|
Tseghe, of course, is a resilient woman and in spite of the early negative encounters in Denver, true to her childhood dream, she founded the Africa House, an African art boutique. Initially, however, housing African House was not easy and the owner could hardly find a lease contract and then she “never expected the ‘land of opportunity’ to have so many closed doors” (p. 32). Nevertheless, her mirage still lingered and thus her “faith of humanity felt renewed” when she found a space at Cherry Creek and she kept hope alive not knowing that her struggles against the Tivoli landlords would continue in a different form against the Tabor Center, a new site for Africa House. In fact, she soon got eviction notice from the Tabor Center and she had no choice but to hire a lawyer(s) and continue to fight. The newly hired lawyer reassured Tseghe that he will “file an injunction in federal court to block the eviction first in the morning.” (p. 73)
America!
Haileselassie
Girmay

What
President-Elect Barack Obama Must Do Now-
November
5, 2008
IDEA
Editorial:
In
infrastructure, America is the envy of the
world. No nation has built superhighways,
perennial roads, and magnificent bridges as the
United States did. However, these
infrastructures need immediate attention for
repair, maintenance, and renovations. After all,
American infrastructure is the tributary and
lifeline of the economy. Renovating and
restructuring the infrastructure is tantamount
to revitalizing, cushioning, and boosting the
national economy.
Prophesy
or Political Expediency, Barack Obama May Become
the First Black President of the United States
Ghelawdewos
Araia October
16, 2008
Since
the Voting Rights Act, slightly over four
decades have elapsed and in due course the
United States has made remarkable progress in
race relations although vestiges of racism and
racial prejudice are still well and alive. The
psychology of racism is best exemplified by the
recent incident in western Pennsylvania where
some Whites explicitly and in no uncertain terms
declared that they would not vote for Obama
because he is Black. This might seem astounding
but it is not altogether surprising given the
deeply rooted racially divided United States
society. For all intents and purposes, racism
has subsided but it did not taper off completely
and with the coming of Obama to power, America
would undergo major restructuring in race
relations and hopefully for the better.
Ethiopia:
Draft Law Threatens Civil Society
Donor
Governments Should Condemn Assault on Rights
New
York – Ethiopia’s parliament should reject a
draft law that would criminalize human rights
activity and seriously undermine civil society
groups, Human Rights Watch said today. Human
Rights Watch called on donor governments to
speak out publicly against the bill, which is
expected to be introduced in parliament this
month.
The
Charities and Societies Proclamation (CSO law)
would provide the government a potent tool to
intimidate and weaken Ethiopia’s long
beleaguered civil society. Although the bill has
been revised twice since May 2008, the current
version retains many of the most alarming
provisions. “The only reason to have such a
repressive law is if it would be used to
strangle Ethiopia’s few remaining independent
voices,” said Georgette Gagnon, Africa
director at Human Rights Watch. “Donor
governments should make clear to Ethiopia that
enacting this law will threaten future funding.”
Civil
Society Leaders Call for Mass Protests Against
Mugabe
SW Radio Africa (London) 13 October 2008
By Lance GumaThe Secretary General of the
Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ)
Raymond Majongwe, and Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
leader Jenni Williams, have both called for
street protests against Mugabe's move to grab
the key ministries. The state owned Herald on
Saturday published a list of ministries
allocated to ZANU PF and the MDC, by Mugabe
using a government gazette. The ZANU PF leader
grabbed Home Affairs, Defence, Justice,
Information, Local Government and Foreign
Affairs Ministries while giving the MDC minor
ministries.
Kagame
Launches One Laptop Per Child
The New Times (Kigali) 2 October 2008
By James Karuhanga
President
Paul Kagame has said that enabling all primary
school children to own computers was the
government's ultimate goal. This was during the
official launch of the One Laptop per Child (OLPC)
initiative at Jali Club yesterday. "Our
goal is to continue finding means and ways to
provide all primary school children in Rwanda
with this important learning tool," Kagame
said, adding that various schemes, including
encouraging parents to participate in buying
computers for their children, would be used.
Don't Rush Proposed Curriculum Reform
1 October 2008
New Vision (Kampala)-IT was good news yesterday that the education ministry suspended the implementation of a curriculum reform that would have drastically scaled down the number of subjects taught in secondary schools.
The proposal in its current form has several negative consequences. For instance, thousands of teachers would be made redundant if the proposal is implemented the way it is. This would send a wrong signal and make it difficult to attract students to the teaching profession.
