IGAD’s
Council of Ministers fully endorses Kenya’s actions in Somali
The 41st
extra-ordinary session of the IGAD Council of Ministers was held in
Addis Ababa on Friday last week. Ethiopia is the current chair of
IGAD and the session which reviewed the situation in Somalia and was
briefed on the activities of IGAD by
Engineer Mahboub Maalim, IGAD’s Executive Secretary, was
chaired by Ato Hailemariam Desalegn, Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of Foreign Affairs. The meeting was attended by Kenya’s
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Moses Wetang’ula, Minister of State
for Defence, the Honourable Yusuf Haji, and Chief of General Staff,
General Julius Karangi; Ethiopia’s Minister of Defence, Ato Siraj
Fergessa, and General Samora Yunis, Chief of the Armed Forces; by
Somalia’s Minister of Fisheries, Marine Resources and Environment,
Mr. Abdirahman Sheikh Ibrahim, the TFG’s Deputy Defence Minister,
Brigadier General Mohamed Ali Ibrahim, and Chief of Staff of the
Armed Forces, General Abdukadir Sheikh Ali Dini. Djibouti, Uganda
and Sudan were represented by their respective ambassadors to
Ethiopia or Djibouti.
Opening the session as Chairman, Ato Hailemariam told the Council
that the task of guaranteeing lasting peace and security in the
region required a concerted effort and called on the Council to go
beyond emergency meetings and temporary solutions. He condemned the
kidnappings of civilians from Kenya and noted the encouraging
developments since the last Council meeting on August 24th
including the adoption of the roadmap, the official re-opening of
the Bakhara market in Mogadishu and liberation of most of the city.
He called on members of the council to continue to give their full
support to the TFG and to AMISOM. The meeting was briefed in detail
by Mr. Moses Wetang’ula on recent security developments, including
the increasing violation of Kenya’s territorial integrity by Al-Shabaab’s
kidnappings of foreign tourists and aid workers and Kenya’s military
activity along the borders of Somalia in response to the direct
threat posed by Al-Shabaab. On behalf of Ethiopia, Ato Hailemariam
expressed the belief that Kenya’s recent military action was within
the limits of the right to self defence as enshrined in the Charter
of the United Nations and the responsibility to protect the safety
and security of its people. The Somali ministers present also
briefed the Council on the current situation in Somalia and the
on-going joint TFG/AMISOM security operations against Al-Shabaab and
their successes in Mogadishu.
After discussion, the Council expressed its serious concern
regarding the recent security challenge posed by the violation of
Kenya’s territorial integrity as indicated by the kidnappings of
foreign tourists and aid workers by Al-Shabaab. It welcomed Kenya’s
security operations in pursuit of Al-Shabaab under the title
‘Operation Protect the Nation’ and the agreement between the
Government of Kenya and the TFG, endorsing the joint communiqué of
the meeting between the two Governments in Mogadishu on 18th
October. The Council also welcomed the African Union’s support for
the sustained and ongoing joint security operations against
Al-Shabaab and the TFG/AMISOM successes in Mogadishu. It called on
the AU to fast-track the next phase of AMISOM deployment to sustain
and consolidate these successes, and on the international community
to enhance its assistance to AMISOM. It expressed gratitude to the
AMISOM troop contributing countries of Uganda and Burundi for their
continued sacrifice in pursuit of security.
The
communiqué also condemned the actions of Al-Shabaab in kidnapping
aid workers from Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya and took note of the
concerns of humanitarian organizations over their security in view
of the escalation of Al-Shabaab attacks. It urged humanitarian
groups not to scale down their support to the more than 500,000
refugees in the Dadaab camps. The Council also strongly condemned
the recent attack against AMISOM troops by Al-Shabaab and expressed
its condolences to the families of fallen soldiers. It reiterated
its call to the international community to implement previous
decisions and recommendations of IGAD and the AU. These have
included calls to the UN Security Council to impose a maritime
blockade on Kismayo and a no-fly zone on parts of Somalia, as well
as lifting the arms embargo on Somalia to enhance the capacity of
the national security forces of the TFG, and to expand the mandate
and capacity of the AMISOM to allow it to undertake more effective
peace support operations.
