የተደናበረው ማነው!

ግልጽ ደብዳቤ ለአቶ ሀይለ ማሪያም ደሳለኝ
ከብርሃኑ ተስፋዬ

ይድረስ ለአቶ ሀይለ ማሪያም ደሳለኝ ፖ.ሳ. ቁ. 1031 አዲስ አበባ

ጉዳዩ፣ የተደናበረው ማነው!

እንደ ጠቅላይ ሚኒሰትር ሳይሆን እንደ ተራ ካድሬ ከዋልታ ኢንፎርሜሽን ጋር ያደረጉትን ቃለ ምልልስ አዳመጥሁት ገረመኝ፣ ፣ አግራሞት የፈጠረብኝ ደግሞ ከአፋዊ ህግ መንግስት አንቀጽ ቀንጨበው ጉዳዩን ለማስረዳት መሞከርዎ ሳይሆን ጠያቂዎ ያጎረሰችዎትን ቃላት እንዴት ለመጠቀም መሞከርዎ እሱዋ ሃላፊዎት እንጂ ጠያቂዎት ሳትሆን መሪ ካድሬዎት መሆኑዋን ማረጋገጥዎ ነው።
ይህ የተደናበረ መልስዎ ያጫረብኝ በሃይማኖት ሺፋን የፖሊቲካ እንቀስቃሴ ሃገሪቱ ውስጥ አለ ብለው አፍዎን ሞልተው የሸሪያ መንግስት ለመመስረት የተነሱ ናቸው ብለው መናገርዎ አንድን ጣልቃ አትግቡን የራሳችንን መጅሊሰ ያለ መንግስት ጣልቃ ገብነት ራሳችን እንምረጥ ያለን የሙስሊም ማህበረ ስብ ጥያቄ እንደዚህ ከፖሊቲካ ሃሳብ ጋር ማጋባተዎ የባጃጅነትዎን መጋረጃ ቀደው ለህዝብ ባደባባይ ራስዎን ያሳዩበትን በማየቴ ነው።

ለመሆኑ እየመራሁት አለሁት የሚሉትን መንግስት በዝርዝር እንመልከተው እስቲ፣

ገና ተጠባባቂ ተብለው ባቶ በረከት ስምኦን ከተሰየሙና የዱዳ ፓርላማ ማህተም ከማድረጉ በፊትና ካደረገልዎት ወቅት ጀምሮ የተዘጉ የሜዲያ ዉጤቶች ከደቡብና ሌሎች ክልሎች የተፈናቀሉ ኢትዮጵያዉያን ሁኔታ በመንግስት ወጪና ከቀረጥ ነጻ መብት ያለው ሃገሪቱን ያለወደብ ላስቀረና ማህበረ ሰባችንን በጎሳ ላከፋፈለ ህዝቡን አፈናቅሎ በሳንቲም ደረጃ መሬታችንን ላከራየና ለገደለ አርዮስ መታሰቢያ ድርጅት ለፓርላማ አቅርበው እንዲጸድቅ ማድረግዎ የሚጠቀሱት ናቸው።

ልብ ይበሉ በህዝብ ገንዘብ በሀገርም ሆነ በዉጭ እድሉን አግኝቶ ለተማረና የምእራብን የዴሞክራሲ አሰተዳደር ለማየት እድል ካጋጠመው እርስዎን ከመሰለ ግለሰብ በሺዎች የሚቆጠሩ ልጆቻችን እህቶቻችን ወንድሞቻችን እናትን አባቶቻችን በጠራራ ጸሃይ ሲደበደቡ ሲታሰሩና ሲገድሉ እይኔን ግንባር ያድርገው ብለው ምንም ያልተፈጠረ አድርገው እንዲህ አይነት ቃለ መጠይቅ ያሰደምማል።

ትንሽ ላሰታውሰዎ እስቲ አዋሳ እያሉ ሎቄ ላይ ሃሳባቸውን በመግለጻቸው በፌደራል አባላት ያስገደሉዋቸውና ያሰፈጁዋቸው የሲዳማ ብሄረ ሰብ አባላት ደም በእጅዎ የለም ከህዝብ በተሰበሰበ ታክስ ወጋጎዳ የሚባል አዲሰ ቑንቓ ፕሮጀክት መሃንዲሰነት መጫወትዎን እረሱት እንዴ።