When
Criminals Control the Ministry of Education
September
10, 2008
George
D. Gollin-The connection between education and
personal economic advantage drives a global
market for higher education. But much of the
world cannot create additional university
capacity at a rate to match this demand. Diploma
mills, businesses that sell bogus degrees to
customers in search of easy credentials,
comprise the dark response to these market
forces. The recent demise of a sophisticated
American diploma mill provides some insight into
these abominations.
Ethiopia
celebrates restoration of giant obelisk
September
4, 2008
talian soldiers
carted away the 24-meter (78-foot)
third-century AD granite funeral stela in 1937
on the orders of then-dictator Benito
Mussolini during his attempt to colonise
Ethiopia.
Despite a 1947
agreement that called for its return, the
obelisk had remained in Italy standing outside
the Rome headquarters of the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization, much to the anger of
Ethiopia.
Its return was
finally agreed upon in talks in Italy in
November 2004 between Ethiopian Prime Minister
Meles Zenawi and Italian Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi, but its arrival was then announced
and delayed several times.
Beijing
2008 Olympics: Symbol of the Emergence of China
as a Global Power
Ghelawdewos Araia
August 10, 2008
On August 8, 2008
when I watched the opening ceremony of Beijing
2008 Olympics, I was mesmerized and totally
captivated by the 2008 drummers, not only by the
sheer elegance and symmetry of their polymetric
body movements, but also by their astounding
dramatic reenactment of the glorious past of
China. The talent of these seemingly robotic
drummers altogether blends the bounties of
nature and humanity and their gratifying
posture, in a word, was protean, displaying
great diversity in contradistinction to the
uniformity of their roles. The incredible
military-like pageantry of these drummers may
not get a satisfying intellectual explanation if
superficially observed but on close scrutiny the
4016 hands operated like two giant hands to
signify unity, and most importantly the 4016
glowing drum sticks used by the drummers
symbolize light of hope and bright future.



Unesco-Nigeria
Project Reviews 57 Curricula
This
Day (Lagos) NEWS
15 July 2008 Lagos
A total of 57 programmes in technical colleges
and polytechnics have been reviewed under the
first phase of the UNESCO-Nigeria project for
the revitalization of Technical and Vocational
Education (TVE), National Coordinator of the
Project, Dr Nuru A. Yakubu has said. Yakubu
who is also the Executive Secretary of the
National Board for Technical Education (NBTE),
one of the unique features of the revised the
curricula, which have been made available to
stakeholders in hard and soft copies, was the
incorporation of ICT and Entrepreneurship
Education.

Global
Political Theater and The Peripheral States of
Africa
Ghelawdewos Araia
The
degree of dependence, however, varies from
country to country and across the board in
Africa. A significant number of Africans in the
early 1960s were vociferously and avowedly
independent, and fiercely independent regimes
like Sekou Toure of Guinea were penalized by
economic embargo and diplomatic ostracism. At
the other extreme of the continuum, there were
some leaders who either wanted to postpone
independence or simply continue the
patronization of their ‘mother country’
France.
Ghelawdewos
Araia
That
Ethiopian belly once again starving
My
people once again dying
The
Ethiopian nation altogether crying
That
Ethiopian mother for her children mourning
Out
of Africa Sunday
May 18, 2008
Source: Observer, UK
For the moment, though, it is the music of the past that is attracting the attention of the West. Éthiopiques gathers an array of talents, among them singer Mahmoud Ahmed, who lifted a BBC World award last year, Alemayehu Eshete, saxophonist Getatchew Mekurya, and 'Ethio-jazz' bandleader Mulatu Astatke. It's these four who are heading for Europe, backed by the US jazz troupe Ether Orchestra.
Ethiopian Airlines says profits may hit record high
May
17, 2008, REUTERS
ADDIS ABABA: Ethiopian Airlines net profits for the first nine months of 2007/08 reached 484 million birr ($55.67 million), the airline said in a statement.
The state-owned carrier posted net profits of 129 million birr in 2006/07. The statement predicted that, based on the first nine months of 2007/08, the airline would achieve a record net profits and revenues. Expenses for the same period rose by 21 percent, the brunt of which Chief Executive Girma Wake said was spent on fuel.
"Fuel price remains of concern to the industry as a whole and Ethiopian believes that costs will continue to escalate into the next quarter given the present trend in price of fuel," Wake said. Revenues for the period rose 29 percent to 6.6 million birr, he said.