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….Further progress against Al-Shabaab
Kenya launched its
“Operation Linda Nchi – Protect the Nation” on Sunday October 16th
when some 1,500 Kenyan troops crossed over into Somalia in response
to a series of recent terrorist activities by Al-Shabaab in Kenya,
announcing that it was taking what it called “robust measures to
protect and preserve the integrity of the country and the national
economy and security.” It invoked Article 51 of the UN Charter which
says “Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right
of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs
against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council
has taken measures necessary to maintain international peace and
security.” Defence Minister, Yusuf Haji, said “If you are attacked
by an enemy, you have the right to pursue the enemy…Al-Shabaab will
be pursued.”
The Kenyan forces
crossed the border in several places. From Dhobley and Liboi they
advanced towards Afmadow, an important Al-Shabaab base, 130
kilometers from the border, and about the same distance north of
Kismayo. Driving Al-Shabaab out of Qoqani they rapidly reached
within a few kilometers of Afmadow before being halted by heavy
rain. The Kenyan troops are accompanied by armour and are using air
support. Reports suggest Al-Shabaab has been trying to build up its
forces in Afmadow, forcibly recruiting local youths and bringing in
fighters from other areas. There have been reports that a number of
prominent local figures have been arrested by Al-Shabaab after they
protested against these actions. Further south, other Kenyan forces
attacked and captured Ras Kamboni last week and then advanced to
take Kolbio, and are now reported to be moving towards Badhadhe.
Another force appears to be moving up the coast towards Bur Gabo.
Kenyan naval units are also reported to have been in action around
the Bajuni Islands. Additional Kenyan troops joined in the offensive
at the end of the week, and according to the Kenyan media there are
now some 4,000 Kenyan troops in Somalia.
Kenyan military
spokesmen have indicated suggested that driving Al-Shabaab out of
one of its major centres, the port of Kismayo, is a significant aim
of the Kenyan operations. Kismayo provides much of Al-Shabaab’s
revenue through its livestock and charcoal trade. It is also said to
be an important staging post for drug consignments en route to
Kenya. The Kenyan government hasn’t formally explained its intended
aims but clearing Al-Shabaab extremists away from the border and
securing the safety of the border is clearly an important element.
In the past Kenya has encouraged the establishment of a buffer zone
along the border with local militias supporting the TFG, but this
failed to prevent Al-Shabaab’s cross-border activities. Now Kenya
clearly intends at least to ensure that Al-Shabaab is kept much
further away from the border and it appears to be planning to remove
it from the regions of Lower and Middle Juba and Gedo as far as
possible. Government spokesman, Alfred Mutua said that Kenya’s
efforts to flush out Al-Shabaab might take a couple of months but
that weeks would be a more ideal time frame.
Kenya has
underlined that it is co-ordinating its operations in Somalia with
the TFG, and with TFG allied local militias. Defence Minister, Yusuf
Haji, and Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula were in Mogadishu on
Tuesday last week to talk to President Sheikh Sharif and Prime
Minister Abdiweli Mohamed about the joint military offensive.
Discussions focused on closer security co-operation, and sizeable
pro-TFG forces, including both Ahlu Sunna wal Jama’a and Ras Kamboni
militias, have been co-operating with Kenyan forces in the advance
on Afmadow. In a subsequent statement, the two sides pledged to
cooperate in “undertaking security and military operations in Lower
Juba border regions of Somalia” and “pre-emptive action and pursuit
of any armed elements that continue to threaten and attack both
countries.”
At the beginning of
this week President Sheikh Sharif called on Kenya to halt its
advance. He welcomed Kenyan support for training and logistics but
described Kenyan troops crossing the border as “inappropriate”. The
President has apparently been concerned that Kenya might be tying to
support the idea of an “Azania” state in the Juba valley, proposed
earlier by the former Defence Minister, Mohamed Abdi Ghandi.
