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UN Green National Hero Raises Awareness of Climate Warming


 (prweb.com)…UN Green National Hero Raises Awareness of Climate Warming American to discuss reforesting Ethiopia at Cancun climate meeting San Francisco, CA (Vocus) November 18, 2010 An Ethiopian-born American… read more

Keep walking

Epas anastas visits Ethiopia focus on cookstove opportunities





 (iapnews.wordpress.com)U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Official Visits Ethiopia: Focus on Cookstove Opportunities Addis Ababa, November 18 - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Assistant Administrator for Research… read more

The population challenge up close and personal

Dorze huts (Ethiopia)Image via Wikipedia (grist.org)by Lisa Hymas. You don't need to go to a place like Ethiopia to get a firsthand look at population growth - we can see its impacts all around us, from sprawling suburban subdivisions to crowded… read more
Gigi Sings Hope Songs for Ethiopia -- With Hopes for a Homecoming (spinner.com)

Ethiopian PM says EU election report is "trash"

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, left, a...Image via Wikipedia

By Barry Malone
ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has dismissed as "trash that deserves to be thrown in the garbage" a European Union (EU) report that criticised his overwhelming May election victory.
Meles' ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) and allied parties won 545 seats in the 547-member parliament in a vote that was also criticised by the United States.
"The report is not about our election. It is just the view of some Western neo-liberals who are unhappy about the strength of the ruling party," Meles told state television as he returned from the G20 summit late on Sunday. "Anybody who has paper and ink can scribble whatever they want."
Ethiopia is a key U.S. and European ally in the volatile Horn of Africa, where its secular government is seen as a bulwark against Islamic extremism.
The country's biggest opposition coalition, the eight-party Medrek, won just a single parliamentary seat. Medrek and the smaller All Ethiopia Unity Party (AEUP) demanded a rerun, alleging pre-poll intimidation and some vote rigging.
The calls were rejected by the country's electoral board and Supreme Court.
OPPOSITION DISADVANTAGE
The EU observer mission's report said the poll was marred by the EPRDF's use of state resources, putting the opposition at a disadvantage, and that freedom of expression and movement was not "consistently respected".  "The electoral process fell short of international commitments for elections, notably regarding the transparency of the process and the lack of a level playing field for all contesting parties," the 87-page report said.
Europe's chief observer for the election, Thijs Berman, says he was refused a visa to present the report in Ethiopia. The government denies that.
Ethiopia's last elections in 2005 damaged its reputation and hampered investment when the opposition disputed the result and street riots erupted in capital Addis Ababa, killing 193 protestors and seven policemen.
At the time, the government accused Europe's then chief observer of being biased in favour of the opposition and of helping to incite the trouble.


8,000 Falashmura to make aliyah - Israel News, Ynetnews




After years of waiting in transition camps, thousands of Jews from Falashmura denomination in Ethiopia will be brought to Israel. 'We have moral obligation to end humanitarian crisis,' prime minister says
Yael Branovsky
Published: 11.14.10, 16:27 / Israel News

The government has agreed on Sunday to bring the approximately 8,000 Falashmura Jews who remain in transition camps in Gondar, Ethiopia to Israel over the next four years.
"These are the seeds of Israel – men, women and children – that currently find themselves in the worst living conditions," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said during a Knesset meeting. "This really is the case of a complex humanitarian crisis. We must prevent the emergence of additional refugee camps in Ethiopia."
Jewish Rights
Rally: Not authorizing Falashmura aliyah crime against Zionism / Yael Branovsky
Hundreds of Ethiopian-Israelis gather in Jerusalem to protest delay in issuing of immigration permits to thousands of Falashmura waiting in Ethiopian transit camp. Minister Steinitz: This isn't about skin color
Full Story
Netanyahu told the ministers that 600 Falashmura members will come to Israel as soon as next year, and in the three years that follow 200 Falashmuras will make the move each month. "It is our moral obligation as the Israeli people to find a solution," Netanyahu said.
As per the government decision, there will be no additional organized aliyah of Falashmura members once this project is completed. Moreover, no one claiming to be Falashmura member will be granted the right for aliyah. Entrance to Israel will be allowed on an individual basis, in accordance with the Law of Return and the Interior Minister's decision.
200 immigrants will make aliyah each month (Archive Photo: AFP)

'Cannot let it become a historic crime'

Immigrant Absorption Minister Sofa Landver welcomed the measure, which was put together by the director-general of the Prime Minister's Office, Eyal Gabay, in collaboration with various organizations that have been petitioning for the step for years. "This is a historic decision, but we must make sure that it comes with budgetary support and with all the necessary solutions," he said. "It cannot become a historic crime."
Regional Development Minister Silvan Shalom, however, said that the proposal is unsatisfactory. "This is a scandal that must be stopped," he said. "We should bring 1,000 Falashmura members to Israel every month, and bring an end to the saga where thousands of people live in terrible conditions."
There are 7,846 Falashmura members who are candidates for aliyah. As per the decision, the Interior Ministry will examine their eligibility and give them a final answer by August 2011. To be found eligible a candidate must have had a Jewish mother, must desire to return to Judaism in Israel and must have been registered in an official list from 2007 of Falashmura waiting in transition camps. Falashmura members who are already living Israel can request their relatives to be brought to Israel within three months.
Falashmura rallying in Jerusalem in July. (Photo: Guy Asayag)

'We saw their suffering'

"We have experience with government decisions," said Knesset Member Shlomo Molla (Kadima), who supported the measure. "This project will not only put the government's decision-making to the test, but also the execution of these decisions. After many years of evasion, the agency has taken responsibility."
Molla described his experience as the head of a delegation to Ethiopia a year ago. "We saw the distress that people face, and their suffering and the suffering of their families," he said. "The fact that it will take three years to bring them here is ridiculous, and I hope that the government will shorten the unbearable waiting period."
Members of the South Wing to Zion, an organization advocating for Ethiopean Jews, welcomed the decision and called it a "historic justice." A representative of the Public Committee for Ethiopian Jewry stated that "this is a moral, Jewish, human and Zionist decision of the highest order, which comes to complete the aliyah from Ethiopia and bring justice to the Jewish brothers who are pleading to return and connect with the Jewish people in their country."


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