መንግስትና ሀይማኖት በህገ መንግስታችን የተከበረ ነው ብለው ያፌዙና ሙስሊም ወንድሞቻችን ያነሱትን ጥያቄ ከፖሊቲካ ድርጅቶች እንቅስቃሴ ጋር ማጋባትዎና ከራስዎ አንደበት የወጡትን ቃላት ለመጥቀስ “…. አቃጥየ ፣ ደብድቤ፣ ገድየ፣ መስጊድ ማቃጠል ቤተ ክርስቲያን ማቃጠል…..የሸሪያ ህግ የበላይ መሆን አለበት፣ ህገ መንግስት መናድ” አምጥተው እድንጎርሳቸው ለምን ፈለጉ።

አቶ ሀይለ ማርያም እስኪ ከሰሞኑ የኢትዮጵያ ቴሌቪዥን ያሰተለለፈውን ላሰታውሰዎት የተቀደደ ሰንደቅ አላማ በሙስሊሙ የአንዋር ተቃውሞ መሃል አሳይቶ ተቃጠለች የሚል ዘገባና አስተያየት በቤኒ መስጊድ እንደተደረገ ማናፈስ… ኮፈሌ ህዝብን ለመጨፍጨፍ ቅድመ ዝግጅት አጠናቆ ረብሻ አስነስቶ በመቅረጽ ያልሆነ ዘገባ ለህዝብ ማሰተላለፍ ፣ ሀዝበ ሙስሊሙ የሮመዳን ጾም ፍችን ከዚህ ቀደም እንደሚያደረጉት ሁሉ ሰታዲዮም ለማክበር ሲዘጋጅ ሙስሊሙን ለሁለት በመክፈል ላንዱ መግቢያ መስጠት ለሌላው መከልከል ሲተገበር የርሰዎ ቢሮ አያውቅም ነበር ቢሉኝ፣ በሰላማዊ መንገድ የተቃወሙ የሙስሊሙ ማህበር ሰብ በልዩ ሃይል እንዲደበደቡ ሲደረግና አዲሰ አበባ ሰው ሲፈነከትና ህጻናትና እርጉዞች ሲደበደቡ፣ ከአውሮፓ ፓርላማ ቃሊቲ ከሄዱ በሁዋላ የፖለቲካ እስረኞችን ለመጎበኘት መከልከላቸው የራስዎን መደናበር ከማመላከቱ ባሻገር አንድም ሀገሪቱን የምትመራበት ብለው የሚያላዝኑለት ቃላዊ ህገ መንግሰትን ወይ ያላነበቡት አሊያም እንደ ሌሎቹ ካድሬዎች በህወህት እንደ ኮካ ኮላ የተሞሉ ሆነው ነው የማይዎት።

በመሆኑም ይህንን ስጽፍ ውሃ ቢወቅጡት እንቦጭ መሆኑን ባልረሳውም እንደተናገሩት

ሳልሸራርፈው የተሞላሁትን ለመተግበር የተነሳሁ ነኝ ዲያቢሎሱ ቢሞትም ከላይ ኮቴን ከውስጥ የሱን ሰደርያ ለብሼ እንደምቀጥል እወቁት ያሉትን የመጀመሪያ ንግግርዎ ትዝ ይልዎት ይሆን?

ታዲያ እራሱን ሆኖ ከማይኖር ግለሰብ ህዝቡን ለመምራት ሳይሆን ራሱ ተደናብሮ ህዝብ ማደናገርን ከሚፈልግ የሚጠበቅ በመሆኑ እባክዎን ወደ ህሊናዎ ይመለሱ እላለሁ።

Google honors Abebe Bikila with doodle

 

 

Abebe-Bikila

The 81st birthday of Abebe Bikila, Ethiopian marathon runner and the first Sub-Saharan African to winan Olympic gold medal, is being celebrated with Google Doodle.

Bikila, born on 7 August 1932, sprinted to success when he beat competitors in the 1960 Summer Olympics marathon, barefoot – the way he had trained for the race. He won in record time, finishing 25 seconds ahead of race rival, Rhadi.

 

Abebe-Bikila-doodle

In 1964, Bikila made history again, breaking the world record for the marathon, coming in at 4 minutes and 8 seconds in front of the silver medallist.  He was the first athlete in history to win the Olympic marathon twice.

“I wanted the world to know that my country, Ethiopia, has always won with determination”, said the athlete.  Abebe Bikila passed away at the age of 41 in 1973, and was proclaimed an Ethiopian national hero.

Change looms for Ethiopia’s ancient salt trade

By Siegfried Modola

HAMAD-ILE, Ethiopia (Reuters) – Abdu Ibrahim Mohammed was 15 years old when he began trekking with caravans of camels to collect salt in a sun-blasted desert basin of north Ethiopia that is one of the hottest places on earth.