However, on Wednesday, the Somali government issued a clarification
of its views, thanking Kenya for working with the TFG to stabilize
Somalia, for training Somali troops and for hosting a “huge number
of refugees from Somalia”. The statement said Kenya and Somalia
agreed that Al-Shabaab was a common enemy to both countries and that
the territorial integrity of both Somali and Kenya should be
respected. It added that in order to evolve a common security
strategy Somali and Kenya had agreed to coordinate security and
military operations spearheaded by TFG forces trained by Kenya.
There was also agreement on cooperation and collaboration in the
sharing and exchange of information relevant to the fight against
cross-border crimes and operations.
After his visit
last week, Mr. Wetangula also came to Addis Ababa where Prime
Minister Meles assured him of Ethiopia’s support for Kenya’s
actions. Following the expressions of full support from IGAD’s
Council of Ministers last Friday, Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign
Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, said Ethiopia was considering
joining the military campaign. It was “high time” for a regional
response to the threat of Al-Shabaab and its provocations, he added,
and the long term goal must be to eradicate Al-Shabaab from
Somalia.
Others have also
expressed their support for Kenya’s actions. The US Ambassador in
Kenya, Scott Gration, has said that the US, as an ally in the
conflict on terrorism, is looking to see how it can help Kenya.
Ambassador Gration said the US had been involved in “a very robust
bilateral training program” and equipment to help strengthen border
protection. The Ambassador has made no comment on the claims that
there have been a series of US drone attacks on Al-Shabaab bases in
southern Somalia in recent months. Kenya also hopes that France and
other countries with naval warships involved in the fight against
piracy will be prepared to assist Kenyan forces as they advance
along the coast towards Kismayo. France has responded to a Kenyan
request for logistical support and provided some air transport for
Kenyan troops up to the border. Somali and Kenyan military officials
have claimed that there have been US drone attacks and a French
naval bombardment against Al-Shabaab positions but both France and
the US have denied providing such support.
Al-Shabaab has
responded to Kenya’s intervention by calling for violent retaliation
in Kenya. Al-Shabaab spokesman, Sheikh Ali Mohamed Rage, said “The
bloody battles that will ensue as a result of this incursion will
most likely disrupt the social equilibrium and imperil the lives of
hundreds of thousands of civilians; and with war consequently comes
a significant loss of lives, instability and destruction to the
local economy and a critical lack of security.” Although not
directly claimed by Al-Shabaab, two grenade attacks in Nairobi at
the beginning of the week have underlined government concern about
further possible terrorist activity in Kenya, and the Kenyan
authorities have carried out a number of arrests of suspected
Al-Shabaab members in Kenya, and are tightening security in possible
target areas as well as screening processes for travellers.
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….and a new UN Security Council resolution on piracy
Meanwhile, on Monday, the UN Security Council renewed its call for
tougher anti-piracy measures in Somalia and the region, urging all
countries to adopt laws to prosecute and punish pirates and
co-operate with international organizations for this purpose.
Unanimously adopting SC 2015 (2011), the Security Council urged
countries to criminalize piracy under their domestic laws and
implement prosecutions. The resolution
requests the Secretary-General, in conjunction with the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP), to consult further with Somalia and
regional States on the international assistance required to help
make anti-piracy courts operational and on procedural arrangements,
a timeline and costs for such courts. It asked for detailed
implementation proposals within 90 days. These courts should have
jurisdiction over all who incite or facilitate piracy operations and
illicitly finance, plan, organize, or profit from pirate attacks as
well as over suspects captured at sea. The resolution calls on
Member States and regional organizations to support efforts to
establish anti-piracy courts, and on the Somali authorities, UNODC,
UNDP and other international partners to support the construction
and responsible operation of prisons in Somalia.
