Category Archives: News

Senator Feingold Introduces Tougher Human Rights Legislation on Ethiopia

Tadias Magazine

By Tadias Staff

Published: Sunday, August 29, 2010

WASHINGTON (TADIAS) – Senator Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), a member of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, has introduced a bill entitled “Support for Democracy and Human Rights in Ethiopia Act of 2010.”

The legislation, co-sponsored by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), asserts new U.S. foreign policy towards Ethiopia focused on improving humans rights and empowering democratic institutions. The proposed law in the 111th Congress follows Ethiopia’s 2010 disputed national elections.

Below is the text of the bill. You can track its progress at Govtrack.us.

S. 3757:
To reaffirm United States objectives in Ethiopia and encourage critical democratic and humanitarian principles and practices, and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

This Act may be cited as the ‘Support for Democracy and Human Rights in Ethiopia Act of 2010′.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

Congress makes the following findings:

(1) Despite progress and an estimated annual growth rate of nearly 10 percent, Ethiopia remains one of the poorest and most hunger-prone countries in the world, with more than half of the population of 78,000,000 living on less than $1 per day.

(2) Since the collapse of the Derg and overthrow of the Mengistu regime in 1991, the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front-led government has overseen the introduction of a multiparty system and the adoption of a new constitution that guarantees economic, social, and cultural rights and states that `human and democratic rights of peoples and citizens shall be protected.’

(3) Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a bloody border war between 1998 and 2000, and, despite the Algiers Accord ending the conflict and the agreement to abide by the final and binding Ethiopia-Eritrea Border Commission (EEBC) arbitration, the Government of Ethiopia has refused to comply with the final physical demarcation of the border and the Government of Eritrea has expelled the United Nations peacekeeping force, causing regional instability and keeping alive the possibility of a renewed border war.

(4) According to the March 2010 report by the United Nations Monitoring Group on Somalia, `Since the cessation of hostilities between the [Ethiopia and Eritrea] in 2000, Asmara has sought to counter Ethiopian influence in the region and supported armed groups within Ethiopia who oppose the current government. Since 2006, and possibly earlier, Eritrea has supported opposition to the Transitional Federal Government, which it perceives as a proxy for the Government of Ethiopia.’

(5) Sporadic fighting has continued between Ethiopian National Defense Forces (ENDF) and armed opposition Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) in the Somali Region of Ethiopia. Stringent restrictions continue to be placed on media and aid workers, making it difficult for independent observers and aid workers to monitor or respond to the humanitarian and human rights situation, including the behavior of the Ethiopian National Defense Forces, allied militia forces, and the Ogaden National Liberation Front.

(6) Credible sources indicate there are ongoing and serious human rights abuses against civilians in the Somali Region, including arbitrary arrests and detentions by military, police and paramilitary forces; allegations of torture in military and police custody, including sexual violence against women and girls; and diversion of food aid intended for civilian communities.

(7) In the run up to the 2010 elections, the Ethiopian Parliament passed a number of new laws, including the Charities and Societies Proclamation and the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, which severely restrict freedom of expression, freedom of association, peaceful assembly, and the right to a fair trial, while broadening the definition of terrorism.

(8) The Department of State’s 2009 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices states that `although the constitution and law prohibit the use of torture and mistreatment . . . [o]pposition political party leaders reported frequent and systematic abuse and intimidation of their supporters by police and regional militias’ and that `opposition UDJ party president Birtukan Mideksa, whose pardon was revoked and life sentence reinstate in December 2008, remain in prison throughout the year. She was held in solitary confinement . . . despite a court ruling that indicate it was a violation of her constitutional rights’.

(9) In its 2010 Freedom in the World report, Freedom House noted that, in the run up to elections, Ethiopia saw a `narrowing of political activity . . .’ and that `the government cracked down on operations of nongovernmental organizations and . . . a series of arrests of opposition figures’.

(10) The European Union Election Observer Mission noted in its preliminary statement on the May 23, 2010 elections, `The National Electoral Board of Ethiopia administered the electoral process in an efficient and competent manner, but failed to dispel opposition parties’ lack of trust in its independence. While several positive improvements have been introduced, the electoral process fell short of certain international commitments, notably regarding the transparency of the process and the lack of a level playing field for all contesting parties.’

(11) In testimony before the Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health of the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson stated that `[w]hile the [Ethiopian] elections were calm and peaceful and largely without any kind of violence we note with some degree of remorse that the elections there were not up to international standards,’ and that `[i]t is important that Ethiopia move forward in strengthening its democratic institutions and when elections are held that it level the playing field to give everyone a free opportunity to participate without fear or favor’.

(12) On May 25th, 2010, the National Security Council’s spokesman Mike Hammer, released a statement which noted with concern that `The limitation of independent observation and the harassment of independent media representatives [in Ethiopia] are deeply troubling . …[and that an] environment conducive to free and fair elections was not in place even before Election Day.’ The statement also noted that `[i]n recent years, the Ethiopian government has taken steps to restrict political space for the opposition through intimidation and harassment, tighten its control over civil society, and curtail the activities of independent media. We are concerned that these actions have restricted freedom of expression and association and are inconsistent with the Ethiopian government’s human rights obligations.’

SEC. 3. STATEMENT OF POLICY.

It is the policy of the United States–

(1) to support and encourage efforts by the people and Government of Ethiopia–

(A) to achieve a participatory multiparty democracy, an active and unhindered civil society, rule of law and accountability, judicial capacity and independence, freedom of the press, respect for human rights, and economic development; and

(B) to develop a comprehensive strategy to combat extremism and terrorism in a manner consistent with international law;

(2) to promote peace and stability, equal access to humanitarian assistance regardless of gender, ethnicity, religion, or political views, and good governance, transparency, and accountability;

(3) to seek the unconditional release of all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience in Ethiopia, and the repeal of laws that enable politically motivated arrests without due process;

(4) to prohibit funding to any unit of the Ethiopian security forces if the Secretary of State has credible information that such unit has committed a gross violation of human rights, unless the Secretary certifies to the appropriate congressional committees that the Government of Ethiopia is taking effective measures to bring the responsible members of the security forces unit to justice; and

(5) to seek a resolution of the ongoing dispute between the Government of Ethiopia and the Government of Eritrea consistent with the Ethiopia-Eritrea Border Commission arbitration decisions on border demarcation, to press the Government of Eritrea to cease all support for armed opposition groups in Ethiopia and the region, and to urge both Governments to contribute constructively to stability throughout the Horn of Africa, especially in Somalia.

SEC. 4. SENSE OF CONGRESS.

It is the sense of Congress that the United States Government should–

(1) build on successful diplomatic efforts that contributed to the October 2007 release of political prisoners in Addis Ababa, and press the Ethiopian government to release Birtukan Mideksa, as well as other political prisoners;

(2) urge the Government of Ethiopia to repeal or at a minimum amend the Civil Society Proclamation, the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, and the Mass Media and Freedom of Information Proclamation in order to genuinely protect the constitutional rights and freedoms of all Ethiopian citizens;

(3) press the Government of Ethiopia to allow human rights and humanitarian groups, as well as the media, to have unfettered access to areas of concern throughout the country;

(4) encourage and assist the United Nations and other independent organizations and the media to investigate credible reports of gross violations of human rights or international humanitarian law in the Somali region of Ethiopia, to publish any information of serious abuse, and send consistent messages to the Government of Ethiopia that the continuation of such violations or impunity in this region, or Ethiopia more generally, has consequences for relations between the United States and Ethiopia; and

(5) encourage the Governments of both Ethiopia and Eritrea to immediately take steps to lessen tensions, physically demarcate the border in accord with the Ethiopia-Eritrea Border Commission decision, and promote normalization of relations between the two countries.

SEC. 5. RESTRICTIONS ON ASSISTANCE.

(a) Conditions-

(1) PROHIBITION OF FUNDS- Notwithstanding any other provision of law, assistance may not be provided to the Government of Ethiopia unless the Secretary of State certifies annually that the Government of Ethiopia has taken demonstrable steps–

(A) to ensure the autonomy and fundamental freedoms of civil society organizations to pursue work on civic education, democratization, good governance, accountability, human rights, and conflict resolution, without excessive government intervention or intimidation;

(B) to respect the rights of and permit non-violent political parties to operate free from intimidation and harassment, including releasing opposition political leaders currently imprisoned;

(C) to strengthen the independence of its judiciary, including developing the capacity of the judiciary at the national, regional, and local levels;

(D) to allow Voice of America and other independent media to operate and broadcast without interference in Ethiopia;

(E) to promote respect for human rights and accountability within its security forces, including undertaking credible investigations into any allegations of abuse and ensuring appropriate punishment; and

(F) to ensure that humanitarian and development entities, including those of the United Nations, have unfettered access to all regions of the country without prejudice to the political views of recipients.

(2) WAIVER- The prohibition included in paragraph (1) shall not apply if the Secretary of State certifies in writing to Congress that waiving such a prohibition is in the national security interest of the United States.

(b) Exceptions- The prohibitions in paragraph (1) shall not apply to–
(1) health and HIV/AIDS assistance;
(2) humanitarian assistance; or
(3) emergency food aid.

(c) Report- Not later than 120 days after exercising a waiver pursuant to subsection (a)(2), and every 90 days thereafter, the Secretary of State shall submit a report to the appropriate congressional committees assessing progress made by the Government of Ethiopia in the areas set forth in subparagraphs (A) through (F) of subsection (a)(2).

SEC. 6. DEFINITIONS.

In this Act the term `appropriate congressional committees’ means–

(1) the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; and

2) the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives.


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Ethiopia’s capital city: Make it prettier and cheaper

The Economist

Aug 26th 2010 | ADDIS ABABA

AMHARIC has no precise word for architecture, but it needs one. Ethiopia’s capital, founded by Emperor Menelik II in 1886, now has 4.6m people but that figure may well double by 2020. Dirk Hebel of Addis Ababa’s revamped architecture school says that “the first thing we do is to sit down with the students for a day and explain what [it] is”.

According to the UN, Addis has one of the higher densities of slum dwellers in the world. But their geographical pattern is unusual. Most African cities separate fairly neatly into poor and rich areas “like a sunny-side-up egg”, with slums spreading out from the rim, says Mr Hebel. But Addis is “more of a scrambled egg”. A lack of crime and a tradition whereby the rich seem to tolerate the poor living among them mean that Addis’s slums often lie in the seams between office buildings and flats in the more affluent parts of the city.

Some cash for the overhaul of the architecture school has come from a technical institute in Zurich, known by its initials ETH. Mr Hebel and Marc Angélil, head of ETH’s architecture school, have co-written a book that explores the city’s many architectural styles. Ministries built in Ethiopia’s Marxist period (1974-91) were kit models from the Soviet Union. Fascist-style buildings built during the Italian occupation (1935-41) have often proved more suitable. Messrs Hebel and Angélil think African architects could learn from the way the Italians allowed streets to radiate out from grand central buildings.

What the architects call this “mixity” of styles may offer a chance to tackle the scourges of traffic gridlock and pollution. The city still has some open spaces that could be artfully filled in if public transport and the water supply were improved, along with the planting of indigenous trees and grasses. Read more.


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Russian Explorer Claims Unusual Access to the Ark of the Covenant in Ethiopia

Tadias Magazine

By Tadias Staff

Published: Thursday, August 26, 2010

New York (TADIAS) – The Voice of Russia is reporting that celebrity explorer and ordained Orthodox deacon Fyodor Konyukhov has been given the unusual access to view the Ark of the Covenant in Ethiopia.

According to the radio station’s website, the world-famous traveler went to Ethiopia to work on an officially sanctioned project of producing a map with new tourist routes to Ethiopia’s historical sites. The Voice of Russia announced that he is now “the first European to see the Ark of the Covenant where the stone tablets with the Ten Commandments communicated to Moses by God on Mount Sinai are believed to have been put.” Corroboration from the Ethiopian side has not been cited.

“I did not expect it, but the Ethiopians showed me the Arc of the Covenant,” Fyodor Konyukhov told VOR. “It was four o’clock, and I was with priests at the service. I was standing near the keeper of the relic and I looked into his eyes. I have never seen such a person. Light was emitting from his eyes. He could not talk to me, because priests do not talk during Lent. The Arc of the Covenant was taken out and it was shown to me. An Ethiopian operator was at the scene and filmed the event,” he said.

According to Professor Ayele Bekerie of Cornell University, who penned a recent article on the subject for Tadias Magazine, the biblical relic, which is a central tenet of the Ethiopian Orthodox Christian faith, has been a source of puzzlement and speculation by generations of foreign travelers and researchers alike. “The Ark of the Covenant may have been a source of mystery and curiosity, but for Ethiopian Christians, it is the rock of their faith,” wrote Bekerie. “There have been countless conjectures regarding the Ark’s fate and final resting place, but the Ethiopian Christians locate the Ark or what they call Tabot at the center of their faith…while the rest of the world sees it, at best, as a source of inspiration to write mystery novels, construct countless theories or make adventurous films, the Ethiopians believe that the Ark of the Covenant was brought to Ethiopia from Jerusalem with the return of Menelik I after his famous visit with his father, King Solomon.'”

Meanwhile, The Voice of Russia says the explorer has also been granted permission to build a Russian Orthodox church in Addis Ababa, which will be named St. George chapel. “We met with the builders and Ethiopian workers. Our embassy helped us. I hope to install a cross at the site before I leave for the expedition in February,” Konyukhov said.


You may read the original story at The Voice of Russia.

Related:

The Not-So-Lost Ark of the Covenant

Related video:

Ethiopia – Keepers of the Lost Ark (David Adams Films)

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USDFA Sends $300000 Worth of Med-Equipment to Ethiopia

Above: USDFA has sent large supplies of medical equipment
to help furnish a new hospital under construction in Ethiopia.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Sunday, August 22, 2010

New York (Tadias) – US Doctors for Africa, a California based NGO, announced that it has shipped nearly $300,000 worth of medical equipment to Ethiopia.

The cargo, which also contains medical supplies, is intended to furnish a new hospital under construction in the Oromo region of Ethiopia.

According to USDFA’s Founder and CEO Ted Alemayhu, the material is being delivered through the local health authorities. “Members of the Oromo regional government officials have expressed their advance gratitude to USDFA for the vital support in providing the supplies to the hospital,” Mr. Alemayhu told Tadias. “The facility currently being built would provide some vital healthcare services to over 350,000 people.”

Mr. Alemayhu said USDFA mobilizes American healthcare professionals to engage in service in Africa, and also plans to send volunteers to the area on a regular basis. “Besides sending the medical equipments and supplies, we plan to send medical personnel to the region for short term missions year round,” he said.

You can learn more about U.S. Doctors for Africa at USDFA.org.

Washington Post Highlights Henok Tesfaye

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, August 16, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The Washington Post features Henok Tesfaye, an Ethiopian American parking mogul who started in valet-parking to become one of the biggest players in Washington, D.C.’s parking industry. Tesfaye’s company, U Street Parking, has been “awarded a lucrative contract to oversee 37,000 public parking spaces at Dulles International and Reagan National airports, including four garages, three surface lots and a valet service.”

Tesfaye, whom Tadias highlighted last year when he hosted a fundraiser for the reelection bid of Mayor Adrian M. Fenty at Etete, said winning the business was an emotional experience. “When I got the call that we had got the contract, I cried,” Henok told the paper, from his office in a rowhouse on Rhode Island Avenue NE. “We were a long shot. We’ve always been a long shot.”

But those who know him in the community consider him to be a trailblazer.

“He’s the leading young entrepreneur in our community. . . . I know him from when he was a parking attendant, and it’s great to see these types of businesses grow,” said Dereje Desta, the publisher of Zethiopia, an Ethiopian newspaper in the District.

Read the story at Washingtonpost.com:
Young parking lot czar is the face of Ethiopian success in the D.C. area.

Related from Tadias Archives
Photos from Mayor Adrian M. Fenty’s Fundraiser at Etete

Made in Ethiopia: Sole Rebels Wins Eco-Bold Green Award

Above: Sole Rebels, Ethiopia’s first fair trade fashion company,
has won this year’s Eco-Bold Green Award. (Exclusive photo)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Sunday, August 15, 2010

New York (Tadias) – EcoBold, the Silicon Valley-based provider of online video reviews of green and eco-friendly products, has named Sole Rebels, Ethiopia’s environmentally-sensible footwear brand, as winner of its first Annual Green Awards under “Best Shoes” category.

According to the company: “The award recipients represent an array of green companies…judged on a series of ‘green qualifications,’ which scrutinized their product and examined company-wide practices such as promoting green initiatives to employees, packaging footprint, and social causes impacting the environment.”

Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu, Co-founder and Managing Director of Sole Rebels, said her team welcomes the news. “We are really honored and excited. When I told the team here, they were sort of in shock,” she told Tadias via email. “Then, big smiles, lots of them!”

According to EcoBold’s Chief Executive, contestants were primarily considered on the basis of the greenness of their products as well as eco-sensible business practices. “The contributions made by these green companies make a tremendous difference in how people produce, consume, and think about the environment,” Steffany Boldrini, EcoBold’s CEO and Founder, said in a statement. “Their level of commitment and dedication to making a difference with sustainable and eco-friendly products are reflections of company-wide green initiatives towards a greener future.”

Bethlehem said her company accepts the accolade as a recognition of the brand’s message that organic living is part of the nation’s way of life. “It affirms our belief that we are green by heritage,” she said. “We utilize Ethiopia’s immense, diverse, sustainable and eco-friendly materials and cultural arts to craft amazing footwear for the global market.”

EcoBold is a California based e-commerce company that “creates awareness of sustainable and green products by providing online video reviews of various green and eco-friendly household products.”

Images: Exclusive photos from Sole Rebel’s spring 2011 collection provided to Tadias by the company.


Photo courtesy of Sole Rebels (Spring 2011 collection)

Photo courtesy of Sole Rebels (Spring 2011 collection)


Related story:
CNN’s African Voices features Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu

Watch: Turning old tires into shoes (7:10)

Video: Young SoleRebel (8:07)

Video: Creating window to world market (7:24)

Ethiopian Soccer Tournament: Delay to announce host city has Toronto organizers fed up

Above: The most recent tournament was held in San Jose, CA
Toronto and Atlanta are the front runners for 2011. (File photo)

Tadias Magazine
By Yeamrot Taddese

Published: Friday, August 13, 2010

Toronto, Canada (Tadias) – The Ethiopian Soccer Federation in North America (ESFNA) was supposed to announce the next soccer tournament host city on July 4 but bidding cities are still waiting for a decision.

Tournament organizers in Toronto said if the delay continues, their city will lose a rate offer from the Royal York Hotel, one of the hotels where discounted reservation has been made to accommodate visitors. “A decision will need to be made very soon to be able to hold the space for [the tournament],” wrote Shelley Crawford, the Account Director of Sports from Tourism Toronto to the organizing committee. “Royal York’s offer will expire late August.”

Samuel Getachew, the communications director of Toronto’s Ethiopian soccer team, Ethio Star, has also been working to complete ESFNA’s criteria of a host city. “It has been six weeks and I am now questioning my confidence in working with the federation,” he said. He added that he personally believes ESFNA is having a hard time choosing between Toronto and its competition Atlanta. “But leadership is about making decisions.”

Getachew, who is running for city councillor in Toronto, said he and his team are still making sure they provide everything ESFNA asks for. If the games don’t come to Ontario’s capital next year, Getachew said he will resign his post as a member of the organizing committee of tournament.

The organizing team and other Torontonian Ethiopians told Tadias in June that it is about time their city hosted the soccer games. ESFNA must include Canada to live up to its name as a North American sports federation, they had said.

This week, the Ethiopian community in Ontario’s capital succeeded in having September officially recognized as Ethiopian Heritage Month by the City of Toronto.

ESFNA spokesperson Fassil Abebe said the delay is a result of some “unfinished business.” He said the federation is still seeking supporting documents from Toronto and Atlanta. He added that decision will be made by August 15. The organizing committee in Toronto has not been made aware of this date.

The last time Toronto hosted the games was in 2000 and Atlanta in 2005.

Support of the community to the sports, availability of a large stadium, closing venue and a member team are some of the criteria ESFNA is looking at. Abebe said he will not say what each city currently lacks.

Abebe also said the criticism that ESFNA excludes Canada despite its name does not hold. “There are cities [in the United States] that have never hosted the games,” he said. “Yes, it has been 10 years but Toronto has at least hosted the tournament twice.” He added that Calgary was one of the four non-member teams which competed to become a member in San Jose this year.

Endale Tufer, Atlanta’s tournament organizer said it is not the first time a delay is happening but he said he could not comment about the implications of the hold-up on Atlanta’s preparations.


Cover Image: At the 2010 San Jose Ethiopian Soccer Tournament by Kal Kassa.

About the Author:
Yeamrot Taddese is a journalism student at the University of Toronto, Canada. She is also a contributing reporter for Tadias Magazine.

Related from Tadias:
Photo Journal: San Jose Ethiopian Soccer Tournament 2010

Toronto Says It Has What It Takes to Host the Tournament

Photos from Chicago: Ethiopian Soccer Tournament 2009 (Tadias)

Dispute Leaves Miss Ethiopia Without Prize

Above: Contestants at the 2010 Miss Ethiopia Pageant in July
were promised that the winner will be awarded a brand new car.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Tuesday, August 10, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The winner of the 2010 Miss Ethiopia pageant was to receive a brand new ride, the Chinese made Lifan 320, except the car dealership Yangfan Motors in Addis Ababa, who is the announced sponsor of the event, says it never made a written agreement to deliver the prize.

According to Addis Fortune, “Ethiopian Village Adventure Playground (EVAP) is to wait until Thursday, August 12, 2010, to see whether Yangfan will award a Lifan 320 to the newest Miss Ethiopia. Failing to deliver the prize may result in being taken to court while Yangfan, in turn, threatened to sue EVAP for defamation.”


Melkam Michael, a sophomore at Addis Abeba University Law School, was named winner of the prize last month at a ceremony held at the Hilton Addis, featuring celebrity judges including Mulatu Astatke and Meseret Mebrate.

The pageant organizers, who had publicized the award in advance, accused Yangfan Motors of canceling its commitment at the last minute and stealing their copy of the written agreement. According to Murad Mohammed, director of EVAP, Yangfan Motors took his copy of the written document without his knowledge, and he has been unable to regain possession of it. “It is not the 18th or 19th century where people only agree on something orally,” he told Fortune.

Yangfan Motors’ local Marketing Manager William Wong rejected the claims, denying the existence of such a binding contract. “There was no agreement to cancel,” he said. “We did not agree to give them a car and because EVAP did not carry out its responsibilities, we are not going to give them any discount.”

The report, however, points to another document that indicates the existence of a prior understanding. “Yangfan Motors had sent EVAP a letter on April 23, 2010, complaining that they had failed to promote the company on public media and billboards. The company demanded that the problems be corrected within one week or it would be ‘forced to cancel our entitled agreement of cooperation,’ according to the letter. ”

Meanwhile, Melkam says although she is happy to be named Miss Ethiopia 2010, she would not mind to sit behind the wheel. “I would be happy if I get the promised car,” she said.


Cover image: Group photo of Miss Ethiopia 2010 contestants (WorldShowBiz.info)

Ethiopian Artist Tibebe Terffa Paints Kentucky

Above: An exhibition featuring paintings inspired by Ethiopian
artist Tibebe Terffa’s recent visit to Kentuky entitled “Corralling
Colors” opened on Monday in Stanford, where he spent weeks.

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Published: Sunday, August 8, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Renown Ethiopian artist Tibebe Terffa has spent the last two months in Kentucky, where his paintings inspired by local traditions and the states’s famous horse culture, will go on display this week at the Lincoln County Public Library in Stanford.

“It’s mission accomplished, I believe,” Tibebe told the local AM news. “I never thought I could paint all these paintings. It has been very inspiring. I am having a very pleasant time,” he said inside the little home on Mill Street that has been his home and studio. “I didn’t have much stressful times. There’s not much stress reflected in these paintings.”

His ten-week stay in Stanford was sponsored by the First Southern National Bank in partnership with the city’s downtown arts program. As AM News notes, the bank’s President “Jess Correll and wife Angela met Terffa while visiting Ethiopia in February. They visited his studio in the capital city of Addis Ababa, liked his work and bought some of his paintings.”

“Just a coincidence,” Tibebe said of the Corrells’ visit and timely offer.

Per the artist’s website, Tibebe, 62, “was born in the walled city of Harar, Ethiopia in 1948. He studied at the University of Addis Ababa School of Fine Art and Design from where he graduated in painting in 1973. During the school years (1970-1973), Tibebe and his friends formed the Sixteen Young Artist’ Association that aimed at staging exhibitions around the country. Tibebe worked as an art instructor at the Medhane Alem Comprehensive High School in Harar from 1973 until 1980. In 1981 he moved to Addis Ababa, and worked as an Illustrator for Kuraz Publishing House until 1983. Since 1984 he has been working as a studio artist from his residence in Addis Ababa. He has had numerous solo exhibition in Ethiopia, Germany (Berlin), Canada (Winnipeg ,Toronto), USA (Washington), and Spain (Madrid).”

Regarding his recent works, the painter said he initially had to return to recalling scenes from Ethiopia in order to place his new and unfamiliar surroundings into perspective and to get his ‘creative juices flowing.’ “Like a tree, I have roots, a culture, a place where I grew up,” he explained. “When you have roots you can return to, you are not lost. These first paintings were a spring to get to the unknown, to start the engine, to wake up the engine.”

“What goes on inside an artist’s head and then comes out on canvas has been an interesting process to watch,” said Jess Correll, president of First Southern National Bank.

If you go
Ethiopian artist Tibebe Terffa’s “Corralling Colors” exhibit of paintings completed in Stanford will open Monday at Lincoln County Public Library, 310 N. Third St., Stanford. An artist’s reception will be from 6:30-8:30 p.m. More at amnews.com.

Learn more about Tibebe Terffa at: tibebeterffa.com

Cover Image: The artist courtesy of tibebeterffa.com and the picturesque Lincoln County Courthouse located in Stanford, Kentucky.

Seattle: Ethiopians seek help to open a community center

Above: Mulu Retta, boardmember of the Ethiopian Community
Mutual Association. The organization is raising funds to build a
community center in South Seattle. (Seattle Post Intelligencer)

Seattle Post Intelligencer
By Scott Gutierrez

Despite its wet and mild climate, the greater Seattle area is home to many East African immigrants, with estimates ranging from 25,000 to 40,000.

“It’s probably more than that,” said Mulu Retta, a member of the Ethiopian Community Mutual Association.

That’s one reason why Retta and her association are trying to start a new Ethiopian community center in South Seattle. They envision a central gathering place that provides youth activities and cultural events, services for seniors and a spot for celebrating holidays, weddings and graduations.

They’ve offered to buy the Faith Temple Community Church building at 8323 Rainier Ave. S. in Rainier Beach for $1.6 million. The church’s congregation moved to a new location and put the building up for sale.

But they’re only halfway to raising $200,000 they need for a down payment. Despite the slow economy, they raised $100,000 in a few months. They’re hoping others in their community will rise to help before an Aug. 31 deadline, said Retta, chairwoman of the association’s building fund committee. Read more.

President Obama Meets With Young African Leaders At The White House

Above: President Obama held a forum at the White House on
Tuesday with 115 young leaders from Africa designed to mark
the fiftieth anniversary of African independence (Getty Images)

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Published: Tuesday, August 3, 2010

New York (Tadias) – President Barack Obama hosted a large contingent of young African leaders from the public and private sectors at the White House on Tuesday.

115 young leaders representing more than 40 countries – including Ethiopia – gathered for the East Room event, where the President led a town hall meeting urging the attendees to focus on economic progress, fighting corruption, disease and extremism on the continent.

“We are rooting for your successes,” Obama said. “And we want to work with you to achieve that success. But ultimately, success is going to be in your hands.”

The young leaders were joined by a number of U.S. administration officials, including Attorney General Eric Holder, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, U.S. Trade Rep. Ron Kirk and USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah and others.

WATCH

According to the White House, the event, which was also designed to mark the fiftieth anniversary of African independence, “presents the U.S. government and American friends of Africa with an opportunity to deepen and broaden our understanding of the trajectories of African societies, and to reflect on how the next generation are building their communities’ and their nations’ futures – just as their predecessors did in the era of independence from colonial rule.”

In addition to the town hall meeting, the three-day forum features small-group discussions on topics such as transparency and accountability, job creation and entrepreneurship, rights advocacy, and the use of technology to empower individuals and communities.

The administration hopes the event will also serve as a networking opportunity between the African leaders and their American counterparts. “The U.S. government’s role in this gathering is as a convener, encouraging networks between young American and African leaders, and pursuing lasting partnerships on behalf of our common security and prosperity,” the White House said. “This dialogue and follow-up events in Africa will help the U.S. government better assess how to support Africa’s own aspirations going forward.”

Per the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, four young people represented Ethiopia at the forum, including Mahlet Eyassu Melkie, 29, a climate change activist; Meron Getnet Hailegiorgis, 27, an author; Salsawit Tsega Ketema, 30, Founder of Sel Art Gallery and Yohannes Mezgebe Abay, 35, Vice President of the Pan African Youth Union.

Cover Image: President Obama speaks during a town hall meeting with Young African Leaders in the East Room at the White House. (Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images)

White House Party for Africa Leaves Out Leaders (The New York Times)

Related from Tadias Magazine:
On the South Lawn of the White House (By Ayele Bekerie)

Video: Obama’s Message To Africa during his 2009 visit to Ghana

Ethiopian Youth Lobby Senators to Pass Law Protecting Girls

Tadias Magazine
OP-ED
By Saba Fassil

Published: Thursday, July 29, 2010

WASHINGTON (TADIAS) — Two weeks ago, about 20 young people from the Ethiopian Community Center in D.C., along with their peers from other communities, descended on the U.S. Senate, where they delivered over 11,000 letters urging lawmakers to pass “The International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act.”

The bill, if passed, will authorize President Obama to provide assistance, including through multilateral, non-governmental, and faith-based organizations, to prevent child marriage in developing countries and to promote the educational, health, economic, social, and legal empowerment of girls and women.

According to USAID, the marriage of girls under 18 is a common practice in many developing countries, including Ethiopia, and in some regions it is a deeply-rooted tradition. USAID research shows that “the practice can produce large families, poverty, medical complications due to early childbearing, increased vulnerability to HIV/AIDS, high rates of divorce, and interruption of education.” There are already an estimated 60 million girls worldwide who are child brides; without serious action to end this harmful tradition 100 million more girls are expected to be forced into marriage in the next decade.