The airline transported 1.9 million passengers, a 19 percent increase on last year. Wake said the improvements in revenue and traffic were due to increased frequency of flights, the introduction of new routes and an increase in cargo revenue
ZIMBABWE
: From Party-Mobilizing to
Monopolistic-Hegemonial Regime
Ghelawdewos
Araia
May
6, 2008
We
shall see what will happen in the run-off
elections! It seems to me, however, that Mugabe
could prevail only if he deploys all his secret,
army, and police forces all over Zimbabwe. This
last political ditch may not work for Mugabe
this time for three reasons:
1)
Mugabe and his cronies are not as young and
energetic as they were in the early 1980s; the
wear and tear has taken a toll;
2)
the bulk of the Zimbabweans, who got the brunt
of the crisis, are sick and tired of the
monopolistic regime;
3)
Zimbabwe has now virtually became a desolate and
isolated country in an increasingly globalized
and interacting world, and the only hope for
Zimbabwe’s resurrection is the MDC and other
progressive Zimbabweans.

Ghelawdewos
Araia
April
7, 2008
IDEA,
Inc.
This
essay will make a brief historical synopsis and
analysis of the crimes perpetrated by the
Italian fascists against the Ethiopian people in
the 1930s. At this particular juncture, it may
sound ironic to revisit the crimes against
humanity committed in Ethiopia by Fascist
henchmen like Marshall Pietro Badoglio and
Marshal Rodolfo Graziani, but sometimes the past
contends with the present especially if justice
has not been served and no official apologies
extended by state and/or religious leaders of
the perpetrator nation.This essay is also aimed
at reinforcing the Global Alliance for Ethiopia,
a group of Ethiopians’ initiative in an effort
to convince the Vatican and Pope Benedict XVI to
apologize to Ethiopians as he has done to the
Jews in Germany with respect to the Holocaust
committed by the Nazis. As a matter of fact, one
of the members of the Global Alliance for
Ethiopia, Ato Kidane Alemayehu has written a
letter to the Holiness Pope Benedict XVI (Vatican_Apology_to_Ethiopia.doc)
but to this day no answer was given.
The
Kenya Political Crisis: Diagnosis and Prognosis
March
20, 2008
Ghelawdewos
Araia-Unless
otherwise the Kenyan constitution is completely
revised and re-written, the people of Kenya
cannot simply accept a sudden departure from the
politics that they are familiar with. According
to the present Kenyan constitution, the
President [Kibaki] is head of state and
government and is elected directly by the people
for a five-year term limited to two terms. The
president selects members of the cabinet from
the National Assembly and he also appoints the
governors of the respective districts (69
autonomous provincial districts) and members of
the judiciary including the Chief Justice and
High Court judges.
March
18, 2008 Transcript
Barack
Obama’s Speech on Race
Throughout
the first year of this campaign, against all
predictions to the contrary, we saw how hungry
the American people were for this message of
unity. Despite the temptation to view my
candidacy through a purely racial lens, we won
commanding victories in states with some of the
whitest populations in the country. In South
Carolina, where the Confederate Flag still
flies, we built a powerful coalition of African
Americans and white Americans. This is not to
say that race has not been an issue in the
campaign. At various stages in the campaign,
some commentators have deemed me either “too
black” or “not black enough.” We saw
racial tensions bubble to the surface during the
week before the South Carolina primary. The
press has scoured every exit poll for the latest
evidence of racial polarization, not just in
terms of white and black, but black and brown as
well.
Ghelawdewos Araia-
If Barack
Obama becomes the next president, can America
adapt to the global changing circumstances?
Given America’s political history of
‘constancy and change,’ and the ability of
the nation to reinvent itself, the United States
will definitely attempt to accommodate the new
order rather than clash with it. The new world
order that I have alluded to above is not just a
multi-polar world tainted with balance of powers
but it is also going to herald peaceful
coexistence and cooperation among the peoples of
our planet earth. In order to foster such a
grandiose plan of international cooperation and
cultural exchange, an Obama type of leader is
the necessary prerequisite, because he has
already united the American people and will
bridge U. S. interests with other global
interests and he is of dual heritage, American
and African who can smoothly connect not just
Kenya but also the entire continent of Africa
with America. America needs a Barack Obama
leadership in the first decade to quarter of the
21st century, but we will have to
wait and see for its fruition.

Dr.