The Security Council made it clear it continued to be gravely
concerned by the continuing and growing threat that piracy poses to
the situation in Somalia and the increasing level of violence used.
It stressed the need for a comprehensive solution to the problem and
the importance of building up Somalia’s potential for sustainable
economic growth as a means to tackle the underlying causes of
piracy. The resolution recognized the primary role of the
Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and Somali regional
authorities in eradicating piracy off the coast of Somalia. It
welcomed the roadmap of September 6th, and its references
to developing counter-piracy policy and legislation. The Security
Council has made its future support to the TFI contingent upon the
completion of the tasks defined in the roadmap. The resolution
strongly urges States that have not already done so to criminalize
piracy under their domestic law, and to share evidence and
information on anti-piracy law enforcement. It calls on all Member
States to report by the end of the year on measures taken, and in
conclusion, decides to remain seized of the matter.
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Conferences on Green Economy and Sustainable Development
Addis Ababa this
week hosted two conferences: the first was the seventh session of
the Committee on Food Security and Sustainable Development (CFSSD-7)
and the Expert Segment of the Africa Regional Preparatory Conference
for the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development
(Rio+20), which took place on Monday and Tuesday; the second was the
three day Sixth African Economic Conference on the theme of “Green
Economy and Structural Transformation in Africa”, October 26th
- 28th.
The aim of the
first meeting was to unify and streamline the position of Africa in
advance of the upcoming UN Rio+20 conference on sustainable
development. This is expected to be held in June next year in Rio De
Janeiro, and the conference was addressed by the Chairperson of the
Bureau of CFSSD-6, Dr. Jean Ping, the Chairperson of the African
Union Commission, the Prime Minister of Ethiopia, the President of
the Republic of Congo, the Executive Secretary of UNECA, and
representatives from various UN agencies and from the African
Development Bank.
Prime Minister
Meles recalled that the world leaders who came together twenty years
ago at Rio De Janeiro to adopt Agenda 21 had expected it to serve as
a blueprint to achieve sustainable development by promoting economic
growth that was socially equitable and environmentally responsible.
Many had hoped that Agenda 21 would generate the necessary resources
and political commitment to help countries embark jointly on a new
and more sustainable way of managing the world’s resources. Not much
has happened at international meetings since to realize those lofty
objectives. There had been a continuing and disturbing pattern of
many promises and little or no delivery. This, said the Prime
Minister, had been particularly detrimental for those who did not
have the necessary resources and technology to cope with the
changing global environment. Africa, in fact, was getting the
short-end of the stick. Nevertheless, scepticism and frustration,
however legitimate, were no substitute for producing a better
strategy or a reason for giving up the fight. Prime Minister Meles
stressed that speaking with one voice would help Africa to fight
better, and he appreciated that agreement had been reached to do
that at Rio+20 under the leadership of President Nguesso of Congo.
He also underlined the need to develop effective and realistic
strategies to get decisions that would enhance resource flows and
technology transfer to Africa and to fight for their implementation.
Every African country should have a plan that it could implement
with or without external support.
President Nguesso
said the conference created an excellent opportunity to share views
that would be helpful to ensure sustainable development. He
reaffirmed the need for Africans to have a common position and speak
in one voice; and stressed the need for African leaders to give
major attention to national and regional issues of building the
green economy. African Union Commission Chairperson, Jean Ping,
noted that the AU Summit in Malabo had adopted a resolution for
Africa to be represented with one voice and said it was
indispensable for Africa to have a strong common stand. The UN
Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of the Economic
Commission for Africa, Abdoulie Janneh, said an agreed institutional
framework would promote coordination and synergies across various
sectors and actors, and give a greater voice for sustainable
development to developing countries. He said all stakeholders should
take the opportunity provided by Rio+20 to secure renewed
international commitment to strengthen and deepen the implementation
of NEPAD programs. A draft resolution on a unified African position
for Rio+20 was issued and will be presented to the upcoming AU
Summit. The Conference paid tribute with a minute’s silence for the
late Professor Wangari Maathai, Kenya’s Nobel Prize winner and a
most notable advocate for the environment.