The lobbying effort, which was coordinated by Plan USA – part of Plan International, a world-wide non-profit organization with country offices in 48 developing countries including Ethiopia – used letters written by volunteers from each of the 50 states asking the Senators for their support to pass the law so that no girl ever has to be forced into marriage, at ages as young as seven!

Helina, a student at Cardozo Senior High School in Washington, D.C., is one of the leaders of the youth delegation. She was born in Ethiopia where half of all girls are married by age 14 in the northern Amhara region. “Child marriage is terrible,” says Helina. “Kids should be able to stay in school and get an education, and not be forced into marriage. We need to do something about it. We have to make sure people are aware of this situation.”

Sixteen-year-old Shayna, a D.C. student at School Without Walls says, “It is important for girls my age or younger to go through their childhood experience in a positive way so they can grow and become strong young women, and know what it is they want for themselves and get proper education, develop friendships and connections with others. Ultimately having strong and beautiful young women in this world will make this world a better place.”

Mamadou,12, is a boy trying to stand up for girls, something you don’t usually see on the school playground. But he wants to help stop the practice of child marriage, a tradition that stands to affect 100 million more girls in the coming decade. “It just basically messes up your whole life. Just imagine yourself as a young child wanting to be a doctor. But then you get married at a young age, do you really think that those dreams are still alive?”

Nardos, a young Ethiopian-American girl, was brimming with excitement to be walking into Senate offices, gladly attending a Congressional hearing about child marriage and speaking to Senate aides.


The kids gather to lobby congress on July 15, 2010. Courtesy Photo.

Hopefully this youth-led effort will help push the Senate, in its final marathon before adjourning for the year, to pass this important act, and help millions and millions of girls worldwide have the chance to be just girls, not wives.

These young global citizens are participants of “Because I am a Girl” – Plan International’s campaign to fight gender inequality, promote girls’ rights and lift millions of girls out of poverty.

Saba Fassil is a graduate of the George Washington University, where she earned a B.S. in Economics.

Related:
Tesfaye Girma Deboch: Friends Seek Closure in WSU PhD Student’s Drowning Case

Join the conversation on Twitter and Facebook

New York Times Highlights Abyssinian Fund

Above: The Rev. Nicholas S. Richards, head of the Abyssinian
Fund, an NGO that is financing the training of farmers working
to produce higher-quality products. Photo: The New York Times

Harlem Helps Raise Coffee in Ethiopia
Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Tuesday, July 27, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The New York Times highlights one of the latest projects by members of Harlem’s legendary Abyssinian Baptist Church: the Abyssinian Fund, the only nongovernmental organization by an African-American church operating in Ethiopia.

The NGO was officially launched last December at an event held at the elegant Harlem Stage, which was attended by a diverse group of people, including local politicians, business leaders, and diplomats.

According to NYT, the young organization has already hit the ground running. “It will soon be joining forces with a co-op of 700 coffee farmers in the ancient Ethiopian city of Harrar, with a mission to improve the quality of the farmers’ lives by helping them improve the quality of their coffee beans,” the newspaper reports. “The Abyssinian Fund will pay for specialized training and equipment to help the co-op’s farmers produce a higher-quality product so they can be more competitive on the international coffee market. Once their income has increased, part of what they make will then be set aside in a fund to support local development projects, like much-needed roads, schools or clinics.”

According Reverend Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III, the church’s current pastor – who made a brief introductory remark at the fund’s launch VIP reception in December 2009 – the project was born out of the group’s historic trip to Ethiopia three years ago. Reverend Butts, who led over 150 delegates to Ethiopia as part of the church’s bicentennial celebration and in honor of the Ethiopian Millennium, told the crowd that the journey rekindled a long but dormant relationship that was last sealed in 1954 with an exquisite Ethiopian cross, a gift from the late Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie to African-Americans as a symbol of love and gratitude for their support and friendship during Mussolini’s invasion of Ethiopia. The cross has since become the official symbol of the church.

“The Abyssinian Fund is inspired by the pilgrimage taken by The Abyssinian Baptist Church to Ethiopia in 2007, “said Rev. Richards in an email after last year’s event. “We saw the biggest enemy Ethiopia faces is poverty, so on our arrival back in the USA, we dedicated our energy and love for Ethiopia to establish an organization dedicated to creating and supporting sustainable development.”

“The mission of the Abyssinian Fund is to reduce poverty in Ethiopia by increasing the capacity of farming cooperatives and by developing programs for the wider community, which will lead to sustainable improvements in health care, education and access to clean water, Rev. Richards said. “I strongly believe in the success of our goal to develop Ethiopia, one community at a time.”

According to the church’s official history, in 1808, after refusing to participate in segregated worship services in lower Manhattan, a group of free African Americans and Ethiopian sea merchants formed their own church on Worth Street, naming it the Abyssinian Baptist Church in honor of Abyssinia, the former name of Ethiopia.

Related from Tadias Magazine:
Harlem’s Legendary Church Launches Abyssinian Fund

Slideshow: See photos from the launch event in harlem:

Related Tadias Magazine stories:
African American & Ethiopian Relations (Tadias)
haile_powel.jpg

The Case of Melaku E. Bayen & John Robinson (Tadias)
melakuimage1.jpg

Addis Voice Relaunches Its Newest Website

Above: Addis Voice announced the official re-launch of its site.
The new cutting-edge website integrates a number of new and
upgraded multimedia features. The Addis Voice site screen shot.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Tuesday, July 27, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Addis Voice has unveiled its newest online design featuring a significant relaunch of its website and an upgraded version of its customizable toolbar.

Developed by Abebe Gelaw – the first Ethiopian-born journalist to be awarded the coveted Stanford University’s Knight Fellowships for international journalists and the 2010 World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders honoree – The Conduit powered Toolbar delivers up-to-the-minute breaking Ethiopian stories from news sources across the globe.

“With increasing demand for service upgrade in the face of repeated technical and server problems with Bravenet, we are certain that the new site and Bluehost server will not only address the issues but also help the smooth and seamless running of the website,” the organization said in a press release.

“Addis Voice is also excited to report that its multimedia toolbar has become a powerhouse of information and must-have digital tool that delvers up-to-the-minute news, radio podcasts, video streaming, live webcasts, weather updates and other essential gadget to Ethiopians all over the world.”
—-

Related from Tadias Archives:
Addis Voice Toolbar Delivers Breaking Ethiopian News To Your Desktop

Africa-USA Business Executives Convention to Take Place in Las Vegas

Above: A large contingent of African business executives and
their American counterparts are scheduled to meet in Nevada.

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Published: Monday, July 26, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Over a thousand African business leaders and their American counterparts are expected to convene in Las Vegas in early November for what organizers say will be the biggest convention of its kind in the United States. (This event has been rescheduled)

Top executives from various industries including Telecom, Energy, Banking, Mining, Agriculture, Airlines, Tourism as well as Ministers of Trade & Investment from across the African continent will gather for the 3-day conference scheduled from November 15 to November 17, 2010. Joining them are American business leaders, U.S. Administration officials, along with African Ambassadors, and representatives of several multilateral agencies.

According to Ethiopian-American social entrepreneur Ted Alemayhu, whose firm Africa-USA Trade & Investment is hosting the event in Las Vegas, the conference focuses on boosting investment as well as encouraging large-scale networking of entrepreneurs.

“The goal is to help create strategic economic partnerships through mutually beneficial trade and development initiatives,” says Mr. Alemayhu. “The conference will bring together key players in both regions to discuss business opportunities within the framework of establishing sustainable long-term relationships.”

A similar event focusing on civil society and the private sector is also scheduled in Washington next month. According to the White House, President Obama will host a town hall meeting with 120 young leaders from 40 countries to discuss their vision for transforming their societies over the next fifty years.

“Africa is becoming the new frontier for emerging market investors,” Mr. Alemayhu said. “Once, talk of investment in African countries was dismissed as idealism. Now Africa is increasingly attracting major global investors.”

According to Mr. Alemayhu: ‘In addition to strengthening and facilitating the commercial relationship between the United States and Africa, the convention will also serve to raise Africa’s investment profile in the U.S. by creating strategic and developing critical contacts and providing a forum for the exchange of information and ideas.”

If You Go:
The event is scheduled to take place in Las Vegas, Nevada, from November 15 to November 17. To register or other inquiries, please send an email to info@africanbizconvention.com.

Cover Image: Illustrative stock photo.

Watch related video: Synergies africaines accueille le Président fondateur de USDFA
Ted Alemayhu, who is also Founder & CEO of US Doctors For Africa, being recognized in
that capacity by the President of Cameroon.

Obama to Host White House Forum with Young African Leaders

Above: President Obama will convene a forum at the White
House next month with 120 young leaders from Africa and
their counterparts from the United States. – (Pete Souza)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Thursday, July 22, 2010

New York (Tadias) – President Barack Obama is set to play host to a large contingent of young African business and community leaders next month for a White House initiated effort to foster stronger partnerships in the years ahead.

Nearly 120 young leaders from civil society and the private sector representing more than 40 African countries will gather in Washington for a three-day conference scheduled to take place from August 3rd to August 5th, 2010.

“Together with American counterparts and U.S. government officials, the participants will share their insights on key themes of youth empowerment, good governance, and economic opportunity,” the White House said in a statement. “President Obama will host a town hall meeting at the White House with these young leaders to discuss their vision for transforming their societies over the next fifty years.”

According to the White House: “The President’s Forum with Young African Leaders presents the U.S. government and American friends of Africa with an opportunity to deepen and broaden our understanding of the trajectories of African societies, and to reflect on how the next generation are building their communities’ and their nations’ futures – just as their predecessors did in the era of independence from colonial rule. In addition to the town hall meeting with the President, the forum will include small-group discussions on topics such as transparency and accountability, job creation and entrepreneurship, rights advocacy, and the use of technology to empower individuals and communities. African participants will have an opportunity to meet with grassroots service organizations to share experiences and strategies.”

The administration hopes the event will also serve as a networking opportunity between the African leaders and their American counterparts. “The U.S. government’s role in this gathering is as a convener, encouraging networks between young American and African leaders, and pursuing lasting partnerships on behalf of our common security and prosperity,” the statement added. “This dialogue and follow-up events in Africa will help the U.S. government better assess how to support Africa’s own aspirations going forward.”

Update
Four Ethiopians To Participate in the Forum

With U.S. Ambassador Donald E. Booth

Per the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, the
following four young leaders will represent
Ethiopia at the upcoming White House forum.

Mahlet Eyassu Melkie, 29, Climate Change Activist
Meron Getnet Hailegiorgis, 27, Author
Salsawit Tsega Ketema, 30, Founder, Sel Art Gallery
Yohannes Mezgebe Abay, 35, Vice President, Pan African Youth Union

Cover Image: President Barack Obama listens during a meeting with residents at Carmandelle’s Live Bait and Boiled Seafood in Grand Isle, La., June 4, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Related from Tadias Magazine:
On the South Lawn of the White House (By Ayele Bekerie)

Video: Obama’s Message To Africa during his 2009 visit to Ghana

Photos: Ebullient Teddy Afro Celebrates 34th Birthday During NYC Show

Tadias Magazine
Events News – Photos by Kidane Mariam

Published: Monday, July 19, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Teddy Afro celebrated his 34th birthday during his sold-out show in New York this past weekend.

The artist, who treated the audience to a spectacular show on Saturday night, was greeted by his adoring fans with a chorus of “Happy Birthday” as he kicked-off his concert after midnight. Organizers say between 800 – 1,000 people attended the event. A number of people also stood outside unable to find tickets.

Teddy Afro kept his audience rocking for over three hours with powerful renditions of his iconic songs and his trademark message of love and unity: Fiqir Yashenifal – Amharic for “love wins.”

Ethiopia’s biggest pop-star also took the opportunity to introduce the founders of Color Heritage Apparel, which specializes in Reggae and Ethiopian wear, and announced a possible collaboration to develop a Teddy Afro clothing line down the road. Winston Jack, the head of the fashion company tells TADIAS that they are exploring the idea but nothing is finalized yet. “It is still in the early stages of discussion,” he said. “We will announce it through a press release when it happens.”

Here are a few images from Teddy Afro’s concert in Manhattan, which took place at 630 Second Ave. on July 17, 2010.

Bomb blasts devastate Kampala night life

AFP
By Ben Simon (AFP)
Friday, July 23, 2010

Bomb blasts that killed 76 people in Kampala this month have left the city’s bustling nightlife in tatters, with paltry crowds and dwindling drink orders curtailing business prospects. Suicide bombers detonated deadly explosives in the midst of revellers watching the World Cup final on the night of July 11 in two separate entertainment venues in the Ugandan capital. Scores of people were also left injured. “People thought it was a bomb that killed people. But it’s a bomb that killed also business,” said Paul Kato, who organises bands and DJs in several venues in the city’s Kabalagala district. Kampala is known for its lively nightlife. Kabalagala, where a suspected suicide bomber killed 15 patrons in an Ethiopian restaurant, has the highest concentration of bars and clubs. Locals and expatriates frequent Kabalagala in the south of the city, where bouncers usually observed a relaxed policy towards commercial sex workers. Read more.

20 Arrested Over Attacks in Uganda (The New York Times)
By JOSH KRON
Published: July 17, 2010

KAMPALA, Uganda — The police have arrested a second batch of suspects in connection to last Sunday’s terrorist attacks in this capital that killed 76 people, and they said suicide bombers were probably involved in the attacks.

The Shabab, an Islamist insurgency in Somalia, claimed responsibility for the three bombs that struck two popular nightspots where soccer fans had gathered to watch the final match of the World Cup.

The police said that the latest suspects included people from Uganda, Somalia and Ethiopia.
Read more.

Video: Museveni vows to hit al-Shabab (NTV Kenya)

Video: Somalis in Uganda fear backlash after Shabab bombings (Al Jazeera)

Related News:
Ethiopians, Eritreans Face Double Suspicion in Post-Bomb Uganda (VOA)

Uganda bomb probe finds ‘suicide vest’ at dance hall, four suspects arrested
Tadias Magazine
News Summary
Updated: Wednesday, July 14, 2010

New York (Tadias) — Four people have been arrested following Sunday’s twin bomb attacks in Uganda’s capital, Kampala, which killed 76 people watching the final World Cup match on TV.

“Arrests were made late yesterday after an unexploded suicide bomber’s belt was found in the Makindye area (of the capital Kampala),” announced government spokesman Fred Opolot.

According to the New York Daily News, a “‘suicide vest’ filled with ball bearings was discovered by investigators at a dance hall in Uganda’s capital and is similar to the items found at the scene of Sunday’s deadly explosions.” The catch in Kampala led to the arrests of four “foreign’ suspects,” who officials said could be from Somalia.

An al-Qaida-linked Somali militant group- which views Ethiopia as an enemy – claimed responsibility Monday for the bombs that exploded at two locations, including at a popular Ethiopian garden restaurant.

“We will carry out attacks against our enemy wherever they are,” said Sheik Ali Mohamud Rage, a militant spokesman in Mogadishu. “No one will deter us from performing our Islamic duty.”

Ugandan police officials had said on Sunday that they suspected the Somali based Al-Shabab could be behind the synchronized attacks. The group had previously issued repeated threats against Uganda and Burundi, which together have 5,000 troops presence in the African Union peacekeeping force in Somalia.

“We can’t rule anything out,” said Kale Kayihura, Uganda’s police inspector general, at the scene of one of the attacks. “This was obviously terrorism, from the way it was targeted at World Cup watchers in public places.”

One bomb went off at a large rugby field in a different Kampala neighborhood where hundreds of people had gathered to watch the the 2010 World Cup between Spain and the Netherlands.

If confirmed, this makes the terror group’s first attack beyond Somalia ‘s borders.

According to the Daily Monitor, which quotes Ethiopia’s ambassador to Uganda – Terfa Mengesha – six Ethiopian nationals are among the dead.

Per AP: One American was killed and at least three others were wounded. “Among the wounded was Kris Sledge, 18, who said a group of six Americans had been watching the World Cup at the Ethiopian restaurant. Sledge, of Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania, had been part of a church group in the country for three weeks. They were supposed to leave Uganda on Tuesday. Three Americans in his group were wounded.”

US President Barack Obama called the deadly explosions “deplorable and cowardly,” a spokesman said. “The president is deeply saddened by the loss of life resulting from these deplorable and cowardly attacks, and sends his condolences to the people of Uganda and the loved ones of those who have been killed or injured,” National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said in a statement. “The United States is ready to provide any assistance requested by the Ugandan government.”

Meanwhile, Ethiopian authorities have condemned the terrorist attack, calling on the international community to focus on worldwide anti-terror response.

Video: Uganda police impound new explosive devices (NTV Kenya)

Video: 2 Bomb Attacks in Uganda; 20 Feared Dead (AP)

Cover photo: AFP

Related:
Containing al-Shabab (BBC)
Somalia: America needs to engage (Guardian.co.uk)
State Department puts Uganda death toll at 76 (CNN)

5th Ethiopian Diaspora Business Forum & Exhibition Opens in D.C

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Published: Thursday, July 8, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The 5th Annual Ethiopian American Business Forum & Exhibition is scheduled to take place in the nation’s capital this weekend.

The conference – a joint project between U.S. government agencies and private companies – aims to foster new business relationships between Diaspora investors and entrepreneurs operating in Ethiopia.

The event is organized by The Ethiopian American in association with USAID’s “Africa Growth & Opportunities Act+” Program – VEGA AGOA Plus, a U.S. taxpayer-funded project designed to promote trade between the United States and African nations.

According to the organizers, “Mimi Alemayehou, Executive Vice President of Overseas Private Investment Corporation, will give the opening remarks to kick off the Forum, and Adrian Fenty, Mayor of D.C., has been invited to open the exhibition/trade show and give the keynote speech at the Forum’s luncheon on July 10th, 2010.”

The exhibition and trade show will feature over 20 ventures from the U.S. and Ethiopia.

In case you are debating whether to attend the conference or watch the World Cup finals, organizers note: “We’re working on making sure a big screen TV is available for your viewing pleasure in the lobby.”
—-

Update from the organizers (Friday, July 9, 2010)
Karl Wycoff, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Africa will speak at the 5th Ethiopian Diaspora Business Forum & Exhibition luncheon tomorrow. Other speakers at the luncheon will be: Ms. Rosa Whitaker, CEO of the Whitaker Group, the principal architect of AGOA and Ato Ermias Amelga, CEO of Access Capital and Founder and Board Chairman of Zemen Bank S.C.

If You Go:
5th Ethiopian Diaspora Business Forum and Exhibition
July 10 and 11
Four Points by Sheraton (1201 K Street, NW)
Washington D.C. – (202) 289-7600
Both days the events run from 9AM-6PM
The event is free and open to the public

Related from past events:
Video: Watch Ethiopian Diaspora Business Forum – 2008

Photo Journal: San Jose Ethiopian Soccer Tournament 2010

Tadias Magazine
Events News – Photos by Kal Kassa

Published: Wednesday, July 7, 2010

San Jose, CA (Tadias) – The recently concluded Ethiopian Soccer Tournament in San Jose, California was attended by thousands of Ethiopian-Americans and their families.

The annual event, designed to promote goodwill among the various Ethiopian communities in the United States and Canada, is organized by the Ethiopian Sports Federation in North America (ESFNA), a non-profit organization founded in 1984 to help popularize amateur soccer while celebrating commonly shared traditions.

The week-long gathering, which this year celebrated its 27th anniversary, goes far beyond sports entertainment, allowing families and friends to come together in celebration of their cultural heritage. The festival week is a popular time for networking, alumni gatherings, small business catering, music performances, and reunion parties.

The colorful 2010 tournament at Spartan Stadium showcased 27 teams – along with food vendors, artists, artisans and entrepreneurs, offering items ranging from injera to T-shirts and everything in between.

ESFNA has yet to announce the host city for next year’s tournament. Meanwhile, here are few photos from San Jose.

Related from Tadias Magazine:
Toronto Says It Has What It Takes to Host the Ethio Soccer Tour

Teddy Afro to Perform in New York City

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Updated: Tuesday, July 6, 2010

New York (TADIAS) – Teddy Afro, Ethiopia’s biggest pop star, will perform in New York city next week.

The singer – who made an appearance at a sold-out concert in the Bay Area during the recently concluded 2010 Ethiopian Soccer Tournament – will stage a show in Manhattan on Saturday, July 17th at 630 Second ave, bet 34th and 35th streets.

Afro, born Tewodros Kassahun, is known as Ethiopia’s Bob Marley, mostly for his socially conscious lyrics and his incorporation of roots-reggae rhythms into his version of Ethiopian grooves.

He kicked off his American tour last fall in Washington, D.C.

If You GO:
Masinko and Addis Zemen Ent. present Teddy in NYC

Featuring DJ Mehari!

Sat, July 17th, 2010
630 Second ave, bet 34th and 35th Sts.

Advance tickets are $35, $40 @ the door.

VIP Package For A Group of 5 is Also Available
VIP = No waiting in line and includes bottle & table service.
VIP TIX: $350 in advance ($70 per person) or $400 @ the door.

If you’re interested in buying tickets or ordering the VIP package, please call 646-436-3022.

Related videos and photos from past events:
Video: Teddy Afro Pays Tribute to Legendary Singer Tilahun Gessesse in DC (2010)

Video: Teddy Afro Concert 2010 in DC (Posted by Milliano Promo)

Slideshow: Teddy Afro concert at the DC Armory (Saturday, January 2, 2010)

Toronto Says It Has What It Takes to Host the Ethiopian Soccer Tournament

Tadias Magazine
By Yeamrot Taddese

Published: Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Toronto (TADIAS) – Toronto is a member of the Ethiopian Sports Federation in North America (ESFNA), but most Ethiopian Torontonians have a fading recollection of the last time their city hosted the soccer tournament. Many others had not yet arrived here when the games came to Toronto in 1992 and later in 2000.

The Ethiopian community, in one of biggest and most diverse cities in North America, says it has what it takes to accommodate the games for the first time in a decade.

“The community has grown ten folds since the last time tournament was hosted here,” said Dr. Retta Alemayehu, the Director of the Ethiopian Association in the GTA during a meeting with ESFNA President Demmissie Mekonnen. “The preparation for the games will reflect this change.”

Samuel Getachew, the communications director of Toronto’s Ethiopian soccer team, Ethio Star, says the games are long overdue. “If we call this organization a North American sports federation, different cities should get an opportunity to host the tournament instead of repeating venues,” he said. He added that the local government and Tourism Toronto have agreed to make financial contribution to host the tournament.

Getachew is running for Toronto City Council representing ward 43. One of the goals on his platform is to officially label a section of the famous Danforth Avenue between Greenwood and Monarch Park as “Little Ethiopia” on the city map. The area is alive with several Ethiopian restaurants, cafes, clubs and other businesses.

Rendezvous restaurant and bar is located in the aspiring Little Ethiopia. Its owner, Banchi Kinde, says the Ethiopian community in Toronto is more prepared than ever to host the soccer tournament. “In ten years, I have witnessed an unbelievable amount of growth in populace and businesses. We have now more than enough restaurants to accommodate everyone,” she said. Kinde also noted that economic booms in cities like Calgary will surely draw people from other parts of Canada.

The Bloor Street and Ossington Avenue area, also located near the downtown core, is known for its Ethiopian cuisine.

Tameru Tesfaye, a member of the organizing committee of Ethio Star, said if Toronto wins the bid this week, the event venue will be set up in downtown Toronto, making it convenient for guests to access attractions and Ethiopian community areas through the city transit system.

Toronto annually attracts visitors to thrill-evoking events such as the Luminato arts festival and Caribana. In March 2010, the Ethiopian Students Association International (ESAi) chose Toronto to host its 10th annual summit and anniversary celebration. Young professionals from several parts of the U.S, Canada and even Ethiopia flocked to Toronto for the ESAi’s first ever summit outside the United States. Ellal Aklilu was one of the attendees of the event from Pennsylvania. After his first visit to Canada’s biggest city, Aklilu says he would come back any day. “I was awed to see such a well-established Ethiopian community in Toronto. The city’s atmosphere was very diverse and welcoming,” he said.

In no other festivity do local Ethiopians’ spirit, talent and culinary skills shine as they do on the annual day-long Ethiopian New Year’s celebration. The event, which is also dubbed “Ethiopian Day,” is the most anticipated gathering in the community that features live music, rising Ethiopian entrepreneurs, social justice advocates and lots of injera. With the kind of fervor Toronto has for hosting the next soccer tournament, the New Year’s extravaganza just might happen twice next year.

About the Author:
Yeamrot Taddese is a journalism student at the University of Toronto, Canada. She is also a contributing reporter for Tadias Magazine.

Related News:
Big dreams for ‘Little Ethiopia’ dashed (The Globe and Mail)
Ethiopian Soccer Tournament 2010 Opens in San Jose (Tadias)
Ethiopians gather in San Jose for soccer, festival and food (San Jose Mercury News)
Ethiopian American organizations assist ESFNA earn recognition in California (EthioMedia.com)
Team Abay, Built New York Tough! (Tsehai.NY.com)
ArifQuas – iPhone Application For The 2010 Ethiopian Soccer Tournament (Tadias)
Photos from Chicago: Ethiopian Soccer Tournament 2009 (Tadias)

Africa ‘witnessing birth of a new ocean’

Above: The 60km crack that opened in Ethiopia five years ago
will eventually become an ocean, scientists say (BBC News) .

By Matt McGrath
BBC News Science reporter

Friday, 25 June 2010

Africa is witnessing the birth of a new ocean, according to scientists at the Royal Society.

Geologists working in the remote Afar region of Ethiopia say the ocean will eventually split the African continent in two, though it will take about 10 million years.

Lead researcher Tim Wright who is presenting the research at the Royal Society’s Summer Exhibition, described the events as “truly incredible”.

Used to understanding changes in the planet on timescales of millions of years, the international team of scientists including Dr Wright have seen amazing changes in Afar in the past five years, where the continent is cracking open, quite literally underneath their feet.

In 2005, a 60km long stretch of the earth opened up to a width of eight metres over a period of just ten days.

Hot, molten rock from deep within the Earth is trickling to the surface and creating the split.

Underground eruptions are still continuing and, ultimately, the horn of Africa will fall away and a new ocean will form. Read more at BBC.com.

Sofia Bushen to Represent Ethiopia at the 2010 Miss Africa USA Pageant

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Updated: Friday, June 25, 2010

New York (Tadias) – We recently received a call from one of our readers in Tennessee. “I have just learned that I have been selected as a finalist at the biggest pageant featuring African beauty queens in the United States,” the young woman said. “And as part of my micro project for the competition, I need to publicize the upcoming event within my community.”

23-year old Sofia Bushen will represent Ethiopia at the 2010 Miss Africa USA contest, scheduled for July 24, 2010 in Silver Spring, Maryland.

The pageant aims to foster confident African women leaders both at home and here in the U.S.

“The vision is for African girls in America to shine the spotlight on Africa,” organizers say through their website. It helps the participants “tell their stories to the world and inspire one another, and build self esteem.”

Past winners of the competition have gone on to join forces with major charity organizations in the U.S. such as Habitat for Humanity, Concern USA, Russell Simmons’s Diamond Empowerment Fund, to help raise money for charitable causes benefiting communities in Africa and the United States. Most notably, Miss Teizue Gayflor, Miss Africa USA 2006-2007 toured Liberia in 2007 on a mission to promote education for school children and conducted a series of radio and television interviews calling for peace and reconciliation.

Video: Meet Sofia Bushen, finalist at the 2010 Miss Africa USA contest, in her own words

Learn more about Miss Africa USA at www.missafricaunitedstates.com.

Video: Miss Africa USA 08 Parade MISS ZIMBABWE, MISS LIBERIA AND MISS NIGERIA

Cover photo provided courtesy of Sofia Bushen.

Cabbie from Lakers riot gets $10K donation

Above: The taxi driver who was attacked by a mob of Lakers
fans following the NBA championship received a $10k check.

KABC
LOS ANGELES

By Robert Holguin

The 41-year-old immigrant from Ethiopia has been driving a cab in L.A. for seven years, but on Thursday, the occupational hazards got wildly out of hand.

“I was thinking they can kill me, that’s what I was thinking. I was scared. They burned the car, they shake the car, they turned over me,” described Teferi.

Teferi was caught in the mayhem that erupted shortly after the Lakers won the NBA Championship. A mob attacked his cab, then pulled him from the driver’s seat. After a few minutes, the cab was set on fire, and Teferi watched as it burned. His livelihood was destroyed.

Monday, the CEO of Staples Center’s owner Tim Leiweke presented Teferi with a $10,000 check.

Watch video below or Read more.

Video: Cabbie from Lakers riot gets $10K donation

New Fossil From Ethiopia Predates Lucy

Above: The fossils of LUCY from Ethiopia on display at the
Discovery Times Square exhibition in New York on June 23,
2009. New fossil predates Lucy. (Photo – Chester Higgins)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Tuesday, June 22, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Here comes another anthropological discovery from Ethiopia: the oldest known fossil of human ancestor (3.6 million years old) has been found in the Afar region of Ethiopia – unseating the famous 3.2 million years old Lucy (Dinqnesh) — whose skeletal remains are currently touring the United States.

The new bones, which are much bigger than Lucy, have been named “Kadanuumuu,” (kah-dah-nuu-muu) which means “big man” in the Afar language.

The news comes on the heels of recent questions raised by other scientists regrading Ardi – another recent discovery – and its classification as a member of the human lineage. According to The New York Times, “Its primitive anatomy,” scientists contend, “suggests a species predating the common ancestor of the human and chimpanzee family trees.”

Regrading the newly discovered fossil: “This individual was fully bipedal and had the ability to walk almost like modern humans,” author Yohannes Haile-Selassie of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History said in a statement. “As a result of this discovery, we can now confidently say that Lucy and her relatives were almost as proficient as we are walking on two legs, and that the elongation of our legs came earlier in our evolution than previously thought.”

Watch: Museum Curator Introduces Hominid Fossil

Related:
Ardi: Oldest Fossil of Human Ancestor?

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

Thousands Pay Respect to Victims of Fatal Fire in Seattle

Above: Mourners at Friday’s public memorial service react at
an emotional visual tribute to the Seattle fire victims Friday.
(PHOTO CREDIT: STEVE RINGMAN / SEATTLE TIMES)

Updated: Saturday, June 19, 2010
By Marc Ramirez
Seattle Times staff reporter

One by one, the lives lost to last weekend’s fire in Fremont were celebrated on screen, a series of snapshots taken in happier times. The boy who dreamed of playing point guard for the Boston Celtics. The siblings who adored their older brother. The girl who liked to jump rope. And the young woman who could win any argument she set her mind to.

