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Somalia and Ethiopian troops…..
At the IGAD Summit last
week, Ethiopia agreed to back the efforts of Kenya, the AU and
Somalia’s government to end the Islamic insurgency in Somalia.
IGAD’s Executive Secretary Mahboub Maalim said IGAD had asked
Ethiopia’s government to “come in and assist peace and
stabilization”, and he added “there was a promise from the Ethiopian
government that they would do so.” Ethiopia will respond to requests
from AMISOM and the TFG and any operations will be carried out under
the auspices and with the agreement of IGAD Chiefs of Defence
Staffs. Reports of large-scale Ethiopian convoys across the border
have been greatly exaggerated though there have been, as in the
past, some reconnaissance missions in border areas. It has been made
clear that any troops that do participate in operations at the
request of IGAD, AMISOM or the TFG will only be involved for short
periods to support TFG forces or assist other Somali forces fighting
Al-Shabaab.
On Monday, this week
President Sheikh Sharif told members of the public in Mogadishu that
at the IGAD Summit last week which he had attended Ethiopia had made
it clear it was not interested in deploying troops in Somalia. He
added that some countries had been pressuring Ethiopia to contribute
soldiers to AMISOM but it had refused. “Ethiopian officials have
been telling us in every meeting we have had that they do not want
to send their troops to Somalia, but that they want to strengthen
neighbourly relations and cooperate in the fight against
Al-Shabaab”. He emphasized the role that Ethiopia is playing would
be to strengthen its border security and to support Somali
government forces.
On Monday, Al-Shabaab
banned 16 aid groups from the regions it controlled, alleging they
had been carrying out “illicit activities” and “misconduct”. Among
those involved were several UN agencies, UNHCR, the World Health
Organization, UNICEF, the UN Population Fund and the UN Office for
Project Services, as well as the Norwegian Refugee Council, the
German Agency for Technical Cooperation, Solidarity, the Danish
Refugee Council, Concern, Norwegian Church Aid, Cooperazione
Internazionale and Action Contre la Faim. Aid agency officials said
it was truly bad news for the tens of thousands who depend upon
these agencies for aid and assistance. In a statement, Al-Shabaab
accused the agencies of “financing, aiding and abetting subversive
groups seeking to destroy the basic tenets of the Islamic penal
system”, and of “persistently galvanizing the local population
against the full establishment of Islamic Sharia system”. It claimed
the banned groups lacked “political detachment and neutrality with
regard to the conflicting parties, thereby intensifying the
instability and insecurity gripping the nation”. The agencies were
also accused of misappropriating funds and using corruption and
bribery as well as passing information about Al-Shabaab activities.
Following the lifting of
the famine status for three districts, aid agencies have begun the
resettlement of some of the tens of thousands of drought displaced
Somalis now in camps around Mogadishu. The United Arab Emirates Red
Crescent Society has started a project to resettle some 4,000
families, about 24,000 people, back in their homes so they can take
advantage of the rainfall before the end of the rainy season. The
returnees are being given food for three months, material for
shelters and some cash for each family. The returns are voluntary
with most of the families going back to Bay and Bakool and Lower
Shebelle, the three regions which have been reclassified from
famine/humanitarian catastrophe to humanitarian emergency areas.
Somalia’s National Disaster Management Agency says it is the
government’s policy to resettle all the internally displaced people
and more returns are planned among those willing to go back. Many of
those involved are farmers keen to get back to take advantage of the
best rains for three years and plant crops.
There have been few reports of Kenyan/TFG military activity on the
ground during the week though the Kenyan air force has continued to
carry out operations to decimate and degrade Al-Shabaab’s capacity
to plan and launch operations. There have, however, been reports
from areas of central Somalia and Juba regions that local militias
have been taking up arms against Al-Shabaab authorities, apparently
in anticipation of forthcoming AU/IGAD military assistance. Clashes
between militia and Al-Shabaab forces have been reported in Middle
Juba this week. In the Middle Shabelle village of Adadey, fighting
led to deaths on both sides after people responded to the beating of
a women by beheading the Al-Shabaab militant responsible. A
subsequent Al-Shabaab attack was driven off and Al-Shabaab
apparently abandoned the area.