Now 51 and retired, he has passed his camels to his son to pursue this centuries-old trade in “white gold” from the Danakil Depression, where rain almost never falls and the average temperature is 94 degrees Fahrenheit (34.4 Celsius).

But the tradition of hacking salt slabs from the earth’s crust and transporting them by camel is changing as a paved road is built across the northern Afar region.

Although the road being cut through the Danakil Depression is making it easier to transport the salt, the region’s fiercely independent local salt miners and traders are wary of the access it might give to industrial mining companies with mechanised extraction techniques that require far less labour.

“Most of the people who live here are dependent on the salt caravans, so we are not happy with prospective salt companies that try to set up base here,” said Abdullah Ali Noor, a chief and clan leader’s son in Hamad-Ile, on the salt desert’s edge.

“Everything has to be initiated from the community. We prefer to stick with the old ways,” he added.

The tarmac road will link the highland city of Mekele with the village of Dallol in the Danakil Depression, a harsh but hauntingly beautiful geographical wonder of salt flats and volcanoes once described as “a land of death” by the famous British desert explorer Wilfred Thesiger.

The road has cut from five hours to three the drive from Mekele to Berahile, a town two days’ trek by camel from the Afar salt deposits that are one of Ethiopia’s main sources of the crystalline food product.

New roads like these are gradually helping to transform this landlocked Horn of Africa state, which has a unique culture and history but has been racked by coups, famines and droughts, into one of the fastest-growing economies on the continent.

As Africa’s biggest coffee producer, Ethiopia’s economy remains based on agriculture, which accounts for 46 percent of gross domestic product and 85 percent of employment. But its nearly 94 million population – the second biggest in Africa – is attracting the attention of foreign investors hungry for new markets.

ACCESS TO MARKET

Further south in the Danakil Depression, at the salt reserve of Lake Afdera, industrial salt production is already under way.

A company named Berhane and Zewdu PLC came to the desert plains near Hamad-Ile in 2011 aiming to produce salt there, according to Noor.

Clan leaders saw the threat to their ancient trade and lined up to oppose the project. Fearing sabotage of its equipment, the company left the following year, local people said.

But Noor still welcomed the new road.

“The new highway will give easy access to the market, which will bring benefits and development to this region,” Noor said.

The development he talks of is visible in Berahile, where caravans from the salt pans come to drop off their cargo so it can be transported to the rest of the country. Most residents are involved directly or indirectly in the salt business.

Telephone and electricity networks have been extended to the town over the past four years, a new Berahile Salt Association was established in 2010 to facilitate trade and a recently built salt store is now the biggest construction in town.

“Thousands of people benefit from this work as the salt here is exported throughout the country,” said the head of the association, Derassa Shifa.

For now, tradition and modernity co-exist – the organisation buys salt from the caravans that make the four-day trek to the salt flats and back, then sells it to merchants who carry it away by truck.

The salt blocks, which were once used as a unit of money, are sold across Ethiopia, many of them to farmers to provide their animals with essential minerals. Ethiopia has the largest livestock population on the African continent.

Life is harsh for the thousands of camel herders and salt extractors who use traditional hoes and axes to carve the “white gold” out of the ground in the Danakil Depression.

Many of the salt diggers live in Hamad-Ile and hire out their services to different caravans.

The work, however exhausting, still draws thousands onto the baking salt flats.

“You forget about the sun and the heat,” said Kidane Berhe, 45, a camel herder and salt merchant. “I lost a friend once on the salt desert because he was working too much with no protection from the sun. Eventually he just collapsed.”

ኣንበሶቹ ደረሱላት-Ethiopian girl reportedly guarded by lions

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia  — A 12-year-old girl who was abducted and beaten by men trying to force her into a marriage was found being guarded by three lions who apparently had chased off her captors, a policeman said Tuesday.

The girl, missing for a week, had been taken by seven men who wanted to force her to marry one of them, said Sgt. Wondimu Wedajo, speaking by telephone from the provincial capital of Bita Genet, about 350 miles southwest of Addis Ababa.

She was beaten repeatedly before she was found June 9 by police and relatives on the outskirts of Bita Genet, Wondimu said. She had been guarded by the lions for about half a day, he said.

“They stood guard until we found her and then they just left her like a gift and went back into the forest,” Wondimu said.

“If the lions had not come to her rescue, then it could have been much worse. Often these young girls are raped and severely beaten to force them to accept the marriage,” he said.

‘Some kind of miracle’
Tilahun Kassa, a local government official who corroborated Wondimu’s version of the events, said one of the men had wanted to marry the girl against her wishes.