The emotional slide show capped Friday’s public memorial to those five family members at Seattle Center’s KeyArena. The multicultural crowd, estimated at 3,500, largely reflected an East African population united in grief over the loss of so many young lives. “Your sorrow is our sorrow,” said Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn. “Your grief is Seattle’s grief. We walk with you in your grief because we are — and will be — one community.” Killed last Saturday morning in the swift-moving fire at Helen Gebregiorgis’ Fremont apartment were three of her children — Joseph Gebregiorgis, 13, Nisreen Shamam, 6, and Yaseen Shamam, 5; her sister, Eyerusalem Gebregiorgis, 22; and a niece, 7-year-old Nyella Smith, daughter of a third sister, Yordanos Gebregiorgis.

Watch Video: Memorial service for Seattle fire victims


Nisreen Shamam (left), Yaseen Shamam (C) and Joseph Gebregiorgis.


PHOTO BY JOHN LOK / THE SEATTLE TIMES

How You Can Help?
Donations to help family members affected by last Saturday’s blaze can be sent to the Seattle Children’s Fire Fund at any Bank of America branch. Donations also are being accepted at the Red Door tavern in Fremont. There will be a booth at this weekend’s Fremont Fair at North 35th Street and Evanston Avenue North to accept cash donations or gift cards from grocery or department stores. There also will be paper and envelopes available to write condolence notes to the family.

Watch Video: Ethiopian community mourns 5 dead in Seattle fire

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Seattle (Tadias) – As investigators continue to look into the cause of this pasts weekend’s apartment fire in Seattle that killed an Ethiopian family, including four children, the city’s fire chief described the frantic seconds after the blaze erupted Saturday morning in Helen Gebregiorgis’ two-story home in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood.

Seattle Fire Chief Gregory Dean told the media Sunday that the city’s deadliest fire in decades started in the living quarters of Helen Gebregiorgis’ three-bedroom, two-story apartment and spread to the second floor. He said the mother had gone upstairs to tell the others about the fire, grabbed her 5-year-old niece, Samarah Smith, and left the building, thinking the others were behind her. “She believed that the rest were following her and when she got outside they were not,” Dean said during a news conference at Fire Department headquarters in Pioneer Square. “We did find the four children and the aunt in the second floor bathroom, huddled together.”

Gebregiorgis, 31, lost her sons, 13-year-old Joseph Gebregiorgis and 5-year-old Yaseen Shamam, and her 6-year-old daughter, Nisreen Shamam, in the fire in the city’s Fremont neighborhood, the children’s grieving uncle, Daniel Gebregiorgis, told The Seattle Times. Also killed were Helen’s 22-year-old sister, Eyerusalem Gebregiorgis, and 7-year-old niece, Nyella Smith.

Video: Seattle Fire Chief Gregory Dean reacts to an apartment fire that killed an Ethiopian family

The fire was reported just after 10 a.m. Saturday morning.

According to Seattle’s King5 News, the first emergency vehicle to arrive at the burning apartment building had a problem with a pump that prevented it from spraying water on the fire, but a second unit arrived two minutes later and was able to fight the fire.

“They needed to be able to control what was in front of them before they could go up the stairs,” the Chief said. “There was definitely a delay in firefighters being able to get there. I think in looking at the pictures and what we saw and listening to comments, there was a tremendous amount of fire and smoke prior to the fire department’s arrival, which, again, makes it pretty hard to sustain life in that type of heated environment,” he said.

Dean said the truck with the mechanical problem arrived at 10:09 a.m., and a second truck about two minutes later, and a third at 10:12 a.m.

According to the fire chief, the department prepares for problems because they happen on a regular basis and this weekend’s particular problem would be investigated.

“We do what we call redundancy back-up to make sure that if something happens, we’re prepared for that type of thing,” he said. “In this case something did happen. The second unit came in, they did what they were supposed to do and we continued to fight the fire.”

“Our firefighters are beating themselves up, you know ‘could I have done more,'” the chief said. “Our hearts go out to the ones that lost their loved ones and we recognize there’s an impact on the community, recognize there’s an impact on our firefighters. We will be doing a follow-up with the community.”

Click here to leave a comment.

New:
Fatal fire may have started in mattress (Seattle Times)

Ethiopia’s Supreme Court Rejects Election Appeal

Above: Ethiopia’s Supreme Court has rejected opposition
challenge against Ethiopia’s election authority. (Photo: AP)

Tadias Magazine
Election News Summary

Updated: Saturday, June 19, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Ethiopia’s High Court has rejected a petition from opposition parties against the nation’s electoral board.

“The court Friday upheld an earlier decision from the National Electoral Board dismissing the opposition’s request. The Board had said the parties’ claims of fraud and pre-poll intimidation were unsupported by evidence,” VOA reports.

Ethiopia’s biggest opposition coalition, the eight-party Medrek, filed the court appeal last week after the country’s election authority the previous week rejected its calls for a new poll after reports of irregularities surfaced in last month’s nationwide parliamentary contest.

“We have lodged this appeal because the manner in which the NEB handled our grievances was very irregular,” Medrek chairman Beyene Petros told Reuters at the time.

“We submitted an 87-page document of evidence but they never invited us to explain or to present witnesses. The rejection was a face-saving measure.”

Early results showed the ruling party sweeping 99.6 percent of announced seats. “Government officials say the ruling party’s landslide victory reflects the will of the people, while the opposition says the election was stolen,” VOA reports.

European Union observers and the U.S. government have criticized the pre-election-day process. “This electoral process falls short of certain international commitments,” said Thijs Berman, the chief EU observer, pointing to the use of state resources to campaign for the ruling party.

Secretary of State Jonnie Carson, President Obama’s top Diplomat for Africa, recently told a Congressional panel: “While the elections were calm and peaceful and largely without any kind of violence, we note with some degree of remorse that the elections there were not up to international standards.”

The aftermath of last month’s poll in Ethiopia, one of America’s key partners in the global war against terrorism, continues to be closely watched by U.S. officials, lawmakers as well as by Ethiopian-Americans.

“To the extent that Ethiopia values the relationship with the United States, then we think they should heed this very direct and strong message,” State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley said. “We value the cooperation that we have with the Ethiopian government on a range of issues including regional security, including climate change for example. So we will continue to engage this government. But we will make clear that there are steps that it needs to take to improve democratic institutions.”

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the ballot had been corrupted by pre-election irregularities.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has dismissed outside criticism as foreign interference – violating the sovereignty of Ethiopia.

Here are related news:

NEW:
Spotlight on the Struggle of Birtukan Mideksa (Huffington Post)
Journalist decries ‘outrageously ludicrous’ elections (Stanford Report)
Ethiopia’s Embarrassing Elections (Wall Street Journal)
Ethiopian election stirs outrage at ruling party (Washington Times)
Ethiopia’s Ruling Party to Work with Opposition (VOA)
US says Ethiopia ties depend on electoral changes (AFP)

Video: U.S. Department Daily Press Briefing: May 26, 2010
(Forward to minute 02:10 for the Ethiopia comment)

Video: Inside Story, with presenter Mike Hanna – Zenawi: A source of stability?

Ethiopian Prime Minister Declares Victory in Election (Bloomberg)
Early results: Ethiopia’s ruling party won vote (The Associated Press)
Ethiopian Ruling Party Sweeps Preliminary Election Results (VOA)

Watch Video: A Post-Election Analysis – Al Mariam Jezeera Interview

Watch Video: Polls Open in Ethiopia Marred by Intimidation Complaints (Al Jazeera)

Related:
Premier’s Party Sweeps Ethiopian Vote (NYT)
EU: Ethiopian Election Unbalanced (VOA)
Governing Party Leads in Ethiopian Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopia’s Meles on course for landslide election win (Reuters)
Ethiopian Party Accused of Intimidation Before Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopian Election Draws Record Turnout; Opposition Charges Fraud (VOA)
Ethiopia opposition bloc claims voter intimidation (AP)
Britain ‘keeping quiet about Ethiopia repression’ (Telegraph.co.uk)

Related Pre-Election News:
VOA Video: Ethiopian Diaspora Seeks Democratic Progress in Ethiopia

Video: Interview with Meles Zenawi (Al Jazeera)

More News:
Ethiopia votes, with ruling party favored to win (AP)
An Eerie Silence Precedes Ethiopia’s Election (TIME)
Repression Is Alleged Before Vote in Ethiopia (The New York Times)
Critics Stifled in Ethiopia (Wall Street Journal)

Supporters of Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi rally on Thursday ahead of Sunday’s
elections. (Agence France-Press/Getty)

Fairness at Issue in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Ethiopian Government Confident Sunday’s Polls Will be Credible (VOA)
Obama Urged to Speak Out On Ethiopia (Tadias)
Ethiopia’s ruling party poised to win election (The Associated Press)
Ethiopia tackles ghosts of elections past (BBC).
Ethiopia’s elections: Five more years (From The Economist print edition)
Ethiopia’s Meles Headed for Election Win as West Pours in Aid (Bloomberg News)
Last day of campaigning ahead of Ethiopia’s elections (BBC)
Ethiopian Diaspora In US Is Split Over Role in Election (Voice of America)
Experts say US Government Walks Fine Line with Ethiopia (VOA).
Divided Opposition Faces Longtime Incumbent (VOA)
Scenarios- How might Ethiopia’s elections play out? (Reuters)
Election monitors arrive in Ethiopia (UPI)
Ethiopia’s Biggest Electoral Prize Divided As Election Nears (VOA)

Analysis from VOA:
Experts Say There Will Be No Contest in Ethiopia’s Upcoming Vote
2005 Ethiopian Election: A Look Back

BBC Profile: Ethiopian leader Zenawi

BBC Profile: Ethiopia’s Merera Gudina

Related election news:
Ethiopian opposition says third activist killed before vote ( AFP)
Tigray, a ‘Battleground State’ in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Challengers Face Long Odds in Bid to Unseat Ethiopian Rulers (VOA)
Ethiopian TV journalist arrests worry watchdog (Times Live)
Scuffle breaks out among Ethiopian opposition (AP)

Video: Ethiopia Amharic News – Fight breaks out among Ethiopian opposition

Listen:
What do Addis Ababa residents think about the election?
(Click here to listen to VOA’s Amharic program)

More election news:
Tensions mount in Ethiopia (Times Live)
Ethiopian Opposition Demands Independent Probe Into Activist’s Death (VOA)
Ethiopia activist clubbed to death in ‘politically motivated’ murder (Guardian)
Ethiopia opposition leader flees 12-year jail term (Reuters)
Silence Not Golden In Ethiopia (VOA Editorial)
Free and fair elections in Ethiopia (The Hill)
Media Group to Ethiopia – Stop Jamming VOA Broadcasts (VOA)
Ethiopia Accuses Rights Groups, VOA of ‘Smear Campaign’ (VOA)
European Union to Send Monitors to Ethiopia Vote, Lawmaker Says (Bloomberg News)
VOA says Ethiopia blocks website as US row escalates (Reuters)
Ethiopian Opposition Party Elders Confront Prison Officials Over Jailed Leader (VOA)
Ethiopia Opposition barred from seeing jailed leader (Reuters)
Ethiopia blasts US for report on rights record (Sudan Tribune)
Forget about democracy (The Economist)
U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts (CNN)
Candidate Slaying in Northern Ethiopia Stirs Calls for an Inquiry (VOA)
Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing (The New York Times)
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

Video: Thousands pay respects to victims of last Saturday’s fatal fire in Seattle

Above: Mourners at Friday’s public memorial service react
during an emotional visual tribute to the Seattle fire victims.
(STEVE RINGMAN / SEATTLE TIMES)

Updated: Saturday, June 19, 2010
By Marc Ramirez
Seattle Times staff reporter

One by one, the lives lost to last weekend’s fire in Fremont were celebrated on screen, a series of snapshots taken in happier times.

The boy who dreamed of playing point guard for the Boston Celtics. The siblings who adored their older brother. The girl who liked to jump rope. And the young woman who could win any argument she set her mind to.

The emotional slide show capped Friday’s public memorial to those five family members at Seattle Center’s KeyArena. The multicultural crowd, estimated at 3,500, largely reflected an East African population united in grief over the loss of so many young lives.

“Your sorrow is our sorrow,” said Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn. “Your grief is Seattle’s grief. We walk with you in your grief because we are — and will be — one community.”

Killed last Saturday morning in the swift-moving fire at Helen Gebregiorgis’ Fremont apartment were three of her children — Joseph Gebregiorgis, 13, Nisreen Shamam, 6, and Yaseen Shamam, 5; her sister, Eyerusalem Gebregiorgis, 22; and a niece, 7-year-old Nyella Smith, daughter of a third sister, Yordanos Gebregiorgis.

Watch Video: Memorial service for Fremont fire victims


Nisreen Shamam (left), Yaseen Shamam (C) and Joseph Gebregiorgis.
They were killed in last weekend’s apartment fire in Seattle.


PHOTO BY JOHN LOK / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Click Here to Donate to Seattle’s Fremont Apartment Fire Victims Fund – Donate Online Now
Donations to help family members affected by last Saturday’s blaze can be sent to the Seattle Children’s Fire Fund at any Bank of America branch. Donations also are being accepted at the Red Door tavern in Fremont. There will be a booth at this weekend’s Fremont Fair at North 35th Street and Evanston Avenue North to accept cash donations or gift cards from grocery or department stores. There also will be paper and envelopes available to write condolence notes to the family. Neighbor Allecia Clemons, a Fremont folk singer, is trying to organize a benefit concert for later in the summer. She can be reached at allecialightlove@hotmail.com.

Watch Video: Ethiopian community mourns 5 dead in Seattle fire

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Seattle (Tadias) – As investigators continue to look into the cause of this pasts weekend’s apartment fire in Seattle that killed an Ethiopian family, including four children, the city’s fire chief described the frantic seconds after the blaze erupted Saturday morning in Helen Gebregiorgis’ two-story home in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood.

Seattle Fire Chief Gregory Dean told the media Sunday that the city’s deadliest fire in decades started in the living quarters of Helen Gebregiorgis’ three-bedroom, two-story apartment and spread to the second floor. He said the mother had gone upstairs to tell the others about the fire, grabbed her 5-year-old niece, Samarah Smith, and left the building, thinking the others were behind her. “She believed that the rest were following her and when she got outside they were not,” Dean said during a news conference at Fire Department headquarters in Pioneer Square. “We did find the four children and the aunt in the second floor bathroom, huddled together.”

Gebregiorgis, 31, lost her sons, 13-year-old Joseph Gebregiorgis and 5-year-old Yaseen Shamam, and her 6-year-old daughter, Nisreen Shamam, in the fire in the city’s Fremont neighborhood, the children’s grieving uncle, Daniel Gebregiorgis, told The Seattle Times. Also killed were Helen’s 22-year-old sister, Eyerusalem Gebregiorgis, and 7-year-old niece, Nyella Smith.

Video: Seattle Fire Chief Gregory Dean reacts to an apartment fire that killed an Ethiopian family

The fire was reported just after 10 a.m. Saturday morning.

According to Seattle’s King5 News, the first emergency vehicle to arrive at the burning apartment building had a problem with a pump that prevented it from spraying water on the fire, but a second unit arrived two minutes later and was able to fight the fire.

“They needed to be able to control what was in front of them before they could go up the stairs,” the Chief said. “There was definitely a delay in firefighters being able to get there. I think in looking at the pictures and what we saw and listening to comments, there was a tremendous amount of fire and smoke prior to the fire department’s arrival, which, again, makes it pretty hard to sustain life in that type of heated environment,” he said.

Dean said the truck with the mechanical problem arrived at 10:09 a.m., and a second truck about two minutes later, and a third at 10:12 a.m.

According to the fire chief, the department prepares for problems because they happen on a regular basis and this weekend’s particular problem would be investigated.

“We do what we call redundancy back-up to make sure that if something happens, we’re prepared for that type of thing,” he said. “In this case something did happen. The second unit came in, they did what they were supposed to do and we continued to fight the fire.”

“Our firefighters are beating themselves up, you know ‘could I have done more,'” the chief said. “Our hearts go out to the ones that lost their loved ones and we recognize there’s an impact on the community, recognize there’s an impact on our firefighters. We will be doing a follow-up with the community.”

New:
Fatal fire may have started in mattress (Seattle Times)

Ghana vs Serbia: Black Stars win 1-0

Above: Ghana wins over Serbia 1-0, and Slovenia beats
Algeria 1-0 in the continuation of the FIFA World Cup 2010.

FIFA.com – The latest videos from the 2010 World Cup

FIFA World Cup 2010: TV Schedule Printable June 13 2010

Algeria vs. Slovenia – 13 Jun 1:30pm
Serbia vs. Ghana – 13 Jun 4:00pm
Germany vs. Australia – 13 Jun 8:30pm

* All times are South Africa Time

Video: World Cup 2010: Ghana profile

The world is still talking about the England vs USA game in which it went into a tie. The focus of the conversation is how the goalkeeper of England missed the biggest goal of his career. England goalkeeper Robert Green presented the greatest gift that the United States can receive to tie the score at 1-1.

Watch

BBC News
By Pumza Fihlani
June 11, 2010

Johannesburg’s streets were filled with the unrelenting chorus of the vuvuzela and car horns announcing the beginning of a long night of celebrations as South Africa – known by all football fans here as “Bafana Bafana” (“the boys”) – drew 1-1 with Mexico at the opening match of Africa’s first World Cup.

“I am really proud of Bafana Bafana. Yes, I was hoping for a win but they played really well and have done the country proud,” said Isaac Maphalle, 21, after the final whistle.

The past week has been particularly impressive here – as though the reality of what it means to hold an event of this magnitude has finally sunk in. The entire country is drunk on World Cup fever.

Words can scarcely describe the electricity in this country at the moment. Read more.

Related:
Mandela misses World Cup opening after family death (BBC)
In pictures: Africa’s World Cup (BBC News)
Watch World Cup 2010 online, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, iPhone, Blackberry, Android apps (Examiner.com).

VIDEO: 2010 FIFA World Cup Kick-Off

Video: Will the 2010 World Cup unite South Africa?

Video: World Cup 2010 Opening Ceremony

Marcus is the new Top Chef Master

Above: Top Chef Masters’ champion Marcus Samuelsson won
$100,000 for the UNICEF Tap Project, which brings clean and
accessible water to millions of children around the world.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Friday, June 11, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Marcus Samuelsson has been crowned winner of the second season Top Chef Masters, a reality competition show broadcast on the cable television network Bravo.

“It’s the best feeling,” said Samuelsson after his victory was announced. “People all over the world will celebrate this with me, I guarantee you that.”

Top Chef Masters reality show pits world-renowned chefs against each other in weekly challenges. Samuelsson defeated fellow celebrity chefs Susur Lee, also from New York, and Las Vegas chef Rick Moonen.

As the winner, the Ethiopian-born chef received $100,000 for the UNICEF Tap Project, which raises funds to bring clean and accessible water to millions of children around the world.

WATCH

Related:
CNN’s African Voices Profiles Marcus Samuelsson

Update: Ethiopia Election Board Rejects Call for New Poll

Above: Ethiopia’s electoral board has rejected demands for a
new election following last month’s controversial poll. (AP)

Tadias Magazine
Election News Summary

Updated: Wednesday, June 9, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Ethiopia’s electoral board on Wednesday rejected opposition calls for a new election following last month’s disputed nationwide contest.

A coalition of six Ethiopian opposition parties are calling for a re-run of the May 23 parliamentary poll. “Government officials say the ruling party’s landslide victory reflects the will of the people, while the opposition says the election was stolen,” VOA reports.

Early results showed the ruling party sweeping 99.6 percent of announced seats. Government spokesman Bereket Simon told The Associated Press the election was free and fair.

The United States has issued a sharp rebuke of the election process. Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson, President Obama’s top Diplomat for Africa, told a Congressional panel that Ethiopia’s recent election was substandard by international norms. “While the elections were calm and peaceful and largely without any kind of violence, we note with some degree of remorse that the elections there were not up to international standards,” Carson said.

“To the extent that Ethiopia values the relationship with the United States, then we think they should heed this very direct and strong message,” State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley said. “We value the cooperation that we have with the Ethiopian government on a range of issues including regional security, including climate change for example. So we will continue to engage this government. But we will make clear that there are steps that it needs to take to improve democratic institutions.”

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the ballot had been corrupted by pre-election irregularities.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has dismissed outside criticism as foreign interference – violating the sovereignty of Ethiopia.

According to AP, Opposition leaders have said they may challenge the results through the nation’s court system.

The aftermath of last month’s poll in Ethiopia, one of America’s key partners in the global war against terrorism, continues to be closely watched by U.S. officials, lawmakers as well as by Ethiopian-Americans.

Here is related news:

NEW:
Spotlight on the Struggle of Birtukan Mideksa (Huffington Post)
Journalist decries ‘outrageously ludicrous’ elections (Stanford Report)
Ethiopia’s Embarrassing Elections (Wall Street Journal)
Ethiopian election stirs outrage at ruling party (Washington Times)
Ethiopia’s Ruling Party to Work with Opposition (VOA)
US says Ethiopia ties depend on electoral changes (AFP)

Video: U.S. Department Daily Press Briefing: May 26, 2010
(Forward to minute 02:10 for the Ethiopia comment)

Video: Inside Story, with presenter Mike Hanna – Zenawi: A source of stability?

Ethiopian Prime Minister Declares Victory in Election (Bloomberg)
Early results: Ethiopia’s ruling party won vote (The Associated Press)
Ethiopian Ruling Party Sweeps Preliminary Election Results (VOA)

Watch Video: A Post-Election Analysis – Al Mariam Jezeera Interview

Watch Video: Polls Open in Ethiopia Marred by Intimidation Complaints (Al Jazeera)

Related:
Premier’s Party Sweeps Ethiopian Vote (NYT)
EU: Ethiopian Election Unbalanced (VOA)
Governing Party Leads in Ethiopian Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopia’s Meles on course for landslide election win (Reuters)
Ethiopian Party Accused of Intimidation Before Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopian Election Draws Record Turnout; Opposition Charges Fraud (VOA)
Ethiopia opposition bloc claims voter intimidation (AP)
Britain ‘keeping quiet about Ethiopia repression’ (Telegraph.co.uk)

Related Pre-Election News:
VOA Video: Ethiopian Diaspora Seeks Democratic Progress in Ethiopia

Video: Interview with Meles Zenawi (Al Jazeera)

More News:
Ethiopia votes, with ruling party favored to win (AP)
An Eerie Silence Precedes Ethiopia’s Election (TIME)
Repression Is Alleged Before Vote in Ethiopia (The New York Times)
Critics Stifled in Ethiopia (Wall Street Journal)

Supporters of Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi rally on Thursday ahead of Sunday’s
elections. (Agence France-Press/Getty)

Fairness at Issue in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Ethiopian Government Confident Sunday’s Polls Will be Credible (VOA)
Obama Urged to Speak Out On Ethiopia (Tadias)
Ethiopia’s ruling party poised to win election (The Associated Press)
Ethiopia tackles ghosts of elections past (BBC).
Ethiopia’s elections: Five more years (From The Economist print edition)
Ethiopia’s Meles Headed for Election Win as West Pours in Aid (Bloomberg News)
Last day of campaigning ahead of Ethiopia’s elections (BBC)
Ethiopian Diaspora In US Is Split Over Role in Election (Voice of America)
Experts say US Government Walks Fine Line with Ethiopia (VOA).
Divided Opposition Faces Longtime Incumbent (VOA)
Scenarios- How might Ethiopia’s elections play out? (Reuters)
Election monitors arrive in Ethiopia (UPI)
Ethiopia’s Biggest Electoral Prize Divided As Election Nears (VOA)

Analysis from VOA:
Experts Say There Will Be No Contest in Ethiopia’s Upcoming Vote
2005 Ethiopian Election: A Look Back

BBC Profile: Ethiopian leader Zenawi

BBC Profile: Ethiopia’s Merera Gudina

Related election news:
Ethiopian opposition says third activist killed before vote ( AFP)
Tigray, a ‘Battleground State’ in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Challengers Face Long Odds in Bid to Unseat Ethiopian Rulers (VOA)
Ethiopian TV journalist arrests worry watchdog (Times Live)
Scuffle breaks out among Ethiopian opposition (AP)

Video: Ethiopia Amharic News – Fight breaks out among Ethiopian opposition

Listen:
What do Addis Ababa residents think about the election?
(Click here to listen to VOA’s Amharic program)

More election news:
Tensions mount in Ethiopia (Times Live)
Ethiopian Opposition Demands Independent Probe Into Activist’s Death (VOA)
Ethiopia activist clubbed to death in ‘politically motivated’ murder (Guardian)
Ethiopia opposition leader flees 12-year jail term (Reuters)
Silence Not Golden In Ethiopia (VOA Editorial)
Free and fair elections in Ethiopia (The Hill)
Media Group to Ethiopia – Stop Jamming VOA Broadcasts (VOA)
Ethiopia Accuses Rights Groups, VOA of ‘Smear Campaign’ (VOA)
European Union to Send Monitors to Ethiopia Vote, Lawmaker Says (Bloomberg News)
VOA says Ethiopia blocks website as US row escalates (Reuters)
Ethiopian Opposition Party Elders Confront Prison Officials Over Jailed Leader (VOA)
Ethiopia Opposition barred from seeing jailed leader (Reuters)
Ethiopia blasts US for report on rights record (Sudan Tribune)
Forget about democracy (The Economist)
U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts (CNN)
Candidate Slaying in Northern Ethiopia Stirs Calls for an Inquiry (VOA)
Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing (The New York Times)
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

Obama Appoints Mimi Alemayehou to Key Administration Post

Above: Mimi Alemayehou has been nominated by President
Obama to serve as a Member of the Board of Directors of the
African Development Foundation (ADF), US Federal agency.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Wednesday, June 9, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Ethiopian-American Mimi E. Alemayehou, who served as the most senior U.S. Treasury official in Africa, has been nominated by President Obama to serve as a Member of the Board of Directors of the African Development Foundation.

Ms. Alemayehou was most recently the United States Executive Director at the African Development Bank (AfDB) and was the first African-born leader in this role. She was Founder & Managing Partner of Trade Links, LLC, a development consulting firm that worked with clients on emerging markets issues to promote African exports under the African Growth and Opportunity Act.

Ms. Alemayehou is a naturalized U.S. Citizen. She was born in Ethiopia and spent her early years in Kenya before emigrating to the United States. Ms. Alemayehou holds a Masters degree in International Business and International Law and Development from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.

Dr. Mulu Muleta Receives 2010 Global ATHENA Leadership Award

Above: At the 16th annual ATHENA Women’s Leadership
Summit in Chicago, Dr. Mulu Muleta was presented with
the 2010 Global ATHENA Leadership Award. (Tsehainy)

Tsehainy.com
Posted here on June 8th, 2010
The ATHENA International Global ATHENA Leadership Award acknowledges, among many qualities, women who show excellence, creativity and initiative in their work; provide valuable services to improve the quality of life in their communities and whose work has national or international significance. While studying at Addis Ababa University Medical School, Dr. Muleta met the founders of the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital, Reginald and Catherine Hamin. After graduating, Reginald Hamin recruited Dr. Muleta to work at the hospital. Read more.

Related:
Gates to spend $1.5 billion on women’s health (The Seattle Times)

Stolen Treasure Returned to Ethiopia

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Thursday, June 3, 2010

New York (Tadias) – A century-old prayer book stolen from Ethiopia has been returned by the American collector who held it, Agence France-Presse reports.

The book written in Geez belonged to Emperor Menelik, who ruled the country from 1889 to 1913.

“Gerald Weiner is the largest collector of Ethiopian antiquities in north America. I went to him and said they belonged to Ethiopia,” Steve Delamarter, an Old Testament scholar who made contact with the U.S. collector, told AFP. “To my surprise, he thought it was a good idea and decided to act in good will,” he said, before handing the relic to Addis Ababa University officials at a ceremony late Wednesday.

The report adds: “Delamarter said he was still working with the Ethiopian authorities on ways of repatriating all the items in Weiner’s collection. Officials say thousands of Ethiopian historical objects remain in the hands of foreign collectors and museums in Western countries due to centuries of poor management which led to looting.”

Historian Richard Pankhurst, longtime advocate for the return of stolen Ethiopian antiquities, welcomed the news, but he accused Britain of still hogging more than 500 ancient manuscripts, paintings, and an 18-carat gold crown looted by British troops in 1868 following the defeat of Emperor Tewodros.

“It took 15 elephants and 200 mules to bring the loot. It was unjustified and even sacrilegious as they were taken from a church,” Pankhurst said. “There have been requests for their return, but the answers from British authorities are always not satisfactory.”

Related from Tadias Magazine Archives:
An Exquisite Pocket Watch And The Emperor Who Owned It

Geb Says New York here I come…

Above: Gebrselassie has accomplished just about everything
a runner can accomplish, except winning the New York City
Marathon. The Ethiopian great will run the race in November.

Geb set to take a bite out of Big Apple
By Joe Battaglia | Universal Sports
June 3, 2010
World-record holder Haile Gebrselassie of Ethiopia talks about his affinity for the Big Apple and his training for the ING New York City Marathon. Watch the Video at Universalsports.com
—–

Related:
Ethiopian men finish 1-2-3 in Bolder Boulder

USA Today
By Arnie Stapleton, AP Sports Writer

BOULDER, Colorado — Lelisa Desisa of Ethiopia has won the men’s Bolder Boulder 10-kilometer race, crossing the finish line hand-in-hand with fellow countrymen Tilahun Regassa and Tadese Tola.

The trio broke away from two Kenyans in the third mile Monday and entered Folsom Field hand-in-hand. Expecting a sprint to the finish, the crowd of 50,000 roared ever louder when it became apparent the Ethiopians instead would cross the tape together.

Desisa finished in 29 minutes, 16.93 seconds, officially 0.03 seconds ahead of 2009 champion Regassa and 0.15 seconds in front of Tola.

“We decided if no Kenya and if we are three, we finish together,” Desisa said.

As race officials attempted to separate them just past the finish line into first, second and third place, the three runners adamantly refused to be sorted into any order.

“We didn’t even try to race each other,” said Regassa, the 2009 champion. “We tried to go together.” Read more.

Ethiopian Opposition Coalition Calls for New Vote

Above: Ethiopia’s 65 political parties don’t agree much, but
they are coming together on one subject: the poll results.