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…..and Progress in the Somalia Roadmap
Last weekend the UN
organized another Consultative Conference, attended by members of
the international community as well as government officials and
representatives of Ahlu Sunna wal Jama’a, civil society groups and
the regional administrations of Puntland and Galmudug. Participants
heard reports from the four joint committees which have been looking
into issues of security, the constitution, political outreach and
reconciliation, and good governance. The next phase of the
consultation process will be held in Garowe, in Puntland, and will
focus on discussion of the draft constitution.
Considerable progress is
being made in organizing the Roadmap as the progress report at the
end of last week demonstrates. In the security area the Joint
Security Committee (JSC) has been meeting regularly for the past few
months with the August meeting the first to be held in Mogadishu.
The October meeting was held under the new 2-day format called for
by the Roadmap and, for the first time, included representatives
from regional stakeholders, Puntland, Galmudug and Ahlu Sunna wal
Jama’a. The National Security and Stabilization Plan 2011-2014 (NSSP)
has been drafted and finalized with input from the regional
stakeholders and was debated and approved by the Council of
Ministers at an emergency meeting on 26th October and
then submitted to Parliament.
The TFG-controlled
security zone has been expanded and now 98% of Mogadishu is under
the control of the TFG, and ongoing stabilization of the city
continues with Somali Police and TFG forces consolidating gains
after the August expulsion of Al-Shabaab. New district
administrations have been re-established in the newly-liberated
areas of Mogadishu, and the Police and the National Somali Security
Agency are conducting regular patrols all over the city, with
regular checkpoints established around the city to examine vehicles
and collect weapons. The Prime Minister has also established a
special taskforce made up of police and security forces to secure
humanitarian aid distribution in Mogadishu. He is now holding
regular meetings to coordinate activities with the Ministry of
Interior and National Security, with the Mayor, the Police
Commissioner and the 16 District Commissioners, and to discuss
Mogadishu security. District Peace and Security Committees implement
the outcome and decisions of these meetings.
Outside Mogadishu, the
TFG continues the offensive against Al-Shabaab in the south of the
country in its joint military operations with Kenyan troops in Lower
Juba and Middle Juba regions. In Gedo region, the TFG is in the
process of stabilizing the region after succeeding in ousting
Al-Shabaab and in creating a buffer-zone to deliver humanitarian
aid. On piracy, the Anti-Piracy Taskforce is undertaking capacity
building activities and building a robust national coastguard. It is
coordinating information and activity between the Office of the
Prime Minister, the Ministry of Interior and National Security, and
the Ministry of Fisheries as well as collaborating with regional
administrations under the Kampala Process on Piracy.
The Committee of Experts
for the Constitution was appointed on 23rd September. It
is composed of 9 members selected by the Prime Minister and the
Minister of Constitution in consultation with stakeholders. The
committee is currently in the process of preparing for the National
Consultative Constitutional Conference scheduled to take place in
the second week of December in Garowe, Puntland. The topics to be
discussed will include Federalism, a Decentralized System of
Administration and other outstanding contentious issues. The Joint
Committee to prepare for the adoption of the Draft Constitution and
for recommendations on the reform of the Federal Parliament was
appointed on 20th November. The Council of Ministers has
already appointed a Cabinet Select Committee on Election Preparation
and by mid January this will have produced draft legislation related
to the establishment of an independent electoral commission and
nominations for members of the electoral commission, rules governing
the conduct of elections at district, regional and national level,
and laws related to the formation and registration of political
parties.
There has also been
progress on political outreach and consultation starting with the
successful Consultative Conference on the Roadmap in September where
the TFG, Puntland, Galmudug and ASWJ were all present. That
conference was preceded by several high-level visits, including
visits to Puntland by TFG Prime Minister Dr. Abdiweli Mohamed Ali on
26th August and by TFG President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed on
28th August; and by Dr. Abdiweli Mohamed Ali to Galmudug
on 30th August where he signed a historic 8-point plan on
strengthening relations between the two administrations. On 19th
September, a high-level reconciliation dialogue took place in
Nairobi between the TFG Minister of Interior and National Security,
the TFG Minister of Constitution and Reconciliation, the Deputy SRSG,
and emerging regional administrations. In mid October, a government
mission led by the Deputy Minister for Interior and National
Security went to Puntland and Galmudug and to ASWJ areas. Another
mission that month led by the Chief of Armed Forces and AMISOM
recruited soldiers from all regions for joint training in Uganda.