GHELAWDEWOS ARAIA- March
2, 2008
- More than any moment in their history,
Ethiopians must jealously guard a united and
strong Ethiopia in an effort to continue the
legacy of their patriotic forefathers and
guarantee the national interest and security of
their nation. They should never succumb to
ethnic-specific issues despite the current
ethnocentric politics hovering over Ethiopian
communities at home and elsewhere. Unity and
brotherhood among various Ethiopian nationality
groups is extremely crucial, and Adwa is a
constant reminder of a unified force that can
virtually circumvent a negative political
monster that is aimed at dismantling the organic
and cohesive fabric of a given historic entity.
Ethiopians have witnessed peaceful coexistence
amongst themselves for millennia and they have
no wish other than harmony and fraternity toward
one another and toward others. It is in light of
the above reality, therefore, that we must now
celebrate the 110th anniversary of the victory
of Adwa, and so that our subscribers appreciate
in some depth and get the flavor of what Adwa
was all about, we have hereby post two articles
on the victory of Adwa written and presented by
Dr.Ghelawdewos Araia; one in English, presented
at Howard University (Washington, DC) and the
Dusable Museum (Chicago) for the centennial
celebration in 1996; the second, in Amharic,
presented before an Ethiopian audience in
Seattle for the 107th anniversary of Adwa in
2003.
IDEA
Editorial
March
2, 2008
111th
Anniversary of the Victory of Adwa
Is the 111th anniversary of the victory
of Adwa. This IDEA editorial, however, is not
intended to present an elaborate version of the
history of Adwa victory. It is rather a critique
of the misguided perceptions and misconceptions
with respect to Adwa. Some Ethiopians think that
the victory of Adwa was the victory of the
people of Adwa. This category of people is
either misled by some mysterious and
unfathomable dictates or is simply ignorant of
the historical circumstances that led to the
battle of Adwa.
Uganda:
Makerere University Ranking Up
MAKERERE University has significantly moved up
the rankings of the top 100 universities in
Africa.
According
to the latest rankings of world universities
updated in January 2008, the 86-year old
university is now placed at number 47th, seven
steps up from where it was last year. Makerere
is also the only Ugandan university that
features on the list. The Uganda Christian
University that was 97th in 2007 is off the
current ratings. The
highest ranked University in East Africa is
Strathmore University Nairobi at number 21.
Others are University of Dar es Salaam (22),
University of Nairobi (25), Egerton University
(33) and National University of Rwanda (44).
Literacy
Plan to Provide 300 000 Adult Classes
BuaNews
(Tshwane)
A
mass literacy campaign, the Kha Ri Gude project,
is to provide basic literacy classes to 300 000
adults and youth. This
emerged from President Thabo Mbeki's State of
the Nation Address Friday, which focuses on a
Business Unusual approach, delivered at the
opening of Parliament in Cape Town on Friday.
As
part of the Adult Basic Education and Training
programme (ABET), the President said: "We
shall this month launch the Kha Ri Gude mass
literacy campaign. "This
will include the training of master trainers who
will provide basic literacy classes to 300 000
adults and youth in 2008."
Seeye
Abraha:
The Transformative Personality in
Ethiopian Politics
January 23, 2008
By Bereket Kiros-Seeye
Abraha captured in his energetic articulation of
the inner reality of the diverse political views
(lives) of the many feuding Ethiopians and their
organizations. Chinua Achebe in his novel “A
Man of the People” narrates about two
contrasting groups of people in West Africa. In
that novel, he describes two characters
representing the old and the new generations of
politicians. The conflict between the old and
the new political systems is portrayed through
the two characters as they disagree and quarrel
over political views. Seeye likewise captured in
his articulation the essence of the present
conflict between Ethiopian politicians, the new
against the old, the leftist against the
rightist, the Derg against the democratic et
cetera that paralleled the main theme of
Achebe's novel.
A
New Paradigm in Ethiopian Politics: A discussion
on what Ethiopians can do at this historical
juncture to bring about change in Ethiopia
Ghelawdewos Araia January 14 2008-How
can this paradigm of epistemology be attained
though? The advanced segment of Ethiopian
learned men and women (intellectuals and
professionals) could make enormous contribution
if they are willing to do so and if conditions
in Ethiopia are favorable and permissive. These
educators must be open and receptive as well as
focused and hard driven, and they can’t afford
to exhibit non-committal silence in the middle
of their endeavor.

IDEA
Editorial
January
4, 2008

Obama,
therefore, may continue to be a charismatic
persona representing hope and change, but in the
end it is the Electoral College, and not the
popular vote, that would decide the selection of
the would president of the United States of
America. To begin with, the Democratic Party,
Obama’s own party, out of fear losing to the
Republican Party, may not chose Obama as its
candidate in its forthcoming convention.
