Vol. XIX No. 951 |1 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Vol. IXI No. 9501| November 29, 2014 | ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA www.thereporterethiopia.com Price 5.00 Birr Ethiopia, South Sudan to establish new airline By Kaleyesus Bekele The management of Ethiopian Airlines is finalizing negotiations with the Government of South Sudan to establish a new regional airline in Juba, which will serve as a flag carrier for the newlyborn African nation. Ethiopian Airlines will hold a 49 percent stake on the new start-up airline while the Government of South Sudan will own the majority 51 percent share. A senior official of Ethiopian told The Reporter that they started the negotiation early this year and hope to finalize and sign the deal next month. Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda. The new airline will feed passengers to Ethiopian Airlines. “Initially, the airline will serve domestic and regional routes but eventually it will go international,” the official said. At the initial stage the start-up airline will operate scheduled domestic flights in South Sudan and regional flights to neighboring countries, including Initially, Ethiopian will deploy senior staff members to manage the startup airline. Ethiopian will train and empower South Sudanese staff who will Ethiopia issues USD 1 billion sovereign bond take over the management of the airline eventually. “It is not like any other management contract. We will build their capacity so that they can run their own airline.” Ethiopian will lease regional aircraft to the start-up airline. It will also provide maintenance services by deploying Ethiopia, South... page 39 Nine charged for spying on Ethiopia’s defence force By Tamiru Tsige Seven Ethiopian and two Eritrean nationals this week were charged with espionage on Ethiopia’s defence force stationed at the Ethio-Eritrean border. The charge filed at the nineteenth criminal bench of the Federal High Court alleges that the defendants maintained clandestine communications with the Eritrean Intelligence Agency. By Yohannes Anberber told The Reporter. Following the decision that was passed by the Government of Ethiopia to dip into the international money market, it announced to investors on Wednesday that it has issued a sovereign bond amounting one billion dollar, sources Sources also disclosed that the sovereign bond that Ethiopia offered for the first time is revealed to investors in London, where the team is also scheduled to travel other European cities and the US to make the offer known to investors there. According to sources, the certificates Advertisment offer six to seven percent interest rates with a maturity date of ten years. High-level delegation led by Sufian Ahmed, minister of Finance and Economic Development (MoFED), Ethiopia issues... page 7 The suspects are accused of spying on the current status of Ethiopia’s defence force. Federal prosecutors also accused one of the suspects of prohibited traffic of arms including Kalashnikovs and ammunitions and grenades. The charge alleges that the suspects have been carrying out the espionage from October 2011 to May 2013. The charge accuses the suspects of Nine charged ... page 39 2| Vol. XIX No. 951 EDITORIAL The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Published weekly by Media & Communications Center Address: Bole Sub City, Kebele 03, H. No. 2347 Tel: 011 6 616180 Editorial 011 6 616185 Reception 011 6 616187 Finance Fax: 011 6 616189 PO Box:7023 0910 885206 Marketing E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.thereporterethiopia.com General Manager Amare Aregawi Managing Editor Bruh Yihunbelay [email protected] Editor-in-Chief Asrat Seyoum Sub city: N.lafto, K. 10/18, H.No. 614 [email protected] Senior Editors Yacob Wolde-Mariam Dibaba Amensisa Editors Kaleyesus Bekele [email protected] Yonas Abiye [email protected] Assistant Editor Tibebeselassie Tigabu [email protected] Senior Reporters Henok Reta Columnist Leyou Tameru [email protected] Chief Graphic Designer Yibekal Getahun Senior Graphic Designer Tewodros Kebkab Graphic Designers Tsehay Tadesse Fasika Balcha Endale Solomon Semenh Sisay Netsanet Yacob Bezaye Tewodros Head of Photography Nahom Tesfaye Photographers Tamrat Getachew Mesfen Solomon Website Bezawit Tesfaye Binyam Hailu Cartoonist Elias Areda Fasil W/giorgis Marketing Manager Endalkachew Yimam Biruk Mulugeta Biruk Chernet Computer Secretaries Birtukan Abate, Helen Yetayew, Print Tesfaye Mengesha, Yeyesuswork Mamo,Gezaghgn Mandefro Ramping p g upp the fight g to end violence against women The UN annually observes the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on 25 November. It is followed by 16 Days of Activism against Gender Violence which follow (ending on 10 December, Human Rights Day) whose primary objective is to mobilize as well as to raise awareness and trigger action to end the global scourge of violence against women and girls. The campaign attempts to forge an effective strategy to combat violence against women by acting as a link between international and local organizations which work towards this end. The importance of this campaign cannot be overstated. According to a 2013 UN report which reviewed the available global data, 35 percent of women worldwide have experienced either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence with some national violence studies showing that up to 70 percent of women have experienced physical and/or sexual violence in their lifetime from an intimate partner. The report said that of all women killed in 2012, it is estimated almost half were killed by intimate partners or family members. It further found out worldwide, more than 700 million women alive in 2013 were married as children (below 18 years of age). More than one in three—or some 250 million—were married before 15. Child brides were often unable to effectively negotiate safer sex, leaving themselves vulnerable to sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, along with early pregnancy. The statistics indicate that in Ethiopia too violence against women has reached alarming levels. The UN estimates that 49 percent of women are subjected to physical violence at the hand of their partners while 59 percent face some form of sexual violence. At the beginning of November a high school student in Addis Ababa died after she was abducted from the taxi she was traveling to home and repeatedly gang raped for some five days. We condemn this barbaric act in the strongest possible term and extend our condolences to her family and beloved ones. Though violence against women is not a new phenomenon, the manner in which the young girl was abused and eventually died makes it particularly gruesome. Admittedly, similar incidents are likely to have occurred before. But more often than not, cases of violence against women go unreported and hence contribute to diminished awareness on the extent of the problem. The death of the teenager has evoked raw emotions across all sections of the public and is still a topic which stimulates impassioned views on all forms of media. It has also prompted activists drawn from different civil society organizations and notable personalities to appeal to Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn to set up an anti-gender-based violence taskforce and allocate the necessary resources for this cause. All agree that the reaction to the horrendous crime cannot just be to wish the families and friends of the deceased the strength to cope with their loss. Her death is not a crime against a single individual; it’s a crime against the entire community. Violence against women cannot be stopped by expressing rage whenever a shocking incidence takes place. Given its complexity and pervasiveness, what is required is not an ad-hoc response but rather mainstreaming the efforts aimed at addressing its root cause through a sustainable and full-time nationwide action. This makes it incumbent upon all stakeholders who work on eliminating this scourge—the government, civil society and religious organizations, educational institutions and the public at large— to appreciate that the foremost task in this regard, namely bringing about an attitudinal change by way of a national dialogue, cannot be achieved overnight and to allot the requisite funding for sensitization and other related activities. Ghastly as the crime against the high-schooler might be, the response to it must follow due process. As the late Prime Minister Meles Zenawi once said, however appalling a crime is the downsides of taking illegal measures in the heat of the moment far outweigh any perceived benefit. Violence against women should not be a subject which hits the headlines once and then is promptly forgotten. Therefore, if Ethiopians are to strengthen our social cohesion and realize our aspiration for development, we have no option but to ramp up the efforts aimed at eliminating any and all impediments standing in the way of the enjoyment of the rights guaranteed for women under the constitution. www.thereporterethiopia.com HEADLINES The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Vol. XIX No. 951 |3 IOM repatriates over 250 migrants from Tanzania 30 unaccompanied minors said to be among returnees By Yonas Abiye Some 253 illegal migrants, who were detained in Tanzania for more than a year, returned home yesterday. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) facilitated their return and said that around 30 of the returnees are unaccompanied minors who are currently temporarily sheltered at a rehabilitation center set-up by IOM. The returnees, who were released from Tanzanian prisons last week, were staying at temporary stations provided by IOM Tanzania until their predeparture medical screening and travel documents were finalized. They were detained at the borders of Tanzania while attempting to illegally enter South Africa. The migrants were charged and imprisoned by Tanzanian authorities for trespassing. The migrants were detained in two regions in Tanzania namely Mbeya and Pwani in three prison facilities called Ruanda, Ubena and Kigongoni. Most of the returnees were released after serving their prison terms for over one year, while some were pardoned by the Tanzanian Government before serving time. Department registered and verified their nationalities during their stay in prison. After the verifications, IOM Tanzania conducted a pre-departure medical screening to assess the conditions of the migrants and chartered a flight to bring them back to their home country. The IOM in collaboration with the Ethiopian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) and the Tanzanian Immigration Most of the returnees originated from the Southern Nations and Nationalities Peoples Regional State. Upon arrival, Officials of MoFA and IOM have welcomed the returnees from Bole airport yesterday International afternoon. Advertisment Sub-Saharan Africa face decline in soil fertility Medrek, UDJ relationship ends in divorce By Mihret Aschalew By Neamin Ashenafi Empirical assessment of Sub-Saharan Africa’s soil fertility has confirmed that the region faces a significant decline in soil fertility, which could further aggravate food insecurity if no appropriate action is taken. The two parties, Unity for Democracy and Justice Party (UDJ) and Forum for Democratic Dialogue in Ethiopia (Medrek), which used to work together in the opposition block of the country, has ended their relationship and have officially separated as of November 20 due to the differences between the parties. The finding of the assessment has been the point of discussion at a regional workshop, conducted in Nairobi, Kenya last week. The workshop, with a theme “Advancing Integrated Soil and Water for Climate-Adapted Management Land Use in Low-Fertility Areas of Sub- Saharan Africa”, was organized by the United Nations University Institute for Integrated Management of Material Fluxes and of Resources (UNU-FLORES), in partnership with the United Nations University Institute for Natural Resources in Africa (UNUINRA), World Agro forestry Centre (ICRAF) and Technische Universitat Dresden, Germany. These two parties were working together for the past six years and their relationship was at odds after a speech, which was delivered by former president of UDJ Gizachew Shiferaw (Eng.), advocated for a merger than continuing with the party in the form of a front or a coalition. In this regard, Medrek demanded a correction of that speech and suspended the party temporarily on its ninth general assembly which was held last year. However, UDJ declined to do so and argued that the speech was delivered by the president as a personal opinion which does not represent the party. An initial mapping study was conducted to review the current condition of soil and land use management in The disagreement between these two Sub-Saharan.. page 38 Medrek, UDJ... page 38 www.thereporterethiopia.com f / All of the returnees are male with 30 of them being unaccompanied minors. IOM Ethiopia in collaboration with Ministry of Women, Children and Youth Affairs and UNICEF will conduct a family tracing for the unaccompanied minors and reunite them with their families in the coming weeks. Hence, until the family tracing is complete, the unaccompanied minors will be staying at the IOM Transit Center in Addis Ababa. S The returnees at Bole International Airport IOM Ethiopia will provide an overnight stay accommodation and handout onward transportation allowance for them to get back to their place of origin. 4| Vol. XIX No. 951 HEADLINES The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Sheep leather to become the Coca Cola, Ambo Water to be new Ethiopian brand under one umbrella By Yonas Abiye The oldest modern mineral water, Ambo Mineral Water, a.k.a. Ambo Tsebel, was bought jointly by the UK-based multinational brewer, SABMiller PLC, and SouthWest Development (SWD), will join the Coca Cola family as SABMiller. The Coca Cola Company and Coca Cola Sabco announced their intention to form a new company called Coca-Cola Beverages Africa. Fistum Arega Noriyuki Nagai Dubbed as champion product approach, Ethiopia is set to brand its leather and leather products made of sheep skin to Japanese market and beyond. Noriyuki Nagai, one of the four consultants hired by JICA to undertake the job of championing sheep leather to become a brand product, told The Reporter that the short term target of the champion product approach is to introduce Ethiopia’s hi-end sheep leather and leather goods to the Japanese market. By Birhanu Fikade Sponsored by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), the champion product approach movement is something which is said to seek and improve Ethiopia’s image and brand the country’s finest sheep leather and finished leather products abroad. To that end, stakeholders held the second phase of the champion product approach meeting on Thursday at Harmony Hotel Sheep leather... page 40 Advertisment The new business is said to be the biggest bottler of soft drinks and nonalcoholic beverages in Africa and the 10th largest in the world, with an annual revenue of USD 2.9 billion. As part of the deal, SABMiller, which is already a significant bottler of Coca Cola products across Africa, will sell its Appletiser soft drinks brands to the Coca Cola Company to avoid competition between the two companies. Coca Cola will also acquire or be licensed rights to another 19 nonalcoholic drinks owned by SABMiller in Africa and Latin America for around USD 260 million. SABMiller and its local partner will control the operations and bottling of Coca Cola in the Ethiopian market as a majority shareholder. Currently, there are more than 30 Coca Cola bottlers in Africa alone and there has already been a wave of consolidation among bottling companies in other countries such as Spain and Japan. BAMBIS NEWS ,,, +&'("' '&$" (!* +#(($#'"/..*3..*53./...!" + #$&$'"53.!" +#(($#'"3..*53./...!" +&$''#(&##*%*!!( !# $ +')('& &' +&$"!# +"##$$$132.!" +" !(#$'(+ "&$#"/13! $#"/13! "#"/13! '$#"/13! $ "/..! $&!/0.! $#"/3.! !"/5.! ! !#"0..! !!$"0..! ! 0..! !0..! ! 0..! -+ !!!!"/5.! !!!"/5.! !$!!"/5.! ! '!!"/5.! +%!#( +"""/0.!$# "2.. +&$"$)(& +$( # #65! + *$#*!$#)$#* #!" * "$#6.! +!#""43! + ! +!"(## +#(*#!!#" +$)&'($%'$%%##(&,,, !#+.//,330//.2-.3!33.3362 www.thereporterethiopia.com Coca Cola Sabco is the second biggest bottler of the product in South Africa and also has operations in other African countries such as Ethiopia and Kenya. On Thursday, SABMiller PLC and Coca Cola Co. have announced that they will combine soft drinks bottling operations in southern and eastern Africa including in Ethiopia, in a deal that reinforces the UK-based brewer’s growing interest in non-alcoholic beverages. According to information obtained from SAB and Coke, a new company, Coca Cola Beverages Africa, will serve 12 countries and supply 40 percent of all Coca Cola volumes in Africa. The two companies also said that SAB and Coke will hold 57 percent and 11.3 percent of the new business respectively while Gutsche Family Investments will own the remaining 31.7 percent. Ambo Mineral Water has been bottled and marketed since 1930 and is considered the market leader in Ethiopia. The source of Ambo Mineral Water is a thermo-mineral spring, which is rich in natural calcium, magnesium, potassium, bicarbonates and carbon dioxide. The water originates in a volcanic fissure which then percolates through mountainous terrain, eventually being Coca Cola, Ambo... page 40 HEADLINES The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Seasoned Ethiopian captain establishes private airline, pilot school Captain Lemma Tekalign By Kaleyesus Bekele Former captain of Ethiopian Airlines, Mulatu Lemlemayehu, owner of Dreamliner Hotel, is establishing a new private airline and pilot training school, East African Aviation, with an outlay of 57 million birr. Captian Mulat is a seasoned pilot who served Ethiopian Airlines for 39 years and has accumulated 27,000 flight hours under his belt. While working for the national flag carrier he commanded aircraft from the old DC3 to the state-ofthe-art jetliner, Dreamliner. Mulat founded an investment company called M.T.D.N and built Dreamliner Hotel in Addis Ababa near Meskel Flower eight years ago. He started talking about the new business venture with his former colleagues a year ago. He retired from Ethiopian Airlines last August. M.T.D.N owns the new private airline, East African Aviation, and the pilot school. Captain Lemma training Tekalign, general manager of East African Aviation, told The Reporter Seasoned Ethiopian... page 40 Vol. XIX No. 951 |5 Gov’t contemplates beefing up investment commission By Birhanu Fikade the restructuring was required was unsuccessful. The recently-restructured Ethiopian Investment Commission (EIC) is anticipated to oversee two essential government activities, industry zone management and export promotion, which are considered to be critical for the transformation of the country to industrialization. The House of Peoples’ Representatives has amended the proclamation which constituted the EIC a few months back. The amended proclamation (Proclamation No. 849/2014) stated that Industrial Zone Development Corporation, a body that is assigned to oversee the development of industrial parks in Ethiopia, will be under the investment board, which is also a supervisory body to EIC and is chaired by Prime Minister Hailemariam Dessalegn. However, the recent move, according to sources, is intended to give more functioning power to EIC. According The Reporter’s sources, the commission is set to bring under its wings the industrial zones development corporation of the Ministry of Industry and Export Promotion Directorate General which was under the Ministry of Trade. Sources also said that these two government offices have been prioritized by the government to scaleup Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) activities and the export earnings of the country. Most of the FDIs coming to Ethiopia are preferred to be exportoriented. Hence, the Office of the Prime Minister is considering the commission to be best suited to manage these two governmental agencies, sources said. Getahun Negash, public relations officer of the EIC, confirmed to the The Reporter that there are certain moves to muscle up EIC, but said that there are no official assignments given to the commission so far. Attempts made by The Reporter to get a response from the Office of the Prime Minister to further explain and comment as to why such Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com Similarly, the Ministry of Trade, which three years ago was part and parcel of the Ministry of Industry, was heading the export promotion directorate general. Sisay Gemechu, state minister of Industry was appointed in 2013 to head the industrial zones development. The definition of the industry zone further elaborated to include the development of urban centers, special economic zones, industrial parks, technology parks, export processing zones, free trade zones and the likes which are to be designated by the investment board. The previous proclamation was contained to define industrial development Gov’t contemplates... page 40 6| Vol. XIX No. 951 In-depth The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Copyright amendment: a game changer By Mikias Sebsibe and Tibebeselassie Tigabu In April 2007, the Malawi Broadcasting Station (MBS), a state-owned radio station, had its office furniture and cars impounded by the country’s police following a dispute over unpaid music royalties. The measures followed a long-running legal wrangle between the station and the Copyright Society of Malawi (COSOMA). A Malawi court ordered MBS to pay USD 250,000 to COSOMA for years of accumulated music royalties. The confiscation was aimed at ensuring MBS pays up the sum. COSOMA, a consortium of associations in the field of intellectual property, is a statutory body tasked to enforce copyright laws of Malawi. Boasting a history of over two decades, the society is considered a role model for the rest of Africa in the protection of copyright. Here is one of the six African countries where an Ethiopian delegation went last year to draw lessons. The delegation was tasked with the responsibility of proposing an amendment to the Copyrights and Neighboring Rights Protection Proclamation (No. 410/2004) of Ethiopia. even had a chance to properly study its impact on our industry,” Zerihun Teshome, co-owner of Zami FM, told The Reporter. “We were not involved during the drafting process as a stakeholder.” The amendment concerns broadcasters like Zami FM as the law puts an obligation on them to pay royalties for the use of copyright protected works like music. The obligation also extends to businesses such as hotels, clubs, lodges, beauty salons and taxis. It also creates a collective management society to enable right holders administer their rights in an organized and enhanced manner including collection and redistribution of royalties. Berhanu Adelo, director general of the Ethiopian Intellectual Property Office (EIPO), says that the drafting process was participatory enough and various consultation forums were held with the “relevant stakeholders” including broadcasters. “The amendment is aimed at providing legal protection that is compatible with an ever growing development of copyright and neighboring right,” Berhanu told The Reporter. On the other hand, those in entertainment business believe amendment is long overdue. the the After two years of benchmarking that also assessed Asian countries, the drafting process culminated and the amendment was tabled before the House of Peoples’ Representatives on the first week of November. To the dismay of some, the bill was approved within two weeks. “This amendment should have been incorporated in the copyright and neighbouring rights protection proclamation ten years ago,” Equbay Berhe, president of Ethiopian AudioVisual Association, told The Reporter. “The draft was approved before we Payment of royalties is not an entirely new Paymentofroyaltiesisnotanentirelynew concept in Ethiopia. It was introduced a decade ago with the coming into force of the existing Copyright and Neighboring Rights Protection Proclamation. But payment of royalties was limited to use of protected sound recordings and even then users were obliged to pay producers “equitable remunerations” only once. The law does not provide for royalties for other literary and artistic works. The proclamation also failed to establish an