During the past 3
months, the TFG has supported local level reconciliation and peace
building initiatives across the country. This has involved inter
alia sending reconciliation delegations to Galmudug, Himan and Heeb,
Puntland and Gedo to reconcile conflicting groups. Inclusivity and
participation is one of the key principles underlying the
implementation of the Roadmap. Civil society is a key partner of the
TFG and a Civil Society Organization Consultative Meeting was held
in Mogadishu last weekend with the business community, traditional
elders, diaspora, intellectuals and artists, NGOs and professional
associations, religious leaders, women groups and youth
representatives all represented.
The final area of
consideration is that of good governance. The Prime Minister has
established several mechanisms for greater coordination and
information sharing including a Humanitarian Drought Response
Ministerial Committee of 8 Cabinet Ministers, set up on 30th
June to oversee the delivery of humanitarian assistance to IDPs.
This committee meets weekly with international partners, local NGOs
and the Somali Disaster Management Agency which was created as an
independent agency by the Prime Minister in July to manage all
disaster issues within the country. Since its establishment it has
produced monthly reports on all the incidents that have occurred in
recent months and on ongoing needs. In September, a Humanitarian
Coordination Office was created within the Office of the Prime
Minister tasked with ensuring that the information flow between the
TFG and its humanitarian partners runs smoothly. It has brought
together the Ministry of Interior and National Security, the Somali
Disaster Management Agency, UN OCHA and the Mogadishu Mayor’s Office
in a working group to meet regularly on the humanitarian crisis.
On 17th
November, the Select Cabinet Committee on Anti-Corruption reported
back to the Council of Ministers on a proposed legislative
framework, recommending the reactivation of Law No.10 of 1968 to
re-establish the Bureau for Investigation of Corruption. This will
now update the relevant laws within 60 days, and in the meantime
Interim Commissioners have been nominated and are in the process of
being vetted. The government demonstrated its concern over
corruption in October when two Mogadishu district commissioners were
arrested, prosecuted, and sentenced after they were found guilty of
diverting food aid.
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The AU Peace and Security Council
discusses Sudanese issues
The latest round of negotiations on post-independence relations
between the Sudan and South Sudan was held in Addis Ababa under the
auspices of the AU High Level Implementation Panel (AUHIP), 25th
– 30th November. The session ended on Wednesday when the
AUHIP failed to resolve differences on charges over oil and other
pending issues. Further talks are scheduled to be held in December
and in January in the respective capitals.
In the meantime, the AU’s Peace and Security Council held two
meetings this week (November 28th and 30th) on
Sudan to consider the situation in Darfur and the activities of the
AU High Level Implementation Panel (AUHIP) on Sudan. The Council
took note of the Report of the Chairperson of the Commission on the
activities of the AU High Level Implementation Panel and was briefed
by Professor Ibrahim Gambari, Joint Special Representative (JSR) of
the African Union, former President Thabo Mbeki, Chair of the AUHIP,
and of Haile Menkerios, the United Nations Special Envoy for Sudan,
as well hearing statements from representatives of the Republic of
Sudan and the Republic of South Sudan.
In a subsequent communiqué, the Council expressed its concerns over
continued hostilities in parts of Darfur, called on all armed
movements that have not yet done so to join the peace process, and
reiterated its support to the efforts of the AUHIP, with the support
of UNAMID, to facilitate the early launching of the Darfur Political
Process (DPP). The Council said it was seriously concerned by the
continuing conflict in South Kordofan and Blue Nile, and urged the
Government of Sudan to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian
assistance, called upon all parties to immediately cease
hostilities, permit unhindered humanitarian access, and allow the
return of displaced persons to their homes.
It welcomed the progress made so far in post-secession negotiations
between the Governments of the Sudan and of South Sudan, including
the establishment of the Joint Political and Security Mechanism (JPSM),
the Agreement on Temporary Arrangements for the Administration and
Security of the Abyei Area, and the Framework Agreement between the
Government of the Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM-North)
on Political Partnership between the National Congress Party (NCP)
and the SPLM-North and Security Arrangements in Blue Nile and South
Kordofan States, signed in Addis Ababa on 20th and 28th
June, respectively.