Universities
Create Partnership to Improve Disaster Risk
Management
The
Reporter (Addis Ababa) By Yelibenwork Ayele
The
three-year 200,000 USD grant will help Bahir Dar
University create a regional institute of
excellence on disaster risk management and
sustainable development with support from the
University of Arizona (UA). The new project is
being implemented in partnership with the Higher
Education for Development.
Halfway to 2015 Education Goals, Progress Not Fast Enough
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
Posted to the web 17 December 2007 Dakar
Critics
say donors at a recent high-level meeting failed
to make firm funding commitments for improving
education, particularly in impoverished, fragile
and war-torn countries, making it highly
unlikely the world will meet ambitious education
goals by the 2015 deadline. "I cannot be
very optimistic," Koïchiro Matsuura,
director-general of the UN Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO),
said at a press conference on 13 December in the
Senegalese capital, Dakar, at the close of the
three-day meeting of the High-Level Group on
Education for All, which brought together
education ministers, donors and development
partners.

 
Towards
Confederation in the Horn of Africa Focus
on Ethiopia and Eritrea
This
is a new addition to the volumes of works on the
Horn of Africa. From the back page of the Book:
In this book Professor Tesfatsion Medhanie
explores the possibility of confederal relations
between Ethiopia and Eritrea. Such an
arrangement could become the nucleus of a Horn
of Africa confederation. The author discusses
the obstacles at present and the necessary
conditions for success in this regard.
SOVEREIGNTY:
An Absolute and Perpetual Power
A
Discussion on U. S. – Ethiopia Relations
Ghelawdewos
Araia October
26,
2007
If
we follow Diamond’s extrapolations, therefore,
HR 2003 will only serve as an extension of the
old-fashioned ‘carrot and stick’ policy and
will not realize Congress’ intention of
scrutinizing the Ethiopian government on “human
rights violations”, but by default could
penalize and harm Ethiopia. It is simple logic:
In the absence of the vital institutions for the
establishment of democracy, we cannot have
viable democratic governance in Ethiopia or
elsewhere in the Third World.
MAKERERE
University has directed the sh600m meant to pay
for Internet services to fixing its roads. The
university secretary, Sam Akorimo, attributed
the shift to the Government's failure to include
the university in its budget for road repairs
ahead of the Commonwealth meeting (CHOGM) next
month.
Nigeria
is to participate in the next international
mathematics and science Olympiad competition,
the director general, National Mathematical
Centre Abuja, has said. The center at the
weekend held preparatory exams in all the states
of the federation and FCT which will be followed
by the geo-political and the national one in
order to chose those that will represent the
country at the international event.October
22,
2007
Conference
Report
Sally Healy, September 2007
Points of Clarification for the Sake of Educational Discourse
October 3,
2007
Ghelawdewos Araia-Instead
of burying oneself in the sand – the ostrich
syndrome – the best critique of my article
would have been a thoughtful analysis that is
credible, plausible, and enumerates in plain but
coherent English what Ethiopians can do for
their country. Moreover, a critic’s
responsibility is to critically examine
concepts, themes, and controversies that are
part of the corpus of a given essay without
resorting to polemics and sarcastically
appealing to the powers that be for attention
and personal gains. However, as I have stated in
the introduction of this essay, we must tolerate
a broader continuum of perspectives including
the sublime and the absurd. Our destiny has been
to traverse a complex path tainted with positive
and negative attributes, in order to achieve a
relatively sane and democratic society.
Seeking
Peace in the Horn of Africa Solutions for
Somalia
Duke University Talent Identification Program's International Affairs Institute.
September
26, 2007
Beyond
the Millennium, Beyond Illusion and Cynicism,
and the Challenges of Development
. Ghelawdewos
Araia September 20, 2007
“In the last fifteen years, I have argued all
along that the EPRDF government needs to attract
Ethiopian intellectuals and professionals and
utilize their expertise and talent. So far, I
have not witnessed the use of Ethiopian
professionals en masse for nation building,
notwithstanding the few and far in between
favored officials that hold ministerial
positions and other portfolios. If the Meles
regime is indeed in favor of ‘educated and
healthy workforce, world-class managers and
professionals,’ it should openly extend its
hands to all Ethiopians, especially those who
are scattered all over the Diaspora.