effective system to collect royalties. “The former collective management society was registered as an NGO which is not mandated by law to issue license or collect royalties from third party and distribute it to right holders,” Dawit Yifru, president of Ethiopian Musicians Association, told The Reporter. publishers to go out of business.” According to data from the Ethiopian Audio-Visual Association, over 2,000 criminal suits were filed over copyright infringements in the last ten years alone. However, right holders got no monetary gains from such criminal proceedings. “We could not even file a single civil suit against the infringers for compensations in these cases because we were unable to pay the 10 percent (of the amount claimed) court fee,” Equbay told The Reporter. The introduction of a system of royalties for protected works used for commercial purposes is aimed at boosting the thriving industry under flawed system. However, devising a royalty scheme, including how those royalties are calculated, is an intricate and controversial matter. Hence, right holders of protected works stood to gain nothing when their song, for instance, is aired on broadcasting stations or other forms of public performances. The only economic benefit they get from their works was through mechanical royalties (royalties from the recording of composed music on CDs and tape). This daunting task, which includes identifying the category of works for which royalty payment is to be made and the list of users subject to pay royalty, is left to the EIPO based on a proposal submitted to it by the collective management society. Enforcing the mechanical royalties of right holders was further compounded by the growth of the digital world which made transfer of music easy. Songs can easily be transferred using flash disks, memory sticks and the internet which complicated controlling mechanisms. Biruk Haile (LLD), head of the School of Law at Addis Ababa University, contends that leaving the decision of devising the royalty scheme and who should pay – to the society and EIPO – without first providing minimum guideline by the law is problematic. “Album copies plummeted from around four million to just 100,000 copies as a result of the digital growth,” Equbay, who participated in the drafting process, told The Reporter. “This has forced He argues that the powers given to the office and the society whose constituting members is not clearly stated in the law www.thereporterethiopia.com Copyright amendment... page 39 HEADLINES The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Vol. XIX No. 951 |7 Turkish investors eye housing projects in Addis Ababa By Yonas Abiye opportunities with regards to housing projects. A group of Turkish businesspersons, who are on a business trip here, have expressed their interest to invest in housing projects in the capital. During the occasion, President Mulatu welcomed the decision of the experienced Turkish investors to invest in Ethiopia and said that their presence would enable the country to share their experiences. The Turkish delegation headed by Erdogan Bayraktar met with President Mulatu Teshome (PhD) at the National Palace and discussed on issues including their “strong desire” to invest in massive housing projects in Addis Ababa. However, it was learnt that the total investment outlay has not been disclosed. According to sources, the delegation will discuss with the Mayor of Addis Ababa, Driba Kuma, on the potential He also reiterated that the Ethiopian government would provide support for the investors. The delegation leader, Bayraktar, on his part affirmed to the president that the investors have finalized preparations to build a green model city in Addis Ababa. According to a senior government official, the delegation is expected to meet with officials from the Ministry of Urban Development, Housing and Construction, and the Mayor of Addis Ababa about the possibility of finalizing the ventures. The Reporterr learnt that the delegation are also scheduled to meet with Sufian Ahmed, minister of Finance and Economic Development. A year ago, it was reported that the Chinese giant construction company, Chinese Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC) had issued an enquiry letter to secure land for real estate development in Addis Ababa. The newly-restructured Ethiopian Investment Commission announced a few months ago that Turkey tops the list of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Ethiopia. Although the Chinese lead in terms of number of companies that have invested in the country, the Turks lead others in combined capital outlay, the commission said. Until the end of August this year, some 2,010 investors have joined the Ethiopian market with a total capital investment of 89 billion birr; however, the combined capital investment by the Turks is just shy of 20 billion birr, constituting 22.5 percent of the overall outlay. The Chinese, who have 367 companies already invested in the country, are second to the Turks in capital expenditure. Advertisment Institute to bridge gap in reproductive health in Africa Ethiopia issues... CONT`D FROM PAGE 1 including Teklewold Atnafu, Governor of the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE), Fisseha Abera, International Financial Institutions Cooperation Directorate Director at MoFED, Wasihun Abate, Director of Legal Division at MoFED and Mezgebu Ameha, Macro-economy Policy and Management Directorate Director have traveled to Europe for this purpose. By Mihiret Aschalew The International Planned Parenthood Federation Africa Region (IPPFAR) has launched a research institute that aimed at bridging the research gap in sexual and reproductive health and rights in the continent on Wednesday. The institute that will be headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya, is named after Fredrick T. Sai (Prof.), a Ghanaian internationally recognized authority on health, nutrition, population and family planning. The move was expected after the House of Peoples’ Representatives (HPR) discussed in a closed session and gave the responsibility to MoFED to issue a sovereign bond. Though The Reporter approached Ahmed Shide, state minister of MoFED, on the event of the signing ceremony of a loan agreements between the Government of Ethiopia and the World Bank and African Development Bank, he declined to disclose the amount of the bond issued in London. However, he did say that “the interest rate that the bond got was quite reasonable.” According to the state minister this is mainly because the bonds were offered at the right time. “The institute is an initiative of IPPF Africa, as a response to filling the gap in data gathering and dissemination. For us, it is an instrument to strengthen our programs,” IPPF African Region Director, Lucien Kouakoa, told The Reporter at the launching ceremony. The Fred T. Sai Institute will support research, modeling and replication of innovative service delivery and the research effort of young Africans generating evidence for sound program design and implementation in 42 African countries that it operates. The institute will also provide small grants to young women and men for post graduate research and will hold a biennial science lecture series to disseminate and publish research findings with regards to sexual and reproductive health and rights, The Reporter learnt. The move to issue an international sovereign bond came after Ethiopia got a B+ rating by renowned credit rating agencies in May 2014 namely, Moody’s, S&P and Fitch. Last month MoFED selected J.P. Morgan and Deutsche Bank Group from America and Germany, respectively, to organize and facilitate meetings with potential investors with Ethiopian delegation across Europe and the US. Sources also said that the delegation will conclude its tour next week in the US and they are expected to reveal the amount they were able to sell to investors. According to IPPF, the establishment of the institution is particularly timely because of the continued challenges of high unmet need for family planning, high maternal deaths in developing countries, high infant and child mortality, occurrence of female genital mutilation and early marriage. And the Redwan Hussein, head of Government Communication Affairs Office with a ministerial portfolio, while briefing local journalist two weeks ago said that the foreign currency that would be obtained from the sales of sovereign bonds will be used to finance mega government projects which are grappling with severe hard currency shortage. Institute to bridge... page 38 www.thereporterethiopia.com 8| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |9 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL(RFP -ETH- 2014 – 9116223) organization g only. y UNICEF supports the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs (MoLSA) in the design and implementation of integrated childsensitive social cash transfer pilot programs in SNNPR and Oromia. The major objective of the pilot programs is to test the integration of Social Cash Transfers (SCT) and access to social services for extremely poor and labour constrained households Next Generation Productive Safety Net Programme (PSNP) as and Disaster Risk Management System. The design of the program is expected to be completed in towards the end of 2014. MoLSA, in partnership with partner organizations has planned to strengthen the technical capacity of regional Agencies of Labour and Social Affairs for effective planning and implementation of the SCT pilot in the two regions. Objective. Design a comprehensive SCT Management Information System of Oromia and SNNPR Bureaus of Labour and Social Affairs in line with the manual of operations;The Integrated SCT MIS should use technologies that will allow a future integration into registry. ! The design will be conducted by a registered institution/ ! ""#$ the assignment. The team must have (1) extensive expertise and experience in the design of Social Cash Transfer MIS (at least 5 to 8 years) and a strong commitment to undertake the assignment;(2) Knowledge of institutional issues related to development programming (including funding, administration, the role of the UN system, partnerships, human rights and sustainable development issues) and (3) familiarity with social protection policies and programmes with a focus on social cash transfer programmes and their design. Interested and eligible bidders ONLY from International organizations are invited to collect the complete tender documents by sending an email to Mr. Deresse Damte ([email protected]) or Mr. Ayele Wolde ([email protected]) Starting on Friday 5-12-2014. Proposals are to be submitted %&'*'+ 6<=='> Time) " #$%&#% 2014. Please quote the RFP nr. 9116223 in all your correspondences. Due to the nature of the bid, there will be no bid public opening for this offer. UNICEF reserves the right to accept or reject part or all of any or all bids. ADDRESS: UNICEF Ethiopia, UNECA Compound, NOF HQVX#Q><<! Mr. Ayele Wolde, P.O.BOX 1169, TEL: +251-11 518 4167/4142 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. '!*+"%+ " ,%/ #7&8 The Embassy of the United States of America, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, will hold a closed bid sale on used vehicles on Tuesday, January 27, 2015 from 10:00-12:00 noon at the back side of main Embassy compound (Batch Plant). Contact: 011130-7577 or 011-442-3812. Viewing g: Interested participants can view the vehicles on Thursday, January 15, and Friday January 16,2015 between 09:00 and 12:00. In order to access the facility, participants will be required to present ID and get registered. :: ; Interested participants must deposit ETB 10,000.00 for < &+ & # + payable to “Cashier American Embassy”. Account #485. Deposits must be made at Bank of Abyssinia - and branch, prior to the bidding day and receipt for CPO must be presented at the time of bidding. : = : The Embassy will provide bid documents/ forms and bids will be accepted Tuesday January 27,2015 ]=^==_]V^==<<H `# manner by avoiding overwriting and any sorts of ambiguity. >>?:>:=*@>>:=*B==! " ; " Winners will be announced on January 28,2015 and must deposit the full payment at the Bank of Abyssinia- any branch, to the “Cashier American Embassy”, Account #485 and submit deposit slips to the Embassy within three working days or forfeit their CPO deposits. Partial payments are not allowed $" < < ,: Bid winners are required to remove their purchased vehicle(s) with in sixty (60) days and after the necessary documentation work required by the government of Ethiopia. US Embassy will not assume any responsibility on property sold. Failure to remove purchases as per the terms and conditions provided results in revoke and /or < : : : Now-winning bidders can collect their deposit (CPO) receipts on February 09 and 10,2015 between 09:00 and 04:00 at the Embassy Warehouse, off Bole Rd on the Ethio-China Friendship road-Phone 011-442-3812, Failure to meet this dates will result in forfeiture of ++ ! ; 1. Participants must be at least 18 years old and bring !< 2. All bidders must provide personal transportation for their purchases; the Embassy will have no transportation available. 3. Any and all duties, taxes, transfer fees or other charges of #`#{` of Ethiopia are the sole responsibility of the buyer and will not be deducted or credited to the sale price by the U.S. Embassy. 4. All items are sold on an “AS IS”. “WHERE IS” and “NON RETURNABLE” basis. The Embassy DOES NOT guarantee any items in any way. 5. }`Q the Embassy will reserve all rights to cancel the bid and take related administrative measures including forfeiture of bid bond deposits as necessary Contact information: 011-442-3812 or 011-130-7577 www.thereporterethiopia.com 10| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 COMMENTARY T he United States did not send a delegation to the High Level Partnership Forum in Copenhagen, expressing their “deep concern with political turmoil in Somalia”. The current turmoil, however, seems to be the result of problems which are inherent in the transition process and may further escalate in the lead up to the 2016 deadline. State building and the credibility conundrum in Somalia By Anna Bruzzone Yet another international donor conference on Somalia. “A history of broken promises” might have been a rather more appropriate title for the Ministerial High Level Partnership Forum (HLPF) which was held in Copenhagen on 19 and 20 November. The conference was intended to review progress against Somalia’s New Deal Compact endorsed in Brussels in September 2013 and chart the way ahead to the implementation of Vision 2016. This “blueprint for action” entails three main threads, the “democratic formation” of regional interim administrations and Federal States, the revision and adoption of the Constitution and the holding of national elections in 2016. The goals are ambitious, but they seem to be contained within a floating bubble. Blown by the international community, the bubble is growing and may eventually burst. The HLPF meeting in Copenhagen was supposed to build upon the “current momentum” on Somalia, both nationally and internationally. That sense of “momentum”, however, which had made southern Somalia breath more easily for some months after September 2012, is gone. The federal government’s performance has become a concern for both Somalis and the international community, though on different grounds. The British government’s enthusiasm has faded, since it turned out that Somalia was not going to be the political victory that Prime Minister David Cameron was looking for after the intervention in Libya in 2011. Questions are being raised in Westminster about Britain’s relationship with Somalia, in the wake of the latest report by the UN Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea alleging corruption and activities that may be subverting the arms embargo. The United States did not send a delegation to the High Level Partnership Forum in Copenhagen, expressing their “deep concern with political turmoil in Somalia”. The current turmoil, however, seems to be the result of problems which are inherent in the transition process and may further escalate in the lead up to the 2016 deadline. Hailed as the yardstick for the implementation of the New Deal, posttransition Somalia has become a victim of its own “momentum” with donors. The implementation of Vision 2016 has become a matter of international reputation. Western donors are impatient with the slow pace of state building and urging the Somali government to State building... page 31 VIEWPOINT By Jeffrey D. Sachs Sustainable development economics Two schools of thought tend to dominate today’s economic debates. According to free-market economists, governments should cut taxes, reduce regulations, reform labor laws, and then get out of the way to let consumers consume and producers create jobs. According to Keynesian economics, governments should boost total demand through quantitative easing and fiscal stimulus. Yet neither approach is delivering good results. We need a new Sustainable Development Economics, with governments promoting new types of investments. Free-market economics leads to great outcomes for the rich, but pretty miserable outcomes for everyone else. Governments in the United States and parts of Europe are cutting back on social spending, job creation, infrastructure investment, and job training because the rich bosses who pay for politicians’ election campaigns are doing very well for themselves, even as the societies around them are crumbling. Yet Keynesian solutions – easy money and large budget deficits – have also fallen far short of their promised results. Many governments tried stimulus spending after the 2008 financial crisis. After all, most politicians love to spend money they don’t have. Yet the shortterm boost failed in two big ways. First, governments’ debt soared and their credit ratings plummeted. Even the US lost its AAA standing. Second, the private sector did not respond by increasing business investment and hiring enough new workers. Instead, companies hoarded vast cash reserves, mainly in tax-free offshore accounts. Yet private-sector investment today depends on investment by the public sector. Our age is defined by this complementarity. Unless the public sector invests, and invests wisely, the private sector will continue to hoard its funds or return them to shareholders in the forms of dividends or buybacks. The problem with both free-market and Keynesian economics is that they misunderstand the nature of modern investment. Both schools believe that investment is led by the private sector, either because taxes and regulations are low (in the free-market model) or because aggregate demand is high (in the Keynesian model). The key is to reflect on six kinds of capital goods: business capital, infrastructure, human capital, intellectual capital, natural capital, and social capital. All of these are productive, but each has a distinctive role. www.thereporterethiopia.com Sustainable... page 31 Vol. XIX No. 951 |11 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment C/ D ?G (On the occasion of the 3rdd anniversary of the demise of H.E. Kim Jong Il, great leader of Korean people) We are going to mark soon the 3rd anniversary of the passing away of H.E. Kim Jong Il (December 17, 2011). Observing the day with a great deal of sadness, not only the Korean people but also the world progressive people vividly recollect H.E. Kim Jong Il’s ever-lasting exploits. Kim Jong Il, the eternal General Secretary of the Workers’ Party of Korea and the eternal Chairman of the DPRK National Defence Commission, was a great master of independent politics among others which wrote a special chapter in the book of the world history of politics. Songun politics not only defended socialism but brought about a new turning point in the building of a thriving socialist country in the DPRK, smashing every high-handed challenge of the US. This struck the world with admiration. “The DPRK is humbling the US, saying what it wants to say under the eyes of the world,” “The DPRK is the only country in the world countering the US with hard line in the face of the latter’s highhandedness and arbitrariness,” “The US is put on the defensive by the independent Songun politics of the DPRK,” and “The US leads the world and the DPRK leads the US.” His political philosophy was the Juche idea recognized by the international community as the guiding ideology of the cause of independence. The Juche for one’s own destiny and one has also the capacity for hewing out one’s own destiny. Kim Jong Il thoroughly applied this idea in the revolution and construction. Maintaining independence, peace and friendship as the fundamental ideal of the DPRK in its external activities, Kim Jong Il paid deep attention to the building of an independent, new world. When socialism collapsed in several countries one after another towards the close of the last century, the DPRK remained unperturbed because it had been guided by the line of independence put forward by Kim Jong Il. At the time when the anti-socialist forces fussed about the “end of socialism,” Kim Jong Il made public important works including The Historical Lesson in Building Socialism and the General Line of Our Party, Abuses of Socialism Are Intolerable and Socialism Is a Science, in " # and the inevitability of its triumph and made a solemn declaration that socialist Korea would never deviate from nor vacillate on the road it had chosen. Most noteworthy in his political achievements is Songun politics. The imperialist allied forces led by the United States which had appeared as the “only superpower” after the end of the cold war committed arbitrariness and high-handedness in the international arena, taking advantage of the destruction of the balance of forces on the planet, and resorted to open aggression upon and intervention in the countries they were not happy with. In particular, they launched an all-out offensive against the DPRK, which was unswervingly following the road of socialism under the unfurled banner of anti-imperialist independence, in ~Q#QQ< In the light of the prevailing situation, Kim Jong Il held higher the banner of Songun. He formulated Songun politics as the basic mode of socialist politics. Thanks to his Songun politics the military strength of the DPRK was markedly reinforced and the DPRK became a military power which no enemy, how powerful he may be, dare to attack. Despite the all-out offensive by the imperialist allied forces, the DPRK staunchly defended its sovereignty and socialism. He conducted energetic external activities to strengthen the antiimperialist independent forces of the world. In the new century he visited the People’s Republic of China several times, developing friendship between the DPRK and PRC and giving a powerful impetus to the common struggle of the peoples of the two countries to defend the socialist cause and global peace. He also paid several visits to the Russian Federation to put the DPRK-Russia friendship on a new stage and invigorate the international efforts to build an independent world. "" including a top-level delegation from the European Union to give full play to the validity and vitality of the independent foreign policy of the DPRK. As a result, countries which had slighted or kept away from the DPRK in the past made changes of direction: they took the road of improving relations with the DPRK. In a period spanning some years over 20 countries established or reestablished diplomatic relations with the DPRK: among them were most of the West European countries including Italy, UK, the Netherlands, Germany and Spain, and EU, Canada, Brazil, New Zealand, Kuwait and Bahrain. The might and vitality of Kim Jong Il’s independent politics were also #] era by the north and south of Korea under the ideal of By Our Nation < # ` it by their own efforts. As a result, the June 15 Joint Declaration was adopted in 2000 and the October 4 Declaration in 2007, thus setting up " < Kim Jong Il, who always led the cause of independence of the Korean people and the cause of global independence, will live forever in the history of world politics as a great master of independent politics. www.thereporterethiopia.com 12| Vol. XIX No. 951 “ Opinion The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Challenges smallholders face at the dawn of mechanized, large-scale agribusiness is one of these controversial issues. On one of the focused discussions during the LPI Conference on November 12, a scholar by the name Milu Muyanga (PhD) from Tegemeo Institute in Nairobi, Kenya had a presentation entitled, ‘Small may not be beautiful in Kenya: farm size-productivity relationship revisited’. Small is indeed beautiful! By Yonas A. Yimer Within the last few months Addis Ababa hosted a number of conferences on agriculture the latest one of these being the ‘African Land Policy Initiative Conference (LPI) held at the African Commission (AUC) from Union November 11-14. An ordinary person, who managed to attend a few of these conferences, can easily notice that we really are on transformation though a lot of questions remain unanswered and a lot more even contentious. Challenges smallholders face at the dawn of mechanized, large-scale agribusiness is one of these controversial issues. On one of the focused discussions during the LPI Conference on November 12, a scholar by the name Milu Muyanga (PhD) from Tegemeo Institute in Nairobi, Kenya had a presentation entitled, ‘Small may not be beautiful in Kenya: farm size-productivity relationship revisited’. Having no luxury of space to respond to the details of his arguments I would rather take a few more lines to justify the beauty of smallholders that we all need to celebrate. The United Nations has declared 2014 as the International Year of Family Farming (IYFF). And it had a reason to. On its background paper for the State of Food and Agriculture 2014, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) estimated that there are at least 570 million farms worldwide, of which more than 500 million can be considered family farms. And more than 475 million farms are less than 2 hectares in size. Well isn’t this a reason enough to celebrate IYFF? If no, let’s add a little more then. In 2010, the African Development Bank (AfDB) reported that family farms represent up to 80 percent of all farm holdings in Africa and globally they feed 70 percent of the world’s populations. According to International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), ‘the IYFF aims to promote new development policies, particularly at the national but also regional levels, that will help smallholder and family farmers eradicate hunger, reduce rural poverty and continue to play a major role in global food security through small-scale, sustainable agricultural production.’ Despite this claim by the IYFF, we have witnessed most people tending to belittle the value of smallholders and promote large-scale agricultural investments. Mechanized large-scale farming is highly criticized of exporting employment opportunities from Africa to the developed countries because the gigantic farming machines are fabricated outside of Africa and a single one of them performs in an hour what hundreds of people could in a day. Smallscale farming, on the other hand, has promising employment opportunities for the burgeoning youth of Africa if our researches provide solutions to ease the labor with better farming equipments and techniques based on indigenous Small is... page 33 Opinion + he corporatocracy team took different stages and fashions from time to time to precipitately exhibit themselves into the political purview of Somalia after formal government apparatus ended officially in 1991, the metamorphosis trajectory in which this coperotocracy... Somalia: the quintessential banana republic creeping in once again By Ali Sheikh In the Somalia republic, unlike in other parts of African countries and elsewhere, clannish psyche largely determines the power and the impending clan identity that keeps the political rift within them so apart. In 1991 President Said Barre was overthrown by opposing clans. But they failed to agree on a replacement and plunged the country into lawlessness and clan warfare. Afterwards, Somalia turns to be a global icon of a failed state. Total submissiveness to a certain selfish ideology camouflaged with a vague and unambiguous self-imposed interpretation contrary to the “ideal Islamic school of thoughts” intentionally destined to sharpen the divisions and amplified further the uncertainty of realizing unity of purpose that would have otherwise paved the way to a stable and democratic state in Somalia long before all hell broke loose. All international communities’ attempts to lay feet a stable government in Somalia did not materialize in the past and all endeavors were pulled down by the little known Mogadishu corporatocracy (Mega-business owners). The corporatocracy team took different stages and fashions from time to time to precipitately exhibit themselves into the political purview of Somalia after formal government apparatus ended officially in 1991, the metamorphosis trajectory in which this coperotocracy passed through during the last 20 years of statelessness in Somalia include in this order; first from warlordism (financed by Mogadishu-Mega-business owners to provide protection to their wealth), to Islamism (Islamic Union of Courts) en route to unprecedented end of extremist Al-Shabaab group, a very miserable ending. Very imperceptibly, and of course in a boom and bust modus operandi, the Mogadishu-Mega-business owners posed endless intimidation to any transitional government formed that stands out to oppose the corporatocracy fraternity interest for the last two decades. seems unaffected and survived even after Al-Shabaab was meddling southern Somalia control. In 2006 by the rise of Islamists who gained control of much of the south, including the capital, after their militias kicked out the warlords who had ruled the roost for 15 years. With the backing of Ethiopian troops, forces loyal to the interim administration seized control from the Islamists at the end of 2006. Islamist insurgents - including the AlShabaab group, which later emerged and subsequently declared allegiance to Al-Qaeda and in 2012 announced its merger with the global Islamist terrorist group - fought back against the government, regaining control of most of southern Somalia by early January 2009, immediately after Ethiopia pulled its troops out from Somalia. Soon after, Al-Shabaab fighters took control of Baidoa, formerly a key monopoly of the transitional government, but the Mogadishu-Mega-business group still From this stage, ideal matters of coexisting Mogadishu Coperotocracy together were not possibly being agreed upon by themselves, and thus they started falling apart further. Of late, one powerful team emerged called “DamulJadiid” (the New blood), this Islamic organization was formally the out sprout of Al-Islah an affiliate of Somalis Muslim Brotherhood (Ikhwaanul Muslimiinka Somaalia), this fraternity portrayed themselves in two segment, on one end, they are moderate Muslims, on the other end they are true Mogadishu Economic Hit Men (MEHM), they dominate the Mega-businesses in Mogadishu, control learning institutions, and formed of late their own research institute; “Heritage Institute for Policy Studies (HIPS)”among the unknown agenda of the HIPS www.thereporterethiopia.com Somalia... page 33 Vol. XIX No. 951 |13 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 FEATURE Haile Gebrselassie From athletics to the boardroom By Lerato Mbele Haile Gebrselassie is the most famous man in Ethiopia. The double Olympic gold medalist and five-time world champion over 10,000m had a glittering athletics career and is now a successful and busy entrepreneur. the city and the nearby construction sites prompts a few questions about the investment choices he has made, which have turned him into a wealthy businessman. He plays down the role of his property business though, saying it has not yielded high returns. So when you manage to get an interview with him, you do not want to be late. Imagine our dismay then as we arrived at the Alem Building, affectionately named after Haile’s wife, to be told that a power cut meant the lifts were not working and we had to lug our cameras and equipment up eight flights of stairs to the top of the complex. Using the winnings from his athletics career Haile first dabbled in real estate by building a multipurpose center in Addis Ababa. Fortunately we got there before he did (he was also apparently delayed by the broken lifts). Coffee is the mainstay of the Ethiopian economy. It is the country’s largest export commodity and more than 20 million smallholders are involved in the trade. When he does enter, wearing a charcoal grey suit and blue shirt, the 41-year-old smiles broadly and apologizes for the power cut. He appears to be breathing normally, unaffected by the climb up the stairs. He laughs it off and reminds us that he has lived most of his life in Addis Ababa, the highest city in Africa, and by now he’s used to the high altitude and also the frequent power cuts. New ventures However, he later chose to diversify his portfolio by buying land for a coffee plantation. The sector is so lucrative that a commodity exchange was established through which farmers working in cooperative unions can sell to the New York market through facilitated deals. For the “emperor of Ethiopian athletics”, coffee farming is a fairly recent venture, but it has already proven to be a profitable investment. “We have 1,500 hectares of land and we [used] 500 of that to plant full of coffee in two years,” he says. “Now we export organic coffee to other countries.” But he goes on: “That’s not enough, we in Ethiopia are rich in different resources.” Which explains his latest endeavor into the mining arena. However, with mining companies still prospecting for gold, it may be a while before anyone can assess the full potential of a new mining industry in Ethiopia. Haile is obviously proud of his success in business, but he says people who assume that opportunities came easily to him because of his fame would be wrong. Shaking his head, he refers to the earlier electricity cuts and says, “Me too, I am affected.” In addition, he says that he had to build the road leading to his coffee farm, because if he had waited for the government it may have taken five or six years. Turning to athletics, he was asked whether it was hard to make the shift from the track to the boardroom. He admits that he needed to make some From athletics... page 32 The panoramic view from his office of www.thereporterethiopia.com 14| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 COMMENTARY + M ore than 50 South Sudanese and international human rights organisations have called for an arms embargo to be imposed on both sides, in an effort to make further conflict less feasible. The rights groups wanted the regional mediators IGAD to inform the UN Security Council of a ‘clear request’ to impose the embargo. Would an arms embargo help end South Sudan’s civil war? By James Copnall In filthy camps for the displaced, thatched huts in half-forgotten villages, and Juba’s proud new concrete buildings, South Sudanese are waiting. As the rainy season peters out, and the deadlines rush to expiration, everyone wants to know whether a meaningful peace agreement will be signed. Alongside the sort of optimism born of desperation, there is also the fear that the squabble over power, and other issues, will lead to renewed heavy fighting. Can leaders from both sides overcome their differences, their desire for revenge, and their overwhelming need for power? If not, if the war rumbles back to a heightened state of intensity, if thousands more are killed, and hundreds of thousands more displaced, there must be consequences. Already the US and the EU have imposed sanctions on individual commanders accused of breaking the cessation of hostilities agreement. To date, though, these have been on field commanders rather than on those with real decisionmaking power. More than 50 South Sudanese international human rights and organisations have called for an arms embargo to be imposed on both sides, in an effort to make further conflict less feasible. The rights groups wanted the regional mediators IGAD to inform the UN Security Council of a ‘clear request’ to impose the embargo. IGAD did not go quite that far, but the mediators were unusually direct in the November 7 communique following IGAD’s 28th extraordinary summit. South Sudan’s neighbours threatened collective action, including, but not limited to, asset freezes, travel bans, and the ‘denial of the supply of arms and ammunition, and any other material that could be used in war’. The threat of regional sanctions is now explicit, along with the possibility of further US and EU action, and even UN measures too. But how likely is it that sanctions will be applied? The first point to note is the extent to which IGAD drives international thinking about South Sudan. Individual countries or entities may opt to punish the South Sudanese leaders, but UN sanctions are unlikely unless IGAD acts first. There is some logic to this. After all, IGAD, for better or worse, is in charge of the mediation process. It is also difficult to see how meaningful sanctions could be imposed on South Sudan if neighbouring countries were not prepared to apply them. Second, the terms of IGAD’s sanctions threat are interesting. Targeted sanctions Would an arms... page 32 VIEWPOINT + By Gordon Brown The children’s revolution Two tragic and haunting images have emerged this year: hooded Islamic State executioners holding their knives to the necks of innocent victims, and masked medical workers bravely fighting an uphill battle against an Ebola outbreak for which the world was not prepared. But the year’s lasting legacy will be an even more extensive disaster, with recovery taking years, if not decades: nearly two million newly displaced children, trapped in conflict zones across Iraq, Syria, Gaza, the Central African Republic, and elsewhere. These children have joined the ranks of 25 million displaced boys and girls worldwide – a number equivalent to the population of a midsize European country and the largest in the 70 years since the end of World War II. Images of vulnerable, desolate refugee children – likely to be displaced for a decade or more – have become so common that the world seems unable to comprehend what it is seeing. But the plight of child refugees is only one reason why a new approach to children’s rights is needed. This year, an estimated 15 million school-age girls will become child brides, forced into marriage against their will. Some 14 million boys and girls below the age of 14 are child laborers, many forced to work in the most hazardous of conditions. And 32 million girls are denied the basic right to attend school, owing to gender discrimination; around 500,000 of them are trafficked each year. In the 1950s, the fight against colonialism dominated world politics. In the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, great civil-rights battles were waged against racial discrimination and apartheid, followed by struggles to advance the rights of the disabled and sexual minorities. It is our generation’s task to tackle the civil-rights movement’s unfinished business, by ending the exploitation of children, especially girls, and ensuring compulsory universal education. To mark the 25th anniversary of the www.thereporterethiopia.com United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), I, along with this year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner, Kailash Satyarthi, and the head of the United Kingdom’s Overseas Development Institute, Kevin Watkins, am calling on the world community to offer practical support to the burgeoning civil-rights struggle of young people. We can do more to end child labor, child marriage, child trafficking, and discrimination against girls, by not only demanding the proper policing of domestic laws, but also by establishing a new International Children’s Court, buttressed by a credible reporting and The children’s... page 35 Vol. XIX No. 951 |15 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com 16| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Playing her violin in London Café, Tsehay Tesfaye, 35, one of the three famous violinists, only worried about the harmony of the music the group plays. Immersed in the music, she never gave due attention to the sexist remarks. However, on one of those unfortunate days it was not only verbal assault that offended her – she was slapped by a man from the audience after she got off the stage. Puzzled by the moment her inside was shaking and she went to the restroom to calm herself down. And what really amazed her was the reason for his action. “People told me that it was because he ‘loved’ me,” she said. SEE THE FULL STORY ON THE NEXT PAGE www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |17 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 By Tibebeselassie Tigabu Playing her violin in London Café, Tsehay Tesfaye, 35, one of the three famous violinists, only worried about the harmony of the music the group plays. Immersed in the music, she never gave due attention to the sexist remarks. However, on one of those unfortunate days it was not only verbal assault that offende ed her – she was slapped by a man from the t audience after she got off the stage.. Puzzled by the moment her inside was shaking and she went to the restroom to calm herself down. And what really ama azed her was the reason for his action. “People told me that it was because he ‘loved’ me,” she said. Many Ethiopians recognizze the three women since they are the first female violin playing trio. The non n-existence of instrumentalists is visible. Going into different live music ve enues, music studios, weddings and other functions there arre no women music instrrumentalists. Many questiion if they even enrolll in music schools, an nd if they do, where arre they? For lon ng the role of a woman in society y has been limite ed to raising a fam mily. This has confin ned women to ho ome and has hinde ered them from exploring what th he world has to offerr. One of the areas w where there are fewe er women in Ethiopia is the art scene. Tsehay sa ays that she has sacrific ced a lot to be where she iss today. It is not only herr individual trials and tribulations. t It is, rather, her friends, whom she con nsiders her sisters, who also faced difficulties. Nowadays, she is grate eful for what she and the group have achieved a but she does not forget the ro oad she had traveled. Growing up, she loved music but she never thought that sh he would be a violinist. She was inttroduced to violin when she was littlle after she saw Sudanese musicians playing the instrument. Her four years sstay in Yared www.thereporterethiopia.com music school taught her patience since mastering the instrument was very difficult. Though her parents despised the idea of her musical career, she went on her own to pursue her dream. After graduation she instantly found a chance to perform at the Ethiopian National Theater with other artists and that was when the trio was born. Approached by an owner of a night club called Twins, the three violinists started their music odyssey around 1994. Being on the stage gave her a different feeling but her club experience changed things. She felt that the audience was not ready for their music. That was one of the toughest and frustrating moments in her life. There were recurring harassments and sexist comments. She says that for those who were not strong it was unbearable. “It was the almighty that gave me strength,” she told The Reporter. At times there were drunks who wanted to silence them and their music. They were insulted and, according to her, there were amorous advances. In some instances, they were seen as not musicians but as prostitutes. One of her experiences was at Wabi Shebelle Hotel where a foreigner who wiped his shoes with dollars gave them one hundred dollar each (the ones he used to wipe his shoes with). She was humiliated and threw back the money. “This was too much to take,” she said. On the other hand, there were people who adored their music and who supported them and this gave them strength. Her husband was also not supportive. He was not comfortable with her late night outings or her persistent dedication to music. So sacrificing her marriage was not a pleasant choice but she says it had to be done. Apart from that they were struggling financially. They used to go around to find gigs and in some instances had to perform for free. It was not only classical music that the trio played. Eventually, The odyssey... page 27 18| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 PROFILE A rap star from the “Dimple of Norway” to Ethiopia after Aster Aweke, renowned Ethiopian soul artist, and a teenage philanthropist, Hanna Godefa, a Canadian-born student who has cultivated a desire of giving since the age of seven. “It was a big day in my life,” Abelone remarked upon her appointment. She accepted her appointment during a fund-raising program at Alliance Ethio-Francaise dubbed ‘10,000 happy birthdays’ to help mothers in Malawi and Ethiopia. On the occasion she performed both in Amharic and English. By Henok Reta She was appointed as UNICEF’s ambassador to Ethiopia just a few days ago. Born and raised in Stavern, a small town affectionately known as “Dimple of Norway”, from an Ethiopian parents, Abelone Melese, is an aspiring hip-hop artist. She brilliantly contested in the Norway Talent Show 2014 playing the popular hip-hop genre music together with her own song. Although she missed out on winning the 500,000 Norwegian krone finishing a head of the 1000 contestants in the talent competition, she managed to be among the top ten finalists. Following her first appearance in the show, Abelone became famous both in Norway and Ethiopia. “She is a talented rapper,” Beza Mekonen, 16-year-old Ethiopian hip-hop fan says. Indeed, Abelone, a 20-year-old rapper and activist appears to be an inspiring young talent influencing many young daughters in Ethiopia. It is not the first time that Abelone performed on the Ethio-Francaise stage though. Wearing a typical Ethiopian traditional dress, she played at the same stage last week (Nov. 21) commemorating the International Day of the Girl Child organized by UNICEF and the Ministry of Women, Children and Youth Affairs (MoWCYA). Effective as of November 20, the two-year agreement she signed with UNICEF will see her active engagement with women and children in Ethiopia and Malawi. “I have always wanted to help women and children who do not have the opportunities to reach their higher potential,” she said. Driven by a strong resistance to racism, she started singing her feelings as a child before she decided to take her talent to the show. In her final stage performance, where Abelone played We here now, one of her songs about racism, she appeared exceptionally high-spirited. “The place where I was brought up is like any other place in Europe where racism is clearly observed,” she said. And that is why she thinks the talent show could be a good opportunity to send her anti-racism message. Although Abelone has been to the land of her parents a several times, this time, however, her visit to Ethiopia appears to be historic and more memorable than the others. UNICEF appointed her as its ambassador to Ethiopia and Malawi. Abelone is the third female artist to be named ambassador of UNICEF Photo By: Reporter/Mesfen Solomon Abelone also admits that her father, Solomon Melese, who is a song writer, occupies a big place in her music. Although he played a role in her love for music, Abelone says that the racial segregation she experience as a child in the smallest town of Stavern contributed much to her rap music. However, she did not want to downplay the big the support and admiration of Norwegian funs was during the time of the contest. Abelone has high hopes for her ambassadorship. “Working with UNICEF as national ambassador will allow me to help defend the rights of children: their right to education, health, nutrition and sanitation,” she explains. Patricia DiGiovanni, UNICEF’s Ethiopia representative, hopes that Abelone could be a young role model for her peers and young women everywhere. “Her candid personality coupled with her strong presence in the public domain sends a powerful message that can reach the hearts and minds of children and youth all over the world,” she said. Her father could not be happier about her life. “She will do more important things in her life,” he says confidently. In fact, it looks like Abelone’s story is going to stay in people’s minds for a long time with a Norwegian broadcasting corporation planing to do a documentary film about her life. “I’m happy. I think it will bring me something great,” she said. www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |19 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment Where Quality & Value Meet NOW MANUFACTURING Fire Resistant & Anti-Burglary Safes & Cabinets We Specialize in Office & Household Furniture : Executive & Managerial Tables, Cubicles & Workstations, Office Chairs, Fabric & Leather Sofa Sets, Fire Proof Safes & Cabinets, Furnishing materials, Space management, and Turn Key Interior Design. Head Office & Main Showroom is Located at HIsham Complex infront of Yordanos Hotel Tel: +251-115-534317/26 | Fax: +251-115-534351 Website: technostylegroup.com | Email: [email protected] www.thereporterethiopia.com 20| Vol. XIX No. 951 Society The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Kangaroo mother care for newborns recommended By Henok Reta Sisaynesh Bedilu, 38, drifts back in remorse whenever she reminisces about the loss of her newborn baby girl three years ago. Although Sisaynesh delivered her baby in a hospital in Fiche town of the Oromia Regional State, the preterm baby (premature birth) died of an infection shortly afterwards. “The pediatrician made every effort to cure my baby but couldn’t succeed,” Sisaynesh says in grief-stricken voice. At first, she blamed herself for not giving proper care to her baby. Her sad days behind her, she is now among a handful of mothers who attend antenatal care (care related to pregnancy) in the hospital she had given birth. In Ethiopia, an estimated 84,400 newborns die within the first month of birth and an additional 78,000 are stillborn (born dead) while 13,000 mothers die each year, according to The Lancet Series of Every Newborn. “Unless we start giving proper care to newborns, we might have to wait 100 years to reach the status of neonatal care (care for newly-born babies) in the developed world,” Bogale Worku (MD), executive director of the Ethiopian Pediatrics Society, says. In spite of the number of newborn deaths in Ethiopia, The Lancet Series of Every Newborn says the country is currently ranked fifth in the world as having the greatest potential to save maternal prenatal (a number of weeks immediately before and after birth) and neo-natal lives by 2015. “There is tremendous opportunity and we know what needs to be done to ensure every Ethiopian mother and her baby have a healthy start,” Gary L. Darmstadt (MD), Lancet Series author and senior fellow at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, says. Launching the Lancet Series of Every Newborn 2014 4 in Addis Ababa last Monday, the Ministry of Health (MoH) and other international agencies lauded the success stories achieved by Ethiopia. However, they were also cognizant of the daunting and lengthy task of reducing newborn and maternal deaths in the country. Save the Children, UNICEF and the Gates Foundation, organizations which have made significant contributions to Ethiopia’s remarkable achievements such as in achieving the MDG goal of reducing childhood deaths ahead of time, say more needs to be done. Suggestions such as expanding working plans and strategies to remote areas where there is no proper functioning heath care service, overcoming cultural resistance in some parts of the country and calling for more investment in quality care at birth were forwarded. Yet, easy interventions, including the www.thereporterethiopia.com promotion of breastfeeding, neo-natal resuscitation, Kangaroo Mother Care for preterm babies, and the prevention and treatment of infections were also suggested as ideal mechanisms to address the problem. Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) is one concept less understood and overlooked in Ethiopia, which experts say is a promising way that could positively impact neo-natal care. Recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO), KMC is a form of care, initiated in hospitals, that involves teaching mothers and other caregivers how to keep newborns warm through continuous skin-to-skin contact on the mother’s chest. KMC has been shown to prevent infections, promote breastfeeding, regulate the baby’s temperature, breathing, and brain activity, and encourages mother-andbaby bonding. Almost two decades of implementation and research have made it clear that KMC is more than an alternative to incubator care, states the WHO. It is a powerful, easy to use method to promote the health and wellbeing of infants born pre-term as well as full-term as well as a gentle and effective method that avoids the agitation routinely experienced in a busy ward with preterm infants, according to the WHO. It was first introduced by Rey and Martinez in Bogota, Colombia, where it was developed as an alternative to inadequate and insufficient incubator care for those pre-term newborn infants who had overcome initial problems and required only to feed and grow. Hence, mothers’ care in the early days of birth is considered crucial for the healthy growth of a child. “76,800 mothers and babies can be saved each year in Ethiopia if the country continues with its aggressive efforts [of reducing child and maternal mortality] according to our new findings,” Gary says. As most published experience and research concerning KMC comes from health facilities where care was initiated with the help of skilled health workers, mothers can be trained in rather simple way, experts say. Once a mother is confident in the care she gives her baby, she continues it at home under guidance and with frequent visits for specialized follow-up. “Now is a critical time for Ethiopia to continue to take action to end preventable newborn deaths.” Haddis Tadesse, country representative of Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, says. According to the Foundation, a child dies every six minutes in Ethiopia. Despite the great success Ethiopia has demonstrated in reducing childhood deaths (MDG4), newborns now represent a growing proportion of childhood Vol. XIX No. 951 |21 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 deaths, Haddis added. High-impact intervention such as immediate and executive breastfeeding, skin-to-skin contact and thermal care could bring about an enormous change to scale up the efforts being made. “In this regard, we are keen on improving the situation in remote areas of the country like Afar and Somali,” Haddis told The Reporter. Some regions fair better than others in terms of reducing child and maternal death with deep-rooted religious and cultural resistances hindering rapid progress. As a research conducted by Save the Children-Ethiopia suggests cultural resistance is amongst the challenges halting the efforts. “Our five-year research known as Community-based Interventions for Newborns in Ethiopia (COMBINE) shows community-based treatment of severe neonatal infections can reduce newborn deaths after the first day of life by as much as 30 percent,” John Graham, country director for Save the Children says. Bridging the gap between communities in remote areas and access to modern health care will always remain a huge obstacle, the Ministry of Health (MoH) says. More importantly, MoH has acknowledged the effectiveness of the KMC and other methods to add to the success registered within the health sector. “We are working hard to overcome all the challenges and the shortcomings pointed out,” Ephrem Tekle (MD), Maternal and Newborn Children Health Directorate Director at MoH, says. Evidences of the effectiveness and safety of the KMC is available only for preterm infants without medical problems, the so-called stabilized newborns. By facilitating breastfeeding it offers noticeable advantages in cases of severe morbidity. The benefits of KMC are recognized in both low – and high-income countries. Ongoing research and observational studies on KMC are assessing the effective use of the method in situations where neo-natal intensive care or referrals are not available, and where health workers are properly trained. In such settings, KMC before stabilization may represent the best chance of healthy survival, experts explain. For both the authors and the presenters of the launch of the Lancet Every Newborn series it does not require countries like Ethiopia to have greater wealth and more functional health system to reduce infant mortality. The method could well be implemented in Ethiopia by the acclaimed Health Extension Workers, they add. Cost-effective solutions feasible for low-income countries are available, and one of these interventions is expanding the KMC method. Latest data indicate that three million maternal and newborn deaths and still births can be prevented each year around the world with proven interventions such as KMC. These interventions can be implemented for an annual cost of USD1.15 per person. Rwanda is the only country in sub-Sahara Africa to put itself amongst countries which reduced their Newborn Mortality Rate (NMT) by 50 percent between 2000 and 2012. According to the Lancet Series, the Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com progress in Ethiopia is ‘so far so good but so much to do’ and the country could achieve something like Rwanda as long as it keeps up with its well-planned action of interventions. 22| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 INTERVIEW Royalty system taking copyright issue up one notch Berhanu Adelo is the Director General of the Office of Ethiopian Intellectual Property Protection Office. Before joining the Office Berhanu had served as head of Cabinet Affairs in the Office of the Prime Minister. The former law instructor at the Civil Service University is also remembered well in relation to the debates on the civil society and associations (CSOs) draft legislation. Berhanu talked to Solomon Goshu and Mikias Sebsibe of the Reporter on the recently approved amendment to the Copyright and Neighboring Rights Protection Proclamation (No.410/2004) and its enforcement mechanisms. Excerpts: www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |23 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 The Reporter: As we all know, your office initiated the amendment on the Copyright and Neighboring Rights Protection Proclamation (CNRPP) the House of Peoples’ Representatives passed last week. Can you explain what the rationale behind this amendment is? Berhanu Adelo: To begin with, the existing proclamation is over a decade old. And as you know, the industries that are governed by the CNRP Proclamation are very dynamic by their nature. Especially with the advent of digital technology in the area of printing, the nature of business in such industries and the law that is needed to govern them properly has to be compatible. advances in digital Nowadays, technology have made it very difficult to protect the intellectual property right of artistic works. The technology has made it very easy to make digital copies of artistic works and transfer such works from one corner of the world to another. This has created a problem to protect the right of the owner of such properties very difficult around the world. If you think about it, back when the Burn Convention on CNRP was signed, the world was not as digitally advanced as it is today. So, the amendment is aimed at providing legal protection that is compatible with an ever-growing development in the digital areas. In doing so, we have assessed various countries in Africa and more advanced nations in the world. And, hence, we have introduced some basic changes to the proclamation such as the royalty system. In the existing law, right holders of an intellectual property are amply protected when making digital copies of protected rights for the purpose of distributing it for commercial use. However, there are now various entities like broadcasters, music shops, clubs, public transportation and the like that are using music and other artistic works for commercial services without making any due payments to owners of the properties. In this regard, we have identified three groups. The first are broadcasters who will reap direct benefit from artistic works for whom they do not make any payments. Meanwhile, there are also those that do not derive direct benefit from the artistic works, but make a contribution to the economic value that they are making. The second group includes business entities like bars, restaurants, cafes and the like. There is also a third group for whom the so-called artistic works render an indirect benefit. This group includes beauty parlors, lodges and the like. Now, the existing proclamation had gaps in terms of having a system that would have users pay the appropriate royalty to right holders. One of the things the new proclamation brought to the system was how right holders would form their own administrative body that would collect royalties and distribute it to them. The new amendment also deals with issues of determining royalty schemes. Apart from that, the amendment also included other things like adding fines to copyright infringements on top of the prison terms, which was the only penalty under the existing law. Other than that, we have also sought to bring about uniformity in the right of intellectual property owners. The existing law says an owner of a work retains his right as long as he lives plus fifty years after death. However, there was confusion as to when fifty years after death begins to be counted. The amendment clarifies this by stating that counting begins from the first day of January after the death of the right holder. Lastly we have also extended the mandate of CNRP to include the applied arts realm. How was the participation stakeholders in the process amending the CNRP? of of All in all, some 12 stakeholder associations in the field of intellectual property rights have been participating with us. We have had a number of discussions with stakeholders. So, owners of such rights were involved in the drafting process all the way. I think we could have not done it without the participation of the owners and their associations. We have sent a delegation to China and other African countries like Malawi to obtain valuable experience. Apart from that, owners of the rights, other stakeholders like, broadcasters were consulted in the process. Especially, with our discussion with broadcasters, we have come to learn that they had a view that maintains royalty fee to be bad for newly mushrooming FM radio stations in the country. In fact, around the world the perceptions that are against royalties have a lot of sympathizers. Furthermore, we also had a debate with DJs which resulted in the establishment of the DJs professional associations and they are approaching us to work together with them. Also, these groups attended when we held the last public hearing on the amendment and most have agreed to join this system and work with us. Do you think the final version of the amendment was to the satisfaction of all stakeholders? Of course, owners of protected works were very delighted. Aware of the heated debate in final public hearing, they were worried that the amendment might not be approved by the House. So, they were delighted when it did. From the side of the broadcasters as well, they know that this was the international standard and that now they are ready to work with the one another. In other countries, the collective management society (consortium of associations in the field of intellectual property) is given a statutory status to enforce the implementation of such rights. However, in case of Ethiopia the law does not give such special right to the collective society. Why is that? In the existing law, the responsibility to enforce intellectual property right was given to the right holder. The law does not want the involvement of the government in the enforcement of such rights. This was done because the very essence of intellectual property right is structured in such a way that the right gives a monopoly privilege to the owner for a certain time to. When the time lapses, it will join the public domain. So, ultimately, the right to allow, prohibit or sue is a decision left to the owner of the protected work. Now, this is the international standard. Our law, as well, is part of this international standard. When we introduce a royalty system it is one way of enforcement. So, the owners of the rights themselves do reserve the www.thereporterethiopia.com right to decide on the rate of royalty scheme. What our office does is, maybe, check that the rate is reasonable. Now, the amendment would also give the right to collect royalty even for foreign intellectual property works used in our nation. So they do have a large mandate in enforcement. Furthermore, they are given the regulatory power to give permission to foreign artists who want to organize some sort of concerts or public viewing of their artistic work in Ethiopia. But, they need support until they can stand on their own two feet. They can do this through the collective management society. Still, they can establish professional associations, which are different from a management society, to better protect the right of their members. What about individual right holders who are not member of the management society? How can their right be protected? How can they be represented in the collective management body? What about the copyright and neighboring rights mentioned in proclamation would the two have separate representation in there? The amendment states preconditions for the formation of a collective management society and what needs to be fulfilled. For instance, the law states the number of sector associations established under a collective management society shall Royalty system... page 26 24| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |25 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com 26| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Royalty system... not be less than three. Here we have to be clear that individual associations are just professional associations which will be formed just like any other professional associations. Meanwhile, when we talk of the collective management society we are referring to the consortium of these various associations. Now, the proclamation is not concerned about individual right holders, rather it is with a collective protection. One right owner, for instance, cannot unilaterally say that no royalty can be collected from his artistic work. The collective management society would still claim and collect royalty from songs that belong to artists like Michael Jackson, for instance. Although he has passed away and he is not a member of any professional association and hence the collective society, royalties will be collected from the use of his artistic works in Ethiopia. This is about protecting the industry and not about the individual. This is also in our interest because we require artistic works of our own to be protected elsewhere. Preliminary figures of the study we are conducting indicate that the copyright industry at the moment contributes some 4.7 percent to the GDP. So, it is highly interlinked with the social and economic wellbeing of the nation to see that these rights are protected. CONT`D FROM PAGE 23 body is not reasonable. We also see how the society redistributes royalties to its members as well. We will set reasonable limits on the amount of administrative and operational costs that the body withholds from the collected royalty. Another issue of the responsibility of the management society is protecting foreign works. In this regard, we know that Ethiopia is not yet a signatory of international conventions of IP rights. This is also one of the issues in the country’s accession to the WTO. So, how is this society going to handle the intricacies of such complicated task? The existing law in fact states that any foreign intellectual property would be protected if the products are published in the Ethiopian market within 30 days of their release to the international market. But, beyond that, we are not a signatory to international conventions like the Burn convention and that was the problem. When it comes to royalties it is different. The essence of the decision to charge royalty fee on works that are imported to the country is simple. At the beginning we were thinking about imposing royalty payment on those foreign works where we can have reciprocity of protection for ours. But, we went and reviewed the experience of other nations. Most of them impose royalty whether or not there is reciprocity. Come to think about it, it was a wise approach since not imposing would have a discouraging effect on the local works. Users could resort to not using local artistic works where there is unprotected and free works out there. Now, what we are going to do is simple. We will impose and collect royalty charge on foreign works, whether or not the owner of the rights come and claim it. If they come we will give the royalty to them; otherwise we would still give the protection in our own market. Any owner with the right to claim the royalty can do so within five years. Otherwise it will be put on a special fund dedicated to the development of artistic works in the country. Here what we should also know is that we, too, want others to protect our works in their markets. In the past, for example, since there was no strong collective management society in Africa, there was no way to receive royalties collected on use of African works in many European countries. In this regard, at times the royalty charged on African works used to be pooled to one cache and given to any strong African body that can claim it. So far, we have compiled a lot of experiences as to the modality of royalty schemes. One is the fixed royalty imposition system where users would be rated according to the intensity of their use and pay a fixed, assigned amount periodically. On the other hand, we can also use the proportional rating system where the amount is determined based on the actual usage of a broadcaster or DJ or others in certain time. To this effect, there are also software applications that we can use to keep track of the usage and charge appropriately. There are commentators who argue that the power given to the collective management society, such as devising the scheme of royalty, the category of works on which royalties will be paid and users that will be obliged to pay the royalty, should not be left to the society. What do you say to that? In fact, if we look at the collective management society, its main task, which is collecting royalty and determining the rate, it can be argued that it should be decided at higher level like the council of ministers. But, if you look at it carefully, the nature of the industry is quite intricate. For example, in tangible properties it would be easy to transfer that property once or have a contractual agreement if the buyer is going to drive continued benefit from that property. Now, if you look at intellectual properties, the owner of such property, yes, can once make a transaction and sell the property to a third party for certain monetary gains. However, the nature of the property is such that the third party (the buyer) can use that property to drive additional economic gains without the right holder benefiting anything out of it. When it comes to properties which can be copied and duplicated to offer the same service that the original property gives it this becomes problematic. Now, when you look at the nature of such properties the value that the owner of the property should obtain from the continued use of the property for commercial purposes should be determined, collected and distributed by the owner the property itself, and not by the government. The collective management society represents the property owner, and the owner knows the value that it should get from the use of its property. It is a free market operation. However, the government (the office) would serve us a check-point because the user of the protected works also has the right to use the property for a reasonable amount of payment. We would not stand by and see if the charge imposed by the collective There are enforcement issues regarding copyright infringements. Right owners often complain about their right not being protected properly. So, do you have an implementation strategy this time? Indeed we do have an implementation www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |27 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 The odys ysse ey... they started playing Ethiopian music such as Erikum or added flavors such as Eskista and Guragigna. One of their renowned song is “Hiwot Ende Shekla” (Life Cike Clay) which was attributed to their late saxophonist