It also took note of the ongoing AUHIP-facilitated negotiations on
the outstanding issues, including: (i) access by the South to the
oil pipelines that run through the North, (ii) transitional
financial arrangements to cushion the economic shock to the Sudanese
economy from the loss of revenue that accompanied the independence
of the South, (iii) the division of assets and liabilities, (iv)
arrears relating to oil and other outstanding matters, (v) banking
and cross-border payments (vi) trade relations, (vii) border
demarcation, dispute resolution and the management of pastoralist
migration across the common border, (viii) security matters,
including the management of a demilitarized zone between the two
States, (ix) the management of water resources, including the Nile
waters, (x) the nationality status of South Sudanese in Sudan and of
Sudanese in South Sudan, (xi) dispute resolution mechanisms, and
(xii) the efforts to find a solution to the Abyei issue.
The communiqué stressed the primary responsibility of the
leaderships of Sudan and South Sudan in ensuring that the
outstanding issues are swiftly resolved. It strongly urged the
leaderships of Sudan and South Sudan should desist from any
unilateral action that might negatively impact on the interests,
stability and development of either country. It reiterated the AU’s
full support for the Agreement on Abyei, urging both Sudan and South
Sudan to faithfully and unconditionally implement their obligations
under the Agreement. It expressed its deep appreciation to
the Government of Ethiopia for the speedy deployment of troops
within the framework of the United Nations Interim Security Force
for Abyei (UNISFA).
The Council encouraged the AUHIP to pursue and intensify its
engagement with the GoS and other stakeholders, to work closely with
the Government of South Sudan in support of its efforts to meet the
challenge of governance in a context of diversity, and to continue
to prioritize democratization in both states. It also underlined the
critical role that the international community could play in the
attainment of the objective of two viable States. This included the
immediate lifting of the sanctions imposed on Sudan, the granting of
debt relief and the provision of timely and adequate financial
support to lessen the impact on the Sudanese economy of the loss of
substantial revenue following the independence of South Sudan. It,
therefore, encouraged the African Union Commission to take the
necessary steps to reactivate the Sudan Consultative Forum as soon
as possible to facilitate closer coordination of all efforts to
provide more effective support for the aim of two viable States at
peace with one another.
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Prime Minister Meles visits the Republic
of Korea
Prime Minister Meles has
been on a four day official visit to South Korea this week at the
invitation of the President of the Republic of Korea, Lee Myung-bak.
His visit follows the visit of President Lee to Ethiopia and two
other African countries in July. At a summit meeting on Monday,
President Lee and Prime Minister Meles signed a memorandum of
understanding on industrial cooperation, and South Korea agreed to
help Ethiopia develop its textile and leather industry though a
sharing of development experience and knowledge. President Lee
expressed his satisfaction that relations between the two countries
had moved forward rapidly since his visit to Ethiopia in July, with
Ethiopia moving to reopen its embassy in Seoul. He hoped that the
Prime Minister’s visit would help to expand further all-round
cooperation.
The Prime Minister said
Ethiopia considered South Korea an important model for its economic
development and he hoped for greater co-operation in nurturing
textile and leather industries and establishing factories. He also
welcomed a plan put forward by President Lee which would involve the
invitation of 300 descendents of Ethiopian veterans of the 1950-53
Korean War for vocational training in South Korea. This, the
President noted, was part of a program to repay Ethiopia for the
help it provided during the war. Prime Minister Meles said this
would help train workers needed for Ethiopia’s economic development.
One of the core sectors of Korea/Ethiopia development cooperation is
education and resource training which focuses on rural development,
health, education and environment and is expected to have a positive
contribution on the implementation of Ethiopia’s Growth and
Transformation Plan.
Ethiopia has been a
focus of South Korea’s efforts to transfer development knowledge to
Africa, and South Korea has more than doubled its official
development assistance to Ethiopia to US $ 10.32 million last year,
helping to draw up a “green growth” economic development plan. It
has also helped to establish the Agricultural Transformation Agency,
modelled on Korea’s former Economic Planning Board which was
credited with designing and implementing South Korea’s development
in the 1960s and 1970s.