Tadias Magazine
Election News Summary

Updated: Tuesday, June 1, 2010

New York (Tadias) – A coalition of six Ethiopian opposition parties are calling for a re-run of last week’s election. “Government officials say the ruling party’s landslide victory reflects the will of the people, while the opposition says the election was stolen,” VOA reports.

Early results from the nationwide parliamentary contest showed the ruling party sweeping 99.6 percent of announced seats. Government spokesman Bereket Simon told The Associated Press the election was free and fair.

The United States has issued a sharp rebuke of the election process. Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson, President Obama’s top Diplomat for Africa, told a Congressional panel that Ethiopia’s recent election was substandard by international norms. “While the elections were calm and peaceful and largely without any kind of violence, we note with some degree of remorse that the elections there were not up to international standards,” Carson said.

“To the extent that Ethiopia values the relationship with the United States, then we think they should heed this very direct and strong message,” State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley said. “We value the cooperation that we have with the Ethiopian government on a range of issues including regional security, including climate change for example. So we will continue to engage this government. But we will make clear that there are steps that it needs to take to improve democratic institutions.”

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the ballot had been corrupted by pre-election irregularities.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has dismissed outside criticism as foreign interference – violating the sovereignty of Ethiopia.

According to AP, Opposition leaders have said they may challenge the results through the nation’s court system.

The aftermath of last week’s poll in Ethiopia, one of America’s key partners in the global war against terrorism, continues to be closely watched by U.S. officials, lawmakers as well as by Ethiopian-Americans.

Here is related news:

NEW:
Spotlight on the Struggle of Birtukan Mideksa (Huffington Post)
Journalist decries ‘outrageously ludicrous’ elections (Stanford Report)
Ethiopia’s Embarrassing Elections (Wall Street Journal)
Ethiopian election stirs outrage at ruling party (Washington Times)
Ethiopia’s Ruling Party to Work with Opposition (VOA)
US says Ethiopia ties depend on electoral changes (AFP)

Video: U.S. Department Daily Press Briefing: May 26, 2010
(Forward to minute 02:10 for the Ethiopia comment)

Video: Inside Story, with presenter Mike Hanna – Zenawi: A source of stability?

Ethiopian Prime Minister Declares Victory in Election (Bloomberg)
Early results: Ethiopia’s ruling party won vote (The Associated Press)
Ethiopian Ruling Party Sweeps Preliminary Election Results (VOA)

Watch Video: A Post-Election Analysis – Al Mariam Jezeera Interview

Watch Video: Polls Open in Ethiopia Marred by Intimidation Complaints (Al Jazeera)

Related:
Premier’s Party Sweeps Ethiopian Vote (NYT)
EU: Ethiopian Election Unbalanced (VOA)
Governing Party Leads in Ethiopian Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopia’s Meles on course for landslide election win (Reuters)
Ethiopian Party Accused of Intimidation Before Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopian Election Draws Record Turnout; Opposition Charges Fraud (VOA)
Ethiopia opposition bloc claims voter intimidation (AP)
Britain ‘keeping quiet about Ethiopia repression’ (Telegraph.co.uk)

Related Pre-Election News:
VOA Video: Ethiopian Diaspora Seeks Democratic Progress in Ethiopia

Video: Interview with Meles Zenawi (Al Jazeera)

More News:
Ethiopia votes, with ruling party favored to win (AP)
An Eerie Silence Precedes Ethiopia’s Election (TIME)
Repression Is Alleged Before Vote in Ethiopia (The New York Times)
Critics Stifled in Ethiopia (Wall Street Journal)

Supporters of Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi rally on Thursday ahead of Sunday’s
elections. (Agence France-Press/Getty)

Fairness at Issue in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Ethiopian Government Confident Sunday’s Polls Will be Credible (VOA)
Obama Urged to Speak Out On Ethiopia (Tadias)
Ethiopia’s ruling party poised to win election (The Associated Press)
Ethiopia tackles ghosts of elections past (BBC).
Ethiopia’s elections: Five more years (From The Economist print edition)
Ethiopia’s Meles Headed for Election Win as West Pours in Aid (Bloomberg News)
Last day of campaigning ahead of Ethiopia’s elections (BBC)
Ethiopian Diaspora In US Is Split Over Role in Election (Voice of America)
Experts say US Government Walks Fine Line with Ethiopia (VOA).
Divided Opposition Faces Longtime Incumbent (VOA)
Scenarios- How might Ethiopia’s elections play out? (Reuters)
Election monitors arrive in Ethiopia (UPI)
Ethiopia’s Biggest Electoral Prize Divided As Election Nears (VOA)

Analysis from VOA:
Experts Say There Will Be No Contest in Ethiopia’s Upcoming Vote
2005 Ethiopian Election: A Look Back

BBC Profile: Ethiopian leader Zenawi

BBC Profile: Ethiopia’s Merera Gudina

Related election news:
Ethiopian opposition says third activist killed before vote ( AFP)
Tigray, a ‘Battleground State’ in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Challengers Face Long Odds in Bid to Unseat Ethiopian Rulers (VOA)
Ethiopian TV journalist arrests worry watchdog (Times Live)
Scuffle breaks out among Ethiopian opposition (AP)

Video: Ethiopia Amharic News – Fight breaks out among Ethiopian opposition

Listen:
What do Addis Ababa residents think about the election?
(Click here to listen to VOA’s Amharic program)

More election news:
Tensions mount in Ethiopia (Times Live)
Ethiopian Opposition Demands Independent Probe Into Activist’s Death (VOA)
Ethiopia activist clubbed to death in ‘politically motivated’ murder (Guardian)
Ethiopia opposition leader flees 12-year jail term (Reuters)
Silence Not Golden In Ethiopia (VOA Editorial)
Free and fair elections in Ethiopia (The Hill)
Media Group to Ethiopia – Stop Jamming VOA Broadcasts (VOA)
Ethiopia Accuses Rights Groups, VOA of ‘Smear Campaign’ (VOA)
European Union to Send Monitors to Ethiopia Vote, Lawmaker Says (Bloomberg News)
VOA says Ethiopia blocks website as US row escalates (Reuters)
Ethiopian Opposition Party Elders Confront Prison Officials Over Jailed Leader (VOA)
Ethiopia Opposition barred from seeing jailed leader (Reuters)
Ethiopia blasts US for report on rights record (Sudan Tribune)
Forget about democracy (The Economist)
U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts (CNN)
Candidate Slaying in Northern Ethiopia Stirs Calls for an Inquiry (VOA)
Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing (The New York Times)
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

Election Update: Two More Parties Reject Ethiopia Polls

Above: Ethiopians wait to cast their vote Sunday, May 23 at
a polling station in Dukem, Ethiopia, south of Addis. (AP)

Tadias Magazine
Election News Summary

Updated: Tuesday, June 1, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Two more opposition parties on Tuesday rejected the results which handed the ruling coalition a crushing majority. “Berhan for Unity and Democracy and the Ethiopian Democratic Coalition Front said the polls were riddled with irregularities and called for a re-run,” according to AFP.

Early results from the nationwide parliamentary contest showed the ruling party sweeping 99.6 percent of announced seats. Ethiopia’s two largest opposition parties – Medrek and the All Ethiopians Unity Party – have already rejected the tally from last Sunday’s national elections, calling for new votes, VOA reports.

International organizations and the United States have expressed disapproval of the election process. Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson, President Obama’s top diplomat for Africa, told Congress Ethiopia’s election failed to meet international standards. “While the elections were calm and peaceful and largely without any kind of violence, we note with some degree of remorse that the elections there were not up to international standards,” Carson said. A statement by National Security Council Spokesman Mike Hammer said the Obama administration has reservations about the overall electoral system . “We are concerned that international observers found that the elections fell short of international commitments,” the spokesman said. “The limitation of independent observation and the harassment of independent media representatives are deeply troubling.”

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who declared victory amid the raging controversy, has dismissed outside criticism as foreign interference – violating the sovereignty of Ethiopia.

State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley warned: “To the extent that Ethiopia values the relationship with the United States, then we think they should heed this very direct and strong message,” he said. “We value the cooperation that we have with the Ethiopian government on a range of issues including regional security, including climate change for example. So we will continue to engage this government. But we will make clear that there are steps that it needs to take to improve democratic institutions,” Crawley stressed.

Opposition leaders said they may challenge the results through the court system, hoping to avoid the violent street clashes of five years ago that killed nearly 200 people,” AP reports.

Government spokesman Bereket Simon told The Associated Press the election was free and fair.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the ballot had been corrupted by pre-election irregularities.

The country’s 31.9 million registered voters went to the polls to select 547 members of parliament and representatives to regional councils.

Early results show the ruling party sweeping 99 percent of announced seats.

The country’s first national election since the disputed 2005 contest was preceded by an intense political season, painted by allegations of harassments and intimidations by Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s ruling party.

“As voting concludes and the results are announced, we call on all parties to reject violence,” White House said. “We await the final assessments of the electoral process from independent observers, and encourage the government to address in good faith and impartially any concerns and disputes that are raised.”

The vote in Ethiopia, a key American partner in the global war against terrorism, is being closely watched by some U.S. officials, lawmakers as well as by Ethiopian-Americans – whose opinions, VOA reports, are split: some saying that Ethiopian-Americans should stay out of the debate, while others in the community have been urging a more vocal U.S. response against human rights violations in Ethiopia.

Here is the latest:

Spotlight on the Struggle of Birtukan Mideksa (Huffington Post)
Journalist decries ‘outrageously ludicrous’ elections (Stanford Report)
Ethiopian election stirs outrage at ruling party (Washington Times)
NEW: Ethiopia’s Ruling Party to Work with Opposition (VOA)

Video: Inside Story, with presenter Mike Hanna – Zenawi: A source of stability?

Video: U.S. Department Daily Press Briefing: May 26, 2010
(Forward to minute 02:10 for the Ethiopia comment)

Watch Video: A Post-Election Analysis – Al Mariam Jezeera Interview

Watch Video: Polls Open in Ethiopia Marred by Intimidation Complaints (Al Jazeera)

VOA Video: Ethiopian Diaspora Seeks Democratic Progress in Ethiopia

Video: Interview with Meles Zenawi (Al Jazeera)

US Expresses Concerns Over Ethiopia Election Results

Above: United States Assistant Secretary of State for African
Affairs Johnnie Carson said Ethiopia’s recent election has been
compromised by pre-vote flaws. (Photo credit: Vince Crawley)

Tadias Magazine
Election News Summary

Updated: Saturday, May 29, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The United States has expressed disapproval of the poll process in the 2010 Ethiopia election, while urging all sides to restrain from violence.

Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson, President Obama’s top diplomat for Africa, told Congress that Ethiopia’s election failed to meet international standards and called for stronger democratic institutions in the country, a key U.S. ally in Africa.

“While the elections were calm and peaceful and largely without any kind of violence, we note with some degree of remorse that the elections there were not up to international standards,” Carson said to a House of Representatives panel. “It is important that Ethiopia move forward in strengthening its democratic institutions and when elections are held that it level the playing field to give everyone a free opportunity to participate without fear or favor.”

A statement by National Security Council Spokesman Mike Hammer said White House is concerned by reports of irregularities. “We are concerned that international observers found that the elections fell short of international commitments,” the spokesman said. “We are disappointed that U.S. Embassy officials were denied accreditation and the opportunity to travel outside of the capital on Election Day to observe the voting.”

“The limitation of independent observation and the harassment of independent media representatives are deeply troubling,” he added.

Regrading election campaign problems, Hammer said: “An environment conducive to free and fair elections was not in place even before Election Day. In recent years, the Ethiopian government has taken steps to restrict political space for the opposition through intimidation and harassment, tighten its control over civil society, and curtail the activities of independent media. We are concerned that these actions have restricted freedom of expression and association and are inconsistent with the Ethiopian government’s human rights obligations.”

“As voting concludes and the results are announced, we call on all parties to reject violence. We await the final assessments of the electoral process from independent observers, and encourage the government to address in good faith and impartially any concerns and disputes that are raised.”

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who declared victory amid the raging controversy, has dismissed outside criticism as foreign interference – violating the sovereignty of Ethiopia.

Government spokesman Bereket Simon told The Associated Press the election was free and fair.

State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley warned: “To the extent that Ethiopia values the relationship with the United States, then we think they should heed this very direct and strong message,” he said. “We value the cooperation that we have with the Ethiopian government on a range of issues including regional security, including climate change for example. So we will continue to engage this government. But we will make clear that there are steps that it needs to take to improve democratic institutions,” Crawley stressed.

Related:
Ethiopian election stirs outrage at ruling party (Washington Times)

Video: U.S. Department Daily Press Briefing: May 26, 2010
(Forward to minute 02:10 for the Ethiopia comment)

Voice of America Video: Ethiopian Diaspora Seeks Progress in Ethiopia

News Summary: Ethiopian election stirs outrage at ruling party

Above: Ethiopians wait to cast their vote Sunday, May 23 at
a polling station in Dukem, Ethiopia, south of Addis. (AP)

NEW:
Ethiopian election stirs outrage at ruling party (Washington Times)
NEW: Ethiopia’s Ruling Party to Work with Opposition (VOA)
Ethiopia’s Meles Rejects Criticism of Elections (Bloomberg)
US says Ethiopia ties depend on electoral changes (AFP)

Video: U.S. Department Daily Press Briefing: May 26, 2010
(Forward to minute 02:10 for the Ethiopia comment)

Video: Inside Story, with presenter Mike Hanna – Zenawi: A source of stability?

Tadias Magazine
Election News Summary

Updated: Friday, May 28, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Ethiopia’s opposition block has rejected early results from last Sunday’s national elections, calling for new vote.

“Medrek and the All Ethiopia Unity Party, Ethiopia’s two largest opposition parties were crushed in national parliamentary elections a few days ago. But both parties are now saying it is not over yet. They called for new elections, accusing the ruling party of intimidation, fraud, harassment and violence,” VOA reports.

International organizations and the United States have expressed disapproval of the election process. A statement by National Security Council Spokesman Mike Hammer said the Obama administration has some reservations. “We are concerned that international observers found that the elections fell short of international commitments,” the spokesman said. “The limitation of independent observation and the harassment of independent media representatives are deeply troubling.”

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who declared victory earlier this week, has dismissed outside criticism as foreign interference – violating the sovereignty of Ethiopia.

State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley warned: “To the extent that Ethiopia values the relationship with the United States, then we think they should heed this very direct and strong message,” he said. “We value the cooperation that we have with the Ethiopian government on a range of issues including regional security, including climate change for example. So we will continue to engage this government. But we will make clear that there are steps that it needs to take to improve democratic institutions,” Crawley stressed.

Opposition leaders said they may contest the results through the court system, hoping to avoid the violent street clashes of five years ago that killed nearly 200 people,” AP reports.

Government spokesman Bereket Simon told The Associated Press the election was free and fair.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said Monday the weekend ballot had been corrupted.

The country’s 31.9 million registered voters went to the polls to select 547 members of parliament and representatives to regional councils.

Early results show the ruling party sweeping 99 percent of announced seats.

The country’s first national election since the disputed 2005 contest was preceded by an intense political season, painted by allegations of harassments and intimidations by Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s ruling party.

“As voting concludes and the results are announced, we call on all parties to reject violence,” White House said. “We await the final assessments of the electoral process from independent observers, and encourage the government to address in good faith and impartially any concerns and disputes that are raised.”

The vote in Ethiopia, a key American partner in the global war against terrorism, is being closely watched by some U.S. lawmakers as well as by Ethiopian-Americans – whose opinions, VOA reports, are split: some saying that Ethiopian-Americans should stay out of the debate, while others in the community have been urging a more vocal U.S. response against human rights violations in Ethiopia.

Here are related news:

Ethiopian Prime Minister Declares Victory in Election (Bloomberg)
Early results: Ethiopia’s ruling party won vote (The Associated Press)
Ethiopian Ruling Party Sweeps Preliminary Election Results (VOA)

Watch Video: A Post-Election Analysis – Al Mariam Jezeera Interview

Watch Video: Polls Open in Ethiopia Marred by Intimidation Complaints (Al Jazeera)

Related:
Premier’s Party Sweeps Ethiopian Vote (NYT)
EU: Ethiopian Election Unbalanced (VOA)
Governing Party Leads in Ethiopian Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopia’s Meles on course for landslide election win (Reuters)
Ethiopian Party Accused of Intimidation Before Election (The New York Times)
Ethiopian Election Draws Record Turnout; Opposition Charges Fraud (VOA)
Ethiopia opposition bloc claims voter intimidation (AP)
Britain ‘keeping quiet about Ethiopia repression’ (Telegraph.co.uk)

Related Pre-Election News:
VOA Video: Ethiopian Diaspora Seeks Democratic Progress in Ethiopia

Video: Interview with Meles Zenawi (Al Jazeera)

More News:
Ethiopia votes, with ruling party favored to win (AP)
An Eerie Silence Precedes Ethiopia’s Election (TIME)
Repression Is Alleged Before Vote in Ethiopia (The New York Times)
Critics Stifled in Ethiopia (Wall Street Journal)

Supporters of Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi rally on Thursday ahead of Sunday’s
elections. (Agence France-Press/Getty)

Fairness at Issue in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Ethiopian Government Confident Sunday’s Polls Will be Credible (VOA)
Obama Urged to Speak Out On Ethiopia (Tadias)
Ethiopia’s ruling party poised to win election (The Associated Press)
Ethiopia tackles ghosts of elections past (BBC).
Ethiopia’s elections: Five more years (From The Economist print edition)
Ethiopia’s Meles Headed for Election Win as West Pours in Aid (Bloomberg News)
Last day of campaigning ahead of Ethiopia’s elections (BBC)
Ethiopian Diaspora In US Is Split Over Role in Election (Voice of America)
Experts say US Government Walks Fine Line with Ethiopia (VOA).
Divided Opposition Faces Longtime Incumbent (VOA)
Scenarios- How might Ethiopia’s elections play out? (Reuters)
Election monitors arrive in Ethiopia (UPI)
Ethiopia’s Biggest Electoral Prize Divided As Election Nears (VOA)

Analysis from VOA:
Experts Say There Will Be No Contest in Ethiopia’s Upcoming Vote
2005 Ethiopian Election: A Look Back

BBC Profile: Ethiopian leader Zenawi

BBC Profile: Ethiopia’s Merera Gudina

Related election news:
Ethiopian opposition says third activist killed before vote ( AFP)
Tigray, a ‘Battleground State’ in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Challengers Face Long Odds in Bid to Unseat Ethiopian Rulers (VOA)
Ethiopian TV journalist arrests worry watchdog (Times Live)
Scuffle breaks out among Ethiopian opposition (AP)

Video: Ethiopia Amharic News – Fight breaks out among Ethiopian opposition

Listen:
What do Addis Ababa residents think about the election?
(Click here to listen to VOA’s Amharic program)

More election news:
Tensions mount in Ethiopia (Times Live)
Ethiopian Opposition Demands Independent Probe Into Activist’s Death (VOA)
Ethiopia activist clubbed to death in ‘politically motivated’ murder (Guardian)
Ethiopia opposition leader flees 12-year jail term (Reuters)
Silence Not Golden In Ethiopia (VOA Editorial)
Free and fair elections in Ethiopia (The Hill)
Media Group to Ethiopia – Stop Jamming VOA Broadcasts (VOA)
Ethiopia Accuses Rights Groups, VOA of ‘Smear Campaign’ (VOA)
European Union to Send Monitors to Ethiopia Vote, Lawmaker Says (Bloomberg News)
VOA says Ethiopia blocks website as US row escalates (Reuters)
Ethiopian Opposition Party Elders Confront Prison Officials Over Jailed Leader (VOA)
Ethiopia Opposition barred from seeing jailed leader (Reuters)
Ethiopia blasts US for report on rights record (Sudan Tribune)
Forget about democracy (The Economist)
U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts (CNN)
Candidate Slaying in Northern Ethiopia Stirs Calls for an Inquiry (VOA)
Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing (The New York Times)
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

Obama Urged to Speak Out On Ethiopia

Above: A group of U.S. Congressmen have joined the call by
Ethiopian-American activists in urging President Obama to
speak out ahead of the polls this weekend. (Photo – VOA)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Friday May 21, 2010

New York (Tadias) – As Ethiopia prepares for National Elections on Sunday, May 23rd, VOA reports that Ethiopian-Americans in the United States are split: some saying that Ethiopian-Americans should stay out of the debate, while others in the community are demanding that President Barack Obama speak out against the imprisonment of opposition leader, Judge Birtukan Medeksa, who will not be participating in Sunday’s election.

The protesters’ call was joined this week by a bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers who urged the Obama administration to speak out against human rights violations in Ethiopia ahead of the polls this weekend, The Washington Times reports.

In a letter to Johnnie Carson, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, the Lawmakers expressed concern that the upcoming vote will not be free and fair.

“Like most Americans, we believe that our country must never be silent about grave human rights abuses,” the Lawmakers wrote. “Yet in recent years our government has rarely spoken out about the Meles government’s human rights violations.”

According to the report, the letter to Mr. Carson was signed by: Reps. Christopher H. Smith, New Jersey Republican; Trent Franks, Arizona Republican; James P. Moran, Virginia Democrat; Dana Rohrabacher, California Republican; Ed Royce, California Republican; Frank R. Wolf, Virginia Republican; and Bob Inglis, South Carolina Republican.

Here are more news updates on the election:

Ethiopian Prime Minister Declares Victory in Election (Bloomberg)
Early results: Ethiopia’s ruling party won vote (The Associated Press)
Ethiopian Ruling Party Sweeps Preliminary Election Results (VOA)
VOA Video: Ethiopian Diaspora Seeks Democratic Progress in Ethiopia

Audio: Does Ethiopia have an image problem? (Listen at BBC.com)
Ethiopia’s elections: Five more years (From The Economist print edition)
Repression Is Alleged Before Vote in Ethiopia (The New York Times)
Last day of campaigning ahead of Ethiopia’s elections (BBC)
Ethiopia’s Meles Headed for Election Win as West Pours in Aid (Bloomberg News)
Ethiopian Diaspora In US Is Split Over Role in Election (Voice of America)

Video: Interview with Meles Zenawi (Al Jazeera)

ELECTION NEWS
Experts say US Government Walks Fine Line with Ethiopia (VOA).
Divided Opposition Faces Longtime Incumbent (VOA)
Scenarios- How might Ethiopia’s elections play out? (Reuters)
Election monitors arrive in Ethiopia (UPI)
Ethiopia’s Biggest Electoral Prize Divided As Election Nears (VOA)

Related from VOA:
Experts Say There Will Be No Contest in Ethiopia’s Upcoming Vote
2005 Ethiopian Election: A Look Back

BBC Profile: Ethiopian leader Zenawi

BBC Profile: Ethiopia’s Merera Gudina

Related election news:
Ethiopian opposition says third activist killed before vote ( AFP)
Tigray, a ‘Battleground State’ in Ethiopian Elections (VOA)
Challengers Face Long Odds in Bid to Unseat Ethiopian Rulers (VOA)
Ethiopian TV journalist arrests worry watchdog (Times Live)
Scuffle breaks out among Ethiopian opposition (AP)

Video: Ethiopia Amharic News – Fight breaks out among Ethiopian opposition

Listen:
What do Addis Ababa residents think about the election?
(Click here to listen to VOA’s Amharic program)

More election news:
Tensions mount in Ethiopia (Times Live)
Ethiopian Opposition Demands Independent Probe Into Activist’s Death (VOA)
Ethiopia activist clubbed to death in ‘politically motivated’ murder (Guardian)
Ethiopia opposition leader flees 12-year jail term (Reuters)
Silence Not Golden In Ethiopia (VOA Editorial)
Free and fair elections in Ethiopia (The Hill)
Media Group to Ethiopia – Stop Jamming VOA Broadcasts (VOA)
Ethiopia Accuses Rights Groups, VOA of ‘Smear Campaign’ (VOA)
European Union to Send Monitors to Ethiopia Vote, Lawmaker Says (Bloomberg News)
VOA says Ethiopia blocks website as US row escalates (Reuters)
Ethiopian Opposition Party Elders Confront Prison Officials Over Jailed Leader (VOA)
Ethiopia Opposition barred from seeing jailed leader (Reuters)
Ethiopia blasts US for report on rights record (Sudan Tribune)
Forget about democracy (The Economist)
U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts (CNN)
Candidate Slaying in Northern Ethiopia Stirs Calls for an Inquiry (VOA)
Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing (The New York Times)
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

Simien Girl Runners Featured in British TV Documentary

Above: The Girls Gotta Run Foundation-supported Simien Girl
Runners team was highlighted in a segment of the British TV
documentary “Joanna Lumley’s Nile.” (Photo – GGRF)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Sunday, May 16, 2010

New York (Tadias) – A new documentary travel series hosted by the British actress Joanna Lumley features the Simien Girl Runners, a track team supported by the Washington, D.C.-based Girls Gotta Run Foundation.

The film traces Lumley’s journey as she follows the river Nile from northern Egypt to its source. The actress encounters the young athletes near the majestic Semien Mountains during the Ethiopia segment of her exploration.

The foundation – which was profiled here on Tadias Magazine in October of 2009 along with an interview with the organization’s Executive Director Patricia E. Ortman – was established in 2006 to provide funds for athletic shoes, clothes, meals, coach subsidies, and other training-related expenses for impoverished Ethiopian girls who are training to be professional runners.

Regarding Joanna Lumley’s Nile, Dr. Ortman points out that in her otherwise captivating documentary, the narrator makes a few errors.

The popular British actress “doesn’t get everything quite right, including the name of the team, which is the ‘Simien Girl Runners’ and not ‘Girls Gotta Run’,” Ortman said in an email sent to GGRF’s supporters. “She also mistakenly credits a Debark hotel for donating after practice meals to the team, meals that in fact GGRF pays for. And the girls who hold up their ‘bad’ shoes at the meal they share with her there are not GGRF-sponsored members of the team, but girls who sometimes run with them because they would like to be members of the team.” But, she adds, “It is still fabulous footage, a heartwarming segment, and clear she is quite taken with our girls.”

In an interview with ITV.com, Ms Lumley was asked, “Who was the most interesting or fascinating person you met on the trip?” Her answer: “The Simian girl runners have stuck in my heart.”

And what was the most amazing country Lumley visited? “I think the most astonishing country was Ethiopia,” she says.

Click here to watch the video.

Gebre Gebremariam Sets Record in Central Park

Above: Gebre Gebremariam of Ethiopia set a course record
in the Healthy Kidney 10K race in Central Park, sprinting to
the finish in 27 minutes 42 seconds.

NYT: Ethiopian Runner Sets Record in Central Park

Universal Sports
By David Monti, Race Results Weekly
Posted: May 15, 9:10a ET

NEW YORK — The 2009 IAAF World Cross Country champion Gebre Gebremariam ran the fastest-ever 10-K in Central Park here today, winning the 6th annual UAE Healthy Kidney 10-K in 27 minutes and 42 seconds.

Gebremariam, 25, from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, ran aggressively with Kenyan Peter Kamais, the 2010 NYC Half-Marathon champion, right from the gun. The pair were under course record pace at the one-mile checkpoint (4:26) and through the first 5 km (13:47), where they had built a ten second lead over Kenyan Julius Kogo and Englishman Chris Thompson.

The duo ran together until there were 800 meters to go, and Gebremariam used his superior sprint speed to pull away from Kamais for good. Kamais ran 27:49, just one second slower than Tadese Tola’s one year-old course record. Kogo finished third (28:19) and Thompson fourth (28:25).

In addition to his first place prize of $7500, Gebremariam also won a special $20,000 bonus for breaking Tola’s record. Read more.

Israel Honors Ethiopian Jews

Above: Israel held a state memorial service earlier this week
for the thousands of Ethiopian Jews who perished making the
difficult trek to the country. (Photo: Noam Moskowitz)

Jewish Telegraphic Agency
JERUSALEM (JTA) — A memorial service was held for the some 4,000 Jewish Ethiopians who died making their way to Israel. The annual state service was held Wednesday near a memorial erected on Mount Herzl by the Absorption and Immigration Ministry in memory of those who died during the trek to the Jewish state. Speakers included family members of those who died, as well as Israeli President Shimon Peres and Absorption Minister Sofa Landver. Read more.

Related News:
7th Annual Sheba Film Festival in Full Swing

$12 Cup Ethiopian Coffee Raising Eyebrows

Above: The Chelsea location of Cafe Grumpy in Manhattan is
now offering the high-end Nekisse beans from Ethiopia made
using the store’s $11,000 Clover brewing system.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, May 3, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Café Grumpy, a local coffee shop chain here in New York, is raising eyebrows with its new menu item – an expensive cup of joe from Ethiopia.

As The New York Post put it: “If the caffeine doesn’t wake you up, the price certainly will.”

The Manhattan location of Café Grumpy is selling the drink brewed from the handpicked Ethiopian Nekisse beans for $12 a cup.

“There are flavors you would expect in a really nice glass of wine — it’s a cacophony of nuances,” Steve Holt, vice president of Ninety Plus Coffee, the company distributing the beans, told The NY Post. “You detect flavors of apricot, pineapple, bergamot, kiwi and lime. The deeper tones are levels of chocolate, and the finish is super clean.”

And why is it so pricey?

“It is a higher-end coffee, and you have to take a lot of time developing and processing it,” said Holt. “Once the coffee is harvested, it is dried on a raised African drying bed — the actual coffee cherries never sit on the ground.”

But not all New Yorkers are impressed. “People have had bad reactions to the prices,” Colleen Duhamel, a coffee buyer and barista at Cafe Grumpy said. “They will think, ‘This place isn’t for me,’ and storm out.”

“I’ve spent $12 on a cocktail, but I’d be reticent to pay that much for a cup of coffee,” said Whitney Reuling, 25, after tasting samples provided by The Post. “It’s good — but I can’t taste the difference. My palate is not at an advanced level for coffee — a $2.50 cup is fine.”

WATCH

Simon Bahta Arrested in New York City

Above: The man wanted for the Virginia killings of 27-year
old Seble Tessema and their 3-year-old daughter has been
arrested in NYC.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Saturday, May 1, 2010

New York (Tadias) – New York City police have arrested Simon Bahta Asfeha, the man accused of murdering his girlfriend – 27-year old Seble Tessema – and their 3-year-old daughter, ABC 7 News reports.

Police were responding to reports of domestic disturbance on April 11, 2010 at a high-rise complex in Alexandria’s West End neighborhood in the 300 block of S. Reynolds Street when they found the bodies of the mother and her child, both of whom had been stabbed to death.