friend Petros Mekonen. Sometimes they had to stand for eight hours and paid so many sacrifices but finally she feels it paid off. Now they are the celebrated musicians who are invited to different big events like hotel opening, events at the Sheraton, Hilton and even at the National Palace. Now the love they get is overwhelming and they are considered as mentors by many contemporary musicians. Still she does not wish for young musicians to go through what she and her friends went through. With many leaving their career when they get married or starting raising children the few who remain in the industry are seen as exotic. Fikrte Tessema, 36, a violinist and member of the trio is one of them and does not want to reveal the details, especially when it comes to her marriage. There was a time when she played for free but that was only for the love of music. Her story is not different from strategy and it is currently in the drafting process. However, one thing that has to be clear is that the copyrights issue is always with challenges. Especially with the advent of the technology it is very difficult to ensure complete protection of the right holders. The best we can do is to catch up as it advances. For instance, one challenge in Ethiopia is now the audio and video playing apparatus that are imported now do not even accept CDs these days. But, we print our artistic works with CDs here. This is one thing we have to overcome. Overall, we cannot expect the proclamation to be perfect at this time. Another matter with amendment of the CNRP is the provision for the establishment of the tribunal to adjudicate copyrights related issues. Regarding this body, some argue that it takes away a lot of jurisdictions that should have been left to the courts. What is the rationale behind the establishment of the tribunal Tsehay’s. After Yared Music School, she started experimenting with music which gave her joy. During her time at Yared she only played classical music. Playing Ethiopian music was not only discouraged but was not allowed. According to Fikrte, if they were found playing Ethiopian music, there were punishments which range from warning to expulsion. That was when her love for pentatonic sounds grew and she, with her two other member of the group, started playing Anchi Hoye, Tizita, Bati and Ambassel. They were only paid 50 birr per performance when they worked at the national theater and she had to walk from Menilik area to the national theater or to the other clubs. Especially during the nights, they never felt safe. “We died for music,” Fikrte says. Now all that has passed and these days she encourages her daughter and her son to play the violin. Now many young women musicians are forming a trio which gives her deep satisfaction. “We have managed to inspire young women musicians,” she proudly said. ‘Who does she think she is?’ was one of the many comments they heard but for which will be under your office? By its nature the IP matter is known to be far more complicated. And usually, such a tribunal needs high expertise in the area which is better found around IP offices like ours. On the other hand, if you take IP cases to court, they usually take a lot of time since the matter is highly complicated and requires expertise. At the end of the day, the court themselves would be forced to seek expertise opinion to adjudicate such cases. For instance, my office is asked to offer an expert opinion on average 10 a day by courts and the law enforcement in general. The other issue is the IP law which is in effect at the moment. This law leaves too much room for professional expertise, that is for the IP office. For instance, the law gives authority to review trademark claim issues to IP office before the matter can go to court. Of course, there will be a formal appeal process that one party can take their case to court after IP office made its decision known. In CONT`D FROM PAGE 17 Yeshumnesh Taye, 38, her experience is totally different. flute, violin, viola, cello and other string instruments. An associate dean of Addis Ababa University, College of Performing and Visual Arts, she is a flute and piano instructor at Yared. She says that the number of women students who come to Yared are very small which is usually around six. Sometimes only two women might graduate and after graduation many of them might not pursue music as a career. The formation of their band was related to a university project when she was a senior student and with the feedback they got they were encouraged to go ahead with it. “Many of them leave music when they get married and usually it is difficult to come back,” Yeshumnesh told The Reporter. According to Yeshumnesh, the nonexistence of women instrumentalists is related to the gender defined role. Apart from that, Yeshumnesh says that there were few women who made it in the music industry and they did not encourage young musicians to join it. Graduating in flute in the mid-1990s from Yared with a diploma, she started teaching in different schools and did private tutoring for children. After she completed her degree course at Yared, she was hired as an instructor there. In 2007, she formed an only-women-band named Ethio Classic Quintet comprising addition to that, the federal cassation bench recently has passed decision regarding industrial design issues that the IP office should review and exhaust such cases before it can go to the formal court system. This is the existing reality. And the experience elsewhere is the same. So, the rationale is to have a formal tribunal as a local remedy to exhaust issues. But, still the jurisdiction the law accords the tribunal is not as so extensive. What the amendment did is that it gave the tribunal the power to review IP-related civil cases excluding extra contractual ones. The tribunal also does not adjudicate criminal cases arising out of IP issue. The potential economic gain both for the industry and government is obviously another rationale behind the amendment. How do you value this potential gain? In fact, currently we have commissioned a study to determine the economic www.thereporterethiopia.com They perform at different embassies, the national palace and hotels. They play classical musics of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johann Sebastian Bach, Antonio Vivaldi and Ethiopian arrangements. They also play popular music using only instruments. Her experience is different from Tsehay and Fikrte. She says that they are appreciated by the community. The appreciation they get from the audience has enabled them the add new flavors including Latin American music. She says that they do not play at clubs. “We focus on high class events and functions, which I think is one privilege,” she said. Even though it has been decades since Yared was established, it has a long way to go when it comes to involving women. To change that there is a gender office which is opened to encourage women musicians to pursue music. gain from the IP sector. But, this would only show the existing potential of the industry. However, once we have the royalty system up and running the potential for economic gain is immense. Based on the data I have, on average, we have about 30 new movies released to the market per month. This means we have almost one movie per day. This industry is quite lucrative. So, the potential for revenue in tax or other forms of revenues is big. Once, the protection is in place such industries tend to boom in their output. If you take Hollywood, for instance, it contributes about 8 percent to the US economy. And the story is similar with Bollywood and the recently advancing Nigerian (Nollywood) film industry. Protection encourages the sector. Apart from the economic gain it is about protecting the right of the artists and rightful right owners. It has even an impact on the quality of the products themselves. It is a motivating factor. 28| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |29 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com 30| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |31 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 State building... “deliver”. The latter, whose credibility and popularity is falling among the Somalis, is increasingly dependent on shrinking external support. Partly as a result of the pressure to meet external requirements and deadlines, tensions within Somalia’s political elite have been deepening. President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Prime Minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed have been at loggerheads for weeks, in what seems to be the latest episode of a serial political drama. The current standoff shows once more the volatility of clan-based governments led by a President and a Prime Minister who have overlapping, conflicting prerogatives, thanks to a faulty Constitution. This stalemate also reveals an underlying conflict over who is going to take credit for Vision 2016. It seems that Somali politicians are already fighting over the elections’ preparation, no matter how unrealistic the prospect of holding credible elections in 2016 might be. A cornerstone of both Somalia’s Transition Roadmap and Vision 2016, federalism has been playing a major role in fostering Somalia’s political fragmentation. Bringing clan conflict back to the fore, the federalisation process has reignited the debate over autochthony, which pervaded fifteen years of civil war and was only partially appeased by the reassertion of Islamic identities. Moreover, to respond to Villa Somalia’s reluctance towards the implementation of federalism, donors have chosen to support any regional entity going in the “right direction” and able to play with the stability argument. Promoted as a policy to foster “local agency” and mark the paradigm shift from liberal peace to stabilisation, federalism has in fact increased Somalia’s vulnerability to regional and international interference, producing further destabilisation. Federalism is a crucial and controversial issue as it calls the meaning of citizenship into question. This notwithstanding, the donor-driven approach to the implementation of federalism has consisted of a series of ad hoc, partial deals of questionable legitimacy, the Somali public being excluded from decision making. In the latest episode of the federalism series (farce?), the former Parliament Speaker, Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden, was elected as the President of the South CONT`D FROM PAGE 10 West Administration in Baydhabo, on 17 November 2014, two days ahead of the High Level Partnership Forum in Copenhagen. The election’s results were first dismissed by the current Speaker, Mohamed Osman Jawari, then welcomed by Interior Minister Abdullahi Godah Barre and President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud – although he had previously refused to endorse the South West Administration conference – and finally celebrated by the international community (IGAD, EU, and AMISOM). Though absent from the conference in Copenhagen, the United States welcomed the “historic election” of Sharif Hassan Sheikh Aden. The election was so “historic” that, in less than twenty-four hours, it was contested by a group of MPs, rejected by a Somali politician who claimed to be the bona-fide president of the South West Administration, and mired in accusations of Ethiopian meddling. There is an uneasy feeling of déjà vu hovering in the air. With a view to meeting the 2016 deadline, donors have been endorsing friendlies against those opposing certain policies funded by the international community. The competition among Somali politicians for accessing power and capturing financial benefits has been escalating. The New Deal seems, in fact, to be perpetuating some old dynamics, which have contributed to transform Somalia into what Alex de Waal termed a “rentier political market place”. What is at stake here is the credibility of the whole state-building process, which continues to be seen by the Somali public as over-influenced and “contaminated” by foreigners. On the one hand, the “Somali project” supported by Western donors has increasingly been perceived as a never-ending enterprise, with a poor accountability record. On the other hand, al-Shabaab, which still controls large rural areas and retains the ability to carry out attacks in several parts of the country (and beyond Somalia), has been invoking national sentiments and capitalising on the West’s lack of credibility. Against this discouraging background, one can only hope that the Somali people, often celebrated for their resilience, will follow the exhortation contained in a popular song by a band of Somali singers called Qaylodhaan (“to sound the tocsin”): “Don’t tire out until you get your rights”. Ed.’s Note: Anna Bruzzone is a PhD candidate at the University of Warwick. The article first appeared on africanarguments.org. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of The Reporter. Sustainable... “ CONT`D FROM PAGE 10 These agreements promise to shape humanity’s future for the better. If they are to succeed, the new Age of Sustainable Development should give rise to a new Economics of Sustainable Development as well. Business capital includes private factories, machines, companies’ transport equipment, and information systems. Infrastructure includes roads, railways, power and water systems, fiber optics, pipelines, and airports and seaports. Human capital is the education, skills, and health of the workforce. Intellectual capital includes society’s core scientific and technological knowhow. Natural capital is the ecosystems and primary resources that support agriculture, health, and cities. And social capital is the communal trust that makes efficient trade, finance, and governance possible. world markets. Today, however, basic public education is no longer enough; workers need highly specialized skills that come through vocational training, advanced degrees, and apprenticeship programs that combine public and private funding. Transport must be smarter than mere government road building; power grids must reflect the urgent need for low-carbon electricity; and governments everywhere must invest in new kinds of intellectual capital to solve unprecedented problems of public health, climate change, environmental degradation, information systems management, and more. These six forms of capital work in a complementary way. Business investment without infrastructure and human capital cannot be profitable. Nor can financial markets work if social capital (trust) is depleted. Without natural capital (including a safe climate, productive soils, available water, and protection against flooding), the other kinds of capital are easily lost. And without universal access to public investments in human capital, societies will succumb to extreme inequalities of income and wealth. Yet in most countries, governments are not leading, guiding, or even sharing in the investment process. They are cutting back. Free-market ideologues claim that governments are incapable of productive investment. Nor do Keynesians think through the kinds of public investments that are needed; for them, spending is spending. The result is a publicsector vacuum and a dearth of public investments, which in turn holds back necessary private-sector investment. Investment used to be a far simpler matter. The key to development was basic education, a network of roads and power, a functioning port, and access to Governments, in short, need long-term investment strategies and ways to pay for them. They need to understand much better how to prioritize road, rail, power, and port investments; how to make investments environmentally sustainable by moving to a low-carbon energy system; how to train young workers for decent jobs, not only lowemployment; wage service-sector and how to build social capital, in an age when there is little trust and considerable corruption. In short, governments need to learn to think ahead. This, too, runs counter to the economic mainstream. Free-market ideologues don’t want governments to think at all; and Keynesians want governments to think only about the short run, because they take to an extreme John Maynard Keynes’ famous quip, “In the long run we are all dead.” Here’s a thought that is anathema in Washington, DC, but worthy of reflection. The world’s fastest growing economy, China, relies on five-year plans for public investment, which is managed by the National Development and Reform Commission. The US has no such institution, or indeed any agency that looks systematically at publicinvestment strategies. But all countries now need more than five-year plans; they need 20-year, generation-long strategies to build the skills, infrastructure, and low-carbon economy of the twenty-first century. The G-20 recently took a small step in the right direction, by placing new emphasis www.thereporterethiopia.com on increased infrastructure investment as a shared responsibility of both the public and private sectors. We need much more of this kind of thinking in the year ahead, as governments negotiate new global agreements on financing for sustainable development (in Addis Ababa in July 2015); Sustainable Development Goals (at the United Nations in September 2015), and climate change (in Paris in December 2015). These agreements promise to shape humanity’s future for the better. If they are to succeed, the new Age of Sustainable Development should give rise to a new Economics of Sustainable Development as well. Ed.’s Note: Jeffrey D. Sachs is Professor of Sustainable Development, Professor of Health Policy and Management, and Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University. He is also Special Adviser to the United Nations SecretaryGeneral on the Millennium Development Goals. The article was provided to The Reporter by Project Syndicate: the world’s pre-eminent source of original op-ed commentaries. Project Syndicate provides incisive perspectives on our changing world by those who are shaping its politics, economics, science, and culture. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of The Reporter. 32| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Would an arms... are directly tied to any ‘violation of the cessation of the hostilities by any party’. The key point here is that IGAD is not threatening sanctions on leaders who fail to make the necessary concessions needed for peace, merely on those who break the cessation of hostilities. It is not immediately clear if this would target the individual commanders, or those higher up the chain. Is IGAD sending a shot across the bows of Riek Machar and Salva Kiir? Or warning those giving the orders in the field? Linking the sanctions to Cessation of Hostilities violations means that it is particularly important to increase the effectiveness of the monitoring and verification teams. At the moment, they struggle to work in SPLM/A – In Opposition areas. So far, although the monitors have accused both sides of initiating conflict, most of the blame for the violations has been directed at the SPLM/A-IO forces. Both the rebels and the government have expressed, at different times and for different reasons, their reservations about IGAD’s neutrality. In fact, there are strong reasons to question whether CONT`D FROM PAGE 14 IGAD are the right people to adjudicate sanctions. and asset freezes may not be enough to deter further conflict. Uganda is heavily involved militarily in the conflict. Its troops have fought alongside forces loyal to Salva Kiir. Both Uganda and Kenya have strong economic interests in South Sudan too. Neither is particularly likely to want to impose sanctions on those in power in Juba. However, those who commit abuses simply cannot be allowed to escape without punishment. Those who have fled conflict, or been raped by unruly soldiers, or suffered the unnecessary pain of a lost loved one, deserve to know that the world is watching, and will punish anyone who continues to fight. Sudan, for all its public declarations of support for Kiir, has also been accused of supporting his enemy, Riek Machar. The neighbours are all too involved in the conflict to be considered impartial. This idea must be extended, too, to a more general sense of accountability, which has been missing in South Sudan for so long. When the conflict ends, the worst abusers must face justice, both for the sake of their victims, and to deter future fighting. There is a possibility that any regional punishments will not be a fair reflection of the abuses on the ground. There must also be serious doubts, given their obvious interests, whether the region is really prepared to take the necessary steps to impose sanctions. This is unfortunate, because I believe sanctions are necessary. The AU Commission of Inquiry report on South Sudan will make interesting reading. Several sources suggest a strong draft has already been written, in which names are named. This could form the basis for future prosecutions – if that version makes it out into the public domain. It is certainly possible to argue that they may not be effective. Economic sanctions in Sudan have largely hurt the people, not the politicians. Travel bans Among the sanction options suggested by IGAD, the arms embargo seems the most promising. It has the potential to squeeze the warring parties’ ability in “I believe in action, running is action – running is just what you see… you win or not. In business you have to plan and wait.” He says his biggest challenge was working in a team and not being able to set personal goals. It has been a humbling experience for the man who followed up his success on the track by setting world records in the marathon. Although he has now swapped his running shorts for a dapper suit he still finds joy in running and plans to compete in a race for people over the age of 40. Every day he jogs along the hills of Entoto, a mountainside town outside Addis Ababa. He says the morning air helps him think clearly. Interestingly, there have been moments in his business career when his mind was not so clear. “What I learnt is patience. A marathon is like two hours-plus of running. The 10,000m is less than 30 minutes. The same thing when I switch from running to business – I learn more patience.” He recalls how 15 years ago, he decided to build the first ever cinema that would show locally made Ethiopian films, despite there being no local film industry. Clear thinking His architect questioned the sanity of However one option outlined by IGAD seems to me to contain more risks than potential rewards. Point 4 of the 7 November communique states that: ‘Further, the IGAD region shall, without further reference to the warring Parties, take the necessary measures, if need be, to directly intervene in South Sudan to protect life and restore peace and stability.’ This threat of military action, surely intended to push Kiir and Machar to a deal as quickly as possible, should remain just that: a threat. Already the military presence of the Ugandan troops, and apparent Sudanese support for Machar, has made resolving the conflict more complicated. Regional military action runs the risk of regionalising the conflict, the last thing South Sudan needs. Ed.’s Note: James Copnall is a journalist and author of ‘A Poisonous Thorn in Our Hearts: Sudan and South Sudan’s Bitter and Incomplete Divorce’. He is editor of ‘Making Sense of the Sudans’. The article first appeared on africanarguments.org. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of The Reporter. when he considers what Africa needs to do in order to change the shape of local economies. From athletics... adjustments, especially because business there is no instant success. to fight, if not stop the war entirely. It would need to be thoroughly policed, however, and here regional commitment to the embargo would be vital. CONT`D FROM PAGE 13 the project. Haile laughs heartily when he remembers how it all happened. He found a freelance cameraman, commissioned him to write a script and after a few months an amateur film was made. The first screening had five customers, the next had 10, later 15 and thereafter another film was made. Just like that the local movie industry was born in Addis Ababa. He smirks and shrugs his shoulders, saying, “That’s how one creates something.” Staring out of the window, looking at a city that is rising from being a socialistcontrolled economy into a free market, he makes a simple plea. “If you want to help Africa, don’t bring money. Rather, bring good ideas.” With that thought, the athlete-turnedbusinessman excuses himself, late for a leadership seminar taking place down the road. It is a lesson about how to apply the Japanese kaizen philosophy in your business. He believes the session will help him streamline his thinking, his business and ultimately the country. Japanese philosophy He believes these are the lessons that will make Ethiopia function better as a frontier market that new investors are watching closely. While the movie business entailed taking a risk, Haile is more measured Ed.’s Note: The article first appeared on bbc.com. www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |33 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Small is... CONT`D FROM PAGE 12 knowledge and the particular needs of smallholders. Studies also showed that industrial agriculture is energyintensive as it uses ten units of energy to produce one unit of food while smallscale ecological farming uses one unit of energy to produce two units of food. Mechanized industrial farming, with its exhaustive use of fertilizers and pesticides, is also proved to have destroyed biodiversity and created dead-zone water bodies. The dangers of industrial farming could take a few more pages to list. However, even Ethiopia having millions of smallholders, is working hard to attract large scale agriculture investments. interview in March 2013 as saying, ‘given the fact that smallholder farmers account for over 90 percent of agriculture in the country, the ATA’s focus is exclusively on this group of farmers...So the ATA’s work is focused exclusively on identifying the bottlenecks constraining the development of smallholder farmers in Ethiopia...’. These statements are, in essence, a bit of inconsistent. If ATA is ‘exclusively’ for smallholder farmers their researches should only be directed to ‘solve the bottlenecks for small farmers’ rather than balancing between smallholder farmers and large-scale, mechanized, commercialized, monoculture agribusiness. On September this year, during a plenary session of the African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF 2014) one of the participants challenged Khalid Bomba, CEO of Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Agency (ATA) on how large-scale mechanized farming couldn’t be a solution since most of our farmers are smallholders. He had a truth. Khalid replied that it is a question of balancing the two rather than promoting one to take over the other. But it is to be remembered from his exclusive But researches are being co-opted. Just a week ago, The Guardian, on one of its articles observed that, ‘independence in the scientific world is becoming harder and harder to ensure, as university programmes become increasingly funded by private companies with vested interests.’ And that reminded me the words of Vandana Shiva (PhD) at her keynote speech at Wageningnen University: ‘our research systems are brilliant at doing what doesn’t need to be done and not doing what needs to be done’. We have millions of farmers who have particular knowledge of the characteristics of their particular seeds, soils and environment. The job of our researchers then should be building on what our farmers already know to ease their labor and help them produce crops of better quality and quantity. A number of internationally recognized reports also frequently indicated that the food we produce is enough to feed 10 billion people and there are only seven billion of us on earth. The problem thus originates from inequity, not scarcity. Large scale production focused on yield, thus, will not solve our problems; if it won’t aggravate it of course as Emmanuel D. Mlaka from Landnet Malawi highlighted on the LPI conference - ‘prominent projects such as the G8 New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition in Africa intend to make great contributions to economic growth but they have little or nothing to offer small-scale farmers who end up tenants or employees on their own land with little or no security’. On plenary session IV of the LPI conference a presenter called Marc Wegerif received the loudest of all applauds. Marc was able to touch the hearts of those policy makers, academicians, traditional leaders and civil societies who, at the end of his presentation, kept applauding him emotionally. And there was no secret about what he did; he just had the courage to demonstrate how smallscale farming is beautiful and that we need to respect our farmers and learn from those who have been feeding us for centuries. With his case stories he showed that small is where variety is in abundance; small is where nutrition is in plenty; small is where employment opportunities are in bounty, small is where independence from greedy companies is assured and small is where sustainability is guaranteed. This moved many from their seats to applaud and ask Marc for his business cards and it moved me to have more respect for these small farmers and to stand by them. And yes, that incident was a sign that told a sad story: many of the participants of these conferences believe in the small yet speak for the big. Ed.’s Note: Yonas A. Yimer is a communications officer at Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (AFSA). The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of The Reporter. He can be reached at [email protected]. At present, there are a sea of biased policy research and recommendation put forward to support President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s fragile government and thoroughly coach on any steps he would take, especially on the cabinet ministers and the way to wither the legitimate powers of any Prime Minister raised to the position... Somalia... is to increase Hawiye tribe influence in every nook and cranny of Somalia amalgamating fragmented through villages with inflated fake population data and thus awarding autonomous state identity. One Saturday morning like this, Abdi Aynte, director of the Heritage Institute for Policy Studies, himself a Somali-American and among the Hawiye elites, not only that, but one of the founders of the Heritage Institute, on June 28, 2013, told Foreign Policy via email “Everything that affects the national fabric (read Hawiye Tribe) is hugely and manifestly under researched.” This statement strongly indicates the commitment and attitude of the institute in pursuing the remarking of the Geopolitical history of Somalia through the rubberstamp of the Damul Jadiid (The New Blood) government headed by Hassan Sheikh Mohamud.The Heritage Institute for Policy Studies would make research studies and DamulJadiid’s government of Mogadishu will legitimize it, where the Damul-Jadiid policies will be then based on the HIPS research recommendations and would implement it forthwith. Many Somali intellectuals believed that the Mogadishu Heritage Institute is in pursuant to find a scientific solution by acting itself as a Research and Development (R&D) branch of the Damul Jadiid cult, secondly, to come up with a modality based on biased but highly organized academic research marking a red-borderline taking into a possession of areas formally inhabited CONT`D FROM PAGE 12 by other minority ethnic Somalis such as (Marka, parts of Banaadir, Bay and Bakole) as well as initiating the first of its kind since the late dictator Siad Barre’s regime. “New Somali population indispensable census count” the motivation here is to legitimize and remark New Somalia Geopolitical Order (NESGO) based on an exaggerated and tainted population tally, which will be Hawiye tribe taking the dominant lead while other bigger Somali tribes will be viewed as arithmetically marginal. Currently, skeptics have emerged among the elite Somalis across the world with regards to the establishment of the Heritage Institute for Policy Studies, in that, the institute is seemingly designed to deliver a colorful image of the Damul Jadiid sect in order to beat the wit of the Western community and the donors, and it looks like its giving sense to those who don’t know the underlying agenda of the institute. At present, there are a sea of biased policy research and recommendation put forward to support President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s fragile government and thoroughly coach on any steps he would take, especially on the cabinet ministers and the way to wither the legitimate powers of any Prime Minister raised to the position, and advise strategy to oust whoever lives to act contrary to the larger fraternity of Damul-Jadiid’s political and economic interest. The story of this particular “Mogadishu economic hit men (unholy lobby group)” and the true game of how Somalia, the already quintessential banana republic got to where they are now and why they are currently facing such endless crises that seem insurmountable is the responsibility of every elite to uncover the conspiracy theory led by the DamulJadiid government so as to make the matter everyone’s pain. Most importantly, this story must be told because today is the first time in the history of Somalia where one group (The Damul-Jadiid) developed the ability, the money, and the power to change the face of Somalia into a Mogadishu Economic Hit Men. Damul-Jadiid and the Jackal strategy to buy parliament votes In order to keep in power president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, the secretive leader of the Damul-Jadiid cult and end all opposition to his political policies, the Damul-Jadiid uses excess money to influence Somalia parliamentarians to vote in favor of their wishes, which was to kick out of power former prime minister Abdi Farah Shirdon. For those who oppose the Daamul-Jadiid fraternity interest, the group uses the “the Jackal Strategy” (assassination) as a last option to end once and for all all forms of disdain. Somalia’s veteran politicians come to believe that the recent huge car bomb that went off outside the gates of the parliament in central Mogadishu shortly before midday local time, that followed a twine of smaller blasts leading to an intense gunfire that caused heavy casualties was partly blamed on the Damul-Jadiid government, and www.thereporterethiopia.com some parliamentarians went further by saying that there was inside cooperation with the Al-Shabaab terrorist group. Also, the most recent was the parliamentarian and Somali icon singer late honorable Mrs. Sado Ali’s assassination just in front of the national police commission office. Honorable Sado Ali was known for being a nononsense, go-getter and ardent activist of Human Rights. Her straight forward personality to oppose and act as the “checks and balances” of the DamulJadiid government cost her her life. These days President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud as usual has started to organize a vote of no confidence against the sitting Prime Minister, Honorable Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed who went against his interest; the president tried to get all members of the federal parliament of Somalia through the use of heavy packages of money. The big fear now is that Damul-Jadiid ruling clique will use the “jackal strategy” if money does not work according to their wishes, but last week the parliament came out for the second time to abort the motion of vote of no confidence against the prime minister through violent interruptions. Nowadays, people are asking themselves what will be the next cause of action for Damul-Jadiid, given the challenges they face in getting through their vote of no confidence motion against the sitting Prime Minister Honorable Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed? Ed.’s Note: Ali Sheikh is an MBA-IB. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of The Reporter. He can be reached at [email protected]. 34| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 ENTERTAINMENT Rebuni receives awards at film festival By Meheret Selassie Mokonnen Renowned for awarding the best Ethiopian filmmakers every year, the Ethiopian International Film Festival (ETHIOIFF) ended on November 24. Held for the ninth time, the festival kickstarted on November 17. This year the competition consisted of 10 categories- best Feature Film, Cinematography, Director, Screenplay, Actor, Actress, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Promising Child and Audience Choice. The closing ceremony at Hilton Addis was a glamorous night for most filmmakers. Above all it can be said it was the best night for the Rebuni crew who took six of the awards. Rebuni, released last year, won Best Feature Film and Best Audience Choice awards. The writer and director of the film, Kidist Yilma, won Best Director and Screenplay. The lead actress of the film, Ruta Mengisteab, was awarded Best Female Actress of the year. This year the festival mainly focused on children. For this reason there was a Best Promising Child category. The category brought an additional trophy for Rebuni’s child actor – Yeabsira Tekilu. Called to the stage numerous times Kidist could not say much except “thank you God” in a quivering voice. “For me and the rest of the crew, this award is a responsibility, compelling us to do much more” Kidist told The Reporter. She said the award gave them energy and it feels great to be appreciated and recognized for something they had worked on tirelessly. Kidist Yilma Tezera Lemma from Ye’bekur Lij won Best Male Actor of the year. Tewodros Fikadu from Timetaleh Biye and Edilwork Tasew from Sir Mizewa respectively were awarded Best Supporting Actor and Actress of www.thereporterethiopia.com the year. Best cinematography went to Sewmehon Asfaw and Tariku Desalgn for Kemis Yelebeskulet. During the award ceremony some of the audience complained about the poor sound and picture quality. Expecting much more from the closing ceremony, since this is the ninth year and the organizers must have learned a lot from the previous years, many were in despair. Yirgashewa Teshome, organizer and director of the festival, told The Reporter, “These kind of mistakes happen even at big international festivals. It was not because we were not prepared, we were but, it just happened at that moment”. He said there would be some improvements in the coming years. He said they would try to make the closing ceremonies more interesting and add more categories whenever professional judges are available. This year’s judges were selected from Addis Ababa University, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism and National Writers Association. In view of the 25th anniversary of UNICEF, the festival focused on children. The festival, dubbed “Children’s Film World: Color or Black and White”, paid exceptional attention to movies made by children, youths and also movies whose prime concern were children. During the week, around 16 movies from different countries were screened. Among these, Indian movies “Making of Mahatma” and “The 3 idiots” were screened with Amharic subtitles. Children from elementary and secondary schools were invited to attend the discussions and watch the movies. In addition, a public lecture about children’s right to information, expression and culture and how children are portrayed in movies was given by Swedish filmmaker Johanna Wester. Vol. XIX No. 951 |35 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 So there is a case not only for an International Children’s Court, but also for children and their representatives to be granted the right to petition it. Such a court should have the capacity to receive and investigate individual complaints, the power to monitor independently the enforcement of laws... The children’s... sanctions system. Violations of children’s rights are now so rampant that there simply is no alternative. Indeed, though no human-rights treaty has been more widely ratified than the CRC, which requires governments to report on their compliance once every five years, its work lacks adequate resources and enforcement. Only one in seven countries submit compliance reports on time, and one-third do not submit even a year late. Meanwhile, the scantly funded offices that manage the information have a two-year backlog. Another promising initiative – the “optional protocol on communications,” aimed at enabling children and their advocates, for the first time, to bring cases before the UN Human Rights Committee – has been similarly weakened by a lack of strong support, authority, and resources. Indeed, only 14 countries have ratified the protocol since it was agreed in 2011. Moreover, states are not legally bound to change the policies or laws that are deemed to be violating their Advertisment international human-rights obligations. And a shortage of investigative resources has led to an emphasis on problematic legislation, instead of the larger issue of inadequate enforcement of laws that promote the CRC’s principles. So there is a case not only for an International Children’s Court, but also for children and their representatives to be granted the right to petition it. Such a court should have the capacity to receive and investigate individual complaints, the power to monitor independently the enforcement of laws, and the resources to devote to investigations into relevant areas, including child labor, child marriage, child slavery, genital mutilation, and child rape. Over time, a reporting system could be implemented to facilitate an examination of the impact of health and education policies on the world’s most marginalized boys and girls. Such research could provide compelling evidence to support universal education compulsory as the ideal mechanism not just for ending educational exclusion, but also for bringing an end to child labor and trafficking, early marriage, and CONT`D FROM PAGE 14 discrimination against girls. Another advance could follow, based on Graça Machel’s victory a decade ago in convincing the UN Security Council to implement a system for reporting violence against children in conflict zones. At the time, it was agreed that a Special Representative on Children and Armed Conflict, whose work is backed by the threat of sanctions, would also be established. Today, a similar post – underpinned by the same system of reporting and sanctions – should be created to focus on children’s other rights. Next month, Satyarthi and the girls’rights leader Malala Yousafzai will receive this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, reminding the world that a children’srights struggle is underway – one that is increasingly being led by young people. Indeed, frustrated with adults’ failure to discharge what should be their duties toward children, young people are forming child-marriage-free zones, launching anti-slavery groups, and organizing education-rights campaigns. Such initiatives – including Bangladesh’s www.thereporterethiopia.com 20 child marriage-free zones, Nepal’s Kamlari Forum, and Ethiopia’s Yellow Movement of university students – may not yet be trending on Twitter and Facebook, but they are engaging millions of young people worldwide. Now, the Global March Against Child Labor and A World at School have come together to support the #UpForSchool petition, which links the universal provision of education to ending child exploitation. Over the next several months, youth groups in 190 countries will be collecting, it is hoped, a record number of signatures. But we must do more than read and sign the petition. We must recognize that today’s movement to ensure children’s rights is the civil-rights struggle of our generation – and do whatever it takes to support it. Ed.’s Note: Gordon Brown, former Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom, is United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education. The article was provided to The Reporter by Project Syndicate: the world’s pre-eminent source of original op-ed commentaries. Project Syndicate provides incisive perspectives on our changing world by those who are shaping its politics, economics, science, and culture. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of The Reporter. 36| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 ENTERTAINMENT+ Addis Foto Fest to gather photography buffs Guyana, Brazil and US will be exhibited. Moreover, at Alle, photos from China, Germany, Ireland, Sweden and others will be featured as ‘The Visual Migration and the Asia Collection’. By Meheret Selassie Mokonnen Photo By: Reporter /Mesfen Solomon The third Addis Foto Fest – a photography festival – is expected to feature 95 photographers from more than 32 countries. Categorized under various themes, the festival sorts different kinds of photographers according to the themes. Organized and directed by renowned photographer. Aida Muluneh, Addis Foto Fest takes place every two years. The festival’s inauguration will take place December 1 at the Sheraton Addis. Entitled ‘Vision of Africa’, the launching ceremony will present a photo exhibition of 15 African countries. Including 13 Ethiopian photographers, some of the participants are from Mali, Kenya, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Egypt, South Africa and Mozambique. During a press conference held at Sheraton Addis on November 24, Aida said that most of the time Ethiopian cultural and historical heritages are portrayed from a foreigner’s point of view. She said it was about time a chance was given to Ethiopian photographers. She added that fact went for other countries as well. According to Aida, the festival, in a way, stretches the idea of what kinds of photographic pieces are being produced all over the world. Advertisment Aida said that the festival aims at heightening the photography scene of Addis, which she says is at in its infancy. In addition, the festival is expected to provide a platform where photographers can discuss issues. Among the issues are digitization, the market for photographers and the gradual change in African photography. The festival will have a portfolio Aida Muluneh review at Alliance Ethio-Française, on December 2 and the Alle School of Fine Arts on the December 4 - linking different photographers from various countries. The reviews are said to showcase the progress of each photographer. On December 6, at the National Museum, a conference will be held together with an exhibition entitled: ‘The Americans: United States and America’. Works from ‘Memories of a Mexican’, a movie screened at Cannes Film Festival and other international film festivals, will be presented. Featuring photos from Iran, Jordan and Yemen, ‘Witness: images from Middle East’ will be seen at Guramile Art Centre on December 4. On December 6, at the Ethiopian National Theater, pictures from Uganda, Nigeria, Algeria and other African countries will be presented along with video art projections. The discussion that will take place on December 6 at Alle will bring together photojournalists, art curators and critics. The discussion is said to focus on the shifting dynamics of photography in Africa and the world. The closing will be on December 7 at Galani Art Center, with an exhibition viewing traumatic experiences of children in relation to HIV/AIDS. All in all, the conference aims at giving chances to those who have not had it to exhibit their works along with wellknown photographers. The pieces that are included in the festival are selected by Aida. UNHCR !!:&7W$ J!;K#8&&&$$&#M## ; K#8&&&$$&&$$$ ; X ! >B*Y,JBJJ:=ZJ:[ Z [ REQUEST Q FOR PROPOSALS ((RFP)) 1. THE OFFICE OF THE UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES REPRESENTATION OFFICE ETHIOPIA ADDIS ABABA, INVITES INTERESTED QUALIFIED COMPANIES FOR INSTALLATION, SERVICE FOR REPAIR, MAINTENANCE AND RENOVATION ELECTRICITY GENERATOR SETS, AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEM AND ELECTRICAL SYSTEM. 2. PLEASE COLLECT THE BID DOCUMENTS FROM UNHCR BRANCH OFFICE ADDIS ABABA SUPPLY UNIT LOCATED AT BOLE ROAD NEAR TO SAAY PASTRY DURING WORKING HOURS BETWEEN 09:00 AM – 12:00 AM AND 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM BEGINNING FROM 1 – 12 DECEMBER 2014. 3. ALL PROPOSALS MUST BE SUBMITTED IN SEALED ENVELOPES BY THE CLOSING DEADLINE OF 19 DECEMBER 2014 AT 4:00 PM. PROPOSALS SUBMITED AFTER THE DEADLINE WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED. 4. ALL PROPOSALS SHOULD BE SUBMITTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH INSTRUCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE RFP DOCUMENTS. 5. THE UNHCR REPRESENTATION OFFICE IN ETHIOPIA RESERVES 1. THE OFFICE OF THE UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES REPRESENTATION OFFICE ETHIOPIA ADDIS ABABA, INVITES INTERESTED QUALIFIED COMPANIES FOR THE SUPPLY OF THREE WHEELERS MOTORCYCLES. 