The Sixth African Economic Conference also took place this week
under the theme of “Green Economy and Structural Transformation in
Africa”. Organized jointly
by the African Development Bank, the Economic Commission for Africa,
the Development Bank of Southern Africa and the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP - Regional Bureau for Africa), its main
objective was to provide a platform for experts on Africa to reflect
and discuss possible new directions for growth policy on the
continent in order to determine the best approaches to attain the
Millennium Development Goals, achieve the objectives of NEPAD and
accelerate Africa’s sustainable development.
Prime Minister Meles gave a
keynote speech emphasizing his belief that Green Development should
involve major reforestation, water management and soil conservation
programs. There cannot, he said, be any structural economic
transformation in Africa without transforming the agricultural
sector and massively increasing electricity and power generation
using available but untapped and renewable resources with maximum
involvement of modern technology. Green Growth was the only way to
sustain a meaningful agricultural sector in the current global
environment. That was why Green Development was a pillar of
Ethiopia’s overall goal of structural economic transformation. He
detailed Ethiopia’s plans for agriculture which include
reforestation of up to 15 million hectares of degraded land by 2025;
and its aim to increase its current electricity generation by eight
fold within five years with the longer-term ambition of achieving a
close to zero net carbon emission by 2025.
The Prime Minister
said Africa’s problem in charting a course for the future lay more
in implementation and the availability of resources for
implementation. It would be natural and fair for Africans to be
compensated for the damage caused to their economies by global
warming and for the services they have rendered to those who created
the problems, but the issue of Green Development and structural
economic transformation in Africa was too urgent and too important
to be left merely to the good will of others. Africa should first
and foremost look at options for mobilizing its own resources and do
more to enhance domestic resources for investment in electric power
generation. There might be no shortage of investment funds in the
world today, but Africa, despite profitable investment
opportunities, still has difficulty accessing savings from emerging
countries. Faced by the scale and scope of the gaps in financing, it
needs additional mechanisms. Several have been tried including the
borrowing of money from emerging countries with excess savings, but
only some African countries have been successful in these efforts.
The Prime Minister
noted that attempts to try to devise a mechanism through the G20 to
mitigate the perceived risk of lending to Africa and to use
Multilateral Development Banks to mobilize additional resources for
infrastructural investment in Africa appear to have reached a
dead-end, apparently due to the belief that African states should
limit themselves to building schools, clinics and social
infrastructure and leave everything else to the private sector.
Africa had, of course, done essentially that for the last 30 years
and the result was the massive gap in infrastructural investment
that was crippling the prospect of economic growth throughout the
continent. These efforts should continue, of course, but at the same
time Africa should seek other ways of accessing global savings,
through multilateral rather than bilateral mechanisms and without
intermediaries. He emphasized the importance of approaching the
emerging countries as a group to design mechanisms to enable Africa
to obtain investment in green infrastructure, and of the importance
for the continent to continue to speak with a single voice.
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Ethiopia’s economic
performance has been getting a good press this week with articles in
the prestigious International Economic Bulletin of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace and in TIME Magazine. Both have
rightly pointed to the impressive growth the country has been
registering.
The Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace analyzed Ethiopia’s economic
development in some detail, noting the unprecedented 11% average
growth rate since 2004, a significant increase on the average annual
growth for Africa as a whole, and one outperforming most of the
continent. Indeed, it’s the highest such rate among the non-oil
producing economies of Africa, and it’s well in excess of the
population growth rate and above the 7% rate required to achieve the
Millennium Development Goal of reducing poverty by a half in 2015.
Nominal GDP grew six-fold over the last decade, and the
International Monetary Fund predicts that it will reach 474.1
billion Birr in the 2010/2011 fiscal year, representing a compound
annual growth rate of over 55%, fuelled mainly by government and
private sector investment.