Per ABC 7 News: “The U.S. Marshals fugitive task force, which had been hunting Asfeha, described him as a “monster” to the Washington Examiner, saying he had slashed his own daughter’s throat.”

Investigators in Alexandria had initially thought that Asfeha, who had previously been charged with assaulting Tessema, “may have sought refuge in the large Washington, D.C., area Ethiopian community or in a homeless shelter, ” according to America’s Most Wanted TV show.

But Asfeha apparently had run away to New York City, where a witness alerted authorities on his location. He was captured without incident on Thursday night in a coordinated effort between NYPD, the U.S. marshals, and Alexandria police.

Reports say “Asfeha will go through New York’s court system before he ends up back in Alexandria. If he waives his extradition rights, he’ll be back in the commonwealth sooner, authorities said Friday.”

“Everybody’s excited to have him in custody,” said Jody Donaldson, of the Alexandria Police Department. “This was a horrific crime. He’s been on the loose for a couple of weeks now. The [Alexandria police] chief was so grateful for all the work that went into this, with the Marshals Service and NYPD working with our department to make this arrest.”


Related:
Simon Bahta On America’s Most Wanted

Watch this video report from Fox DC (April 12, 2010)

Click here to make a comment on this topic.

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Tsegaye Kebede Wins London Marathon

Above: Tsegaye Kebede crosses the line first to secure victory
in Sunday’s London Marathon at 2:05:18.

Sports News
CNN
April 25, 2010 — Updated 1430 GMT (2230 HKT)

CNN) — Last year’s runner-up Tsegaye Kebede of Ethiopia has won the 2010 London Marathon in a time of two hours, five minutes and 18 seconds.

Olympic bronze medallist Kebede forced the pace with six miles remaining to finish over a minute ahead of his rivals.

In a 1-2-3 for African nations, Kenya’s Emmanuel Mutaim finished second, adding to the silver he won in the world championships in Berlin, with Morocco’s Jaouad Gharib in third place.
.
However, there was bitter disappointment for two of the pre-race favorites for victory. Read more.

Click here to watch video.

Ethiopian Agri-business Legend Inducted Into Cooperative Hall of Fame

Above: Werqu Mekasha will be honored with the cooperative
community’s highest honor at Washington’s National Press
Club on Wednesday, May 5, 2010. (Courtesy Photo)

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Published: Saturday, April 24, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Ethiopian agribusiness legend Werqu Mekasha has been selected for the 2010 induction into the Cooperative Hall of Fame, the Cooperative Development Foundation announced.

Mr. Mekasha, who died last year, is one of four honorees scheduled to be recognized at the annual hall of fame’s dinner and induction ceremony at Washington’s National Press Club on Wednesday, May 5, 2010.

The three other inductees into the four-member class, receiving the cooperative community’s highest honor, include Credit union pioneer Larry Blanchard, rural utility icon Glenn English, and cooperative visionary David Thompson.

“These four individuals could not better exemplify the meaning of the term leadership in their work with cooperatives,” said Steven Thomas, Executive Director of CDF, which administers the Hall of Fame, noting Mr. Mekasha’s status as the foundation’s first international inductee. “The inclusion of three iconic US cooperative leaders is deeply satisfying, and the induction of the very first non-US citizen is an exciting development that will add to the character of the Cooperative Hall of Fame induction ceremony.”

According to CDF, Mr. Mekasha – who served as vice minister of agriculture under Emperor Haile Selassie and who spent nearly a decade as a political prisoner during the Mengistu era – is being acknowledged formally for his accomplishments in his later years.

“Revitalizer of agricultural cooperatives in Ethiopia – having held high government posts under the Haile Selassie regime and been jailed for eight years after the regime was overthrown, Mekasha devoted himself to improving the lives of his countrymen through agricultural cooperatives, forging government policy to assure cooperative independence,” highlights the 2010 Cooperative Hall of Fame’s sponsorship page. “Through his heroic efforts, Ethiopia’s cooperatives not only became businesses that increased farmers’ incomes but also set the stage for growth and trade, especially in the coffee sector.”

If You Go:
For dinner attendance or sponsorship information, contact CDF at 703-302-8097 or tbuen@cdf.coop.org. Individual seats are available at $275. Proceeds from the May 5 event, which is expected to sell out, go to benefit the Cooperative Development Foundation. Or, well wishers may honor Ato Werqu with a message of support in the Hall of Fame program. Full congratulatory ads are $1,250, but collective ads for those who contribute smaller amounts can also be arranged.

Related:
Read an article written by Mr. Werqu Mekasha:
Improving the Lives of Ethiopian Coffee Farmers


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Hospital Shooting Update: Abdo Ibssa’s neighbors describe nice, but troubled man

Above: Al’s Market, a business run by Abdo Ibssa, has been
shut down. There is no word when it will reopen. (WBIR.com)

WBIR.com
Steve Butera
Updated: 4/21/2010 7:31:33 PM

Neighbors near the business operated by Abdo Ibssa said he was a nice man who experienced mental health problems.

“Because you never knew what attitude he had,” said Jack Chesney. He lives near Al’s Market on University Avenue near downtown Knoxville. That business was operated by Ibssa.

“Some days he’d be cool. Some days, he’d be mean and take it out on whoever,” Chesney said.

Police say Ibssa shot three people, then himself April 19 at Parkwest Hospital. One victim and Ibssa died. He left a note, according to police, that a microchip had been placed in him during surgery. Neighbors knew about the man’s fear.

Video: Who is Abdo Ibssa?

“We’ve heard him say crazy things and do crazy things,” said neighbor George Johnson. “The chip they’re talking about–I don’t know where that came from, but he kept on thinking that the government put a chip in him.”

Despite the problems Ibssa had, those same people who spoke of his problems also said they’ll miss him. Some wrote on the sidewalk near Al’s, “God bless this place.”

“It’s unfortunate that it happened, you know. I hope he’s resting in peace, and I feel for the families that he did the tragedy to,” said Johnson.

Al’s Market has since been shut down. There is no word on when or if it will reopen.

Video: Police ID shooter as a naturalized U.S. citizen from Ethiopia

Watch: What cab driver saw of hospital shooting

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Boston Marathon: Teyba Erkesso Wins Woman’s Race

Above: Teyba Erkesso of Ethiopia has won the 2010 Boston
Marathon. She was followed by Russian Tatyana Pushkareva,
and defending champion Salina Kosgei of Kenya.

Tadias Magazine
Sports News

Updated: Tuesday, April 20, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Teyba Erkesso of Ethiopia has captured the grand prize at the 2010 Boston Marathon, finishing the women’s race in two hours, 26 minutes and 11 seconds. She was followed by Russia’s Tatyana Pushkareva three seconds later. Defending champion Salina Kosgei of Kenya came in third, crossing the finish line at 2:28:35.

In the men’s race, Kenya’s Robert Kiprono Cheruiyot won the title in record time, completing the course in two hours, five minutes and 52 seconds. Tekeste Kedebe of Ethiopia finished second at 2:07:23. He was followed by defending champion Deribe Merga, also from Ethiopia, who came in third at 2:08:39.

Erkesso and Cheruiyot will receive $150,000 each.

Video: Boston Marathon and other Headlines

Video: Teyba Erkesso Comments after Boston Marathon

Track and Field Videos on Flotrack

Here are the results courtesy of Boston Athletic Association:

Top Women Finishers-Open Race:

1. Teyba Erkesso (Ethiopia) 2:26:11
2. Tatyana Pushkareva (Russia) 2:26:14
3. Salina Kosgei (Kenya) 2:28:35
4. Waynishet Girma (Ethiopia) 2:28:36
5. Bruna Genovese (Italy) 2:29:12
6. Lidiya Grigoryeva (Russia) 2:30:31
7. Yurika Nakamura (Japan) 2:30:40
8. Weiwei Sun (China) 2:31:14
9. Nailya Yulamanova (Russia) 2:31:48
10. Albina Mayorova-Ivanova (Russia) 2:31:55

Top Men Finishers-Open Race:
1. Robert Cheruiyot (Kenya) 2:05:52
2. Tekeste Kebede (Ethiopia) 2:07:23
3. Deriba Merga (Ethiopia) 2:08:39
4. Ryan Hall (USA) 2:08:41
5. Mebrahtom Keflezighi (USA) 2:09:26
6. Gashaw Asfaw (Ethiopia) 2:10:53
7. John Komen (Kenya) 2:11:48
8. Moses Kigen Kipkosgei (Kenya) 2:12:04
9. Jason Lehmkuhle (USA) 2:12:24
10. Alejandro Suarez (Mexico) 2:12:33

Simon Bahta On America’s Most Wanted

Above: Simon Bahta Asfeha (R) has been added to America’s
Most Wanted list, intensifying the search to find him for the
killings of Seble Tessema (left) and their 3-year-old daughter.

Update: Simon Bahta Arrested in New York City

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Sunday, April 18, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Police in Alexandria, Virginia, have turned to America’s Most Wanted TV show in an effort to locate Simon Bahta Asfeha, the prime suspect in the grisly murder of his girlfriend – 27-year old Seble Tessema – and their 3-year-old daughter.

According to the suspect’s profile on the crime show’s fugitives list, Asfeha, who has been known to use the name Simon Bahta, “may have sought refuge in the large Washington, D.C., area Ethiopian community or in a homeless shelter.”

Police were respondeding to reports of domestic disturbance on April 11, 2010 at a high-rise complex in Alexandria’s West End neighborhood when they discovered the mother and her child dead, with their throats slashed, according to media reports. “They found two victims deceased on an apartment on the 14th floor. We’re investigating the case as a suspicious death right now,” said Deputy Chief of Alexandria Police Blaine Corle.

Watch this video report from Fox DC:

Read the case on America’s Most Wanted Web site.

Simon Bahta may be driving a 1999 silver Acura with Virginia tags XKS-1522. Anyone with information is asked to call the Hotline at 1-800-CRIME-TV. The show’s website notes that callers can remain anonymous.

Related – Tadias Magazine’s editorial published on Wednesday, March 31, 2010:
Re: The Recent String of High-Profile Violent Crimes Involving Ethiopian Immigrants (Video)

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Ethiopians Dominate Paris‎ Marathon (Video)

Above: Ethiopia’s Tadesse Tola finished the men’s race in 2
hours, 6 minutes and 41 seconds while defending champion
Bayisa dominated the women’s race. (Photo: Reuters)

Eurosport – Sun, 11 Apr 15:54:00 2010
Ethiopians underlined their dominance of distance running when Tadesse Tola and Atsede Bayisa won the men’s and women’s races at the Paris Marathon. Tola made his burst with two miles remaining, pulling clear of Kenyan Alfred Kering, who held off compatriot Wilson Kipsang to take silver. Bayisa blew away the field in the women’s race, reducing the leading pack to a trio just after halfway and taking control from team-mates Beyene Tsegaye Tirfi and Gurmu Workitu Ayanu 19 miles in. Read more.

Video: Tadese Tola Wins the 2010 Paris Marathon (ETV)

British oil worker shot in Ethiopia named as Jason Read (BBC)

Above: The victim, aged 39, was from the southern English
town of Portsmouth. He was an employee of British firm IMC
Geophysics International.

BBC
Friday, 9 April 2010
A British geologist working for an oil company who was shot dead in Ethiopia, has been named by the Foreign Office as Jason Read. The 39-year-old, who was from the Portsmouth area, was killed during an ambush on Monday near Danot in the conflict-stricken Ogaden region. He worked for IMC Geophysics International – which was subcontracted to Malaysian oil giant Petronas. The company has said it was “shocked and saddened” by the killing. Read more.

More News via Google (04/10/2010)

Ethiopia Hails Little-Known Rebel Group’s Demise
Voice of America – Peter Heinlein
Ethiopia says a little known rebel group in the eastern Somali region has renounced the use of force and agreed to join the political process, weeks before … Read more.

China builds Ethiopia stadium
Straits Times
ADDIS ABABA – ETHIOPIAN league champions Saint George on Friday signed an agreement with a Chinese construction company to build the nation’s first … Read more.

Ethiopia’s First Science Academy (Science Now)
Ethiopia launches first science academy (Nature.com)
Ethiopian Banking: Moving fast without haste (Africasia)

4-time Boston Marathon women’s champ Ndereba withdraws from race due to injury
The Canadian Press
The women’s elite field still includes last year’s winner Salina Kosgei of Kenya and runner-up Dire Tune of Ethiopia. Officials also say Dmytro Baranovskyy…Read More.

Emaciated children signal crisis in north African country
Temple Daily Telegram – Jason Straziuso – ‎Apr 8, 2010‎
Two years of drought and tribal clashes in this Sudan region bordering Ethiopia have laid foundations for a humanitarian crisis the UN mission dubs the … Read more.

Book That Saved Jewish Lives
Five Towns Jewish Times Online – Rafael Medoff
In late 1984, Israel struck a secret deal with the Sudanese government to let Israeli planes land near the Ethiopia-Sudan border and bring Ethiopian Jews to … Read more.

Ethiopian Airlines getting ready to join Star Alliance?

Above: Star Alliance will be getting a shot in the arm for their
global traffic into Africa, and the geographical position of ET’s
home hub of Addis Ababa will help.

ETN
BATTLE FOR THE AFRICAN SKIES
BY WOLFGANG H. THOME, ETN | APR 08, 2010
Ethiopian Airlines is seemingly getting ready to finish discussions and negotiations with Star Alliance later this year, likely to coincide with the upswing in traffic carried via Addis Ababa to South Africa for the FIFA World Cup. These suggestions and rumors are now rekindled since the airline has confirmed added aircraft orders and is aggressively renewing its fleet in preparation of things obviously yet to come. The airline’s Fokker 50 fleet is being replaced with more modern and larger Bombardier Q400s, with delivery of the first such aircraft reported here last week, and extra B737-800s are due to join the fleet from the middle of 2011 onwards. Read more.

Samuel Getachew Enters City Council Race In Toronto

Above: Samuel Getachew faces two challengers in the fall 2010
election for City Council seat in Toronto to represent E. Ward 43.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Thursday, April 8, 2010.

New York (Tadias) – Samuel Getachew, an Ethiopian-born Canadian citizen, has announced his candidacy for the 2010 City Council election in Toronto.

Mr. Getachew, 33, is seeking to represent Scarborough East Ward 43 in the eastern part of Toronto, a diverse neighborhood long known as a magnet for newly arriving immigrants to Canada.

Getachew says he is running because he believes in public service and would like to address the crime and housing issues in his district.

“Politics and public service at their very best give us a rare opportunity to connect with people in our community and discuss issues that benefits the public,” Getachew said in an exclusive interview with Tadias Magazine. “Ward 43 has a large concentration of public housing; crime is a serious concern.”

Mr. Getachew, who studied Political Science and History at Carleton University in Ottawa, and who is currently employed by the provincial government in Toronto, says the city needs to do more to keep children of recent immigrants away from crime.

“It is a very diverse neighborhood and people who live here include Sri Lankans, Tamils, Iranians, Chinese, and as I knock on doors, I often learn the reasons why most young people get into crime…it is a direct result of a broken government system. Often times, immigrants are allowed to come to Canada because of their educational and work qualifications, but are not able to find work in their field of expertise once they land here. They are often forced to work double shifts to survive and their children are forced to grow up without much supervision, making them vulnerable to criminal behavior.”

According to Statistics Canada, a national census collecting agency, in 2006 Scarborough’s population was over 600,000 with approximately 57% percent of the residents being foreign born immigrants. “Visible minorities” – a demographic terminology used by the statistical organization – constitute over 67% of the population. These groups include South Asians, Chinese, Filipinos, Black Canadians and others. Toronto, with a population of 2.48 million, is also home to a growing and active Ethiopian community. “The greater Toronto Area has upwards of 30,000 Ethiopian residents, “ said Addis Embiyalow, Managing Director of Ethiopian Students Association International’s 10th Anniversary Summit. “Most Ethiopians do not know about the vibrant, dynamic Ethiopian community here.”

Mr. Getachew, who was born in Addis Ababa and arrived in Canada via Zambia, says his political ambitions began when he was volunteering within the Ethiopian-Canadian community.

“At age 17, I founded and hosted the first Ethiopian radio show in Ottawa and what an experience it was. I started a great conversation on the radio program at that very young age and it is a conversation that has not stopped after all these years,” he said. “I interviewed personalities such as White House fellow Dr Meheret Mandefro while she was at Harvard pursuing her undergraduate degree, artist Senait Ashenafi when she was still on the show ‘General Hospital,’ as well as musicians Muluken Melesse, Ephrem Tameru and many others.”

Mr. Getachew was an early proponent of naming a street in Toronto similar to the official Little-Ethiopia strip in Los Angeles.

“I was an advocate for Little Ethiopia and if Los Angeles can do it, I am sure a more diverse city like Toronto can do it as well,” he says pointing out that the idea is still possible. “And when I win, I want to ensure that the people I hire in my office will reflect the residents of the ward. I want to ensure that we take advantage of our diversity. I know of so many people including Ethiopian Canadians who should be given that opportunity.”

The candidate admits that compared to his challengers, he lags behind both in fundraising and organization. “I admit our campaign is the underdog at this time, both in money and grassroots support, but we have hope and we are determined,” he said. “We will work hard to ensure that we meet all of our expectations, and we will win. I look forward to recieve the support of those willing to contribute to my campaign ”

Mr. Getachew, however, is not the only contender with cash-flow problems. John Laforet, one of his opponents, recently warned his supporters that he maybe forced to quit for lack of funds. “ I remain the only candidate that lives in the Ward, the only candidate stepping up to fight for the community and sadly the only candidate who could be forced from the race over a lack of financial support,” he wrote on his blog. “Those who believe I would be a good Councillor need to get involved and take ownership of the fate of my campaign. Our community’s future hangs in the balance.”

Mr. Getachew still faces formidable opposition from the incumbent Paul Ainslie, who enjoys a superior campaign network and a wider name recognition. But he says that he feels confident that he can mount a worthy campaign of his own.

“I like to think our campaign as a movement. It is really a coming of age for our Ethiopian Canadian community here in Toronto and in many ways for all of Canada,” he notes. “The position of Councillor gives one a very powerful outlet to advocate for true change and I know there are many people in this city who can truly help us achieve our objective. I believe I have a unique perspective of the diversity issues from a personal experience and I have a better plan than my opponents to tackle problems surrounding housing and crime issues.”

The municipal election will take place on Monday, October 25, 2010.
—–
You can follow the 2010 Toronto elections at: www.toronto.ca/elections.

Samuel Getachew’s campaign can be reached at 647 456 9690.

(Cover image: Courtesy Photo)

Obama Limits When U.S. Would Use Nuclear Arms

Above: President Obama on Monday discussing his new
nuclear strategy, which would limit the conditions for using
such weapons. (Stephen Crowley/The New York Times)

The New York Times
By DAVID E. SANGER and PETER BAKER
Published: April 5, 2010

WASHINGTON — President Obama said Monday that he was revamping American nuclear strategy to substantially narrow the conditions under which the United States would use nuclear weapons.

But the president said in an interview that he was carving out an exception for “outliers like Iran and North Korea” that have violated or renounced the main treaty to halt nuclear proliferation. Read more.

Video: White House Unveils New Nukes Policy

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Video: New Strategy – ‘A departure, not a surprise’

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Electric Car Maker sees Transportation ‘Revolution’ in Ethiopia

Above: Ethiopia has launched an electric car, despite power
shortages. It is only the second African country to do so, after
South Africa.

VOA
Peter Heinlein | Addis Ababa
04 April 2010
An Italian-Chinese business venture is opening a factory in Ethiopia to produce a practical and affordable electric car in one of the world’s poorest countries. The firm’s manager predicts a big switchover to electric vehicles within the next few years.

Carlo Pironti has small, but revolutionary ideas. The Italian electrical engineer has been traveling the world for years, studying the automobile market. Now he is ready to act.

With an investment of about $600,000, Pironti and a group of mostly Chinese backers are opening a car factory outside Addis Ababa. Using a Korean-made body and components from 57 different suppliers, Pironti hopes that his Solaris Elettra will make a “tiny” dent in the global car market. Read more.

Related:
Ethiopia launches electric car despite power shortages (BBC)

Ex-aide to Jim Graham faces more charges in cab industry probe

Above: Loza (left) was charged with two counts of bribery on
allegations he accepted $1,500 in payments from Abdulaziz
Kamus (right), an advocate for Ethiopian cabdrivers who was
trying to secure advantages for that community in the city’s
taxicab market.

The Washington Post
By Tim Craig
Friday, April 2, 2010
A federal grand jury brought additional charges Thursday against Ted G. Loza, who was D.C. Council member Jim Graham’s chief of staff before he was arrested last fall, accusing him of accepting or soliciting more than $30,000 in cash, trips, limousine rides and meals in exchange for pursuing legislation favorable to the taxicab industry. Read more.

Related:
D.C. Taxi Probe: Who Are These People? (Washington City Paper)
Thirty-Nine Individuals Charged with Conspiring to Bribe Chair of D.C. Taxicab Commission (FBI)
Taxi Mogul Solomon Bekele Speaks (Washington City Paper)

Video: 29 Plead Not Guilty In Taxi License Case

Ethiopian Airlines ‘Interested’ in Report of Bomb Aboard Crashed Jet

Above: Ethiopian Airlines officials are closely following a report
that a captured terrorism suspect has told of a bomb aboard a
plane that crashed off the coast of Lebanon in January.

ET-409 Update: Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Ethiopian Airlines ‘Interested’ in Report of Bomb Aboard Crashed Jet (VOA)
Terror suspect admits jet was bombed (World Net Daily)
Ethiopian Airlines says all crash bodies recovered (ABC News)

Related Videos:
Video: 90 perish in Ethiopian jetliner crash (ntvkenya)

Video: Ethiopian Airlines Crashes into the Mediterranean (CBS)

More ET-409 News Updated: Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Preliminary report says Ethiopian Airlines crash caused by “human error” (Times Live)

Second aircraft involved in Lebanon ET409 crash (Airlines/Airport Examiner)

Crashed Ethiopian plane cockpit recorder recovered (AP)

Ethiopian Air Says Too Soon to Rule Out Sabotage in Crash Prob (BusinessWeek)

Lebanese minister rules out bomb on Ethiopian jet (AP)

Lebanon confirms 45 bodies retrieved from Ethiopian jet crash (Earth Times)

Ethiopian jet’s 2nd black box retrieved from sea (The Associated Press)

Ethiopian plane ‘exploded’ after take-off: Lebanon minister (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)


Lebanese airport safety employees near the crash
site. Credit: REUTERS

Ethiopian Airliner’s flight recorders sent to France (Daily Star – Lebanon)

Ethiopian Jetliner’s Recorders Found ( Reuters)

Main parts of crashed Ethiopian jet found off Lebanon (Reuters)

Ethiopian air crash shines light on lives of migrant workers (LATimes)

Lebanon gets relatives’ DNA in Ethiopian jet crash (AP)

Wreckage from Ethiopian plane found in Syrian waters (Earth Times)

Sub to help search for crashed Ethiopian jet (AP)

Salvage crews hunt for Ethiopian airliner black boxes (AFP)

Racism in Lebanon? Commenters Respond to Ethiopian Airline 409 Tragedy

British investigators say Ethiopian Airlines plane crash ‘similar’ to earlier disaster

Ethiopian Airlines plane makes emergency landing (AFP)

Navy sends second ship to aid Ethiopian flight salvage
(By Stars and Stripes, daily newspaper published for the U.S. military)

Ethiopian crash jet flight recorders found off Lebanon (BBC)

Ethiopian Airlines defends pilot after fatal crash (AFP)

Army says black boxes located from Ethiopian crash (The Associated Press)

The Latest Press Release from Ethiopian Airlines

Terrorism cannot be ruled out in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409 (Canada Free Press)

Flight ET409 Exposes Lebanon’s Racist Underbelly (Huffington Post)

Names of Passengers Aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409

Was The Doomed Ethiopian Plane Formerly Owned by Ryanair?

Photos | Ethiopian Airlines crash (Seattle Post Intelligencer)

Ethiopian plane black box found, toll reaches 32 (Indo Asian News Service)

Ethiopian Air #409 Crashes near Beirut — The Coverage So Far

Boats scour ocean for Beirut crash black boxes (AP)

The United States Extends Its Deepest Sympathies

Ethiopian Airlines plane veered off course before sea crash

Ethiopian Airlines CEO on search for plane’s black box

Search widened for victims of Ethiopian jet crash

White House saddened by deaths in Lebanon crash

Storms or sabotage? The mystery of Flight 409

Video: Ethiopian Plane Crashes Off Lebanon (AP)

Raw Video: Lebanon Plane Crashes After Takeoff (AP)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut

Video: History of Ethiopian Airlines crashes

Raw Video From The Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Off Beirut:

Addis Voice Toolbar Delivers Breaking Ethiopian News To Your Desktop

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, March 29, 2010

New York (Tadias) – As all eyes are focused on the upcoming May 2010 elections in Ethiopia, and amid talks of blocking VOA’s Amharic program, a new media tool is changing the way people retrieve Ethiopian news online.

Developed by Journalist Abebe Gelaw, a 2009 John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University and a 2010 World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders honoree, The Addis Voice Toolbar delivers up-to-the-minute breaking Ethiopian stories from news sources across the globe.

We followed up with Gelaw to learn more about the Addis Voice Toolbar. Below is our recent interview with him.

Tadias: Could you please tell us a bit about the Addis Voice Toolbar? How does it work?

Abebe Gelaw: The Addis Voice Toolbar is a unique and innovative digital tool that allows users multimedia access to information. Traditionally, people have to actively search for information, visit different websites to gather information. It occurred to me that this traditional way of searching for information is not only time consuming but also limiting in terms of multimedia experience, which is the most powerful and dynamic feature of the Internet.

I created a simple toolbar using the Conduit platform in order to make my personal web experience easier by making the kind of content that I regularly want on a menu. The beauty of the platform is that it allows you to take full control of your toolbar and add your own innovative ideas, content and widgets.

Once I created a toolbar for my own use, I realized that I could create a more useful and powerful toolbar that can help deliver the kind of information and content that any Ethiopian can potentially seek. The final product, which has taken me nearly a year to design, redesign, experiment, improve and upgrade, has now been installed on nearly 13,000 computers across the world. If each computer is used by at least three people, it means around 42,000 users are currently using our toolbar.

As anyone using the Addis Voice Toolbar knows, you don’t need to go to Google to look for information because the toolbar offers a range of search engines including the best features of Google. You can easily use the menu to access Google to search any content you want like news, images, videos, books and blogs. You can also search for music, lyrics, Wikipedia, quotes, free software and dictionary.

While browsing the Internet, you may want to listen to music. You don’t need to search music as clicking the music button on the toolbar will open a music player that automatically gives you access to hundreds of popular songs. You may also want to listen to a radio webcast such us the VOA or Deutsche Welle while you are browsing the Internet or doing something else on your computer. If you use our toolbar, you don’t need to go to VOA’s website to listen to the latest programs as the toolbar has two radio widgets, one for popular Ethiopian radio webcasts and another one for international broadcasts such like NPR, BBC, World Music and Premier.

Watching TV programs, playing games, checking up to date weather forecast are among the many features embedded on this toolbar. I believe we have made the online experience of our users much easier and more enjoyable.

Tadias: So does this mean we can download the toolbar and have immediate access to breaking Ethiopian news without opening our browser for each news website? Is that correct?

AG: Absolutely! By using Really Simple Syndication (RSS) technology, the toolbar brings to users neatly organized breaking news and fresh content from so many sources. The content on the RSS menu is updated every 15 minutes, which means the toolbar provides you fresh content whenever you want it. Though it is possible to embed RSS on any website, it is difficult to provide a comprehensive selection of fresh content in a way that our toolbar is capable of delivering automatically.

At any time, the toolbar delivers over 400 recently received news and commentary headlines from credible sources that are linked back to their original sources. It is like selecting from a restaurant menu; you choose what you find more attractive to your appetite. It is safe to say that as far as the appetite for information and multimedia content is concerned, the toolbar serves as a comprehensive menu. You select what you want read, watch or listen to.

Tadias: Is the toolbar limited only to news sources or does it include entertainment and lifestyle websites as well?

AG: The toolbar is not just limited to news content. It informs, educates, entertains and most importantly empowers users. You may wonder how a simple toolbar can empower users. If we agree on the basic premise that information is power, here is a tool that provides you with a lot of information that you cannot normally get on one site. So if you look at the content that the toolbar delivers at any time it is wide ranging. If you are not even satisfied with what is on offer on the menu, you can use the search facilities on the toolbar to look for the content that you seek.

Tadias: We also understand that Addis Voice Toolbar has other benefits, such as allowing users to access websites in countries where that specific URL maybe blocked. Could you please talk about this feature? How does it work?

AG: Yes, it is true. The toolbar has an embedded proxy that serves users in countries like Ethiopia where the government has deployed devices and employed people that try to jam radio stations, close down newspapers and censors content on the Internet. I find this totally pathetic as the job of a government is simply to serve the people, provide protections, promote their interests, protect their freedom and create a conducive environment that enables citizens to attain their fullest potential. It is a sad reality that the government in our country seems to be committed to suppressing our freedom and the basic rights enshrined in the constitution which is only alive on paper. In the process of pursuing its narrow objectives, which appears to be to stay in power at any cost, the government has been trying to suppress the inconvenient truth. They seem to realize the fact that the truth will eventually subvert the system which is perpetuating oppression and tyranny, the very things that the current rulers of Ethiopia had fought to abolish.

You asked me to tell you how it works. I don’t mind telling you how it works. But at the same time I prefer to take caution as there are people out there paid to frustrate the efforts of their fellow citizens to access uncensored content and information.

Tadias: Where can people download the toolbar and how much does it cost?

AG: Anyone in any part of the world can download the toolbar at www.addisvoice.com/toolbar.htm. It is absolutely free. We have no plans to charge for this service as our aim is not to make profit but to enable Ethiopians to have as much access to information as possible.

Tadias: Is there anything else you would like to share with our readers?

AG: I would like to encourage people to test this unique toolbar. Users who have already been making the best of it may need to recommend it to their friends and loved ones. We are also looking into ways of networking users around the world as well as creating a platform where people can also share content and exchange their views and ideas.

Tadias: By the way, congratulations on your recent recognition by the World Economic Forum (WEF) as one of their newest Young Global Leaders (YGL) honorees! Could you tell us a little bit about what a Young Global Leader is?