Irrespective of our differences and political
inclinations, I personally like the government
of Ethiopia to reach out fellow Ethiopians who
are willing to contribute to the transformation
of their country and the welfare of their
people.
Ethiopian Art: Identification and Dating of Crosses and Alleged Brancale on Works.
All Africa.com
The
unique character of Ethiopian art is the legacy
of its situation high in the mountains on the
Horn of Africa. Though remote and often isolated
it evolved a tradition, going back to the fourth
century AD, in response to contacts with
Byzantine, European and Islamic cultures.
Beginning in the twelfth century, elaborate
crosses were cast and engraved in iron and
bronze. Painted and carved icons were produced
in a tradition that reached its peak at the end
of the seventeenth century. Above all it is
richly illustrated manuscripts that have
provided the most defining expression of
Ethiopian Christianity.
Darfur Should Exemplify the End of all Violence in Africa
IDEA
Editorial
August
6, 2007
Now, we have high hope that the 26,000 UN troops will effectively monitor the activities of the Janjaweed and the mood and unpredictable behavior of the Beshir regime. First thing is first: the UN peacekeeping forces must end all violence in Darfur by fully involving the spokesmen and representatives of the people of Darfur in their own affair. Whatever actions and resolutions are taken without the involvement of the people of Darfur would become meaningless and ineffective. Beyond the people of Darfur, the involvement of other Africans via the African Union (AU) is also crucially
important.
IDEA
Editorial
July
22, 2007
Good
News From Ethiopia in Anticipation of the
Millennium Celebration
What
is important, now, however, is the pardoning and
freedom of the 38 CUD leaders. It is a delight
to witness their reunion with their respective
families, as Siye Abraha did with his family and
his ailing mother. We also wish the Kinijit
leaders a happy and prosperous life as well as
reintegration in Ethiopian politics, and
if they pursue the latter they must seriously
consider the subtle nuances of Third World
politics; they must transcend cultural and
linguistic (ethnic politics) affinities; they
should not be limited to and motivated by
political considerations (the power nexus) but
should also consider the exigencies of economic
development or transformative politics;
Dear Ghelawdewos
(Dr.),
As
a supporter of President Clinton's work, you
understand we all have the unprecedented ability
to help others. We hope you'll put this
power to action and join
the Clinton Foundation on our journey as we
strive to make a difference in the fight against
HIV/AIDS, poverty and climate change in Africa.
Uganda:
More Oil, Gas Found
Edris
Kisambira- Resource-rich African countries and those with big economies like Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, Angola, DRC, Egypt, Libya, should really be judged by the MDGs because they and should do much better than that. Even the poorer countries like Ethiopia can do better if they set their priority right. If Ethiopia has resources to occupy another country it can certainly do better at home.
Southern
Africa:SADC to Set Up Gas, Petroleum
Body
Wilfred
Edwin- The secretariat said the consultant will be tasked to identify petroleum and gas issues that need
harmonization and draft appropriate specifications, rules, and standards.
The consultant will identify functions, tasks and structure of the regional petroleum and gas sector association and advise on the feasibility of having a composite regional energy regulator encompassing electricity, petroleum and gas. The East African region is said to have a high oil and gas potential. This has seen players in the industry call for joint petroleum exploration ventures.
The secretariat of the East African Community hosted the third East African Petroleum Conference in Arusha, this March at which sector development in the sub-region was discussed.
Continent Leaders, Rich Nations Hold Key to Africa's Success
July
12, 2007
By Dr. Tajudeen
Kampala- There are countries that are doing quite well on a number of the goals even if they may not meet all of them. Across the continent in education, most of the countries have seen huge rises in enrolment in primary schools as a result of debt relief and new prioritization of the education of our children by many governments. Uganda, for instance, has raised the gear from universal primary education to the secondary level; Kenya is considering the same. Malawi has proven that where there is a will there is a way and even Africa's sleeping giant, Nigeria has reintroduced compulsory universal basic education.
Africa
must unite with a big-bang even if the heavens
fall: A Call to the Summit in ACCRA!!
June
30, 2007
By NES
Commentary
On
the eve of this historic African Heads of States
meeting with a possible impending decision
expected on
how
and when to implement the one and only
one item on the agenda: the African Union
Government: towards the United states of Africa,
NES joins all the inspiring pan-Africanists such
as Kwame Nkrumah, George Padmore and others to
urge Africans to make a big- bang burst into
world history by doing Pan-Africanism in
practice and making it work by deploying
knowledge rather than to use as usual hundred
good or
not so good reasons why Africans should continue
to talk unity while keeping
separate and apart from each other.