The report suggests
this remarkable growth has been associated with sound macroeconomic
policies, political stability and the government’s commitment to
comprehensive development and strict implementation of its policies.
The favourable policy environment has been accompanied by improved
regulatory and institutional frameworks, installed to encourage
business. Large investments in infrastructure have also helped to
fuel the economic performance. All this has been accompanied by
rising international commodity prices and an increase in remittances
which have positively contributed to an impressive result. The
article, in fact, sees Ethiopia as one of the success stories in
Africa.
It also notes that
the government is taking concrete measures to gear the economy to an
even higher trajectory through the formulation of its Growth and
Transformation Plan. The agricultural sector of course continues to
be the major driving force of the economy but the contributions of
service and industry sectors have also been significant and this is
to continue under the GTP. The industry sector is projected to take
a 15.6% share of GDP by the end of 2015, and it is expected to grow
on average at 20% a year. The plan projects real GDP growth of
between 11.2% and 14.9%. This allows for a doubling of current GDP
and the raising of exports to $10 billion by 2015.
The GTP is seen to
offer ample scope for private investment, public-private
partnerships and Private Finance Initiatives in a series of mega
development projects. These range from road and rail networks to
energy and large scale farms. The government plans to expand large
scale irrigated agriculture projects from the current 127,242
hectares to 785,582 hectares and increase the area of small-scale
irrigated agriculture to 1.85 million hectares by the end of the GTP
period. These will play an important role in improving the economy
and alleviating poverty.
The report notes
that the government aims to meet the growing demand for energy and
electricity by increasing hydropower generation from the current
2060 MW to 10,000 MW by 2015. This will also allow for the export of
electricity to neighboring countries and contribute to plans for
regional economic cooperation and integration. Large scale
investments in transport and energy infrastructure will also help to
underpin future industrialization drives. Under the GPT the
expansion of the road and railway networks will allow for the
connections of most rural kebeles, the lowest administrative body,
to the main road networks. There are plans for 2,400km of railway
and for 88,179 km of new federal and regional roads to provide a
more integrated and efficient transport system and increase linkages
between the regions. This will enhance the export market and cut
transportation costs.
The Carnegie
Endowment does have some concerns as the title of the article -
“Ethiopia’s Imperfect Growth Miracle” – underlines, but these
largely relate to the twin challenges of inequality and inflation,
problems that are recognized by the government which is putting in
place appropriate policies to deal with them. Economic growth, of
course, is crucial for the eradication of poverty and to allow the
citizens of Ethiopia to enjoy fast-growing living standards; and
this growth has to be rapid, sustainable and fair. Failure to
achieve this will place real constraints on the country’s
anti-poverty agenda. It is, of course, for these reasons that
Ethiopia’s development policies, and the Growth and Transformation
Plan in particular, place full importance on ensuring sustained,
rapid, broad-based, poverty-reducing and fairly-distributed economic
growth. It is this which will result in the creation of jobs, allow
earnings to rise and living standards improve.
Equally, the government has recognized that finding a solution for
increasing inflation is crucial. In last week’s parliamentary
session, the Prime Minister promised the government will strive to
curb this problem, arguing that keeping up the momentum of the
growth rate, together with the government’s commitment to reduce the
broad money supply and to address the problems found in the trading
system, would provide the solution.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace also raised the
importance of building stronger market systems and institutions.
This was a central point in Alex Perry’s “Africa Blossoms: A
continent on the Verge of an Agricultural Revolution”, an article in
TIME Magazine which detailed how Ethiopia is building a modern
agricultural trading system through the Ethiopian Commodity Exchange
(ECX). Established in 2008,
the ECX was a new initiative for Ethiopia and the first of its kind
in Africa. The aim was to revolutionize Ethiopia’s tradition-bound
agriculture through creating a marketplace to serve all market
actors, from farmers to traders and through to processors, exporters
and on to consumers. This is very much in line with the government’s
policy directions to expand and commercialize the agricultural
sector and the trading system to boost agricultural productivity.