AG: Thank you! So many people have asked me the same question. Just to clarify, being a YGL honoree is not just an honor. It is becoming a member of one of the most vibrant communities at the World Economic Forum. By virtue of being a YGL, I have been admitted as an active member of the Forum of Young Global Leaders. Members of this forum, most of whom are the most innovative and entrepreneurial people on earth, have an enormous impact. When the founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum, the distinguished professor Klaus Schwab, envisioned it, he wanted to create a powerful global forum to have a real and tangible impact on the future of our world by bringing together bold, innovative and forward looking young people who aspire to change the world for the better. It is a great privilege to be part of this vibrant group of people.

Tadias: Thank you Abebe and good luck.

AG: You are most welcome and I thank you so much too.
—–

Election Update: European Union to Send Monitors to Ethiopia Vote, Lawmaker Says

Above: The European Union will send observers to monitor
Ethiopia’s May 23 national elections, amid complaints by
opposition parties that the vote won’t be free and fair, a
European lawmaker said.

Bloomberg
By Jason McLure
March 30
Ana Maria Gomes, a Portuguese member of the European Parliament who led the EU’s monitoring mission to Ethiopia during elections in 2005, said Andris Piebalgs, the European Commissioner for Development, announced the decision to African and European parliamentarians meeting in Tenerife yesterday. Read More.

Related Election News:
VOA says Ethiopia blocks website as US row escalates (Reuters)
Ethiopian Opposition Party Elders Confront Prison Officials Over Jailed Leader (VOA)
Ethiopia Opposition barred from seeing jailed leader (Reuters)
Ethiopia blasts US for report on rights record (Sudan Tribune)
Forget about democracy (The Economist)
Ethiopia opposition stifled before election: rights group (Reuters).
U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts (CNN)
Candidate Slaying in Northern Ethiopia Stirs Calls for an Inquiry (VOA)
Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing (The New York Times)
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

Gena Wins Rome Marathon Barefoot, Pays Homage to Abebe Bikila

Above: Siraj Gena won the men’s Rome marathon barefoot on
Sunday, replicating Abebe Bikila’s famous barefoot victory at the
1960 Olympic Games (right).

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Sunday, March 21, 2010

New York (Tadias) — Ethiopia’s Siraj Gena captured the Gold medal at the Rome marathon on Sunday, sprinting across the last 500 meters barefoot.

Gena finished the race in two hours, eight minutes and 39 seconds, beating Benson Barus and Nixon Machichim of Kenya for the top spot.

The runner took off his shoes to pay tribute to fellow Ethiopian Abebe Bikila, who ran the 1960 Olympic marathon in the same city barefoot and won the gold medal to become the first black African Olympic champion, hailing Ethiopia and Africa into the spotlight.

“I felt I had to do something to honor Bikila,” Gena told the ANSA news agency. “For me he will always be an enormous inspiration and today I wanted to see what it would be like to cross the line in Rome barefooted like he once did.”

Ethiopians also swept up the medals in the women’ race. Firehiwot Dado won the gold in two hours, 25 minutes and 28 seconds, followed by Kebebush Haile who came in second at 2:25.31, and Mare Dibaba finished third at 2:25.38.


Siraj Gena of Ethiopia reaches out to grab an Ethiopian flag as he crosses the finish
line barefoot in front of the Colosseum to win the Rome City Marathon, Sunday March
21, 2010. Gena took his shoes off some 500 meters before the finish line to
commemorate Ethiopia’s athlete Abebe Bikila who, 50 years ago, won the Rome
1960 Olympic Games marathon running without shoes. Photo: Associated Press.

Video: Abebe Bikila 1960 Olympic Marathon

.

CNN: U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts

Above: U.S. officials have condemned plans by the Ethiopian
prime minister to block Voice of America broadcasts in Amharic
.

CNN: U.S. criticizes Ethiopia for jamming VOA broadcasts

Related:
CPJ: PM Says Ethiopia Plans to Jam VOA Broadcasts

New York, March 19, 2010—Ethiopia is preparing to jam the Amharic-language broadcasts of the U.S. government-funded Voice of America (VOA), Prime Minister Meles Zenawi declared Thursday in a press briefing with international media correspondents based in the capital, Addis Ababa.

The prime minister accused VOA’s Amharic service of “engaging in destabilizing propaganda,” comparing it to Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines, the Rwandan station whose inflammatory broadcasts helped stoke the 1994 genocide. In a statement, VOA rejected the comparison as “incorrect and unfortunate.”

The issue arose Thursday when a reporter asked Zenawi about interference that VOA listeners had experienced since late February. Zenawi said the government has been testing equipment that would allow it to block VOA broadcasts, according to news reports. He said a final decision on the jamming had not been made.

“We have to know before we make the decision to jam whether we have the capacity to do it,” Zenawi told reporters, according to news accounts. But he left little doubt he would authorize jamming once the government had the capability, saying “I can assure you” the plan will go forward once it is feasible.

Zenawi’s statements were the first acknowledgment of government interference with VOA broadcasts, which are beamed by satellite from Washington and received in Ethiopia via short-wave radio. Just two weeks earlier, Shemelis Kemal, a government spokesman, told CPJ that any suggestion of government involvement in the interference was an “absolute sham.” He said such practices were unconstitutional.

“Invoking the Rwandan genocide is an excuse to silence legitimate criticism and scrutiny. The Ethiopian government used this reasoning to crack down on the country’s once-vibrant Amharic press after the disputed 2005 elections,” said CPJ Africa Program Coordinator Tom Rhodes. “As Prime Minister Meles Zenawi stands for re-election in May, we urge him to show leadership on constructive reforms to make press freedom, as guaranteed under Article 29 of the Ethiopian constitution, a reality.”

The Ethiopian government has taken draconian measures to limit independent coverage of the May elections, revising a media law to stiffen penalties for libel and adopting anti-terrorism legislation that requires journalists to disclose sources, according to CPJ research. This month, the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia issued a code of conduct for the media restricting the activities of journalists covering the polls, according to news reports. Meanwhile, the government has continued to jail and persecute its critics in the press.
—-

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending press freedom worldwide.

Related Election News From Ethiopia:
Candidate Slaying in Northern Ethiopia Stirs Calls for an Inquiry (VOA)
Ethiopia: Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing (The New York Times)
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

Midge Ure breaks his silence over Ethiopia weapons claims

Above: Bob Geldof and Midge Ure organized the multi-nation
1985 Live Aid concert and ‘raise funds for famine relief in
Ethiopia. (Photo: United Support of Artists for Africa)

Herald Scotland
By Russell Leadbetter
Published on 16 Mar 2010

It was one of the largest concerts of all time and raised £40 million for famine relief in Ethiopia, winning plaudits for its masterminds Sir Bob Geldof and Midge Ure. Now Scots musician Ure has voiced his anger at claims that Live Aid in 1985 – watched by 400 million people in 60 countries – had funds siphoned off to buy weapons for rebel groups in the country. The 56-year-old broke his silence on the allegation contained in a BBC World Service report. Speaking at the launch of CCW Long Play, a specialist management company aimed at musicians, Ure spoke out after he was asked how so many millions of starving Africans had been fed on the equivalent of just 5% of the funds raised. He said: “There’s not a lot I can say about it just now because we’re looking at litigation. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that if what is being claimed, that only 5% of the money has got through, what I would like to know is, what is the secret?

Read More.

Related from Tadias Archives:
“We Are the World” – Live Aid concert’s signature song
The wrenching images of hungry children, which invaded living rooms around the world in the mid 80’s, prompted Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to organize the 1985 Live Aid concert and ‘raise funds for famine relief in Ethiopia’. The multi-nation event, which showcased some of the biggest names in the music industry, included Michael Jackson, who co-wrote the project’s signature song “We Are the World” along with Lionel Richie. The song was recorded on the night of January 28, 1985, following the American Music Awards. Enjoy the song.

The African Diaspora Marketplace Awards $1.4 Million in Matching Grants

Above: At a conference earlier this year, entrepreneurs from
the U.S. African Diaspora were awarded grants for creative
business ideas to be implemented in their native countries.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Wednesday, March 17, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The African Diaspora Marketplace (ADM) – a business plan competition designed to help finance innovative entrepreneurs from the U.S.-based African immigrant community – has awarded $1.4 million in matching grants to 14 businesses who are working in partnership with African-based ventures to promote job-growth in their native countries.

In a press release ADM announced that the grants are sponsored by Western Union and USAID, which provided $800,000 and $600,000 respectively.

The grant winners were chosen at an ADM conference in January after beating out 733 applicants and 58 finalists.

“Fourteen diaspora-driven businesses in seven countries were awarded matching grants ranging from $50,000 to $100,000,” ADM said. “Winning entries ranged from a commercial plant tissue culture business that uses biotechnology to increase yield and quality of produce for Ethiopian agriculture producers, to a franchise business model that will empower female nurse entrepreneurs to improve access to healthcare and reduce the burden on government hospitals in Ghana.”

California resident Raymond Rugemalira, founder of E & M Capital Corporation, was awarded funding for his business idea incorporating mobile technology, such as SMS messaging, to improve the efficiency of communication between buyers and sellers of crops, livestock, and farm produce in Kenya.

“I want to help improve the lives of small scale farmers by offering them markets via mobile phone technology so that they can concentrate on what they know best to do, which is to farm,” Rugemalira said. “We will help get the buyer to come to them.”

Citing USAID data, Reuters reports that “there are more than 1.4 million African immigrants in the United States, many of whom are entrepreneurs who operate small businesses in their native countries and send money back to their homelands. In 2008 an estimated $10 billion in remittance flowed back to sub-Saharan Africa from U.S.-based African diaspora members.”

“The African Diaspora Marketplace has demonstrated that partnership and innovation can lead to powerful solutions to development challenges,” said Karen Turner, Director of USAID’s Office of Development Partners. “ADM highlights not only the value of public-private partnership but also the contributions that U.S diaspora communities can make.”

According to its website, ADM is now accepting applications for new round of funding.

“ADM is currently seeking proposals for start-up and established businesses operating (or to be operated) through partnerships between U.S.-based members of the African diaspora and local Sub-Saharan African entrepreneurs. Following a rigorous two-round review and selection process, 10-20 winning businesses will be awarded matching grants of between $50,000 and $100,000 each. Grants to winners will be matched by investments of diaspora members and their partners on a one to one basis through a combination of financial and in-kind contributions. Proposals must be implemented in one of the following Sub-Saharan African countries where USAID has both on the ground presence and potential technical assistance programs for entrepreneurs: Angola, Burundi, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia.”

You can learn more at: www.diasporamarketplace.org

Video: The African Diaspora Marketplace (Western Union)

African Presidents Summit On Health to Be Held in Washington, D.C. in 2011

Above: African Presidents will gather in the U.S. next year
for the first-ever summit on health, according to USDFA.
(Photo credit: TropIKA.net)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, March 15, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The first African Presidents Health Summit will be held in Washington, D.C. in the Spring of 2011, U.S. Doctors for Africa (USDFA) confirmed today.

The California based non-profit organization, which also played host to the first ever African First Ladies Health Submit last year in Los Angeles, says several heads of state have been invited to attend the upcoming conference.

“It is expected that the majority of African leaders joined by their health ministers and other cabinet members will be attending the summit. Members of the U.S. government, heads of American-based foundations and corporations, as well as executives from various NGOs will also be joining the event,” Ted Alemayhu, Founder & Executive Chairman of USDFA, told Tadias Magazine. “Several African Presidents have already confirmed attendance, and a complete list of attendees will be announced in early 2011.”

USDFA hopes that the historic gathering will put a spotlight on the continent’s chronic healthcare crisis. “As most of us are aware, the issue of health and access to healthcare is an ongoing concern throughout Africa, and, certainly, the leaders of the continent are on the forefront in dealing with this vastly complicated issue,” Mr. Alemayhu said. “What is encouraging is that each leader seems deeply committed to bringing about a better and more broad access of healthcare to their citizens, and the timing for the leaders to come together on this specific topic could not be better.”

Mr. Alemayhu says that he is confident in the successful outcome of the Summit. “What is unique about this Summit is that all Presidents will be focusing on one common issue; they are looking for a more sustainable and timely way to solve the healthcare crisis that is claiming the lives of millions of their citizens. We expect the Summit to provide each leader with an opportunity to highlight their successes and challenges, and to gain more international resources to better assist their efforts on the ground. ”
—-

Related links and videos:
Click here to watch the first African First Ladies Health Summit

Video: Cameroon Honors Ted Alemayhu

Ted Alemayhu’s Keynote at Columbia University (NYC)

Doha 2010 – Gezahegne becomes youngest ever female champion

Above: (L-R) Natalia Rodriguez (Spain) takes silver, Kalkidan
Gezahegne (ETH) the gold, and Gelete Burka takes the bronze
in the Women’s 1500m Final. (Getty Images)

IAAF
By Bob Ramsak

Sunday, 14 March 2010

Ethiopia did take another women’s 1500m title, but the gold didn’t go to defending champion Gelete Burka.

Running with the grit and determination of a seasoned veteran, 18-year-old Kalkidan Gezahegne effortlessly kicked past Burka and Spaniard Natalia Rodriguez to become the youngest woman to ever win a World indoor title.

“I was hesitating to attack after falling down in the heats,” said Gezahegne, whose tumble to the track and brave run to victory was perhaps the major highlight on the opening day of competition. “At the end my finish was enough.”

Her spectacular comeback in the heats already displayed to the world the determination of Gezahegne, who at 18 years and 310 days old, outdid a very familiar name as the youngest ever World indoor champion: Gabriela Szabo of Romania who won her first 3000m title in 1995 when she was 19 years and just under four months old. That was a stat, though, that Gezahegne didn’t think about much at all.

“Thank you for telling me,” she said. “That is an excellent feeling.” An excellent feeling to match a finely executed race. Read More.

Ethiopia: Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing

Above: An opposition candidate for Ethiopia’s Parliament was
stabbed to death on (March 2) in what opposition leaders said
was part of a widening campaign of repression ahead of May
elections. (NYT)

Ethiopia: Opposition Criticizes Verdict in Killing
The New York Times
By JASON McLURE
Published: March 15, 2010

A leader of Ethiopia’s opposition alliance on Monday criticized a court verdict in the stabbing death of an opposition parliamentary candidate, accusing the ruling party of intimidating a key witness. The candidate, Aregawi Gebre-Yohannes, was killed March 2 at his restaurant in the Tigray region. The opposition said the candidate was killed by supporters of the ruling party. The killer, Tsegie Berhane, was sentenced last week to 15 years in prison, said Shimeles Kemal, a government spokesman. Mr. Tsegie was granted leniency because he had confessed, Mr. Shimeles said, adding that the accused was not a member of a party. “It was an arranged and orchestrated court,” said Gebru Asrat, a leader of the Arena party, part of the opposition alliance. He said witnesses who testified had been “involved in the killing.”

A version of this brief appeared in print on March 16, 2010, on page A6 of the New York edition.
—-

Related:
Voice of America
By Howard Lesser
The stabbing death of an opposition candidate in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region is raising new calls for an inquiry and an easing of 2009 repressive legislation that critics say is restraining political activity in the weeks leading up to this year’s 23 May general elections. Opposition figures contend that last week’s slaying of candidate Aregawi Gebreyohannes by five men at his home in Shire has aroused fears of a recurrence of 2005 post-election violence. As many as 200 protesters were killed five years ago by security forces, and thousands of others were arrested for challenging the results of a disputed nationwide vote. Senior East Africa Researcher Leslie Lefkow of human rights watch says that Aregawi Gebreyohannes’ slaying last Monday night was most likely politically motivated. Read more.

Related News
Candidate Is Stabbed to Death in Ethiopia (The New York Times)

A Glimmer of Hope in Ethiopia: Interview With Eric Schmidhauser

Tadias Magazine
Interview by Tseday Alehegn

Published: Monday, March 8, 2010

New York (Tadias) – When we spoke to Eric Schmidhauser last November about his work with the non-profit organization A Glimmer of Hope, he was on his way to Ethiopia for a foundation event in the Gondar region. Since the Fall of 2000 Schmidhauser has been working on a ‘adopt a village’ program, identifying education, health, water and community needs and a plan to construct a minimum of 15 wells for a population of 5,000. A Glimmer of Hope prefers to cluster their projects and to identify priority needs by encouraging the input and concerns of the local community. Schmidhauser’s trips to Ethiopia also help keep donors up-to-date on the progress of the projects they help fund.

We asked Schmidhauser a few more questions about A Glimmer of Hope and his commitment to the people of Ethiopia.

Tadias: Tell us a bit about yourself..where you grew up, who/what were influential in your life.

Schmidhauser: My father worked for Citibank in the international sector. As a child I lived in Liberia, Sudan, South Africa, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Bahrain. I was able to experience living in a lot of countries and visiting several more. This was formative in shaping my world outlook for sure. The inspiration for my current work are the founders of A Glimmer of Hope, Donna and Philip Berber.

Tadias: You currently work as Director of Social Investment at A Glimmer of Hope. Can you tell us how you got involved with their work and projects in Ethiopia?

Schmidhauser: I’ve lived in Austen for 16 years. Donna & Philip Berber had sold their Texas-based company in 2000 and set aside Schwab stock as an endowment for A Glimmer of Hope. What impressed me even more is that they didn’t just write checks to the organization. Donna comes to the office four times a week, when she and Philip are not traveling. Both of them go to Ethiopia annually and really put their heart and soul into the work necessary to eradicate extreme poverty. This is why I joined the effort two and a half years ago. I had co-founded a junior tennis academy, Austen Tennis Academy, and I completely switched fields to serve as a Director for A Glimmer of Hope. I moved from helping a small group of talented, ambitious, priviledged children to helping hundreds of thousands of children – on a bigger level. The core value of my tennis academy was teach kids how to give back and do something bigger than themselves. The Austin Tennis Academy kids have raised $10,000 or more, over a two year period, while getting sponsored for competitive matches. This gets them sensitized to what living is like in other parts of the world, to tackle issues of dilapidated schools and lack of clean water. The head coach and five of its most active students are helping to raise $150,000, and helping to build 8 wells and two school buildings. Imagine how these 14 and 15 year olds will be when they get older with this type of formative experience, as part of their core experience. It’s exciting to see who they’ll become. It teaches the importance of giving back, the importance of being larger than themselves, citizens of significance in their adult lives. This extends to my own children. At the end of the day, my life is so much richer. It’s equally important what I’m able to teach my children by example – through living what I want them to learn. Your life’s work is committed to that. When kids are excited to give up their birthday present and instead raise money to build give something to other kids, it doesn’t get better than that! To me you can’t put a price on that…the greatest joy that I get from my work is when I take donors of our projects to Ethiopia and they are able to personally see the transformation. It’s incredibly fulfilling work!

Tadias: Why did the founders choose Ethiopia as the key place for their projects?

Schmidhauser: Donna is from London and Philip is from Dublin. Donna was very moved by the Live Aid images from televised famine in the 1980s, and it never left her heart and her mind. She vowed that if they came to wealth that she would want to help the people of Ethiopia. Geldoff inspired and taught the power of one person to make a difference. He was the catalyst. And today Donna is my daughter’s role model.

Tadias: What were your first impressions of Ethiopia? How often do you get to go back?

Schmidhauser: My first trip to Ethiopia was in 2007, two months into the job. I was in the Tigray region. I was really surprised by how beautiful it was, and how gracious, hospitable, and warm the people were. The quiet dignity was evident wherever I traveled in Ethiopia. When you visit a community that has no access to clean water until a well was constructed, where women had to travel far, adding a well in close proximity to their homes brings great joy. The joy they have for something so simple, that we take for granted, and the quiet dignity with which they accept their lot in life when they don’t have a health clinic or water and have to walk for hours to get to the nearest source, it’s really overwhelming. We take so much for granted in the U.S., and it surprised me how there isn’t resentment there. They are quiet about their hardship. And if you can help bring about change the gratitude is profound.

I visit Ethiopia twice a year, and a lot of it depends on our donors’ schedules. I want to make sure that I’m bringing donors with me that have invested significantly with us. So on each trip I try to take some of our larger donors. This is one of our key strategies, and we can show them how their social work has made a difference and keep their hearts engaged. I travel when at least one or two donors are available to travel.

Tadias: On your organization’s website you cite your work as “an operation to turn a profit – a Social Profit” and define social profit as “The amount of social and humanitarian benefit gained as a result of investing in the well-being of others.” What are some of the most successful projects you have launched to turn a social profit?

Schmidhauser: I think our microfinance work would be one where you can see social profit – a transformation of a life through a grant. We’ve partnered with microfinance institutions in Ethiopia. They invest the grants that we give them. The profits are redistributed to the next group of borrowers. A small amount of loans, such as those given to farmers to cover irrigation kits can help a farm go from 1 harvest a year to multiple harvests a year and provide surplus crops that they can sell in the market.

Here’s another example of a profound experience: In July 2009 I was with one of our British donors in the Simien mountains. This donor had funded school and water projects in the region and we had gone for the opening of one of the schools. In the process we spent a lot of time hiking, and in the process of hiking we came across a community with no access to clean water. It was VERY VERY cold. Mid 40s low 50s. It had been hailing earlier in the day. And I remember one little girl with her mother, scooping water from a nearby pit, cup by cup and pouring it into the jerican (plastic container). The little girl was inadequately dressed for the weather conditions. Her hands were shaking as she held a water bottle cut in half, taking one scoop of water at a time. Freezing and hands shaking. Only a little girl could get in the pit – not an adult. It took half an hour to fill the can. I was thinking of the injustice: Because my daughter was born in Austen she could open the tap in a condo to get clean water, and if she was born in the Simien mountains she was in hardship. It was hard to watch as a father. Absolutely miserable.

Slideshow: Photos from Ethiopia

Another memorable experience that I had was on my second trip – attended the inauguration of a water point in the Oromia region. While we were unveiling the well, in the middle of the ceremony, a women with a large clay jug stepped forward and released the clay jug onto the point (all over the base of the point) saying “NEVER again will I have to shoulder this burden. Now clean water is closer to my hut.” When someone translated for me what the lady had said, I got so powered up and pumped my fist. And I loved it. I’ll never forget it for as long as I live. The energy was electric.

Tadias: Your programs emphasize Integrated Development. Can you elaborate?

Schmidhauser: The best way that I can explain it is by this example: if we’re building a school but there is no clean water, it’s not going to have maximum impact. What’s the point? Kids will still be busy fetching water and also getting sick from lack of clean water. So integrated development is when you’re providing a community access to water, healthcare, and school and providing those services to the community. The other example is sanitation. When we receive proposals for school projects we make sure they include latrine facilities.

Rather than spreading ourselves thin, we’d rather get it right one community at a time, and provide all the basic social services. The goal of our founders is to eradicate extreme poverty in rural Ethiopia in their lifetime. They have ambitious goals. So far A Glimmer of Hope has helped to build 350 schools since 2001 and 3,000 water projects. Through our collaboration with the non-profit Charity: Water we have built 250 wells alone. One of our commitments to our donors is to provide ‘completion photos.’

Clustering our projects also makes it more efficient to monitor. Most of our work is in hard-to-reach rural areas, and if we spread ourselves thin, it also becomes more difficult to monitor the progress.

Tadias: What are a few ways that our readers could get more involved?

Schmidhauser: Through our interactive website individuals can create their own campaigns. Yemra Melaku, who works for Marriott in New York, is one shining example of a volunteer. We helped her organize her campaign on our website, and created a page for her, and she raised enough money to fund one water project in Southern Ethiopia. She is now on her second project. She provided us the text for her page, and once it was completed she organized a music concert at Columbia University, a poker party, and her own grassroots movement.

We also have teenagers, students aged 13 to 15 who are raising money for A Glimmer of Hope. Everything helps. So many people are turned away thinking “What I do is a drop in the ocean.” Empowering people means donors who have given up their birthdays or christmas. My own son gave up his 7th birthday and raised $20,000 last year.

I encourage readers to know that just because you don’t have a lot of resources, it doesn’t mean you can’t get involved. You can join a campaign, run a marathon, give up your christmas presents, some charity:water volunteers gave up their wedding presents and raised close to $20,000 and have gone to Ethiopia to see the projects that they funded.

I also encourage people to get on Charity:Water website to learn how individual donors can make a difference. A Glimmer of Hope is their exclusive partner in Ethiopia. Our 100% promise is one of the reasons Charity:Water is partnering with us.

Tadias: What is the 100% promise?

Schmidhauser: Our endowment covers 100% of our operating and office expenses in Austen and Ethiopia. So 100% of the donations we receive goes to programs. Charity:Water does the same thing. 100% of donations go to projects.

Tadias: Thank you Eric for this enlightening conversation! We encourage our readers to learn more about A Glimmer of Hope and to take the plunge – give access to clean water to a community in Ethiopia.


About the Author:
Tseday Alehegn is the Editor-in-Chief of Tadias Magazine.

Video: A Glimmer of Hope in Ethiopia – Turk Pipkin

Ethiopian Air Chief Says Reports on January Crash ‘Misleading’

ET-409 Update: Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Voice of America
Ethiopian Airlines Chief Executive Girma Wake says much of the information coming from Lebanon about the crash of flight ET409 has been purposely meant to mislead. The plane crashed into the sea moments after takeoff from Beirut in stormy weather in the early morning hours of January 25. Read more.

Ethiopia Warns Lebanon Over Plane Crash Investigation

Ethiopian Airlines CEO Girma Wake

February 24, 2010 (Addis Ababa) – Ethiopia warns the Lebanese government for trying to solicit political gains out of the crash investigation process of the Ethiopian airliner that occurred around Beirut, Lebanon. The nation also called upon the President and Secretary General of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to intervene in the row.

Briefing local journalists on the agenda, Transport and Communications Minister, Driba Kuma, said on Wednesday the Lebanese government continued providing incorrect and misleading information to media despite the cause of the accident remains undetermined.

“Ethiopia has repeatedly reminded the government of that country to refrain from releasing unfounded information to the media before the conclusion of the on-going investigation process,” he said, “But the government has continued leaking wrong and confusing information to media about the crash of ET-409”.

Ethiopia, once again, requests the Lebanese government in strongest terms to stop feeding the media wrong and misleading information about the crash of the ill-fated airliner, the minister warned.

According to the minister, the aforementioned senior officials of the international civil aviation organization have already responded positively to Ethiopia’s call.

A statement of the ministry indicated that the investigation launched to determine the causeof the crash still continues. The team set up to investigate the crash has finalized preparations to release a preliminary report on the accident in line with the rules and regulation of the ICAO.

The sole objective of the Ethiopian experts in the crash investigation team is to preserve the internationally-acclaimed aviation security record of the national carrier, the Ethiopian. However,the ministry said, the Lebanese government has been hiding relevant data, removing important information, and denying key information about the crisis for cheaper political gains.

It is to be recalled that Ethiopian airliner, ET-409, disappeared into the Mediterranean Sea with 82 passengers and eight crew members on board. The passengers include 24 Ethiopians, 51 Lebanese, and two British nationals as well as one passenger from Turkey, France, Russia, Canada, Syria, and Iraq.
—–

Source: Permanent Mission of Ethiopia to the United Nations

Related Videos
Video: 90 perish in Ethiopian jetliner crash (ntvkenya)

Video: Ethiopian Airlines Crashes into the Mediterranean (CBS)

Video: Ethiopian Plane Crashes Off Lebanon (AP)

Raw Video: Lebanon Plane Crashes After Takeoff (AP)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut

Video: History of Ethiopian Airlines crashes

Raw Video From The Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Off Beirut:

More ET-409 News Updated: Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Ethiopian Airlines says all crash bodies recovered (ABC News)

Preliminary report says Ethiopian Airlines crash caused by “human error” (Times Live)

Second aircraft involved in Lebanon ET409 crash (Airlines/Airport Examiner)

Crashed Ethiopian plane cockpit recorder recovered (AP)

Ethiopian Air Says Too Soon to Rule Out Sabotage in Crash Prob (BusinessWeek)

Lebanese minister rules out bomb on Ethiopian jet (AP)

Lebanon confirms 45 bodies retrieved from Ethiopian jet crash (Earth Times)

Ethiopian jet’s 2nd black box retrieved from sea (The Associated Press)

Ethiopian plane ‘exploded’ after take-off: Lebanon minister (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)


Lebanese airport safety employees near the crash
site. Credit: REUTERS

Ethiopian Airliner’s flight recorders sent to France (Daily Star – Lebanon)

Ethiopian Jetliner’s Recorders Found ( Reuters)

Main parts of crashed Ethiopian jet found off Lebanon (Reuters)

Ethiopian air crash shines light on lives of migrant workers (LATimes)

Lebanon gets relatives’ DNA in Ethiopian jet crash (AP)

Wreckage from Ethiopian plane found in Syrian waters (Earth Times)

Sub to help search for crashed Ethiopian jet (AP)

Salvage crews hunt for Ethiopian airliner black boxes (AFP)

Racism in Lebanon? Commenters Respond to Ethiopian Airline 409 Tragedy

British investigators say Ethiopian Airlines plane crash ‘similar’ to earlier disaster

Ethiopian Airlines plane makes emergency landing (AFP)

Navy sends second ship to aid Ethiopian flight salvage
(By Stars and Stripes, daily newspaper published for the U.S. military)

Ethiopian crash jet flight recorders found off Lebanon (BBC)

Ethiopian Airlines defends pilot after fatal crash (AFP)

Army says black boxes located from Ethiopian crash (The Associated Press)

The Latest Press Release from Ethiopian Airlines

Terrorism cannot be ruled out in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409 (Canada Free Press)

Flight ET409 Exposes Lebanon’s Racist Underbelly (Huffington Post)

Names of Passengers Aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409

Was The Doomed Ethiopian Plane Formerly Owned by Ryanair?