“Everyone thinks this is some kind of miracle, because normally the lions would attack people,” Wondimu said.

Stuart Williams, a wildlife expert with the rural development ministry, said the girl may have survived because she was crying from the trauma of her attack.

“A young girl whimpering could be mistaken for the mewing sound from a lion cub, which in turn could explain why they didn’t eat her,” Williams said.

Ethiopia’s lions, famous for their large black manes, are the country’s national symbol and adorn statues and the local currency. Despite a recent crackdown, hunters kill the animals for their skins, which can fetch $1,000. Williams estimates that only 1,000 Ethiopian lions remain in the wild.

The girl, the youngest of four siblings, was “shocked and terrified” after her abduction and had to be treated for the cuts from her beatings, Wondimu said.

He said police had caught four of the abductors and three were still at large.

Kidnapping young girls has long been part of the marriage custom in Ethiopia. The United Nations estimates that more than 70 percent of marriages in Ethiopia are by abduction, practiced in rural areas where most of the country’s 71 million people live.

Ethiopia to Open First Industrial Zone to Bolster Economy

Ethiopia will spend 900 million birr ($49 million) to open its first industrial hub for export- oriented manufacturers in a bid to deliver faster economic growth, Industry Minister Mekonnen Manyazewal said.

South Korean garment-makers are among companies in talks with the government about establishing operations at the planned site in the capital, Addis Ababa, Mekonnen said in an interview in the city on March 15. The facility is scheduled to open before the fiscal year ends on July 7, he said.

“This is one of the key strategies to facilitate and support foreign and domestic private-sector partners and particularly to enhance exports,” Mekonnen said. “It’s key for our industrialization.”

The economy of Ethiopia expanded an annual average of 10.6 percent for the eight years through 2011, double the rate of all of Africa, according to the World Bank. The Horn of African economy runs on a mixture of state dominance of large industries such as banking, telecommunications and power with private investment in manufacturing and agriculture.

The project is known as the Bole Lemi Industrial Zone and covers 156 hectares (385 acres). It’s designed to help companies such as agro-processors, pharmaceutical-makers and textile manufacturers produce and sell value-added goods and boost revenue from exports. The government is building roads, electricity and telecommunications infrastructure at the site and it will offer tax incentives for industries based there.

Trade Zones

Ethiopia is ranked 127th out of 185 nations in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Index, behind African countries including Swaziland and Kenya. Companies are hindered by a lack of protection of investment and barriers to cross-border trading, according to the World Bank. The bank’s International Finance Corp. is contributing to a $10 million project to help Ethiopia ease investment rules for businesses.

Similar zones are being considered in at least five other locations including, Kombolcha, 158 miles northeast of Addis Ababa, and Dire Dawa, a self-administered city about 228 miles east of the capital, Mekonnen said.

The government is making a push to attract private investment with plans to convert its investment agency into a “one-stop service” for new companies to register, Mekonnen said. It is also introducing measures to speed the clearance of exports and imports at the border, he said.

Tax Breaks

The government passed a law last year offering income tax breaks of as long as six years for manufacturers of items including leather products, sugar and textiles. Producers who send 60 percent or more of their goods abroad will receive an additional two-year income-tax exemption, Mekonnen said.

Tax incentives on imported capital goods are reserved for existing investors and companies planning to expand their operations by more than 50 percent, according to the law.

“If there’s no expansion you are not creating new capacity,” Mekonnen said. “The reason we give incentives is to encourage re-investment.”

Huajian Group, a Chinese shoemaker, said last year it plans to invest $2 billion over a decade building a new manufacturing zone on the outskirts of Addis Ababa.

To contact the reporter on this story: William Davison in Addis Ababa at wdavison3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nasreen Seria at nseria@bloomberg.net

 

New official website for Grand Renaissance Dam

Addis Ababa, March 13 (WIC) – The Office of National Council for the Coordination of Public Participation on the Construction of the Grand Renaissance Dam launched an official website on Wednesday.

The website www.hidasse.gov.et was designed for the Office by the Information Network Security Agency (INSA).

At the launching ceremony, Media and Communication Director of the Office of National Council for the Coordination of Public Participation on the Construction of the Grand Renaissance, Fekadu Ketema said the website would enable citizens to access timely information concerning activities on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.

It also provides a forum for discussion and feedback, he said.
In another development, the office announced that preparation is underway to mark the 2nd anniversary of the launching of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam construction on 2 April 2013 at the site of the Dam.

According to Fekadu, the anniversary would be marked with various assortments including sports and literary events.

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