This indeed is why the government has been making huge investments
in basic infrastructure in rural areas, investment that contributes
significantly to the increase in private sector input. The increase
in demand for raw agricultural inputs for the growing industrial
sector has also encouraged private investment. As the article notes,
during the life of the GTP more efforts will be devoted to increase
the role of the private sector in agriculture, particularly in
lowland areas where land for large scale commercial farming is in
much demand and is available. Private investment is also being
steered towards high-value horticulture production that can be
produced on limited areas, and which uses abundant labour and thus
generates significant employment, as well as increasing exports.
As these articles emphasize, these activities, together with the
results that are being achieved, are going to change the image of
Ethiopia. Equally important, they will finally demonstrate not just
recognition but the reality of success in the efforts to defeat
poverty and raise Ethiopia to the ranks of middle income states by
the end of the decade.
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Gilgel Gibe III and clean, green, energy
Survival International is continuing its campaign to prevent
Ethiopia developing its clean energy resources and “green power”
schemes planned under the current Growth and Transformation Plan. It
has now persuaded the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination (CERD) to ask for evidence that assessments of the
impact of the Gilgel Gibe III dam were carried out and that people
in the region were consulted before the project started. Earlier,
two other advocacy organizations, International Rivers, and Friends
of Lake Turkana, using the preliminary draft of an African
Development Bank document persuaded the UN World Heritage to call
for a halt to the project. In fact, the final draft of the African
Development Bank’s Assessment of Hydrological Impacts of
Ethiopia’s Omo Basin on Kenya’s Lake Turkana Water Levels came
to largely positive conclusions. As we have noted before, the report
did not find a threat to productive fishing areas; it rejected
concerns about seepage from the dam; and it concluded that once
filled the dam would not cause lake levels to fall. Irrigation is
not an element of Gilgel Gibe III which is a power generation
project, though the regulation of the flow will allow for some
downstream irrigation. This will also, of course, play a major role
in breaking the cycle of food shortage, droughts, floods and
dislocation which have persistently affected the river basin.
The claim that Gilgel Gibe III will have devastating social and
environmental effects on the Lower Omo Valley and the Lake Turkana
region is no more than an assertion. The possible impacts have been
addressed in detail in the Environmental Impact Assessment studies
already carried out. The project was thoroughly studied by local and
international experts. The conclusions were that it was economically
valuable and environmentally friendly, and it would contribute
positively to the river’s flow. The discharge and the input of the
other streams will allow for the maintenance of the downstream
ecology during water harvesting phases. The dam will not dry up or
destroy the ecosystems all the way down the Omo Valley to Lake
Turkana nor will it deal a fatal blow to the lake or make life
impossible for hundreds of thousands of fishing families and
pastoralists who use the lake. Regulation of the flow will prevent
rather than create “water wars”, and the provision of roads, health
clinics, schools and other developments will improve life for those
living in the Lower Omo. It is mere hysterics to call these plans
“banishing half a million people to a hydrological hell”.
Whatever the intent of the critics of this, or similar, projects,
they have clearly made no effort to see the undoubted benefits of
the proposed development: enhancement of clean, green, energy
resources, provision of a rural electrification program, building of
health clinics, schools and roads, regulation of the river’s flow
and avoidance of disastrous floods, eco-tourist development and
environmental education, job opportunities, flood controlled
agriculture, and regulation of the Omo River, and of Lake Turkana.
The Environmental Impact Assessments will ensure these effects will
benefit the people and play a valuable and useful role for the
development of the region.