Photos | Ethiopian Airlines crash (Seattle Post Intelligencer)

Ethiopian plane black box found, toll reaches 32 (Indo Asian News Service)

Ethiopian Air #409 Crashes near Beirut — The Coverage So Far

Boats scour ocean for Beirut crash black boxes (AP)

The United States Extends Its Deepest Sympathies

Ethiopian Airlines plane veered off course before sea crash

Ethiopian Airlines CEO on search for plane’s black box

Search widened for victims of Ethiopian jet crash

White House saddened by deaths in Lebanon crash

Storms or sabotage? The mystery of Flight 409

Ethiopian Airlines says all crash bodies recovered

ET-409 Update: Tuesday, February 23, 2010
(Watch Videos Below The Headlines)

Ethiopian Airlines says all crash bodies recovered (ABC News)

Preliminary report says Ethiopian Airlines crash caused by “human error” (Times Live)

Second aircraft involved in Lebanon ET409 crash (Airlines/Airport Examiner)

Crashed Ethiopian plane cockpit recorder recovered (AP)

Ethiopian Air Says Too Soon to Rule Out Sabotage in Crash Prob (BusinessWeek)

Lebanese minister rules out bomb on Ethiopian jet (AP)

Lebanon confirms 45 bodies retrieved from Ethiopian jet crash (Earth Times)

Ethiopian jet’s 2nd black box retrieved from sea (The Associated Press)

Ethiopian plane ‘exploded’ after take-off: Lebanon minister (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)


Lebanese airport safety employees near the crash
site. Credit: REUTERS

Ethiopian Airliner’s flight recorders sent to France (Daily Star – Lebanon)

Ethiopian Jetliner’s Recorders Found ( Reuters)

Main parts of crashed Ethiopian jet found off Lebanon (Reuters)

Ethiopian air crash shines light on lives of migrant workers (LATimes)

Lebanon gets relatives’ DNA in Ethiopian jet crash (AP)

Wreckage from Ethiopian plane found in Syrian waters (Earth Times)

Sub to help search for crashed Ethiopian jet (AP)

Salvage crews hunt for Ethiopian airliner black boxes (AFP)

Racism in Lebanon? Commenters Respond to Ethiopian Airline 409 Tragedy

British investigators say Ethiopian Airlines plane crash ‘similar’ to earlier disaster

Ethiopian Airlines plane makes emergency landing (AFP)

Navy sends second ship to aid Ethiopian flight salvage
(By Stars and Stripes, daily newspaper published for the U.S. military)

Ethiopian crash jet flight recorders found off Lebanon (BBC)

Ethiopian Airlines defends pilot after fatal crash (AFP)

Army says black boxes located from Ethiopian crash (The Associated Press)

The Latest Press Release from Ethiopian Airlines

Terrorism cannot be ruled out in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409 (Canada Free Press)

Flight ET409 Exposes Lebanon’s Racist Underbelly (Huffington Post)

Names of Passengers Aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409

Was The Doomed Ethiopian Plane Formerly Owned by Ryanair?

Photos | Ethiopian Airlines crash (Seattle Post Intelligencer)

Ethiopian plane black box found, toll reaches 32 (Indo Asian News Service)

Ethiopian Air #409 Crashes near Beirut — The Coverage So Far

Boats scour ocean for Beirut crash black boxes (AP)

The United States Extends Its Deepest Sympathies

Ethiopian Airlines plane veered off course before sea crash

Ethiopian Airlines CEO on search for plane’s black box

Search widened for victims of Ethiopian jet crash

White House saddened by deaths in Lebanon crash

Storms or sabotage? The mystery of Flight 409

Video: 90 perish in Ethiopian jetliner crash (ntvkenya)

Video: Ethiopian Airlines Crashes into the Mediterranean (CBS)

Video: Ethiopian Plane Crashes Off Lebanon (AP)

Raw Video: Lebanon Plane Crashes After Takeoff (AP)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut

Video: History of Ethiopian Airlines crashes

Raw Video From The Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Off Beirut:

Reports on Monday, January 25, 2010: (Minutes after the crash)
Lebanon says Ethiopian plane crash site located
Rescue workers have located the crash site of an Ethiopian Airlines plane that went down just off the Lebanese coast on Monday, Lebanon’s Transport Minister Ghazi al-Aridi said. “(The crash) site has been identified three-and-a-half km (two miles) west of the (coastal) village of Na’ameh,” Aridi told reporters at Beirut international airport. He said search and rescue operations were under way but refused to give any further details. He also said it was too early to say what caused the crash but confirmed the plane took off from Beirut international airport in stormy weather. Aridi said an investigation into the cause was under way. (Reuters)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut
CNN
An Ethiopian airliner with 83 people on board crashed into the sea after takeoff from Lebanon early Monday, Lebanese army officials said. The Boeing aircraft was en route from Beirut to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, when it disappeared from radar 30 minutes after takeoff from Rafik Hariri International Airport in Beirut about 4 a.m. local time, Lebanon’s National News Agency reported. On board were 54 Lebanese nationals and 29 people of other nationalities, the army officials said. No additional information was immediately available.

Robel Teklemariam places 93rd in cross country ski event

Above: Robel who goes by the nickname Beredoe Shartate
(Amharic for “Ice Slider”) finished the 15 kilometer course in
45 minutes, placing 93rd out of 95 at the Vancouver games

Richmond Times Dispatch
By MICHAEL PHILLIPS
Published: February 16, 2010
Ethiopia’s lone Olympian, cross country skier Robel Teklemariam, finished 93rd out of 95 skiers yesterday, completing the 15 kilometer course in 45 minutes, 18 seconds. He improved on his time from the Turin Olympics by two minutes against a tougher field. Teklemariam’s family was on hand for the competition. His mother, Yeshareg Demisse, runs The Nile restaurant, which serves Ethiopian food near the VCU campus. This was the second Olympic Games for Teklemariam, who finished 83rd out of 99 competitors in 2006 with a time of 47:53. Switzerland’s Dario Cologna finished in 33:36 to take home the gold medal. Italian Pietro Piller Cottrer won the silver, finishing 24.6 seconds behind Cologna, and Czech skier Lukas Bauer won the bronze to go with the silver medal he won in the 15-kilometer classical style race in Turin. Topping the list of United States finishers was James Southam in 48th place at 35:58. Teklemariam struggled to qualify for the Vancouver Games, criss-crossing Europe on trains while building up enough points through qualifying races to punch his ticket. He said he had less training time than he did before the Turin Games four years ago. Read more.

Related from Tadias:
Robel Teklemariam: Heading to the 2010 Winter Olympics

Watch Video: Meet Cross Country Skier Robel Teklemariam

New York Times Video:
Robel Teklemariam, the first Ethiopian Winter Olympian, discusses his path
to becoming a ski racer and his mission to represent Ethiopia in the 2006
Olympic Games. Click here to watch the video.

Ethiopia gets Microsoft software in Amharic

AFP
Saturday, February 6, 2010
ADDIS ABABA — US software giant Microsoft has launched Windows Vista in Amharic, the first operating system in the national language of Ethiopia, the official news agency said Saturday. “Launching the Amharic version software is a major step forward for Amharic to be a language of technology,” Director of the Ethiopian ICT Development Agency, Debretsion Gebremichael was quoted as saying by the Ethiopian News Agency (ENA). Read more.

Robel Teklemariam: Heading to the 2010 Winter Olympics

Above: Ethiopia’s only winter Olympian Robel Teklemariam is
giving it second try, scheduled to compete in the Vancouver
Olympics later this month, hoping to improve his 84th-spot
finish 4 years ago in Italy. (Photo: Getty Images)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Tuesday, February 2, 2010.

New York (Tadias) – Robel Teklemariam, Ethiopia’s only winter Olympian who represented his country at the 2006 Torino games, will participate in the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, which will open on February 12th.

The cross-country skier, who graced the print cover of Tadias Magazine in 2006, said then that his motivation to represent Ethiopia comes from the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome. The event was filled with unforgettable highlights. Cassius M. Clay (Muhammed Ali) emerged to win the light-heavyweight gold medal in boxing. Wilma Rudolph, the 20th of 22 children in her family, became the first American woman to win three gold medals in athletics in one Olympiad. Clement Quartey of Ghana became the first black African to win an Olympic medal after competing in the light-welterweight boxing category. But it was Abebe Bikila of Ethiopia who stole the show. Five days after Quartey’s triumph, Bikila ran the marathon barefoot and won the gold medal to become the first black African Olympic champion. Running past the plundered Axum obelisk that stood in a Roman square one kilometer from the finish line, Abebe Bikila cruised to victory in world record time, hailing Ethiopia and Africa into the spotlight. Since that time, many legendary runners have emerged from Ethiopia to succeed Bikila as Olympic champions, but Robel is the first winter Olympian aiming to follow suit.


Tadias cover (12th Issue)

It was precisely this legacy that inspired Robel Teklemariam in his teenage years to become an Olympic athlete. Born in Addis Ababa in 1974, Robel moved with his mother to New York in 1983. In the summer of 1986 he enrolled at a boarding school in Lake Placid, NY, host city to the 1980 Olympic Winter Games. Surrounded by Olympic emblems commemorating the 37 nations and 1,072 athletes that participated in the XIII Winter Games, it was easy for Robel to immerse himself into skiing at the age of 12. As a newly arrived immigrant, the tough beginning of life at a New York City school was made easier when Robel discovered sports as his hobby and soon thereafter as his prime passion.

“Really, my goal for Vancouver is to improve my time behind the winner and have a better race than in Turin,” Robel said in a recent interview with CBC (Canada). “As far as results, I really want Ethiopia to be a mainstay in winter sports. I don’t want be the first and last Ethiopian at the Winter Olympics. I don’t want it to end with me.”

And he hopes that someone will soon follow in his footsteps.

“There are over one million Ethiopians living overseas, all over Scandinavia, all over Canada and the United States, I am pretty sure there will be some young kid who will want to race eventually, and that really is my goal at the end of the day.”

Watch Video: Meet Cross Country Skier Robel Teklemariam

New York Times Video:
Robel Teklemariam, the first Ethiopian Winter Olympian, discusses his path
to becoming a ski racer and his mission to represent Ethiopia in the 2006
Olympic Games. Click here to watch the video.

FOXNews: Food 101 – Dishes of Ethiopian Cuisine From New York’s Queen of Sheba

Above: FOX’s Food 101 features New York’s Queen of Sheba
Ethiopian restaurant located in midtown, Manhattan.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Saturday, January 30, 2010

New York (Tadias) – FoxNews.com’s Diane Macedo explores how to prepare authentic Ethiopian cuisine at New York’s Queen of Sheba restaurant.

The eatery was also one of thirty-three favorite restaurants of Voice food critic Robert Sietsema, author of Secret New York. Sietsema has reviewed more than 2,000 restaurants in the last 14 years.

Among those dishing out delicious and eclectic cuisine at last year’s second Choice Eats tasting event organized by The Village Voice, was the staff of Queen of Sheba, serving injera rolls with fillings of either spicy lentil or beef sauces. Eager tasters waited patiently in rows to pick up the wraps. In it’s description of the Queen of Sheba restaurant, the event publication wrote: “New York finally has its own Queen of Sheba, providing intriguing and sometimes fiery spice combinations.”

Diane Macedo explores the unique flavors of Ethiopian cuisine

Related Video from Tadias: QS at Choice Eats 2009

You Can Help Put Ethiopia and Dub Into World Music

Tadias Magazine
Arts News

Published: Wednesday, January 27, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Dan Harper, the British artists who co-wrote and sound engineered Dub Colossus’ album A Town Called Addis with Nick Page, and most recently his own album PUNT Made in Ethiopia (Harper Diabate Records) featuring an incredibly diverse list of musicians, ranging from talent he spotted at a traditional Azmari joint to sessions with singer Tsedenia and the legendary Mahmoud Ahmed, has been nominated for the 2010 Songlines Music Awards’ Best Cross-Cultural Collaboration, which recognizes outstanding talent in world music.

According to the organizers’ website, there are four categories for the 2010 awards: Best Artist, Best Group, Cross-Cultural Collaboration, and Newcomer.

Harper stresses that the collaboration is not trying to imitate how Ethiopians play music. Rather it’s an entirely improvisational recording. Invisible System has played at the Addis Music Festival as well as several live concerts in the U.K. Proceeds from the album are helping to establish a charity focusing on providing resources to artists and musicians in the developing world, an issue which Harper believes is often neglected by international NGOs.

You can help Harper win and propel Ethiopia and dub into world music. There are only 2 days left to submit your 2009 favorites, so hurry and and go to: http://songlines.co.uk/music-awards/ and cast your vote for: Invisible System, Punt (Made in Ethiopia).

Read Tadias Magazine’s interview with Dan Harper:
Cross-Cultural Music Improvisations: A Conversation with Dan Harper


Punt, Made in Ethiopia album cover.

Was The Doomed Ethiopian Plane Formerly Owned by Ryanair?

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Thursday, January 28, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Three days after the tragic crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409, there is no news of survivors but there is plenty of information about the doomed aircraft.

According to Michael O’Leary, the Chief Executive of Ryanair – a discount airline based in Dublin, Ireland – the Boeing 737-800 may have been an eight-year-old plane previously owned by his company and later transferred to Ethiopian Airlines through a third party lessor in September 2009.

“I think they had it in maintenance, they did some work on it, between April and May. I think they leased it to Ethiopian in September, and something happened to it,” O’Leary told Reuters without identifying the third party. “We are not sure yet, but it may have been that aircraft that was involved in the accident…”

Ethiopian Airlines says the plane was leased from the American commercial and consumer finance company CIT Group, according to Reuters.

“The Irish Aviation Authority confirmed that the aircraft was a former Ryanair plane that had logged 17,750 flight hours in its seven years of service,” The Daily Mail reported. “And planespotters came forward to say they had photographed the jet at British airports between 2002 and last year.”

The news follows the plane’s crash into the Mediterranean sea minutes after taking off from Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International Airport in the early hours of Monday, January 25, 2010. The incident happened only days after Ethiopian Airlines and Boeing announced a deal worth $767 million for 10 Next-Generation 737-800s. The company also has a pending purchase order with Airbus for 12 A350 commercial jetliners in a deal valued at about $2.8 billion at list price.

But Chief of Ryanair says buyer’s remorse would not apply to his plane: “What happened we don’t know. It’s a bit like you selling your car and 11 months later the new person driving it has a crash. It had nothing to do with us,” the Irish airline’s CEO told Reuters after a news conference in Rome.

Meanwhile, The Associated Press is quoting an army officer who says emergency workers have detected signals from the black boxes about 1,300 meters (yards) and about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) from the seaside airport and they will attempt to retrieve it in the coming days. The black box recording devices are key to solving the mystery behind Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409.

Cover photo courtesy of Boeing.

ET-409 Update: Thursday, February 18, 2010
(Watch Videos Below The Headlines)

Second aircraft involved in Lebanon ET409 crash (Airlines/Airport Examiner)

Crashed Ethiopian plane cockpit recorder recovered (AP)

Ethiopian Air Says Too Soon to Rule Out Sabotage in Crash Prob (BusinessWeek)

Lebanese minister rules out bomb on Ethiopian jet (AP)

Lebanon confirms 45 bodies retrieved from Ethiopian jet crash (Earth Times)

Ethiopian jet’s 2nd black box retrieved from sea (The Associated Press)

Ethiopian plane ‘exploded’ after take-off: Lebanon minister (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)


Lebanese airport safety employees near the crash
site. Credit: REUTERS

Ethiopian Airliner’s flight recorders sent to France (Daily Star – Lebanon)

Ethiopian Jetliner’s Recorders Found ( Reuters)

Main parts of crashed Ethiopian jet found off Lebanon (Reuters)

Ethiopian air crash shines light on lives of migrant workers (LATimes)

Lebanon gets relatives’ DNA in Ethiopian jet crash (AP)

Wreckage from Ethiopian plane found in Syrian waters (Earth Times)

Sub to help search for crashed Ethiopian jet (AP)

Salvage crews hunt for Ethiopian airliner black boxes (AFP)

Racism in Lebanon? Commenters Respond to Ethiopian Airline 409 Tragedy

British investigators say Ethiopian Airlines plane crash ‘similar’ to earlier disaster

Ethiopian Airlines plane makes emergency landing (AFP)

Navy sends second ship to aid Ethiopian flight salvage
(By Stars and Stripes, daily newspaper published for the U.S. military)

Ethiopian crash jet flight recorders found off Lebanon (BBC)

Army says black boxes located from Ethiopian crash (The Associated Press)

The Latest Press Release from Ethiopian Airlines

Terrorism cannot be ruled out in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409 (Canada Free Press)

Ethiopian plane black box found, toll reaches 32 (Indo Asian News Service)

Flight ET409 Exposes Lebanon’s Racist Underbelly (Huffington Post)

Ethiopian Air #409 Crashes near Beirut — The Coverage So Far

Boats scour ocean for Beirut crash black boxes (AP)

Was The Doomed Ethiopian Plane Formerly Owned by Ryanair?

The United States Extends Its Deepest Sympathies

Ethiopian Airlines plane veered off course before sea crash

Ethiopian Airlines CEO on search for plane’s black box

Search widened for victims of Ethiopian jet crash

Names of Passengers Aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409

White House saddened by deaths in Lebanon crash

Storms or sabotage? The mystery of Flight 409

Video: 90 perish in Ethiopian jetliner crash (ntvkenya)

Video: Ethiopian Airlines Crashes into the Mediterranean (CBS)

Video: Ethiopian Plane Crashes Off Lebanon (AP)

Raw Video: Lebanon Plane Crashes After Takeoff (AP)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut

Video: History of Ethiopian Airlines crashes

Raw Video From The Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Off Beirut:

Names of Passengers Aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, January 25, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The Lebanese newspaper The Daily Star has published the names of passengers aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409, which crashed into the Mediterranean sea minutes after taking off from Beirut in stormy weather on Monday.

The 90 passengers and crew that perished hail from nine countries: Ethiopia, Lebanon, Britain, Canada, Russia, France, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey.

According to the newspaper, the list was released by the The National News Agency of Lebanon.

Here are the names of passengers aboard flight 409:

1) Addis Abera Demise (Ethiopia)

2) Bahrnesh Megersa (Ethiopia)

3) Kidist Wolde Mariam (Ethiopia)

4) Elisabeth Tilhum Habtermariam (Ethiopia)

5) Rahel Tadese (Ethiopia)

6) Etenesh Admasie (Ethiopia)

7) Woinshet Meugistu Melaku (Ethiopia)

8 Azeb Betre Kebede (Ethiopia)

9) Tigist Shikur Hajana (Ethiopia)

10) Hani Gebre Gembezo (Ethiopia)

11) Alunesh Tkele (Ethiopia)

12) Shitu Nuri (Ethiopia)

13) Selam Zigdaya (Ethiopia)

14) Yikma Mohamed (Ethiopia)

15) Seble Agezc (Ethiopia)

16) Aynalem Tessema (Ethiopia)

17) Eyerus Alem Desta (Ethiopia)

18) Mekiya Sirur (Ethiopia)

19) Lakesh Zeleke (Ethiopia)

20) Tigist Anura (Ethiopia)

21) Askalesh Soboka (Ethiopia)

22) Meselu Beshah (Ethiopia)

23) Kevin Graingur (UK)

24) Marla Sanchez Pietton (France)

25) Akram Jassem Mohammad (Iraq)

26) Mohammad Abdel-Rahman Saii (Syria)

Names of Lebanese nationals:

1) Hanna Nakhoul Kreidy, born on 26/6/1987

2) Haidar Hassan Marji, born on 7/11/1976

3) Ali Youssef Jaber, born on 2/4/1967

4) Ali Ahmad Jaber, born on 5/8/1969

5) Abbas Mohammad Jaber, born on 13/7/1977

6) Mohammad Mustapha Badawi, born on 5/9/1970

7) Khalil Ibrahim Salah, born on 5/9/1961

8 Hassan Adnan Kreik, born on 25/1/1984

9) Saeed Abdel-Hassan Zahr, born on 5/10/1984

10) Hussein Ali Farhat, born on 25/1/1966

11) Mohammad Hassan Kreik, born on 14/10/2006

12) Ali Souheil Yaghi, born on 28/6/1973

13) Rawan Hassan Wazni, born on 27/6/1990

14) Bassem Qassem Khazaal, born on 10/3/1974

15) Haifa Ahmad Wazni, born on 25/10/1967

16) Ali Ahmad Tajeddine, born on 3/4/1979

17) Tanal Abdallah Fardoun, born on 1/2/1952

18) Mustapha Haitham Arnaout, born on 16/9/1986

19) Fouad Mahmoud Lakiss, born on 25/8/1946

20) Mohammad Kamal Akkoush, born on 23/12/1983

21) Toni Elias Zakhem, born on 18/6/1976

22) Hamzah Ali Jaafar, born on 31/5/1985

23) Hassan Mohammad Issaoui, born on 22/11/1951

24) Hassan Kamal Ibrahim, born on 13/12/1973

25) Ghassan Ibrahim Katerji, born on 15/12/1964

26) Haifa Ibrahim Farran, born on 25/9/1965

27) Hussein Youssef Hajj Ali, born on 26/7/1968

28) Fares Rashid Zebian, born on 28/9/1955

29) Farid Saad Moussa, born on 3/6/1966

30) Mohammad Ali Khatibi, born on 27/12/1989

31) Yasser Youssef Mahdi, born on 25/8/1985

32) Anis Mustapha Safa, born in 1941

33) Hussein Moussa Barakat, born on 16/12/1983

34) Antoine Toufic Hayek, born on 30/5/1965

35) Elias Antonios Rafih, born on 29/5/1959

36) Tarek George Barakat, born on 21/10/1971

37) Khalil Naji Khazen, born on 20/6/1967

38) Rana Youssef Harakeh, born on 1/2/1980

39) Mohammad Abdel-Hussein Hajj, born on 24/1/1957

40) Julia Mohammad Hajj, born on 2/8/2007

41) Hussein Kamal Hayek, born on 15/11/1977

42) Assaad Massoud Feghali, born on 22/4/1965

43) Ziad Naeem Ksaifi, born on 5/10/1974

44) Reda Ali Mastoukirdi, born on 31/3/1968

45) Albert Jerji Assal, born on 4/11/1959

46) Imad Ahmad Hather, born on 13/5/1980

47) Fouad Mohammad Jaber, born on 6/5/1957

48) Khalil Mohammad Madani, born on 1/12/1968

49) Hasan Mohammad Abdel- Hassan Tajeddine, born on 15/8/1960

50) Yasser Abedel-Hussein Ismail, born on 1/4/1973

51) Jamal Ali Khatoun, born on 5/11/1973

52) Afif Krisht (Lebanese British), born on 29/4/1954

53) Abbas Hawili (Lebanese Canadian), born on 2/11/1945

54) Anna Mohammad Abbs (Lebanese Russian), born on 23/1/1973

Video: 90 perish in Ethiopian jetliner crash (ntvkenya)

Video: Ethiopian Airlines Crashes into the Mediterranean (CBS)

Video: Ethiopian Plane Crashes Off Lebanon (AP)

Raw Video: Lebanon Plane Crashes After Takeoff (AP)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut

Video: History of Ethiopian Airlines crashes

Raw Video From The Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Off Beirut:

ET-409 Update: Thursday, February 18, 2010
(Watch Videos Below The Headlines)

Second aircraft involved in Lebanon ET409 crash (Airlines/Airport Examiner)

Crashed Ethiopian plane cockpit recorder recovered (AP)

Ethiopian Air Says Too Soon to Rule Out Sabotage in Crash Prob (BusinessWeek)

Lebanese minister rules out bomb on Ethiopian jet (AP)

Lebanon confirms 45 bodies retrieved from Ethiopian jet crash (Earth Times)

Ethiopian jet’s 2nd black box retrieved from sea (The Associated Press)

Ethiopian plane ‘exploded’ after take-off: Lebanon minister (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)


Lebanese airport safety employees near the crash
site. Credit: REUTERS

Ethiopian Airliner’s flight recorders sent to France (Daily Star – Lebanon)

Ethiopian Jetliner’s Recorders Found ( Reuters)

Main parts of crashed Ethiopian jet found off Lebanon (Reuters)

Ethiopian air crash shines light on lives of migrant workers (LATimes)

Lebanon gets relatives’ DNA in Ethiopian jet crash (AP)

Wreckage from Ethiopian plane found in Syrian waters (Earth Times)

Sub to help search for crashed Ethiopian jet (AP)

Salvage crews hunt for Ethiopian airliner black boxes (AFP)

Racism in Lebanon? Commenters Respond to Ethiopian Airline 409 Tragedy

British investigators say Ethiopian Airlines plane crash ‘similar’ to earlier disaster

Ethiopian Airlines plane makes emergency landing (AFP)

Navy sends second ship to aid Ethiopian flight salvage
(By Stars and Stripes, daily newspaper published for the U.S. military)

Ethiopian crash jet flight recorders found off Lebanon (BBC)

Army says black boxes located from Ethiopian crash (The Associated Press)

The Latest Press Release from Ethiopian Airlines

Terrorism cannot be ruled out in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409 (Canada Free Press)

Ethiopian plane black box found, toll reaches 32 (Indo Asian News Service)

Flight ET409 Exposes Lebanon’s Racist Underbelly (Huffington Post)

Ethiopian Air #409 Crashes near Beirut — The Coverage So Far

Boats scour ocean for Beirut crash black boxes (AP)

Was The Doomed Ethiopian Plane Formerly Owned by Ryanair?

The United States Extends Its Deepest Sympathies

Ethiopian Airlines plane veered off course before sea crash

Ethiopian Airlines CEO on search for plane’s black box

Search widened for victims of Ethiopian jet crash

Names of Passengers Aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409

White House saddened by deaths in Lebanon crash

Storms or sabotage? The mystery of Flight 409

UPDATE: Crashed Ethiopian plane cockpit recorder recovered (AP)

Above: The Lebanese military says naval commandos have
recovered the cockpit voice recorder belonging to ET409.

ET-409 Update: Tuesday, February 16, 2010
(Watch Videos Below The Headlines)

Crashed Ethiopian plane cockpit recorder recovered (AP)

Ethiopian Air Says Too Soon to Rule Out Sabotage in Crash Prob (BusinessWeek)

Lebanese minister rules out bomb on Ethiopian jet (AP)

Lebanon confirms 45 bodies retrieved from Ethiopian jet crash (Earth Times)

Ethiopian jet’s 2nd black box retrieved from sea (The Associated Press)

Ethiopian plane ‘exploded’ after take-off: Lebanon minister (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)


Lebanese airport safety employees near the crash
site. Credit: REUTERS

Ethiopian Airliner’s flight recorders sent to France (Daily Star – Lebanon)

Ethiopian Jetliner’s Recorders Found ( Reuters)

Main parts of crashed Ethiopian jet found off Lebanon (Reuters)

Ethiopian air crash shines light on lives of migrant workers (LATimes)

Lebanon gets relatives’ DNA in Ethiopian jet crash (AP)

Wreckage from Ethiopian plane found in Syrian waters (Earth Times)

Sub to help search for crashed Ethiopian jet (AP)

Salvage crews hunt for Ethiopian airliner black boxes (AFP)

Racism in Lebanon? Commenters Respond to Ethiopian Airline 409 Tragedy

British investigators say Ethiopian Airlines plane crash ‘similar’ to earlier disaster

Ethiopian Airlines plane makes emergency landing (AFP)

Navy sends second ship to aid Ethiopian flight salvage
(By Stars and Stripes, daily newspaper published for the U.S. military)

Ethiopian crash jet flight recorders found off Lebanon (BBC)

Ethiopian Airlines defends pilot after fatal crash (AFP)

Army says black boxes located from Ethiopian crash (The Associated Press)

The Latest Press Release from Ethiopian Airlines

Terrorism cannot be ruled out in the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409 (Canada Free Press)

Flight ET409 Exposes Lebanon’s Racist Underbelly (Huffington Post)

Names of Passengers Aboard Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409

Was The Doomed Ethiopian Plane Formerly Owned by Ryanair?

Photos | Ethiopian Airlines crash (Seattle Post Intelligencer)

Ethiopian plane black box found, toll reaches 32 (Indo Asian News Service)

Ethiopian Air #409 Crashes near Beirut — The Coverage So Far

Boats scour ocean for Beirut crash black boxes (AP)

The United States Extends Its Deepest Sympathies

Ethiopian Airlines plane veered off course before sea crash

Ethiopian Airlines CEO on search for plane’s black box

Search widened for victims of Ethiopian jet crash

White House saddened by deaths in Lebanon crash

Storms or sabotage? The mystery of Flight 409

Video: 90 perish in Ethiopian jetliner crash (ntvkenya)

Video: Ethiopian Airlines Crashes into the Mediterranean (CBS)

Video: Ethiopian Plane Crashes Off Lebanon (AP)

Raw Video: Lebanon Plane Crashes After Takeoff (AP)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut

Video: History of Ethiopian Airlines crashes

Raw Video From The Ethiopian Airlines Crash Site Off Beirut:

Reports on Monday, January 25, 2010: (Minutes after the crash)
Lebanon says Ethiopian plane crash site located
Rescue workers have located the crash site of an Ethiopian Airlines plane that went down just off the Lebanese coast on Monday, Lebanon’s Transport Minister Ghazi al-Aridi said. “(The crash) site has been identified three-and-a-half km (two miles) west of the (coastal) village of Na’ameh,” Aridi told reporters at Beirut international airport. He said search and rescue operations were under way but refused to give any further details. He also said it was too early to say what caused the crash but confirmed the plane took off from Beirut international airport in stormy weather. Aridi said an investigation into the cause was under way. (Reuters)

Ethiopian Airliner Crashes Near Beirut
CNN
An Ethiopian airliner with 83 people on board crashed into the sea after takeoff from Lebanon early Monday, Lebanese army officials said. The Boeing aircraft was en route from Beirut to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, when it disappeared from radar 30 minutes after takeoff from Rafik Hariri International Airport in Beirut about 4 a.m. local time, Lebanon’s National News Agency reported. On board were 54 Lebanese nationals and 29 people of other nationalities, the army officials said. No additional information was immediately available.

Ethiopian Airlines Confirms Order For 10 Boeing Planes

Above: Boeing has secured an order from Ethiopian Airlines
for 10 of its 737-800 planes valued at about $767 million.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Sunday, January 24, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The flag carrier of Ethiopia is continuing to invest in its fleet portfolio confirming an order from Boeing worth $767 million for 10 Next-Generation 737-800s.

“The Boeing Next-Generation 737 has proven to be a reliable and profitable component of our fleet,” Ethiopian Airlines Chief Executive Officer Ato Girma Wake said in a Boeing press release. “Boeing has been an important and valued partner to Ethiopian for many, many years. This order reinforces the deep ties between our two companies.”

Ethiopian is the first African carrier to own and operate the long-range, wide-body and world’s largest twinjet known as “Triple Seven”. The company also was the first African airline to order the 787 Dreamliner, according to Boeing.

“Since its founding in December 1945, Ethiopian Airlines has been a dedicated Boeing operator — from [the carrier’s] first flights using DC-3 propeller-driven airplanes between Addis Ababa and Cairo, to recent orders for the long haul 787s and 777-200LRs, and continuing now with 737-800s, ” Marlin Dailey, Vice President of Sales for Boeing’s Commercial Airplanes said. “Ethiopian Airlines has been among the most profitable airlines in the region and one of our most valued partners.”