2. PLEASE COLLECT THE BID DOCUMENTS FROM UNHCR BRANCH OFFICE ADDIS ABABA SUPPLY UNIT LOCATED AT BOLE ROAD NEAR TO SAAY PASTRY DURING WORKING HOURS BETWEEN 09:00 AM – 12:00 AM AND 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM BEGINNING FROM 1 – 5 DECEMBER 2014. 3. ALL PROPOSALS MUST BE SUBMITTED IN SEALED ENVELOPES BY THE CLOSING DEADLINE OF 8 DECEMBER 2014 AT 4:00 PM. PROPOSALS SUBMITED AFTER THE DEADLINE WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED. 4. ALL PROPOSALS SHOULD BE SUBMITTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH INSTRUCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE RFP DOCUMENTS. 5. THE UNHCR REPRESENTATION OFFICE IN ETHIOPIA RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY OR ALL PROPOSALS RECEIVED. THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY OR ALL PROPOSALS RECEIVED. 'Y%B==*B:B:BDJYB 'Y%B==*B:B:BDJYB www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |37 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment www.thereporterethiopia.com 38| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 By Leyou Tameru @anchihoye Bits & Pieces road again I have been spending a lot of time in airports, especially in the past few years. And as time goes by, I cannot help but notice the changes that have been taking place through time. Although I do not have the numbers to prove it, I certainly believe that airplanes are becoming a more common form of transportation. Airports are getting bigger, destinations are growing and prices are also lowering, at least in certain places. Let me tackle the ticket prices issue first. I still have a hard time understanding why a flight to Dakar in Senegal costs just as much, if not less, to a flight to Washington DC. Although I have seen a decrease in overall ticket prices, there still is a huge discrepancy when it comes to flights within Africa. This is probably the reason that small airlines offering cheap prices to customers are appearing in different countries. Airlines such as Fly 540 in Kenya are surely becoming alternatives to larger and more expensive airlines. But they only serve short distances, and have a long way to go when it comes to longer ones. I strongly believe that this is a great beginning. As African countries are going towards allowing visa free travel for African citizens, the demand for cheaper intra-country tickets will certainly rise and large airlines have no choices but to reduce their prices. I’m currently taking one of these new and cheap airlines today for domestic flight within the US. This airline has an interesting approach to the flying business. To begin with, they have no first or business class seats, all seats are economy class. And in addition to that, it’s free seating! Boarding priority is on a first come first serve basis, whoever checks in first will be able to board first and take whatever seat they want. My reaction to this is that it kind of feels like boarding a bus, except it’s not a bus. Whenever I go through airport security, I cannot stop myself from thinking about the time when friends and family of passengers would be able to accompany their loved ones all the way to their boarding gates. A time where airport security did not mean, taking off your shoes, taking your computer out and passing through body scanners that show you naked. Although it may be tough to imagine today, there was time where there was no “random” selection for additional security check. Another big novelty is that internet is not only available in the airport, but it’s also available inside the planes! How interesting is that? Now you can get work done, check your email and read the news on the go. I guess traveling on a plane is becoming less of a luxury and more a necessity. The world has its eyes set on reaching higher heights, i.e. taking a vacation in space! Virgin Galactica – an airline founded by Sir Richard Branson and supported by Google – is looking to provide a commercial spaceship that will take paying customers to space. Although the first attempt was a complete failure, it certainly shows where we will all be going next. Ed.’s Note: Leyou Tameru is a graduate of Georgetown and Addis Ababa University Law schools, specializing in International Legal Studies. Born and raised in Addis Ababa, she seeks to understand the impact of economic, political and social issues on everyday lives. She can be reached at [email protected] Sub-Saharan ... different African countries including Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Botswana, Namibia, Nigeria, Mozambique in order to facilitate the discussion at the workshop. The objective of the workshop was to discuss and develop a joint research project across the SubSaharan African region to help mitigation of impact of climate change on soil fertility. Reflecting on the assessment reports, Effiom Oku (PhD), Senior Research Fellow of UNU-INRA, confirmed that decline in soil fertility and erosion, water scarcity, and inappropriate farming practices are part of the major challenges hindering food production in the region. “Results from the mapping assessment serve as a testimony that majority of countries in Africa need an extensive monitoring program to determine the impact of climate change on soil fertility, soil moisture and land degradation” he said. Oku also noted that, in a region like sub Sahara, where large number of the population depends on agriculture, a decline in soil fertility and land degradation farming activities would have a significant repercussion on food security. UNU-INRA, whose focus is enhancing the capacity CONT`D FROM PAGE 3 of African researchers and institutions in natural resources management, is optimistic that the final outcome from the joint regional research project would produce substantial climate adaptive measures that can mitigate the effect of climate change on soil fertility in Sub-Saharan Africa. Among organizations represented at the workshop are Food and Agriculture Organization, United Nations Environment Program, Mekelle University,University of Botswana, University of Namibia, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Sokoine University of Agriculture in Tanzania, Bayero University in Nigeria, Eduado Mondlane University in Mozambique, and International Water Management Institute (IWMI). Research findings show that Ethiopia’s soil is deficient in essential nutrients. Similarly, according to the Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Agency, low soil fertility and crop nutrient imbalances are major challenges of agricultural production in Ethiopia. Thus to help tackle this, the Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Agency has identified a set of soil fertility management interventions, such as new fertilizer formulations and new agronomic management practices and these interventions expected to be practical in the near-term. These two parties were working together for the past six years and their relationship was at odds after a speech, which was delivered by former president of UDJ Gizachew Shiferaw (Eng.), advocated for a merger than continuing with the party in the form of a front or a coalition. Medrek, UDJ... parties continued till the tenth general assembly which was held on November 8 and the newlyelected president of Medrek, Beyene Petros (Prof.), told The Reporterr that the suspension is still in place and nothing has changed in that regard. However, the president underscored the fact that UDJ still has some time to correct its mistakes and rejoin the front before the deadline – the November 24. Since the deadline given by Medrek has expired and nothing has changed the relationship between the two parties stopped, and in this regard head of public relations of Medrek, Tilahun Endeshaw, confirmed to The Reporterr that the two parties have now officially separated. By the same token, the speaker of the national council of UDJ, Abebe Akalu, told The Reporterr that the relationship between the two parties had stopped and UDJ will continue its activities individually as of November 20. Institute to bridge... CONT`D FROM PAGE 3 The Reporter asked both leaders that since it is election year, whether the separation harmed the activities of the parties and weaken the general opposition block. In this regard, both replied that it would hamper activities but there was no other option. “It will affect us, but it is better to separate than to work with some defects. Therefore, UDJ preferred to stop its relation and to work individually with all its capabilities,” Abebe told The Reporter. Tilahun, on his part, said, “The separation affects the parties but this is done deliberately by individuals who wanted to weaken both Medreek and UDJ and in this regard their mission is accomplished and Medrek will go individually and work hard in the future.” Apart from this both leaders of the party underlined that they are well prepared to render their struggles individually. CONT`D FROM PAGE 7 institution is expected to contribute for an approach that strengthen evidence supported strategic thinking and decision making to effectively address the above challenges. The Fred T. Sai Institute is an initiative of IPPF Africa Region to advocate sexual and reproductive health and right issues in the continent. Professor Sai was the first African president of IPPF and served as a senior population advisor at the World Bank. His contributions have also been acknowledged at the global level with the United Nations Population Award, IPPF Lifetime Achievements Award and back at home with the Order of Star of Ghana. At the ceremony, representatives of the Reproductive Health Community from Africa and beyond witnessed about the professor’s contributions to Sexual and reproductive health and rights,(SRHR) Family Planning and women empowerment that spanned over IPPFAR is a sexual and reproductive health (SRH) service delivery organization in Africa as well as sexual and reproductive health and rights advocacy voice in the region. Headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya, the overarching goal of IPPFAR is to increase access to SRHR services to the most vulnerable youth, men and women in sub-Saharan Africa. Supported by thousands of volunteers, IPPFAR works to tackle the continent’s sexual and reproductive health challenges through a network of Member Associations (MAs) in 42 countries including Ethiopia. www.thereporterethiopia.com Vol. XIX No. 951 |39 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Copyright amendment ... is just too big. “The pure discretion given to the society and the office in the most crucial issues is uncommon from the experience of other well established societies,” Biruk, who has specialized in the field intellectual property studies, told The Reporter. The amendment states that the collective management society, a nonprofit organization, is formed only when it is recognized by EIPO. The society is expected to be a consortium of associations, not individual right holders, in the literary and artistic professions. EIPO together with the society is in the process of drafting an implementation strategy which is expected to address issues such as the amount of royalties to be paid for protected works and the amount of administrative fees and tax to be withheld from collected royalties. And the director general believes that it is only fair to allow the right holders to determine the amount of payment they should be paid in royalties for their properties. “However, the office is there to ensure that the royalty rate is not unreasonable,” Berhanu told The Reporter. The office is considering its options for the kind of royalty system it plans to introduce. The schemes proposed includes a ‘fixed rate’, which will be levied on users, like hotels, who will be issued standards and will be required to pay periodically, and ‘proportional rates’, where users, like broadcasters, will be required to pay royalty proportional to their use of protected works. “We are working with WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) to develop a royalty assessment program to keep track of usage,” Dawit told The Reporter. Such applications (software) are mostly ideal to assess royalties from broadcasters. As a booming entertainment industry which comes out with some 300 films annually and musicians in and around Addis Ababa numbering 40,000, the contribution of the industry to the national economy is immense. With the introduction of a royalty system which also seeks to protect all foreign works used in Ethiopia, the potential for a boost in the economy can only get better, those in the entertainment business say. “With a well-functioning royalty system in place the industry’s contribution to the country’s GDP could very well exceed eight percent from the current six,” Equbay told The Reporter, citing recent studies commissioned by EIPO. Those in the industry are eager to embrace the new change. However, others, who might find themselves in the receiving end of the law, feel neglected in the drafting process and fear the unknown. Biniam Negessu, founder of the popular video sharing site DireTube, says he was in the dark about the amendment and only learned of it shortly before the law was approved by parliament. “As a member of the Ethiopian AudioVisual Association, I should have been informed of the process,” Biniam told The Reporter. For DJs like Aron Kebede, who is president of a recently established association of his professional peers, the amendment could mean that he would have to pay royalties whenever he plays songs in social occasions like weddings. Aron, who participated in the drafting process, has no problem with paying royalties to right holders, but he is wary of enforcement issues which are yet to be clarified. Yonathan Hambissa, owner of Club Illusion and Flirt Lounge, popular spots for nightlife in Addis Ababa, was foreign to the issue of the amendment when approached by The Reporter for comment. His club mostly plays popular Western music with few local songs thrown here and there. In fact, he believes that playing local music in his club is to the advantage of local artists. CONT`D FROM PAGE 6 Indeed, in practice, the trend is in reverse. Broadcasters like Zami FM and Biniam’s DireTube are frequented by artists who offer their works for free in the hope of having their artistic work reaching the public. Zami’s Zerihun says that the station has hired an expert to understand the possible impact of the amendment on their industry. “As the collective management society is not yet established, it is our hope that our involvement will be sought to make the institution functional,” Zerihun told The Reporter adding that the fledging broadcasting industry also needs protection. “If the law is only intended to serve the right holder and disregard the space required for the broadcasting industry to grow, I am afraid it will cripple both,” Zerihun warns. The Malawi Broadcasting Station financially struggled to pay the amount of royalties it owed COSOMA. After years of negotiations and legal battle, the station settled its long-standing feud by paying the full amount two years ago. COSOMA, in turn, redistributed the royalty to its members after deducting 30 percent for administrative fees and withholding another 20 percent in government tax out of the total USD 250,000. Advertisment J < : + , G J =77\#7&] DEJENNA Chemical Engineering PLC, a company under the EFFORT group is planning to estiablish an integrated PVC Resin Manufacturing Plant in Mekelle, Ethiopia which has a capacity of 60,000 tons/year PVC resin by the LimestoneCalcium carbide-Acetylene (LCA) route. DEJENNA Chemical Engineering PLC hereby invites internationally renowned # PVC resin manufacturing technology in particular to submit their offer in wax sealed envelope for the Design, Supply, Construction, Erection/ Installation, Commissioning, Traininig, Operation and Maintenance Management of Integrated PVC Resin Manufacturing Plant in Mekelle, ETHIOPIA. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Interested eligible bidders can obtain the complete set of tender documents from the address below upon payment of nonrefundable fee of birr 500. B;=/BYGB>??> G^D ? : D]_D]7# J!!K#8&\]]]&W#7&D!K#8&\]]]&W7]$ G+;K#8&`&]W7&M8$ !!:M`$ Or BB++D G: !#&W All wax sealed bid proposals must be delivered to the cited address on or before may 11,2015. Bids presented by any bidder after the closing date shall not be accepted. H # " original and three copies in a sealed envelope. Bids must be accompanied by a bid security of 2% of the total contract price. Bids received in time shall be opened in the presence of interested bidders or their legal representatives at 10:00 am on May 12,2015 in Mekelle, Guna Building room no 402. DEJENNA Chemical Engineering PLC reserves the right to accept or reject any or all of the bids. Nine charged... CONT`D FROM PAGE 1 transferring information regarding the location and number of the Ethiopian defence force as well as reinforcements in exchange for payments. stability through armed insurgents operating in the region, including Al Shabaab, an Al Qaeda affiliated terrorist group. The suspects are also accused of spying on refugee camps where Eritreans fleeing their country are taking shelter and the operation of Eritrean opposition groups in these areas. Ethiopia’s continued allegation led to the imposition of sanctions by the United Nations Security Council against Eritrea in 2009 which included arms embargo, travel bans on its leaders and freezing of assets of some of its leaders. Following a two year border conflict that ended in 2000, Ethiopia and Eritrea find themselves entangled in a nopeace no-war situation. With no peace process to normalize relations in sight, Ethiopia continuously accuse Eritrea of attempting to destabilize its internal A recent UN refugee agency report indicated a sharp increase in the number of Eritrean youths fleeing to Ethiopia. More than 6,000 Eritreans had claimed asylum in Ethiopia over the past month, the report said. Ethiopia, South... CONT`D FROM PAGE 1 its technical staff from Ethiopian maintenance and engineering department. The amount of investment Ethiopian will make is not yet determined. Speaking of the market potential of South Sudan, the official said it is a big travel market and is projected to grow even further. Ethiopian is implementing a multi-hub strategy. The Ethiopian national flag carrier is a strategic partner of ASKY, a pan-African airline based in Togo Lome. ASKY , which began operation in 2010, serves 22 destinations in west and central Africa. Ethiopian has a 40 percent stake on ASKY. Ethiopian has also invested in another start-up airline in Southern Africa, Malawi Airlines Ltd. Malawian Airlines based in Lilongwe began operation last year from its hub at Lilongwe International Airport. It serves six domestic and regional destinations. Ethiopian has a five-year management and technical service agreements with both airlines. The management of Ethiopian anticipates to partner with the Government of the Democratic Republic of Congo to establish another regional airline in Central Africa. An airline industry analyst The Reporterr talked to said that non-African airlines are establishing subsidiary airlines in Africa taht serve them as feeder airlines. “So I think the management of Ethiopian is doing the right thing to withstand the stiff competition coming from non-African mega carriers,” the analyst said. www.thereporterethiopia.com 40| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Seasoned Ethiopian... that the company was undertaking a feasibility study and working on paperwork for the last one year. Lemma said that the company submitted application to the Ethiopian Civil Aviation Authority (ECAA). “They evaluated our application swiftly and approved the documents. To give us the Air Operator Certificate (AOC) and license for the pilot training school they are waiting for the arrival of the aircraft Sheep leather... CONT`D FROM PAGE 4 located behind Edna Mall. The second phase meeting deliberated on branding issues such as logo and motto, which are expected to be finalized early 2016. Among the candidate sectors and products which the project looked at, sheep leather has become the alternative product to go with, Nagai said. “Ethiopian coffee beans exist in Japanese market. Hence, there is no way to brand coffee there. We are trying to promote sheep leather after we have checked out that the feasibility and the potential to supply the Japanese market and others,” he said. Kimiaki Jin, chief representative of JICA Ethiopia office, said that the sheep leather has been chosen to represent Ethiopia as a new branded product for the Japanese market due to its the accessibility because of the country’s huge potential. According to Fistum Arega, director general of the Ethiopian Investment Commission (EIC), the branding and improving the country’s image via the sheep leather is where the government is gearing up towards. CONT`D FROM PAGE 5 that we bought,” Captain Lemma said. East African Aviation will provide charter flight services. It will provide VIP flights and flight services for international organizations, tourists, construction and mining companies. It will offer flight services for aerial survey and mapping work. The new private airline will also offer medical evacuation (air ambulance services). There will also be an aero club where individuals who want to fly for leisure will be enrolled as members and fly for a few hours during their leisure time. According to the GM, East African Aviation recently bought three aircraft. For the airline operation the company both King Air 200 aircraft at a cost of two million dollars from a US-based company. The aircraft is expected to arrive at Bole International Airport after one month. East African Aviation is planning to offer an air ambulance service. “We are contemplating to bring Eurocopter and Cessna Citation aircraft that are fully equipped with oxygen and all other emergency medical equipment.” East African Aviation bought two trainer aircraft, Cessna172, from a Swedenbased company, Air Unlimited, for EUR 380,000. The Cessna aircraft are now in Antwerp, Belgium, undergoing some modification work. Lemma expects to receive them after four weeks. “We hope to be operational in January tentatively. Once we receive the aircraft ECAA will issue us the necessary licenses,” he said. The company also bought two flight simulators for the pilot training school at a cost of 390,000 dollars. The company bought one Cessna and one King Air simulator from a US-based company, Redbird Flight International. The flight simulators are on their way to Djibouti Port. The pilot training school has dormitories and a canteen which can accommodate 24 cadets at a time. The school has auditoriums, briefing rooms and a library. Theoretical part of the training will be given in the premise of the school while the flight lesson will be offered at the Bole International Airport. The school will offer Private Pilot License (PPL) and Commercial Pilot License (CPL). It will take a cadet four month to complete a PPL training program. The CPL training takes 14 months. The tuition fee for PPL is USD 23,000 while the CPL training costs USD 66,500. “These costs include accommodation, meals, uniforms and other expenses. There is no hidden cost here,” Captain Lemma said. “We will not make money out of the school. We just want to offer an internationally recognized service in Ethiopia. It could be profitable after seven or eight years. The tuition might seem expensive for those who are not in the aviation industry. Fuel cost is cumbersome,” he said. According to Lemma, the trainer aircraft are equipped with a state-of-the-art flight instrument. “We want to make it a five star flight school.” Lemma is a veteran Ethiopian Air Force pilot and former director of the Ethiopian Airlines pilot training school. The Advertisment headquarters of East African Aviation and pilot training school is located in front of the Ethiopian Airlines Aviation Academy off the ring road. The school has already hired four instructors and hopes to admit 24 cadets. Gov’t contemplates... CONT`D FROM PAGE 5 zone as it is “an area with distinct boundary designed by the appropriate organ to develop identical, similar and interrelated industries together or to develop multi-faceted industries based on a plan fulfilling infrastructures such as road, electric power, and water and having incentive schemes with purposes containing industrial development, mitigating