The government is very well aware that it is responsible
for the provision of social welfare and protection for all citizens
as well as for creating a conducive socio-economic environment for
development. It is answerable to the voters who gave it this
responsibility in the elections of 2005 and 2010. It is trying to
build sustainable economic growth to benefit all the citizens of the
country. One of the major elements of this are the hydroelectric
projects, a number of which are now under construction, including
Gilgel Gibe III. That this has become a focus of negative
campaigning among groups who are using the people of the area and of
Lake Turkana as a pretext to meddle in Ethiopia’s affairs is
regrettable. It is depressing to see people oppose either this
project, or Ethiopia’s development, without making any effort to
understand the context or the necessity of its development
activities.
Ethiopia is building an economy based on internal available
resources, notably its water resources. Gilgel Gibe III Power
Project will help
the country achieve its rural electrification objectives and
generate foreign exchange through the export of power to
neighbouring countries. This will also serve as a catalyst for the
enhancement of regional economic
integration.
As already noted it also offers employment generation, environmental
improvement, infrastructural development, new social activities and
better health conditions correlated to social growth in the project
area.
Gilgel Gibe III Dam is
situated in a deep gorge of Omo River, in a largely uninhabitable
and uncultivated area. It will provide enormous benefits to local
communities in surrounding areas. In addition to the advantages
arising from regulation of the river mentioned above, it will also
provide for improved living standards by introducing small scale
irrigation schemes and modern fishing production as well as clean
water and electricity supplies and jobs. Additional elements will
include community awareness programs, cooperative support programs,
agriculture in-service training programs, coordination measures for
food, conflict prevention and resolution training programs, and
Woreda-level-institution strengthening activities.
The government fully respects the cultures, customs, religions and
life styles of all its nations, nationalities and peoples. They are,
after all, enshrined in the constitution. At the same time it is
determined to continue to register sustainable economic development
and fulfil the socio-economic needs and desires of the people rather
than continue to ignore these in favour of the romantic
anthropological view of an under-developed tribal lifestyle. Indeed,
the government’s plans and the facilities it is developing are
“infinitely more environmentally and socially responsible” than the
projects and protests of ill-informed western critics.
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Ethiopia and South Sudan sign a Technical Assistance MOU
Ethiopia and South Sudan have signed a Memorandum of Understanding
on Technical Assistance and Cooperation for the placement of sixty
civil service support officers (CSSOs) from Ethiopia in South Sudan
government offices. The agreement is part of IGAD’s Regional
Initiative Project with the Republic of South Sudan.
The placement of the CSSOs will be for a specific period of years
and arranged according to guidelines to be issued by the South Sudan
government for the placement of a total of 200 CSSOs from IGAD
member states. The United Nations Development Program, with the
support of the Government of Norway, will be providing the funds for
implementation of the project.
The Memorandum of Understanding was signed at the beginning of the
month by Ethiopia’s State Minister of Civil Service, Dr. Misrak
Mekonnen, and South Sudan’s Minster of Labour, Public Service and
Human Resource Development, Awut Deng Acuil. It was
signed under the Framework Agreement on Technical, Economic and
Cultural Co-operation between Ethiopia and the Government of South
Sudan concluded in December 2007. The agreement will promote the
already existing friendly relationship between the two countries by
the deployment of 60 civil servant support officers (CSSOs), with
the support of United Nations Development program. The support
officers will be placed in strategic positions within various South
Sudan government ministries and commissions as well as in different
states and at local government levels. The aim is to provide for the
direct transfer of skills through on-the-job monitoring and
coaching.
The South Sudan
Government has identified priority areas for short, medium and long
term on-the-job training, monitoring and coaching, in accordance
with the Framework Agreement. These areas include: the medical and
public health sector, nursing and clinical health services, town
planning and surveying, public finance management, public
administration, public communication and information, public safety
and security, human resource development, investment, legal
services, labour and industrial relations and ICT.
The agreement is
also expected to strengthen the institutional capacity of various
South Sudanese government institutions to deliver effective
administration through rapid capacity enhancement support. It will
provide for the establishment of training programs and capacity
building in various disciplines. It is also aimed at developing and
facilitating socio-economic, cultural and political relations
between the two countries, on the basis of equity and mutual
benefit.
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