this budget year
Addis Ababa, 20 November 2014 (WIC) – The Ethiopian Road authority says it is working hard to complete the construction of 43 road projects in this Ethiopian fiscal year. Communication Director with the Authority, Samson Wendemu told WIC that the authority plans to complete these projects so as to attain the Five Years’ Growth and Transformation plan (GTP).
The construction of the road projects will cover 2,787.5 kilometers of road, Samson said, adding that the majority of the building expenses are covered by the government and the rest is covered from donors and loans.Participations of local contractors and consultants in the road construction projects are increasing from time to time. According to Samsom, 31 of the projects are under construction by local and 12 of them by foreign contractors.
The completion of the road projects will link districts to districts, zones to zones, regions from regions and the country with neighboring countries, he said.The Ethiopia Road Authority totally plans to undertake the construction of 294 road projects with the annually allocated budget of 29.9 billion EB in this budget year.
Dr Tedros holds talks with FOSS Foundation representatives in Denmark
Addis Ababa, 19 November 2014 (WIC) – Dr. Tedros, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Ethiopia, talks with the FOSS Foundation’s Senior Vice President for Global Sales and Marketing in Copenhagen on Tuesday.Dr Tedros said that having co-operation and close relations with high-tech companies like the FOSS Foundation which focuses on high technology and research to find solutions to agricultural problems was essential for Ethiopia’s efforts to transform the country’s agriculture to necessary mechanized and high-tech levels.
The Minister noted that the Ethiopian government had made the transformation and improvement of the agriculture sector and production mechanisms a priority. He pointed out that the country had huge and untapped areas of arable land, sufficient water, comfortable weather and a wide variety of agricultural ecological zones.
These ranged from lowest place on earth, the Dalol depression hundred meters below sea level, to the Roof of Africa, Ras Dashen, more than four thousand meters above sea level.
FOSS Foundation Senior Vice President, Mr Henrik Wiboltt said that the Foundation had great interest in working on agriculture technology, research, and the search for dedicated solutions for agricultural production in Ethiopia.ccording to MoFA, the Minister assured the FOSS Foundation representatives that the Ethiopian government was committed to provide all possible and necessary support for a FOSS branch in Ethiopia.
The 2nd Ethio-French Business Forum Opens in Paris
Addis Ababa, 19 November 2014 (WIC) – Ethiopia’s Minister of Communication and Information Technology with the rank of Deputy Prime Minister to coordinate the Economy and Finance Cluster, Dr. Debretsion Gebremichael, and French Minister of State for Foreign Trade, Promotion of Tourism and French Nationals Abroad, Mr. Matthias Fekl, opened the second Ethio-French Business Forum in Paris on Monday (November 17).
The Forum aims to expedite economic cooperation as well as an opportunity for the business persons of the two countries to network.
The meeting, at the French Agency for International Business Development (UBIFRANCE), brought together around 30 Ethiopian firms and contractors and representatives of almost 150 French firms, including many from Small and Medium Enterprises and intermediate-sized companies.
The Forum is another step in the deployment of economic diplomacy to promote business-to-business cooperation and sustain Ethiopia’s ongoing economic growth.
PM Hailemariam awards 268 outstanding science, technology innovators
Addis Ababa, 14 November 2014 (WIC) – Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn has awarded 268 extraordinary science and technology innovators today in Addis Ababa.
Speaking at the 5th National Science, Technology and Innovation Award Day marked with the theme “Science and Technology Research for Sustainable Industrial Development” across the nation, Prime Hailemariam emphasized the need to boost capacity to conduct coordinated scientific and technological researches.
According to the Premier, exerting a consolidated effort in the sector is crucial to realize the country’s renaissance.
The government is committed to enhance technological transformation in the country and support scientist in the fields, he said adding that it will be important to effectively implement the 70/30 intake system off universities so as to strengthen the need to science and technology innovation.
Minister of Science and Technology Demitu Hambissa on her behalf said that technological streams are vital to fulfill Ethiopia’s transformation plans.
It is learnt that vocational program trainers, teachers, trainees, researchers and innovators who demonstrated remarkable progress in science and math were awarded.
Ethiopia earns close to 1 Bln. USD from pulses, oilseeds
Addis Ababa, 12 November 2007 (WIC) – The President of Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia Dr. Mulatu Teshome said Ethiopia has earned close to 1 billion USD from pulses, oilseeds and spices in the 2013/4 fiscal year.
Addressing the participants of t the 4th International Conference on Pulses, Oilseeds and Species, the president said the sector contributed 920 million USD to the export earnings of the country with a share of over 28 per cent.