In an interview Prime
Minister Meles noted that he had been to South Korea twice before,
in 1998 when the country was suffering from the currency crisis of
the previous year, and again last year to attend the G20 Summit at
Seoul. He had been impressed to see how well South Korea had
overcome the currency crisis and weathered the 2008 global financial
crisis. He said one characteristic of Korea’s success was its
capacity to use adversity and challenge as a source of opportunity.
This was one of the elements of its success - the capacity to
reinvent itself as necessary. Korea, of course, has achieved an
‘economic miracle’ and Prime Minister Meles said he was eager to
learn from the developmental model of the late former President,
Park Chung-hee. He said that what interested him was how Korea rose
from poverty to become a rich country and in its experiences;
President Park had successfully led Korea’s economic development.
Prime Minister Meles
also attended the 4th High Level Forum on Aid
Effectiveness held this week in the city of Busan to consider the
lack of progress in the International Aid Transparency Initiative.
There is widespread agreement of the need for a broader and deeper
partnership at all levels of development, a set of effective
principles and a revitalized global effort to reach the Millennium
Development Goals as well as recognition that the poorest and most
fragile states need security, capacity and special consideration,
and that achieving results must be based on policies that encourage
direct participation by everybody in the development process.
Speaking in advance of his presence at the meeting, Prime Minister
Meles called on donor nations to provide quality aid, noting that
development assistance alone cannot lead to industrialization. Most
development aid, especially from western nations, was used for
social services, for primary healthcare, primary education and
similar areas. This was very valuable and important but developing
countries also needed to overcome their lack of infrastructure and
skills through more focused investment in these areas. “Development
aid can be effective or its impact on development can be very
little”, he said. The quality of aid to Africa had not been of good
quality and had been largely focused “on managing poverty better
than eliminating it.”
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A Consultative workshop for Ethiopia’s Human Rights
Action Plan
The first consultative
meeting of the National Coordinating Committee for Ethiopia’s
National Human Rights Action Plan was convened this week (November
28th – 29th) at the Sheraton Hotel in Addis
Ababa. The workshop brought together more than 160 members of the
National Coordinating Committee, which includes representatives of
the Federal and Regional Governments and civil society
organizations, and representatives of international organizations
and the media. Ministers, State Ministers and Vice-Presidents of
Regional States were among those present. Ambassador Teruneh Zenna,
Chief Commissioner of the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission, made an
opening speech and Ato Berhan Hailu, the Minister of Justice,
officially opened the workshop. Both stressed that the preparation
of the National Human Rights Action Plan was a milestone in
Ethiopia’s endeavour in ensuring full protection of the rights
enshrined in the Constitution and other international human rights
instruments to which Ethiopia is a party.
The agenda of the
Consultative Meeting and workshop focused on a discussion of the
nature and international experiences for the preparation of the
Action Plan. Ato Abraham Ayalew, Secretary of the National
Coordination Committee, from the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission,
presented a paper on the preparation of such plans. The session was
moderated by Ambassador Fisseha Yimer, Special Advisor to the Deputy
Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs. The workshop also
discussed the flow of data, the collection of information and the
structures created for the preparation of the Action Plan as well as
the role of various institutions involved in the process. The
conference was closed by the Deputy State Minister of Justice, the
Chairperson of the National Coordination Committee, after a 7 point
resolution was agreed by the members of the National Coordinating
Committee. The resolution emphasizes the importance of the National
Human Rights Action Plan, the role of the National Coordinating
Committee and the importance of coming up with a quality action plan
through a participatory process as soon as possible.
The Action Plan, which
will be approved by the Parliament, will serve the Nation as the
major element in the country’s all-round efforts in the promotion
and protection of human rights. It is expected that all the branches
of the Government (legislature, executive and judiciary) as well as
Non-governmental Organizations and the general public will also
contribute their efforts to the preparation and implementation of
the National Human Rights Action Plan.
The government has put
in place very ambitious plans to
achieve various targets
in the fields of democracy, good governance and human rights in the
five year Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP). One of the more
important pillars of the Plan gives due attention to the protection
and promotion of human rights and it has made preparation and
implementation of a separate and effective National Human Rights
Action Plan one of the parameters for the success of the GTP.