IDEA
Editorial June
25, 2007
Granting
Freedom to Political Prisoners is a Step in the
Right Direction 6/23/2007
We at
IDEA do not pretend to act as strategic peace
brokers between the Ethiopian Government and the
opposition, but we wish peace and development
(two faces of the same coin) to prosper in
Ethiopia. The Government and the Opposition,
therefore,
must find ways and means to negotiate
their interests and differences via dialogue and
civil discourse without resorting to antagonism
and coercion. Both groups must understand that
in any political process the interests of
political groups are accompanied, almost always,
by internally generated impulses that could
either be contained or go out of hand. In any
event, both the opposition and the Government
are responsible for developing creative
individual niches to systematically control
impulses
Selective
Amnesia & The German Radio Amharic Broadcast
IDEA
Editorial June 8, 2007-Most
importantly, history cannot be written by people
who harbor phobia to some ethnic group within
Ethiopia and by people who suffer selective
amnesia. The latter is a debilitating disease
that creates discord among people who, in one
form or another, pursue a relatively harmonious
relationship. The guarantee for Ethiopian unity
is, first and foremost respect of the various
cultures and linguistic groups that make up
Ethiopia. Just advocating Ethiopian unity
without due recognition of Ethiopian
nationalities (another version of selective
amnesia) is empty rhetoric and jingoistic.
State Minister Calls On Universities to Attach Due Attention to Quality Research
Ethiopian Herald (Addis Ababa
June 4, 2007
Universities should attach due attention to quality research as they are instrumental in ensuring speedy and sustainable growth, the Ministry of Education said. State Minister of Education Dr. Adhana Haile underscored at a research and study symposium here Thursday that higher learning institutions need to give due attention to quality research works as they have significant contribution towards boosting production and productivity.
Government Promotes Reading Culture Among Children
New Vision (Kampala) June 4, 2007
By Francis Emorut and Penlope Nankunda
THE Government is to partner with Uganda Children's Writers and Illustrators Association (UCWIA) to promote a reading culture among African children, the minister of Labour Gender and Social Development, Syda Bbumba, has said. In a speech presented by William Otim, a commissioner in the gender ministry, Bbumba said: "I'm very satisfied with the activities which UCWIA carries out. The Government of Uganda is ready to be a willing partner in the pursuit of your goals."
In
Memory of Dr. Paulos Daffa
By
Ethiopian community and friends in Muenster,
Germany
May
31, 2007
Dr.
Paulos Daffa passed away on Friday, May 11, 2007
at the University Clinic in Muenster.
His
funeral service was held on May 18, 2007 in
Muenster.
Paulos
Daffa was born on August 19, 1946 in Aira,
Wallaga, Ethiopia as second son of Rev. Daffa
Djammo and Woizero Kanntu Karorssa. He attended
elementary school at the German Mission School
in Aira and junior secondary school at the
Entoto Swedish Mission School in Addis Ababa.
Later he attended General Wingate Secondary
School in Addis Ababa. He was an outstanding
student, a fine athletic person and a
development activist already during his teenage
years. He received several awards in athletics
including first prizes in 800 and 1500 m race
from the hands of the late Emperor Haile
Selassie.
Connecting
Africa and Asia by Bridge
By
IDEA Scholar Research Staff
May
25, 2007
The
huge but compact landmass of Africa can be
abridged at two points, namely the Straight of
Gibraltar and the Straight of Bab al Mendab,
with Europe and Asia respectively. The distance between
Morocco and Spain is only 9 miles and that of
Yemen and Djibouti is about 12 miles. Although
Africa is already connected with the Arabian
Peninsula via the Sinai, there is no modern
infrastructure that really joins the two
continents. Now an ambitious plan to connect
Yemen and Djibouti by the longest suspension
bridge in the world will be undertaken by the
Noor City Development Corporation of Napa,
California. The American company was authorized
by a Dubai-based developer, and once the bridge
is completed it will have a tremendous impact on
the development of Djibouti and Ethiopia as well
as the rest of the Horn of Africa. For further
information please see Tom Sawyer’s report by
linking to the following
URL:
http://enr.construction.com/news/intl/archives/070501.asp
Giving
Peace A Chance in the Ethiopian Millennium
Celebration
Ghelawdewos
Araia May
10, 2007
The
objective of this article, as its title implies,
is to advocate a lasting peace through mediation
and dialogue in an effort to quell the seeming
permanence of conflict within
Ethiopia
and its neighbors. The article will engage and
appeal to the political regime, the opposition,
and the various institutions of learning to
implement peaceful conflict resolution
mechanisms. As we shall see below, a whole gamut
of strategies and array of concepts and
methodologies are suggested in the resolution of
conflicts, and the responsible institutions, it
seems to me, must effectively play their
positive catalytic role in order to have a
relatively safe, peaceful, and tranquil society.