The growth trajectory that we have had observed in the last four years is very encouraging, notwithstanding that the country earns from the sector is still below what it would have potentially endowed, he added.
The president also said that Ethiopia has endowed with untapped and immense investment opportunities in the areas of agriculture with favorable climate which is suitable for the production of Pulses, Oilseeds and Spices.
He urged stakeholders to participate in the sector and do their level best in contributing to Ethiopia’s strong economic performance through value addition of Ethiopian pulses, oilseeds and spices.
He also called up on investors to invest in Ethiopia where there is availability of vast, virgin, fertile and cultivable land, abundance of trained and easily trainable labor force.
Ethiopia’s trade performance has improved since the commencement of GTP I in the 2010/20111 fiscal year. However, our exports remained dominated by agricultural primary commodities, and the observed performance was substantiated by increasing the volume of export, and not through value addition, the president underscored.
According to the president, the government is fully committed not only to boost the sector’s potential but also its operational capacity by making it more vibrant to meet the needs of international markets.
The conference is organized under the theme of “Global Partnership for Sustainable Market Growth” with the objective of boosting the sector and make benefit more the economy and all the stake holders in the value chain.
Ministers, ambassadors, stake holders and Ethiopian business partners were in attendance in this a two days conference.
IGAD-led South Sudan Peace Talks: Opening Statement by Prime Minister Hailemariam
Excellency Yoweri Kaguta Museveni,
President of the Republic of Uganda
Excellency Omar Ahmad Hassan Al Bashir, President of the Republic of Sudan
Excellency Ismail Omar Guelleh, President of the Republic of Djibouti
Excellency General Salva Kiir Mayardit, President of the Republic of South Sudan
Excellency Hassan Sheik Mahmoud, President of the Federal Government of Somalia
Excellency Uhuru M. Kenyatta, President of the Republic of Kenya
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen
I would like to take this opportunity to welcome you all to Addis Ababa. I would also like to express my appreciation to you all for taking sometime off your busy schedule to attend this summit on such short notice. Thank you indeed.
This is yet another summit we are convening to address the conflict in South Sudan and the progress so far has been frustrating if not gloomy indeed. Despite agreements after agreements to end hostilities and to set in motion a transitional process that will lay the groundwork for sustainable political solution to the conflict in south Sudan, these promises have been observed more by breach.
Most IGAD summits have served to both sides primarily as rather welcome intervals in which to prepare for a contest over military preeminence, not as genuine forums to seek political solutions to the conflict. Tactical cleverness not strategically reliable calculations have largely informed the decisions of either side all along. There appears to be little appetite for peace while the people of south Sudan continue bearing the full brunt of conflict. Apart from the tens of thousands so far killed, hundreds of thousands are rendered refugees while famine and starvation is staring millions more in the eye. The status quo is unsustainable indeed.
Excellencies
Ladies and Gentlemen
IGAD has been preoccupied with this issue for almost a year now in the hope that regional ownership of the mediation process will ensure maximum efficacy. This is a principled position taken with the firm belief that the early internationalization of the negotiation process would complicate matters. I am afraid it won’t be long before we reach the end of the line in this regard.
While in our Summit today we expect to make significant headway into breaking the impasse, it should be clear that it’s time the issue be given the full attention it deserves by the AU and UNSC in order for meaningfully strong actions to be taken. That the patience of the international community is wearing thin is not hopefully lost on both sides. There are already ominous signs that holding those responsible for the plight of the people of South Sudan is being seriously considered. While it is not the wish of our regional bloc that both sides go down that path, there is no telling if, in the absence of meaningful progress, such a course of action can be avoided at all.
Excellencies
Ladies and Gentlemen
We have our plates full and it is only imperative that we once again reflect the progress so far and take serious measures to break the impasse. Today we will have consultations amongst IGAD leaders to take stock of the sticking points that are standing in the way of progress. We will leave no stone unturned to get the two parties to come to their senses and honor their words. We will do every thing we can to impress up on both sides the futility of trying to fight this conflict out waiting for the dry season and encourage them to genuinely embrace peace. We will use all the influence we can to bring the two sides back to reason.
If past experience is any guide, this will not be easy but far from impossible to achieve. It’s my hope and expectation that we will manage to achieve a breakthrough that the parties will intend to seriously honor. In closing, I would like to thank our partners from the international community for their consistent support and express my hope that they will step up their efforts in order to help achieve lasting peace and stability in South Sudan.
I thank you