The concept of national
human rights action plans was first developed as part of the second
World Conference on Human Rights held in Vienna, in 1993. The
conference culminated in the adoption of the Vienna Declaration and
Program of Action and this document was later endorsed by the United
Nations General Assembly. It recommends that each state “shall
consider the desirability of drawing up a national action plan
identifying steps whereby that State would improve the promotion and
protection of rights”. Just over 30 countries all over the world
have so far prepared a national action plan and Ethiopia’s plan is
intended to boost its national human rights protection system to
maximum levels.
The decision to prepare
the National Human Rights Action Plan was taken by the Prime
Minister’s office and the preparation of the National Human Rights
Action Plan was officially launched on the 1st of
September by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign
Affairs. During the launch it was announced that the preparation of
the Action Plan would be spearheaded by senior government officials
and the necessary structures to accomplish the task would be
established. This was rapidly followed by the setting up of a
Steering Committee composed of Government Ministers, a National
Coordinating Committee of Federal and Regional Representatives and a
taskforce.
The aim is to enhance
the country’s activities in human rights protection and promotion
activities through a coordinated approach and in an effective
manner. The preparation of the plan also underlines the Government’s
determination to clearly translate existing normative frameworks in
this area into practical action. The process will in fact also add
significantly to Ethiopia’s efforts to fully implement the human
rights protections enshrined in the constitution and its
international commitments. These are, of course, part of the laws of
the land by virtue of the Constitution.
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Terms of Reference agreed for the International Panel
of Experts on the Nile Dam
On Tuesday and Wednesday
this week a tripartite meeting of ministers from Egypt, Ethiopia and
Sudan, was held here in Addis Ababa. Attended by Egypt’s Minister of
Water Resources and Irrigation, Ethiopia’s Minister of Water and
Energy and the Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources of the
Republic of Sudan, the aim of the meeting was to discuss and to
agree on draft terms of reference for the establishment of the
International Panel of Experts being set up to assess the impact of
the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on the Blue Nile. After
discussions and exchanges of ideas on the draft it was adopted with
certain amendments.
In accordance with the
TOR the three countries have agreed to form an International Panel
of Experts with ten members in all, two experts from each of the
three countries and another four international experts. The meeting
agreed on a time frame for the nomination of national members, two
weeks from the end of the meeting. The names of the independent
international experts are to be agreed within four weeks of
exchanging of the names of the respective national teams. The work
of assessing the impact of the Renaissance Dam on the downstream
countries is expected to be finalized within nine months but this
can be adjusted according to the request of the panel itself.
Ethiopia’s Minster of Water and Energy, Ato Alemayehu Tegenu, said
the meeting had immense significance and opened a new chapter of
cooperation by enhancing transparency, the exchange of information,
trust and confidence among three sisterly countries. He indicated
that several of the studies undertaken on the Nile had clearly shown
that there was ample potential and a real window of opportunity for
further development and it was these findings that that had lead to
the initiation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. The Minister
stressed that Ethiopia was in need of huge energy resources to
satisfy an ever growing demand, but the dam would also serve as the
initiative to boost regional economic integration. Dr Hesham Kandil,
Egypt’s Minister of Water Resource and Irrigation, and Engineer
Kamal Ali, Sudan’s Minister of Irrigation and Water, expressed their
appreciation for the holding of the Tripartite Ministerial Meeting
to establish the International Panel of Experts. They both
emphasized that the meeting was a manifestation of cooperation among
the three countries and indicated it would form a good foundation
for future and lasting cooperation, both for the Renaissance Dam and
in other areas.
Before the ministerial
meeting opened, experts from Ethiopia and Egypt discussed the
decisions passed at the third and fourth meetings of the
Ethiopia–Egypt Joint Ministerial Commission to establish the
Technical Advisory Committee aimed to provide smooth implementation
of cooperation between Ethiopia and Egypt in the areas of water
resources and irrigation. During this meeting, the Technical
Advisory Committee developed its rules of procedure and agreed an
action plan for the implementation of the Memorandum of
Understanding signed between the two governments on 17th
September regarding cooperation on Water Resources and Irrigation.