This is the latest in a series of recent big purchases by Ethiopian Airlines. It is to be recalled that Airbus won a similar order from the airline in November 2009 for 12 of its forthcoming A350 commercial jetliners in a deal valued at about $2.8 billion at list price.

Video: Ethiopian Airlines’ new Dreamliner presentation

Ethiopian Banker Leads Development Agency for Obama Administration

Above: Daniel Yohannes, new chief of the Millennium Challenge
Corporation, is the highest ranking Ethiopian American in the
Obama administration. (Photo: Daniel Yohannes is sworn in
as chief executive officer of MCC on December 1, 2009.)

Voice of America
By Yeheyes Wuhib
20 January 2010
An Ethiopian immigrant is making history as the highest Ethiopian-American official in the Obama administration. Daniel Yohannes was born in the Ethiopian capital. He completed his elementary school at Addis Ababa’s Nativity Boy’s School and later transferred to St. Joseph’s, a prestigious Catholic high school in Addis Ababa. “In those days people of my generation were idealistic, full of energy, with a lot of love for each other, as well as love and respect for our parents, elders, and teachers,” Yohannes says. “Growing up in Ethiopia, we had a wonderful awareness of our country as well as the world. We were more advanced in some ways than most teenagers today,” he says. Read more.

Haile Gebrselassie to race in New York Half-Marathon

Above: Haile Gebrselassie, the marathon world record holder
and a two-time Olympic 10,000-meter champion, will race in
the New York Half-Marathon in March, race organizers said
Wednesday.

Bangkok Post

Ethiopia’s Haile Gebrselassie, the marathon world record-holder and a two-time Olympic 10,000-meter champion, will race in the New York Half-Marathon in March, race organizers announced Wednesday.

The 36-year-old long distance legend last competed in a US event in 2007, when he won the New York Half-Marathon in a race-record 59 minutes, 24 seconds. Gebrselassie will seek a 20,000-dollar top prize in the 100,000-dollar event.

“I’m very excited about going back to New York,” Gebrselassie said. “I got such a warm welcome when I ran the Half-Marathon in 2007. I’m sure it will be a wonderful event again and I’m looking forward to it.”

Gebrselassie, who set the world marathon record of 2:03:59 at the 2008 Berlin Marathon, will try to win his third consecutive Dubai Marathon title on Friday.

He has also won four times at Berlin as well as in Amsterdam in 2005 and Fukuoka, Japan, in 2006.

Over the 13.1-mile half-marathon distance, Gebrselassie has won nine of 10 career starts.

Video: Haile & Tyson Gay in Adidas AD

Seattle: Man on Trial in Killing of Ethiopian Immigrant

Above: Rey Davis-Bell is charged with the murder of Degene
Barecha, an immigrant from Ethiopia, at Philadelphia Cheese
Steak. Davis-Bell’s trial started on Tuesday. (Seattle Times)

The Seattle Times
By Jennifer Sullivan
Neither prosecutors nor witnesses could say why Rey Davis-Bell’s alleged violent tirade two years ago wound up inside Degene “Safie” Dashasa’s cheese-steak restaurant, resulting in Dashasa’s death by gunshot at point-blank range.

Dashasa emigrated from Ethiopia about a decade ago, enrolled in online business courses and spent hours perfecting his cheese steak, his family told The Seattle Times after his slaying. Dashasa took over the restaurant after his best friend and business partner was fatally shot in his car in 2003. After Troy Hackett’s death, Dashasa changed the name of Philly’s Best Steaks and Hoagies. Hackett’s slaying has not been solved. Several months before his death, Dashasa traveled to Ethiopia and married a woman he had met through relatives. He recently had bought a house and was preparing it for his new bride, his family said.

Ethiopia launches new Omo River hydroelectric plant

Above: Ethiopia has inaugurated a new hydroelectric plant
effectively solving its chronic shortage of electricity, but
critics fear it will affect the environment and traditional
lifestyle of the Southern Omo Tribes of Ethiopia (Photo:
Chesterhiggins.com)

Ethiopia opens its largest hydroelectric dam

Nazret.com

BBC
Thursday, 14 January 2010
A new hydroelectric plant has been inaugurated in Ethiopia – part of a controversial project on the Omo River. Ethiopia hopes the cascade of dams will turn it from a country suffering crippling power cuts to a major electricity exporter. But critics fear there will be consequences for the environment and for people living along the river. he latest phase, Gilgel Gibe II, has the capacity to generate more than 400 megawatts of electricity. The plant gets its water through an underground channel from the first Gilgel Gibe hydroelectric project, which is fed by the Omo River. Read More.

Obama’s Newsweek essay: We help for one simple reason

Above: President Barack Obama penned the cover story on
Haiti for Newsweek magazine.

Why Haiti Matters
By Barack Obama | NEWSWEEK
Published Jan 15, 2010
In the last week, we have been deeply moved by the heartbreaking images of the devastation in Haiti: parents searching through rubble for sons and daughters; children, frightened and alone, looking for their mothers and fathers. At this moment, entire parts of Port-au-Prince are in ruins, as families seek shelter in makeshift camps. It is a horrific scene of shattered lives in a poor nation that has already suffered so much. Read more.

( How to help Haiti earthquake victims.).

Bush, Clinton to lead Haiti fundraising effort

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Obama orders relief effort of historic proportions

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Haiti in Ruins; Grim Search for the Dead
The New York Times
By SIMON ROMERO
Thursday, January 14, 2010
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Survivors strained desperately on Wednesday against the chunks of concrete that buried this city along with thousands of its residents, rich and poor, from shantytowns to the presidential palace, in the devastating earthquake that struck late Tuesday afternoon. Calling the death toll “unimaginable” as he surveyed the wreckage, Haiti’s president, René Préval, said he had no idea where he would sleep. Schools, hospitals and a prison collapsed. Sixteen United Nations peacekeepers were killed and at least 140 United Nations workers were missing, including the chief of its mission, Hédi Annabi. The city’s archbishop, Msgr. Joseph Serge Miot, was feared dead. Read more.

How to help Haiti earthquake victims
Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Thursday, January 14, 2009

New York – Haiti has been ruined by the most powerful earthquake to hit the impoverished Caribbean country in more than 200 years. Disaster relief organizations are appealing for your help. Funds are needed to provide shelter, medical supplies and water. Here are few ways you can help:

To help with relief efforts, text “HAITI” to “90999” and $10 will be given automatically to the Red Cross, charged to your cell phone bill. Or visit InterAction to contribute. (State Department)

To find information about friends and family in Haiti:
For missing U.S. citizen family members, call 1-888-407-4747. To help with relief efforts, text “HAITI” to “90999” and $10 will be given automatically to the Red Cross, charged to your cell phone bill. Or visit InterAction to contribute.

The American Red Cross
“As with most earthquakes, we expect to see immediate needs for food, water, temporary shelter, medical services and emotional support,” said Tracy Reines, director of international disaster response for the American Red Cross, in a report posted on its Web site. The American Red Cross offers several ways to donate to various funds, including international relief to Haiti. (ABC)

Yele.org
Text Yele. Wyclef Jean is urging donors to text ‘Yele’ to 501501 and make a $5 contribution to the relief effort over cell phone. Click here to get more information via Wyclef’s Twitter page. (NY Daily News)

William J. Clinton Foundation
Former president Bill Clinton is the United Nations special envoy to Haiti. “My UN office and the rest of the UN system are monitoring the situation,” Clinton said in a statement today. “While we don’t yet know the full impact of this 7.0-magnitude earthquake, we do know that the survivors need immediate help.” (ABC)

UNICEF
Shortly following the quake’s eruption, the U.S. division of UNICEF issued a statement on its blog calling attention to some of the smallest victims of the emergency. “Children are always the most vulnerable population in any natural disaster, and UNICEF is there for them,” the statement said. (ABC)

Save the Children
Donate at savethechildren.org or make checks out to “Save the Children” and mail to: Save the Children Income Processing Department, 54 Wilton Road, Westport, Conn. 06880

Mercy Corp
Go online to mercycorps.org or mail checks to Haiti Earthquake Fund, Dept. NR, PO Box 2669, Portland, Ore. 97208 or call (888) 256-1900

Direct Relief International

Quake Victims Plucked From Rubble

UNTV: raw footage of rescue efforts in Haiti:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Search for survivors amid despair

Latest: A woman cares for an injured toddler at a destroyed
orphanage in Fontamara. A stream of food, water and U.S.
troops flowed toward Haiti on Saturday as donors squabbled
over how to reach hungry, haggard earthquake survivors.

Video: ‘Little miracle’ amid desperation in Haiti

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

How You Can Help In Haiti
Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Saturday, January 16, 2009

New York – Although help is beginning to arrive in Haiti, the devastating earthquake has so far claimed 45,000-50,000 people, according to the Red Cross. Disaster relief organizations still need your assistance. Funds are needed to provide food, water, shelter, clothing and medical supplies.

Below are few ways you can help:

To assist with relief efforts, text “HAITI” to “90999” and $10 will be given automatically to the Red Cross, charged to your cell phone bill. Or visit InterAction to contribute. (State Department)

To find information about friends and family in Haiti:
For missing U.S. citizen family members, call 1-888-407-4747. To help with relief efforts, text “HAITI” to “90999” and $10 will be given automatically to the Red Cross, charged to your cell phone bill. Or visit InterAction to contribute.

The American Red Cross
“As with most earthquakes, we expect to see immediate needs for food, water, temporary shelter, medical services and emotional support,” said Tracy Reines, director of international disaster response for the American Red Cross, in a report posted on its Web site. The American Red Cross offers several ways to donate to various funds, including international relief to Haiti. (ABC)

Yele.org
Text Yele. Wyclef Jean is urging donors to text ‘Yele’ to 501501 and make a $5 contribution to the relief effort over cell phone. Click here to get more information via Wyclef’s Twitter page. (NY Daily News)

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Bush, Clinton to lead Haiti fundraising effort

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

William J. Clinton Foundation
Former president Bill Clinton is the United Nations special envoy to Haiti. “My UN office and the rest of the UN system are monitoring the situation,” Clinton said in a statement today. “While we don’t yet know the full impact of this 7.0-magnitude earthquake, we do know that the survivors need immediate help.” (ABC)

UNICEF
Shortly following the quake’s eruption, the U.S. division of UNICEF issued a statement on its blog calling attention to some of the smallest victims of the emergency. “Children are always the most vulnerable population in any natural disaster, and UNICEF is there for them,” the statement said. (ABC)

Save the Children
Donate at savethechildren.org or make checks out to “Save the Children” and mail to: Save the Children Income Processing Department, 54 Wilton Road, Westport, Conn. 06880

Mercy Corp
Go online to mercycorps.org or mail checks to Haiti Earthquake Fund, Dept. NR, PO Box 2669, Portland, Ore. 97208 or call (888) 256-1900

Direct Relief International

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Obama orders relief effort of historic proportions

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Quake Victims Plucked From Rubble

UNTV: raw footage of rescue efforts in Haiti:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Life-saving surgery gives professor mission

Above: Tsehay Demeke at the Debre Keranio Medhanialem
Church in Nashville. (Mandy Lunn/The Tennessean)

The Tennessean
By Juanita Cousins
January 11, 2010
A booming Ethiopian community in Nashville that almost lost its leader is leaning on its church and focusing on health care for a solid foundation in the transition to life in the United States.

Tsehay Demeke, a database engineer at Cumberland University who survived triple bypass surgery, credits his recovery to his faith and support from members of the Debre Keranio Medhanialem Eastern Orthodox Church, which celebrated its Christmas Jan. 7 in accordance with the Julian calendar.

The church is the anchor of Nashville’s Ethiopian community, said Demeke, who sits on the church’s advisory committee of elders. He also is the outgoing president of the Ethiopian Community Association, which he said has some 5,000 members in Nashville. Read more.

Bekele Disappoints, Dibaba Wins In Snowy Edinburgh

Above: Three-time champion Bekele finished a distant fourth,
while Dibaba won the women’s race at the 2010 BUPA Great
Edinburgh International Cross Country race.

IAAF
Edinburgh, UK – In the snow and ice of Holyrood Park today at the BUPA Great Edinburgh International Cross Country Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele was defeated by Kenya’s Joseph Ebuya in shocking fashion, whilst Tirunesh Dibaba ran majestically to win the women’s race with ease to reassert her dominance ahead of the World Cross Country Championships in Poland this March. Read more.

Bekele & Dibaba: Duo Raise The Bar
BBC
By Mark Butler

I’m not sure we know how lucky we are that Kenenisa Bekele and Tirunesh Dibaba have chosen to make so many appearances in the United Kingdom.

The world’s two greatest distance runners – with a collective total of 45 Olympic and world golds – are due to be in action again at the Great North Cross Country in Edinburgh on Saturday.

Between them they have won this corresponding race on seven occasions and in Bekele’s case, his 2001 victory as a teenager was the first of a six-year 27-race win streak at cross country.

The Ethiopian pair are not just great distance runners, they are among the finest sportsmen of their generation.

Having dominated for most of the noughties there is every sign they will do so throughout the “teens” and even into the 2020s.

Their Ethiopian predecessors Haile Gebrselassie (now 36) and Derartu Tulu (37) are still winning big races and setting records. Bekele and Dibaba will not reach those ages until 2018 & 2022 respectively and Dibaba has already talked of competing at the 2024 Olympics.

Why are they so good ? They run fast, they win big races and make it look easy. Read more.

Reid: Sorry for ‘Negro’ remark about Obama

Above: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says his comment
about Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential bid as “light
skinned” and “with no Negro dialect” was “a poor choice of
words.” (Mike Theiler / EPA file)

Video: Reid to Obama: Sorry for ‘no Negro Dialect’ Remark

Video: RNC chair Steele goes after Reid

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

A world away and branching out (The Boston Globe)

Above: Front, left to right – Stacey Cordeiro, Danny Mekonnen,
Kaethe Hostetter, Arik Grier; (rear, left to right) P.J. Goodwin,
Keith Waters, Dave Harris, Bruck Tesfaye, Jonah Rapino.
(Aram Boghosian for The Boston Globe)

The Boston Globe
By James Reed
January 10, 2010
CAMBRIDGE – Just before midnight on a brisk night at the Western Front, an unassuming club outside Central Square, a refreshing scene is unfolding. Soon after a handsome man croons a love song in Amharic (Ethiopia’s official language) over the band’s chunky ’70s funk riffs, a rapper gets up on stage and drops fluid rhymes also in his native tongue. Other times the musicians lock into long instrumental grooves solely in service to the party vibe. Read more.

Video: Help Debo Band Return to Africa

Related from Tadias:
Debo Band Wins BMA’s International Music Act of the Year

Above: From left, alto saxophonist Abye Osman, Debo Band
founder Danny Mekonnen, and vocalist Bruck Tesfaye. (Photo
credit: H. Asrat)
Click here to read the story.

Teddy Afro Kicks Off U.S. Tour (Video)

Above: The crowd at Teddy Afro’s U.S. tour kickoff concert on
Saturday, January 2, 2009 at the D.C. Armory. (Bekalu Biable)

Tadias Magazine
Events News

Published: Saturday, Januray 9th, 2009

New York (Tadias) – Teddy Afro launched his 2010 U.S. tour on Saturday, January 2, 2009 at the D.C. Armory.

The sold out show marked the start of Afro’s first American tour since he was freed early from prison in August after serving 18 months of a two-year sentence for a hit-and-run incident.

The singer, who has been dubbed “Ethiopia’s Bob Marley” and the voice of “Ethiopia’s conscience,” paid a moving tribute to legendary Ethiopian singer, the late Tilahun Gessesse, at the event.

Teddy Afro plans to make concert appearances in several cities in the United States, according to promoters.

Video: Teddy Afro Concert 2010 in DC (Posted by Milliano Promo)

Video: Teddy Afro Concert 2010 in DC (Posted by Milliano Promo)

Slideshow: Teddy Afro concert at the DC Armory (Saturday, January 2, 2009)

Jailed but not forgotten: Ethiopia’s most famous prisoner (Guardian)

Above: Almaz Gebregziabher and her granddaughter, Halley,
hold a photograph of Halley’s mother, Birtukan Mideksa, who
has been likened to Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi in her fight for
democracy. (Photograph: Xan Rice)

Guardian
Xan Rice in Addis Ababa
Saturday 9 January 2010
At noon every Sunday an old Toyota sedan donated by supporters of Ethiopia’s most famous prisoner pulls up near a jail on the outskirts of the capital. A 74-year-old woman in a white shawl and her four-year-old granddaughter – the only outsiders the prisoner is allowed to see – step out for a 30-minute visit. Most inmates at Kaliti prison want their relatives to buy them food. But Birtukan Mideksa, the 35-year-old leader of the country’s main opposition party, always asks her mother and daughter to bring books: an anthology titled The Power of Non-Violence, Bertrand Russell’s Best, and the memoirs of Gandhi, Barack Obama, and Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese political prisoner to whom she has been compared. Read more.

Interview With Grammy-Nominated Musician Kenna

Tadias Magazine

By Tseday Alehegn

Published: Friday, January 8th, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Grammy-nominated Ethiopian-American musician Kenna (né Kenna Zemedkun) is leading a team of friends including Jessica Biel, Lupe Fiasco, Isabel Lucas, Elizabeth Gore, and Alexandra Cousteau to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa’s highest peak and one of the world’s largest stratovolcanoes, in an effort to raise more awareness about the global clean water crisis. Today marks Day 1 of the journey. The climb aims to raise funds for The Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and PlayPumps International.

You can follow the climbers’ progress through their highly interactive site Summit on the Summit (SOTS) as they post photos & video clips and tweet their way to the top. According to a BNC-issued press release “The on-the-ground base camp in Africa, will also be outfitted with high- powered HP PCs to help track each climber’s progress, monitor weather conditions, and capture every aspect of the ascent. Throughout the climb, the team will use HP thin-and-light notebooks to communicate and share photos as well as videos from Mt. Kilimanjaro with fans on www.summitonthesummit.com.” A documentary of Summit on the Summit will also be aired on MTV on March 14th, 2010.

Over a billion people worldwide currently do not have access to clean and safe drinking water. You can join the SOTS effort by donating to their ‘sponsor a foot’ campaign online.

We sent Kenna a few questions about music, his interest in the global water crisis, and his inspiration for the climb. Below are his responses from base camp in Tanzania.

TADIAS: Tell us a bit about youself. Where you grew up? who/what were the main influences in your life? How you got involved in music?

Kenna: Born in Addis, raised in USA. My father is a major influence, but musically it was MJ and is U2. I went to high school wih the Neptunes… God hooked it up.


TADIAS: You mentioned that Summit on the Summit was inspired by the health challenges that your father faced. Can you elaborate?

Kenna: I relate to the water issues through my dad. I was born in Ethiopia but raised in both the inner city and the suburbs of America where water has not been a direct issue for me. Although water is an issue in America, my connection with it is from the fact that my dad suffered as a child from water-bourne diseases. When he told me about his ailment as a child, it really struck a chord and triggered the development of SOTS. But my dad has always encouraged me in being a good citizen and gave me plenty of opportunities to be involved with non-profits. I have been blessed to be a part of the development and curriculum for non-profit projects in my community. If he hadn’t survived, I wouldn’t be here. That is what resonates with me.

TADIAS: Why did you pick Mount Kilimanjaro as the challenge?

Kenna: Because it takes serious effort to do this. It takes serious commitment. We needed to do something extreme to highlight such an extreme human rights issue.


TADIAS: What are you taking with you on this climb for inspiration?

Kenna: I have a note from my dad that says he “knows of my ability to elevate myself through conscious moves.” And that he is proud of me.

TADIAS: What message would you like to share with our readers?

Kenna: It is our time to show the true power and beauty of our culture. We have an inheritance of greatness. Rise up and be counted. It is now. It is today. We are God’s people. Let the world know.

Watch: Kenna’s Speech about Summit on the Summit

Debo Band Wins BMA’s International Music Act of the Year

Above: From left, alto saxophonist Abye Osman, Debo Band
founder Danny Mekonnen, and vocalist Bruck Tesfaye. (Photo
credit: H. Asrat)

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Wednesday, January 6, 2010

New York (Tadias) – The Ethio groove ensemble known as Debo Band, whose signature music explores the unique sounds that filled the dance floors of “Swinging Addis” in the ‘60s and ‘70s, has won the Boston Music Awards’ under the category of “International Music Act of the Year.”

The Boston Music Awards, having recently celebrated its 22nd year, is the most prestigious annual music event in Boston. The BMA website points out that the program pays “tribute to the region’s finest musicians.”

For jazz saxophonist Danny Mekonnen, a PhD candidate in Ethnomusicology at Harvard University and founder of Debo Band, the coveted recognition has garnered excitement.

“It was a huge surprise for us. We really didn’t expect the recognition because there were several great local bands in the category, ‘International Music Act of the Year,’” Danny said. “But somehow we got the attention of the judges (who are Boston-area promoters and music critics) and were also able to garner votes from our fans. I think it will mean more widespread attention for our band throughout Boston, which we’ve already seen at our last few concerts. They have been well attended even in blizzard-like weather!”

The group surfaced from Boston’s underground after playing in major festivals in 2009, including making an appearance at the Ethiopian Music Festival in Addis Ababa. Danny told Tadias Magazine that the band is gearing up to make a return trip to Africa in 2010.

“Yes, we’ve been given the incredible opportunity to bring Ethiopian music for the first time to East Africa’s largest music festival: “Sauti za Busara” on the island of Zanzibar, February 11th-16th, 2010,” he said. “For our performance at the festival we’ll be joined by four brilliant musicians and dancers from Fendika, an azmari bet in the Kazanchis area of Addis Ababa: Selamnesh Zemene (vocalist), Melaku Belay (dancer), Zenash Tsegaye (dancer), and Asrat Ayalew (drummer). Your readers may know Melaku, who was the dancer at the incredible Getachew Mekuria/The Ex concert at the Lincoln Center in August 2008.

The Debo Band is currently raising funds to cover travel expenses for 15 musicians to attend the Sauti za Busara festival.

Danny also shares one more bit of good news: “My wife and I have a beautiful newborn girl. Life has been very hectic these days, but we feel blessed.”

We congratulate Danny and look forward to Debo Band’s first album.


Learn more at: deboband.com.

Video: Help Debo Band Return to Africa

Tadias TV Interview with Danny Mekonnen

Suspected ‘Underwear Bomber’ Flew on Ethiopian Airlines

Above: Umar Farouk Abdul Mutallab, a.k.a. Underwear Bomber,
flew on Ethiopian Airlines from Dubai to Accra, making a stop
over in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, authorities said.

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Updated: Wednesday, January 6, 2010

New York (Tadias)- Umar Farouk Abdul Mutallab, the Nigerian citizen suspected of attempting to blow up Northwest Airlines Flight 253 over Detroit, had apparently traveled on an Ethiopian Airlines flight from Dubai to Accra making a stop over in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. He then purchased a KLM ticket in Accra before proceeding to Lagos, en route to Amsterdam and Detroit, Ghana News Agency reports.

Mutallab, who arrived in Ghana on Dec 9 and departed for Nigeria on Christmas eve, was allowed entry into Ghana on the basis of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) protocol, which grants West African citizens the privilege to spend up to 90 days in a member country without obtaining a formal resident permit, Ghanaian authorities said on Monday.

“He got in and was processed by the immigration as any other ECOWAS citizen because we had no knowledge of any security alert on him,” Ghana’s Deputy Information Minister Mr James Agyenim-Boateng said.

According to GNA, the Deputy Minister said “while in Ghana, he {Mutallab} checked into a hotel at Dzorwulu in Accra and throughout his stay, he did nothing to create suspicion of any sort.”

Mr. Agyenim-Boateng also responded to a statement by Nigerian officials that the would-be bomber had purchased his ticket in Ghana and therefore his journey began there.

“It is interesting to note that although he bought the KLM ticket in Accra, he decided to start that journey from Lagos,” he said. “Why did he not fly direct with the KLM from Accra to Amsterdam?”

Umar Mutallab, 23, a son of a wealthy Nigerian banker, was charged on December 26, 2009, with attempting to blow up a U.S. airliner using explosives hidden in his underwear. He is currently held at the Federal Correctional Institution, Milan, in Milan, Michigan. He faces trial in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.

Video: Not guilty plea entered for Nigerian bomb suspect

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Related:
Suspected ‘Underwear Bomber’ Flew on Ethiopian Airlines (Nazret.com)

Rumors of War: Eritrea says attacked by Ethiopia

Above: Eritrea says it has killed 10 Ethiopian soldiers and
captured two accusing its neighbor of launching the attack.
Ethiopia denies the claim. (Photo: President Afewerki – NYT)

AFP:
Eritrea accused arch-foe Ethiopia on Sunday of launching attacks along their disputed border but said its troops had driven off the assault, killing 10 Ethiopian soldiers and capturing two. The Eritrean foreign affairs ministry said soldiers from Ethiopia’s ruling Tigrai People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) had attacked on Friday in the Zalambesa area. Ethiopian officials were not immediately available for comment. Read more.

Reuters
Eritrea says it killed 10 Ethiopian troops
Sun Jan 3, 2010
Bereket Simon, the Ethiopian government’s head of information, accused the Eritrean government of trying to cover up an attack by Eritrean rebels in which 25 Eritrean government soldiers were killed. “This new allegation that it killed Ethiopian soldiers is an attempt by the regime in Asmara to deflect its internal crisis by implicating Ethiopia,” he told Reuters. Read more.

Thomas ‘Tommy T’ Gobena is a man of the world

Above: Tommy T Gobena, one of Tadias Magazine’s Top Ten
Notable Ethiopian-Americans of 2009, is the the bass player
for gypsy punk powerhouse Gogol Bordello. (Dayna Smith –
for The Washington Post)

Washington Post
By Chris Richards
Sunday, January 3, 2010
It’s breakfast time at Dukem, the popular Ethiopian restaurant on U Street NW, but Thomas “Tommy T” Gobena orders lunch. In a city of red-eyed, Cinnabon-scarfing frequent fliers, he might be the most jet-lagged man in Washington. Gobena lives in Alexandria but will spend most of this new year in the air and on the road, playing bass for Gogol Bordello, a merry band of self-branded “Gypsy punks” scheduled to hit about 200 stages across the globe in 2010. Days earlier, Gobena was wowing a crowd of 20,000 in Mexico City. In a few days, he’ll be at it again in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Read more.

Related from Tadias
Interview with Tommy T.

Tommy T (Thomas T. Gobena), bass player for the New York-based multi-ethnic gypsy punk band Gogol Bordello, has released his first solo album entitled The Prestor John Sessions. The album includes collaborations with Gigi, Tommy T’s brother & bassist Henock Temesgen, members of the Abyssinnia Roots Collective, and a bonus remix including Gogol Bordello bandmates Eugene Hütz and Pedro Erazo. Tommy describes The Prestor John Sessions as “an aural travelogue that rages freely through the music and culture of Ethiopia.” His debut album features the diversity of rhythms and sounds of Ethiopian music – as multi-ethnic as has become the Lower East Side Gypsy band that has taken the world by storm. Who else but Tommy would produce an Oromo dub song featuring Ukranian, Ecuadorian, and Ethiopian musicians? We spoke to Tommy T about life as a Gogol Bordello member, the influences on his music, and the story behind The Prestor John Sessions. Normally Tommy T punctuates everything he says with so much humor that it’s difficult not to be immersed in sporadic moments of pure laughter. His message in this interview, however, remains serious: Are you ready to change the way you listen to and classify music? Read more.

Video: Gogol Bordello on David Letterman

Cameroon Honors Ted Alemayhu (Video Added)

Above: Ted Alemayhu, pictured here addressing the African
First Ladies Health Summit in Los Angeles last Spring, was
honored in Cameroon last week. (Courtesy photo).

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Saturday, January 2, 2010

New York (Tadias) – Ted Alemayhu, Founder and Chairman of U.S. Doctors for Africa (USDFA), was honored in Cameroon last week for his organization’s work tackling Africa’s enormous health care problems.

Mr. Alemayhu, who convened the African First Ladies Health Summit in Los Angeles last Spring, says the acknowledgment of his service brings needed attention to USDFA’s work in Cameroon and other nations in Africa.

“The President and The First Lady of Cameroon were kind with their generous recognition of our efforts in bringing the highly needed medical manpower and other resources to the continent,” Mr. Alemayhu told Tadias Magazine. “The recognition would simply raise the level of attention and awareness of the needs for organizations like U.S. Doctors for Africa to be more engaged in providing much needed medical care and services to the people of Africa who continue to suffer from the lack of basic medical care.”

According to Mr. Alemayhu USDFA is currently working with three local organizations in the country: The African Synergy organization, the First Lady of Cameroon’s Foundation, and The Chantal Biya Foundation. “All of the organizations are our strategic partners in Cameroon and their missions are directed to providing access to health care to under-served communities, mainly targeting women and children,” he said. “U.S. Doctors for Africa brings volunteer medical manpower as well as medical supplies and equipments to further assist several clinics that are currently being managed by these organizations. Currently we are working toward sending an estimated $500,000 Dollars worth of medical supplies and equipments to Cameroon.”

Mr. Alemayhu tells us that he has also traveled to his native country, Ethiopia, and that a medical project there may also be imminent.

“During my recent yet very brief trip to Ethiopia I’ve had the opportunity to meet with the Health Minister and other senior officials of the government. We’ve had some productive discussions in regards to USDFA’s possible new engagement in the country,” he said. “I will be back in Addis soon for further discussion and action plans. In the past, USDFA has developed several successful medical missions to Ethiopia, and we hope to expand on our efforts in accordance with the country’s health plan and strategic approach.”

Asked about what he considers to be the biggest health care challenge facing the African continent today, Mr. Alemayhu is quick to answer that lack of trained medical professionals is the number one chronic problem. “Unfortunately, and despite the great effort that is underway by several thousand organizations across the continent, the biggest challenge continues to be the extreme shortage of medical manpower,” he points out. “According to some credible sources, the ratio of doctors per population in most African countries remains 1 doctor per 100,000 people. This staggering and disturbing statistic further complicates the situation despite the fact that more vaccines and other medical supplies are being provided to the continent. Our effort is not only to bring in U.S. trained volunteer medical personnel to the continent but to also help train more local health care providers as well.”

And what is he looking forward to in 2010? “We plan to host the second-annual African First Ladies Health Summit in 2010,” Mr. Alemayhu said during an interview conducted on New Year’s day. “However, it will be held in Africa. At this time we are considering several possible hosting countries.”

Video: Ted Alemayhu in Cameroon

Related Video:
Ted Alemayhu’s Keynote at Columbia University (NYC)

Ethiopian Business and Lifestyle