The
Impact of HIV/
AIDS
on Poverty and Education in
Africa
May
6, 2007
Ravinder Rena-The
HIV/AIDS is having a devastating effect on many
developing countries of Africa, largely by
undermining human capital particularly in the
countries like
South Africa
,
Ethiopia
,
Botswana
,
Swaziland
, and Uganda etc. The disease affects primarily
the adult population in its most productive
years thereby thwarting population incentives to
save and invest. The epidemic disease of AIDS
destroys the social fabric of whole communities
and undermines the capacity of government to
provide basic social services and essentially
curtails the potential for sustained economic
development and social transformation.
Ghana:
Ghana @ 50: Aid Effectiveness in Education
Delivery
Ghanaian
Chronicle (Accra) April
20, 2007
The
premise that education is a central pillar of
human resource development is widely accepted in
Ghana. Education produces knowledge, skills,
values and attitudes. Education is critical for
economic growth and poverty reduction. Through
education there is a development of critical
thinking skills to create human capital to
affect workers productivity and distribution of
new wealth. Ghana @ 50 therefore demands frank
assessment of the various interventions in
education delivery in the country to guide our
actions, from the current rallying cry of a fall
in standard of education to a reality of
achieving excellence
South
Africa: Educating the Poor is Vital to SA's
Future Prosperity
Business
Day
(Johannesburg) OPINION
Neva Makgetla April
20, 2007
EVERY
year when matric comes around, we hear about
plucky schools in dirt-poor communities that
achieve a decent pass rate. But the reality is
that education remains heavily inequitable, with
worse resourcing and outcomes for poor, black
and female children. In 2003, only 12% of
Africans who took matric got a university
exemption, compared with 51% of white learners.
Is
Christianity an Offshoot of the Egyptian Mystery
System?
Ghelawdewos
Araia April
7, 2007
The
ancient Egyptians virtually gave us all major
attributes of civilization: agriculture
(irrigation), architecture (pyramids, obelisks,
temples etc), mathematics (numerical and
standard measures), medicine (Imhotep’s legacy
–he is the first physician, not Hippocrates-,
herbal pharmacology, anatomy, mummification
etc), art of government (Egypt is the first
nation), and collection of wealth.
AfricaFocus
Bulletin Mar 26, 2007
The Southern African Development Community (SADC), which has pushed for an approach of 'quiet diplomacy' to the Zimbabwean crisis, has increasingly come under fire for failing to wield any influence." - IRIN, March 23, 2007 Attacks on protesters and opposition leaders in Zimbabwe have provoked a new level of criticism, particularly in the Southern Africa region. But it is still unclear what Zimbabwe's neighbors and the international community more generally can do to help check the
country's crisis.
By
Saba Mistlal Desta Webb
“In
naming this book I liken myself to a tigress, a
strong animal always ready to fight for her
rights. Being in the crossfire represents the
trials and heartaches I went through in order to
help the nation achieve the status it has today.
The illustration of the rays of the morning sun
shinning down on the tigress depicts the ongoing
journey into a new tomorrow for Ethiopia and its
people.” From the back cover of the book.
Oprah
Winfrey: The Indomitable Spirit & A Gift for
Africa
Ghelawdewos
Araia-March 12, 2007
Oprah
Winfrey is the embodiment of goodness and a
blessed woman destined to donate her love and
her money to African children. If Oprah had
lived several centuries in the African past and
happen to be part of the
Southern Africa
mythology, she would have been named Hakata
(sacred dice). Among the Bantu of Southern
Africa, especially among the people of
Zimbabwe
, legend has it that the Hakata was sought and
consulted whenever drought, famine, and
pestilence struck.
Ethiopians
Will Soon Celebrate The Millennium
Come
September the world could have celebrated it at
the same time had it not been for a historical
accident. We all recall that seven years ago
most of the world celebrated the Millennium
according to the Gregorian calendar. Did you
know that the Gregorian calendar came into being
only 425 years ago? The Christian world was
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