The Arab Republic of Egypt has allocated two million Egyptian pounds
for the capacity building and training for this year. According to
the action plan Egypt is offering PhD programs to three candidates,
MSc programs for seven candidates and other short term annual
training over the next years for Ethiopian students. The two
countries are also working to strengthen and renew their bilateral
relations. During its visit, the Egyptian delegation took the
opportunity to visit the Addis Ababa University’s Faculty of
Technology.
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News and Views
The Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister visits Japan
Deputy Prime Minister
and Foreign Minister Hailemariam Desalegn left for Japan on Thursday
this week. He is visiting the country as a guest of the Foreign
Ministry of Japan from December 1st to December 5th.
During his stay, Ato Hailemariam will be holding talks with Japan’s
Foreign Minister, Mr. Koichiro Gemba, and will be visiting a number
of organizations as well as holding discussions with representatives
of private companies. Last year marked the 80th
anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between
Japan and Ethiopia, and the Deputy Prime Minister’s visit is
expected to further strengthen the close relations between the two
countries. These have been regularly underlined by various visits
including the visit of the Prime Minister of Japan, Mr. Koizumi, to
Ethiopia in 2006, and of Prime Minister Meles to Japan on several
occasions.
Japan has played a
significant role in helping Ethiopia’s efforts in the fight against
poverty, collaborating in agriculture, water resources, health,
education and infrastructural development, and provided a wide range
of grants and technical cooperation. The trade balance between
Ethiopia and Japan has consistently remained in favour of Japan, and
Ethiopia would like to see a significant increase in investment from
the private sector in Japan. Ethiopia would also like a growth in
tourism; the number of Japanese tourists visiting Ethiopia remains
small. Japan has provided significant support through JICA, the
Japanese Government Aid implementing body, for capacity building
programs and technical cooperation projects, many aimed at
transferring technology and knowledge to serve the socio-economic
development of Ethiopia, a concept very much in line with Ethiopia’s
current Five-Year Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP).
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The 16th International Conference on AIDS/HIV
Final preparations have
been made for the opening of the 16th International
Conference on HIV/AIDS in Africa (ICASA) on Sunday. The conference,
under the theme “Own, Scale-up and Sustain”, will bring together
more than 7,000 delegates, including health professionals and
scientists involved in anti-HIV/AIDS work. Among those expected to
attend are former US President George W. Bush and several heads of
state as well as ministers and political leaders. Some 22 million of
the 33 million sufferers from AIDS are in Africa and a major aim of
the conference is to raise public awareness throughout the
continent. ICASA-2011 will be an opportunity to renew global
commitment towards a more aggressive work in the fight against
HIV/AIDS, and mobilize resource and technical assistance to reduce
deaths from HIV/AIDS in Africa.
Ethiopia’s Minister of
Health, Dr. Tewodros Adhanom, says the week long event, jointly
organized by the ICASA-2011 Office in Addis Ababa and the Ministry
of Health, is an opportunity to share information about approaches
to the prevention and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases,
and the main objective will be to learn from others. Ethiopia, he
says is keen to learn from others and also show to the world what it
is doing. The number of AIDs' deaths has been decreasing steadily
since 2004 as antiretroviral drugs have become more available. In 33
countries, the incidence has fallen by more than 25% between 2001
and 2009 and 22 of these are sub-Saharan African countries including
Ethiopia, but Africa still bears an inordinate share of the global
impact of HIV/AIDS. The Conference, which comes a few days after
World AIDS Day, December 1st, will be the largest ever
held in Addis Ababa. The first ICASA was held in Brussels, Belgium,
in 1986 with the theme, "AIDS in Africa," and Senegal hosted the 15th
ICASA under the theme, "Africa's Response: Face the Facts," in 2008.
******
The Climate Change Convention at Durban - COP17
The 17th Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change (COP17) formally opened in Durban on Monday. The
conference runs until December 9th and brings together
national governments, international officials, and civil society
organizations including the Climate Action Network, (CAN), a global
network of more than 700 non-governmental organizations (NGOs) from
95 countries.