the impacts of environmental pollution as administering urban areas with plan and system”, it stated. Besides the industrial development zones are to be developed either by the government, by the joint venture with the private sector or by the private sector alone. The export promotion directorate general on the other hand, led by Assefa Mulugeta, has also been restructured recently to oversee both agricultural and manufactured commodities of the country and to seek ways which would promote the exports of the country. The recent commitment of USD 250 by World Bank to finance the state-owned two-phased Bole Lemi Industrial zone has encouraged 22 factory units to come to Ethiopia. Among the stationed factories, the Taiwanese, Hong Kongese and South Koreans are some worth mentioning. Coca Cola, Ambo... EIC coordinates the branding project with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Industry, Leather Industry Institute, Ethiopian Development Leather Industries Association and the Ethiopian Chamber of Commerce and Sectoral Association also taking part. CONT`D FROM PAGE 4 tapped at the springs in Ambo Senkele, 130 km from Addis Ababa. Currently, branding Ethiopia’s sheep leather project has involved three local businesses which are said to be “partner companies”. Leather Exotica and Enzi and ELICO Awash Tannery are the local firms which are selected for the champion product project due to their designing and production qualities respectively, according to the consultants. It is popularly consumed during and after meals as a digestive, also popularly consumed as a thirst quenching ‘soft drink’ or as a discerning mixer, specifically with whisky and other spirits. Recently, its product and pack range has been extended to include convenience packaging in plastic bottles, as well as new products, Ambo Lite (lower carbonation and mineralization) and ‘Ambo flavored water’ (Orange, Apple, Pineapple, Lemon-lime).etc. Fistum said that the branding project will be scaled up further to the mass production stage after succeeding on market penetration and image building tasks. According to Fistum, champion product approach has been successful in countries like Indonesia where they had become the famous producers of Indomie noodles worldwide. He also recalled that the Office of the Prime Minister of Japan has recently sponsored the promotion of Kaizen – a renowned Japanese management philosophy to improve productivity and quality – and how the philosophy has become the norm of the manufacturing sector in Ethiopia. Coca-Cola was first bottled in Addis Ababa in 1959 by the Ethiopian Bottling Share Company, which later opened a second branch in Dire Dawa in 1965. The two plants were nationalized in 1975 and ran as public companies until 1996 when they were bought by local entrepreneurs. Just prior to this, in 1995, Coca Cola Sabco bought shares in the business and, in 1999, signed a joint venture agreement with the plants. In 2001, Coca Cola Sabco increased its shares to 61 percent and the company changed its name to the East African Bottling Share Company (EABSC). Currently, it produces and bottles a range of beverages including Fanta group, Coca Cola, Sprite, Schweppes, Coke Light and Dasani Bottled Water. Currently, Ethiopia has three coffee brands internationally recognized after years of relentless battle with international giants like Starbucks. The fine coffees of Harar, Yirgachefe and Sidama are registered as trademarks of Ethiopia. www.thereporterethiopia.com LEISURE The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Vol. XIX No. 951 |41 Crossword ACROSS 1. Bleat 4. Restaurant or bar bill 7. In a fright 12. Aged 13. Artificial language 14. Followers of Gaea 15. Vacate 17. Civil Rights group 18. Can 19. ___ Lanka 21. One and only 22. Whale ship captain 24. Arctic explorers, abbr. 25. Compartments 26. A way to change color 27. __ de, seats you 29. Based on or told of in traditional stories 31. A salt or ester of hydriodic acid 35. Loved 37. A waterproof raincoat made of rubberized fabric 38. Beehive 41. __ student, learns healing 42. Alexander __, former secretary of State 43. Unit of food energy 44. Possessed 45. Clothespin 46. Get up 48. A woman who dances in a chorus line 52. Goddesses 53. Reverence 54. Neither 55. Samoyedic 56. John __, English statesman (1584-1643) 57. Travel one unit east and one unit north DOWN 1. Scarf 2. A close-sleeved linen liturgical vestment 3. Determined 4. Neat 5. Flurry 6. A dwarfed ornamental tree or shrub grown in a tray or shallow pot 7. God of fire (Hindu) 8. Supervises flying 9. Tie again 10. Scratchy 11. Measuring instruments 16. Apprehend 20. Tied once more 22. Cash dispenser 23. Mown grass 24. Washington city 25. A place for sleeping 27. Used in combination 28. Perch 30. Come to pass 32. A way to experience 33. Thai 34. Cardiograph 36. Baggage attendant 38. Proportionality 39. Tibeto-Burman language 40. Elect 42. Third person as object (female) 44. Rudolph __, war criminal 45. Literature 47. Drunk 49. Route, abbr. 50. Toff 51. Bulky grayishbrown eagle US Box office Kuncho Komments I want us to be friends. What? I have a proposal for you. Well there are some things I have to know first. What is it? Your Zodiacs Please submit your resume, two letters of recommendation a motivational letter. 1 The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 2 Big Hero 6 (2014) 3 Interstellar (2014) 4 Dumb and Dumber To (2014) 5 Gone Girl (2014) 6 Beyond the Lights (2014) 7 St. Vincent (2014) 8 Fury (2014) 9 Birdman (2014) 10 0 The e Theory eo y o of Everything e yt g ((2014) 0 ) (astrology-online.com) ARIES (Mar. 21- April 20) CANCER (June 22-July 22) LIBRA (Sept. 24 -Oct. 23) CAPRICORN (Dec 22.- Jan. 20) Learning patience is the main task during this week. Try to develop your social skills through working alongside others. You should make an attempt to curb your impetuous side- weigh alternatives and consider consequences before speaking or acting. Get to know yourself better. This week lucky numbers are: 9, 53, 95, 6, 81 Try to tune in what people are really saying. There is a possibility that someone would wont to monopolies your time and energy during this week. Beware of such people. Ideals and ideas can be worthy of devotion, but destructive at the same time. Firstly you should make sure that others want to be helped and than offer your support. Beware of being carried away by your enthusiasm. This week lucky numbers are: 78, 84, 80, 24, 2 You should try to be more affectionate and playful. Beware others have their wish and gifts to teach also, and that the best teacher is often an internal student. This week lucky numbers are: 41, 18, 88, 65, 40 ! the patience to interact fully with others. Your ideas may have " escapism in its manifold guises. This week lucky numbers are: 31, 89, 67, 28, 61 TAURUS (Apr. 21- may 21) LEO (July 23-Aug 22) SCORPIO (Oct. 24 - Nov. 22) This week’s the main task – cultivate your quite side, yet do not neglect your aggressive urges or let them go bottled up inside. In case you feel frustrated, try to understand the problem and then take the initiative. Acknowledge your need for affection and support. Do not hesitate to ask for help if you need it. This week lucky numbers are: 14, 68, 92, 81, 1 Try not to overpower others during this week. Learn to back off and allow things to happen as they will. Although your hands may itch to do the job, you should give others to do it their way, even if they make mistakes. Try to remain sensitive to those around you. This week lucky numbers are: 56, 4, 48, 33, 94 This week is a perfect time for you to dig deeper and explore the depths of your personality. Make an attempt to take matters a bit more seriously if you wish others to do the same in regard to you. On the other hand try not to give up your natural and instinctive approach to life. This week lucky numbers are: 8, 1, 75, 63, 84 AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 -Feb. 19) You should try to come on in a rush. Be clear in what you say, but also diplomatic. This is very argent rule within this week. Don’t be inattentive to the impression you make or the idea others have of you. The silence can also be a great value. Try to improve the personal relationships between you and your beloved. This week lucky numbers are: 61, 39, 80, 67, 30 VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 23) GEMINI (May 22-June 21) You should resist overwhelming people with your energy. Act responsibly. Try not to be too needy of attention and and pay more attention to the hidden talents of yours during this week. This week lucky numbers are: 14, 31, 55, 16, 58 You should beware of taking too much responsibility. Consciously work on changing yourself during this week, month or even year. You can open your horizons by exposing yourself to different disciplines and points of view. This week lucky numbers are: 98, 5, 54, 36, 46 SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -Dec. 21) You should monitor the pace of your activities carefully. Seek to be more consistent and less casual in jettisoning people and ideas. Avoid coming on so strong. Don’t forget to turn off your mental monitor from time to time. Confront your fears and insecurities. This week lucky numbers are: 53, 28, 18, 69, 97 SPOT THE DIFFERENCES Can you spot the 12 differences between the two pictures? www.thereporterethiopia.com Solution PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar. 20) Sometimes what is right in front of you is just as interesting as something risky or exotic. It may not be incumbent on you to # ! it is called for. On the other hand don’t forget to give yourself easy rewards, too. This week lucky numbers are: 66, 26, 95, 90, 20 Solution 42| Vol. XIX No. 951 Sport The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 On your mark, get set, t go! By Mark Jenkin “I don’t like running,” claims Liam Myles. It is an extraordinary admission from a man who has just dashed halfway across the world to be involved in a remarkable road race. Amid more than 35,000 vibrant red t-shirts, the softly spoken Irishman is hobbling back towards his hotel after taking part in the Great Ethiopian Run. Everywhere, people are smiling and chatting about their experiences. Everyone has a story to tell. Elite athletes, fun runners, charity workers, mums, dads, grandparents, even family pets have covered the undulating course from Menelik II Hospital via Megenagna and back to the finish at Jan Meda Race Course. Shirts are drenched in sweat; medals are worn like badges of honor, draped around necks or tied around foreheads, creating makeshift bandanas. Some runners are still wearing their lion masks or straw hats. Others have creatively cut their shirts to shreds to stand out from the crowd. Liam’s rosy cheeks tell the story of an epic journey. He has a plastic bag pulled over his head, protecting his balding scalp from the burning sunshine. A small amount of discomfort is worth it, though, to be involved in one of Africa’s great social gatherings. Worth it, too, for the money he has raised for Vita, a charity project which supports farmers in the Southern Nations, Nationalities and People’s Region. “I was traveling on Friday with a group of 11 from Dublin but I had a family bereavement so I had to come a day late,” says Liam. “I flew during the night and rushed to my hotel despite the traffic. I arrived this morning at quarter to seven.” With just a few minutes to spare, the 67-year-old agricultural worker finally found a place among the masses, ready to take on his second Great Ethiopian Run. become like a mass sport, not only for Ethiopians but for foreigners.” Contributing to the international flavor are the Stockport Harriers from England; students from Norway; six blind athletes from Holland and a group of charity workers from Australia running to raise funds for Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital. It is not just about enjoyment, however. For once in the year, this is an opportunity for ordinary Ethiopians to make their voices heard. Plenty make political statements as they run past government buildings. Motivated by this year’s race slogan ‘Empower Women. Empower a Nation’ Tigist has taken part to raise awareness about equality. For her, the event is part perspiration, part inspiration. “I have never liked running - I prefer Gaelic football and hurling - but do it to raise funds for the project,” he says. She wanders home, tired but satisfied. “I have been running it for 11 years,” she says. “It’s very nice, especially now the women’s race is very important.” “It’s a marvelous occasion. It’s a running jamboree.” And the weekend is not just about the adults in the international 10k. Joining the jamboree are joggers and jokers from all walks of life. Gezahgne Mersha definitely comes into the joker category. On Saturday, the festivities begin with 4,000 children racing their own version of the Great Run at Jan Meda. Still buzzing after completing the race for a seventh time he claims “I am the King of athletics, The King of Habesha and Russia as well as oldest Prussia.” What ever his official title, nothing was going to deny Gezahgne in his home city. The course took him around 45 minutes to complete. “I was sick for the last week so today I did some running and some walking,” he says.” Not to mention lots of talking. “I want to run it every year until my death,” he continues. “Forever.” “It’s our culture. It’s our tradition. It has By 8am, thousands have gathered in their brilliant orange and navy t-shirts, many with the green, yellow and red of the national flag painted across their faces, warming up in the bright sunshine. The mood proves such a contrast to last year when a security scare caused the last-minute cancellation of the children’s race. Then there were tears of disappointment but now only toothy smiles and excited anticipation. With loud music blasting from speakers, the pop group Yegna keep spirits high, providing extra encouragement for the athletes. Not that there is a shortage of motivation. Prizes for the top three finishers, including mountain bikes, keyboards and bags see to that. are inspired, too, by Edna Kiplagat, the reigning London Marathon champion from Kenya, who is on hand to present prizes. Adding to the sense of occasion, the India ambassador Sanjay Verma tells the children “You may have many friends when you are growing up but one friend that will remain with you, is sport and physical exercise. For the winners of the boys’ races, Bikal Meka (under-5s), Kim Johne (under-8s) and Amir Hassen (under-11s), there is the honor of a warm handshake from the great Haile Gebrselassie. “Sport is going to keep you away from all the wrong things in life.” As soon as the horn blasts to signal the start, mayhem ensues. Instead of the measured approach favored by longdistance runners, kids are out of the traps like Usain Bolt. Cycling in front to guide the way is Richard Nerurkar, a former Great Britain marathon runner, pedaling hard just to stay ahead. For many children it is a first introduction to large-scale racing. In front of cheering crowds and waving mascots, perhaps it will be a perfect warm-up for a future Olympic appearance. Or may be it is simply a fun and healthy way to spend time with friends and family. Either way, it doesn’t matter. The Bekele-brothers-wannabes and those just enjoying the atmosphere, jogging hand-in-hand with mum or dad can take part together. Thanks to Plan International there is a separate race for disabled athletes and the organization hosts the event under the slogan ‘Because I Am A Girl’, promoting education and equal rights for females. Girl power is clearly on display. Maki Chindlan, the under-5s winner, Ruth Aynadis, the under-8 champion, and Nados Tesfaye, first in the under-11 race, all dream of emulating Ethiopia’s track queen Tirunesh Dibaba. They www.thereporterethiopia.com As the race’s co-founder 14 years ago, Haile plays a prominent role on Sunday too. He officially stars proceedings with Kenenisa Bekele, Derartu Tulu and Meseret Defar - a quartet of legends with a stunning nine Olympic gold medals between them. The medal chase on the day is led by Azmeraw Bekele, clocking 30 minutes 11 seconds for his second GER title. Wude Ayalew remains strong over the gruelling hills, claiming the women’s crown in 34 minutes 3 seconds, her third victory on the streets of Addis. Trundling home more than an hour later comes Liam, the former farmer from Tipperary. Still separated from his friends after rushing to the start, he is far from alone. Thousands of companions chat and pose for photographs with strangers. Like those walking away from a great music festival or football match, they are happy to have been part of a huge cultural event. For once the streets are free from traffic and the people are in charge. As Liam explains “it’s a long way to Tipperary” but well worth the journey. Vita, the charity for which he went the distance, means ‘life’ in Latin. It seems the perfect word to sum up the Great Ethiopian Run. Here, life comes in all forms and is celebrated joyously. Ed.’s Note: The writer is on an internship at The Reporter. Vol. XIX No. 951 |43 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 HAMMER TIME SPORT have missed training during teenage years when agility and flexibility are greater. By Mark Jenkin Kibrom Werede stands proudly next to a painting of Abebe Bikila outside the Defense Club in Addis Ababa. Size makes a big difference too. While throwers require powerful and muscular frames, Ethiopians tend to be lean and light. By showing dedication to athletics and setting national records in Ethiopia, both men have been trailblazers for their chosen sports. “May be, physically Ethiopians are not suited to throwing events,” said Kibrom. “In Oromia and Tigray, they do running because of their culture. In the north of Ethiopia, people are very tall but they play basketball and volleyball. But the similarities end there. When ‘barefoot’ Bikila stunned the field by winning the Olympic Marathon in Rome in 1960, he instantly became one of the world’s most recognizable sports stars. “The other problem is food. Culturally, Ethiopians eat injera. It is injera only. We are not eating enough carbohydrates and protein but for throwing, the main things you need are carbohydrates and protein. Kibrom, a gentle giant who only took up hammer throwing five years ago, is still waiting for his athletics discipline to gain similar public profile. “Kenyans eat maize and have better suited diets for throwing events.” Along with the other throwing eventsjavelin, discus and shot put - it has suffered from a lack of interest and shortage of investment. In the land of the long-distance runner, the hammer is yet to get off the ground. It was a proud moment for Kibrom last year when he beat the national record. The previous best of 38.90m is credited on the Ethiopian Athletics Federation website to Sahle Muluneh in 1976. Combining power and technique, competitors hold a handle which is attached to a 16lb spherical weight. By rotating quickly in a marked circle and then releasing their grip, they are attempting to project the heavy object as far as possible. As a self-coached athlete who was forced to learn the finer points of his sport from the internet, Kimbrom says there is desperate need for more qualified coaches. And, due to the lack of open space on which to train, he even fears hitting a member of the public when the potentially lethal ball and chain is sent spinning through the air. Despite these limitations, it is remarkable that Kibrom took only four years to go from novice to national record holder. Last year in the Ethiopia Championships at Addis Ababa Stadium, his throw of 44 meters broke a record which had stood for more than three decades. It is an achievement he did not think possible while working as an animal science development agent, helping farmers learn the best ways of feeding, grazing and breeding their cattle. Kibrom, 32, is originally from the town of Wukro in the Tigray Regional State. Having graduated from the government agricultural college, he worked for three years in the rural area of Dergajen, often coping without electricity. When he found himself out of work, a new occupation provided spark in his life. “When I started throwing, I was 27,” said Kibrom. “I had no job, I had no alternative, so I thought ‘I’ll throw’. I was doing it for enjoyment. “I didn’t have a coach so I learned from Kibrom Werede the internet and books.” The self-tuition clearly paid off and, following his first appearance in a national competition, he realized hammer throwing could be more than just a hobby. “All regions come to Addis to compete in the Ethiopia Championships and after that, my rank was No 9,” said Kibrom. “I was throwing without a coach so they thought ‘may be he’s good’. “When Defense Club asked me to join, I said to myself ‘this is good for me’. If a person has no job, clubs give hope. Defense is the best club in Ethiopia. They give me a salary, a home and food.” Dents and divots do not do footballers any favors. “The Football Federation says ‘the pitch is damaged. Don’t throw’,” said Kibrom. “If the government gave it more attention, may be the federations would work together. They need to compete with other countries so they prefer running only. In running, the athletes have managers - for business only - they can gain money. There is no attention for throwing. There is no vision for changing.” Kibrom, who is taking his coaching qualifications, hopes the next generation of throwers do not have to rely on advice found online. Keen to boost their strength in field events, Defense valued his contribution in club competitions where the top eight finishers earn points. The hammer throw is such a technical event, experienced teachers are needed for advice on rotation, footwork, grip and release. However, in the hectic city of Addis, Kibrom finds it difficult to practice his skills. “Long distance running is not complicated,” said Kibrom. “It is more simple. Throwing and also jumping and short distance running have more technique. “When I am throwing the hammer, I’m worried about hitting people,” he said. “There are no places to train.” Even at the national athletics stadium, there are practical problems. With the blessing of the Athletics Federation, runners can happily do laps of the track on the outside of the football pitch. But throwers, who use the infield, are greeted by groundsmen with the contempt normally reserved for a burrowing mole. “There is no one throwing a far distance because there are no skillful coaches. If we have skilled coaches, may be we can have skilled athletes.” Kibrom says there are not enough competitions for throwers and the shortage of gymnasiums means they miss vital work on the weights. Athletes who show interest in throwing tend to be aged 22 to 30 by which time they www.thereporterethiopia.com At that time, with Ethiopia still under socialist rule, throwers were taught by coaches from the Soviet Union, the world’s leading throwing nation. The Soviets produced eight different world record holders for the hammer between 1954 and 1986 and Yuriy Sedyky’s mark of 86.74m has still not been beaten. Gradually, Ethiopian throwers hoping to make progress. are This year at the African Championships in Morocco, Biruk Abraham extended the national record to 46.12m, claiming fourth place. For Kibrom, however, despite his national achievements, 44 metres is not a distance which stands up against Africa’s best. “When you compare it with countries like South Africa, Egypt and Kenya, it’s very short,” he said. “Only for Ethiopia, it’s very good. “In South Africa and Egypt they throw over 70 meters.” He dreams of a day when an Ethiopian thrower can generate the same enthusiasm among supporters as the nation’s famous runners. “When our people, our communities, hear ‘he’s doing a throwing event’ they don’t support it,” he said. “Abebe Bikila was a role model for running. Still there are no role models for throwing.” By spreading the word about his passion and teaching young athletes, Kibrom is aiming to put that right. Perhaps in the future, it will be hammer time. Ed.’s Note: The writer is on an internship at The Reporter. 44| Vol. XIX No. 951 The Reporter | Saturday | November 29, 2014 Advertisment Design & Page Making Media & Communications Centre (MCC) Publisher Media & Communication Center (MCC) Printed d by Berhanena Selam Printing Enterprise Sub-city: Arada, Kebele: 17, H.No: 984
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