One of the main aims of COP17 is to obtain a second commitment
period for the Kyoto Protocol, the sole legally binding
international agreement to cut green house gas emissions. COP 17 is
taking place simultaneously with the 7th Session of the Conference
of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties (CMP 7) to the
protocol. The first commitment period for Kyoto ends in 2012 and
negotiators at Durban are seeking agreement for a second commitment
period, though there are still divisions between countries on what
the terms of the new commitment should be. Another aim is to agree
to a pathway for another legally binding agreement by 2015. Neither
COP 15 in Copenhagen in 2009 nor COP 16 in Cancun last year managed
to produce a new binding agreement on emissions reduction.
Another important issue in Durban is the Green Climate Fund under
which industrialized countries are to provide 100 billion U.S.
dollars per year by 2020 to help support developing countries in
their efforts to adapt to climate change and mitigate its negative
impacts. This was agreed in Cancun and a transitional committee has
been working to develop some of the modalities. There are
expectations that it will be made operational in Durban but current
commitment levels will be insufficient to reach the
100-billion-dollar threshold. There are still disagreements over the
structure and design of the Fund with developing countries making
clear they would prefer direct access to national climate change
trust funds while the developed countries have said they would
prefer to use a third-party channel, such as the World Bank. Another
priority is for progress on the formation of a Technology Mechanism,
accompanied by a Climate Technology Center and Network (CTCN),
agreed at Cancun, to help facilitate the movement of important
technologies for climate change adaptation and mitigation to
developing countries.
******
An
IGAD parliamentary meeting on disaster risk reduction
Representatives of the National Assemblies of IGAD member states
held a meeting in Nairobi this week to discuss disaster risk
management, 28th –29th November. Chaired by
Ethiopia, the current chair of IGAD, it was
the first in its kind to engage legislators and policy makers in
national and regional activities for disaster risk management. The
meeting was opened by
Engineer Mahboub Maalim, Executive Secretary of IGAD, and Esther
Murugi Mathenge, Kenya’s Minister of State for Special Programmes.
Speakers underlined the importance of incorporating disaster risk
reduction and management measures and strategies in development
programs. IGAD’s Executive Secretary emphasized the importance of a
regional approach. IGAD endorsed a disaster risk management
programme in 2003 and this has been adding value to the initiatives
of member states through awareness raising, experience sharing and
advocacy.
Delegations outlined their progress in disaster risk management, and
the delegate from Ethiopia noted that Ethiopia was
shifting from ad hoc
assessment based responses to an early warning system and disaster
assessment based response. It was fully committed to implement a
full scale disaster risk management cycle. Building on past
experiences and moving away from a late emergency response it is now
preparing a draft disaster risk management policy.
Participants adopted recommendations and a meeting statement, taking
note that IGAD member countries are at risk from a wide range of
natural and human made disasters, recognizing that poverty,
population growth and depletion of natural resources make the region
particularly vulnerable to these hazards .The statement acknowledged
the paradigm shift from disaster management to disaster risk
management and called upon the governments of member states to
strengthen the development and implementation of appropriate
national disaster risk management policies and strategies.
******
A judge causes a diplomatic row between Kenya and Sudan
On Monday this week, a Kenyan judge issued an order for the arrest
of President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan should he set foot in Kenya.
His decision was apparently taken in response to a petition
submitted a year ago by the local chapter of the International
Commission of Jurists to compel the government to activate the
warrant issued against President al-Bashir by the International
Criminal Court. Kenya is a signatory to the Rome Statute of 2002 but
has refused to implement the ICC arrest warrant against President
al-Bashir. The Sudan government promptly expelled the Kenyan
ambassador in Khartoum and recalled its own envoy from Nairobi.
Kenya’s Foreign Minister, Moses Wetangula, quickly issued a
statement reacting to the decision and emphasizing that the
government would appeal the ruling. “It is important that the
country’s national interests as well as the wider interests of the
region in which we live are taken into account in matters of this
nature.” He said the government would be asking the Attorney General
to expeditiously appeal the matter. He also noted that the AU Summit
in February 2009 had requested the Security Council to defer the ICC
process, and President al-Bashir visited Kenya in August last year.
Yesterday, Mr. Wetangula visited Khartoum as the personal envoy of
President Kibaki to deliver a message from President Kibaki to
President al-Bashir. Sudan’s Foreign Minister was quoted as saying
that the Kenyan government had affirmed it would work to cancel the
judge’s decision and it was making arrangements to do this.
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