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Showing posts with label Ethiopian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ethiopian. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2022

"ኢትዮጵያዊነት ከዘር በላይ ነው" በሚል መሪ ቃል በሳንድያጎ ከተማ ለወገኖቻችን እርዳታ በተሰበሰብው ገንዘብ የእህል እርዳታ ይዞ የሄደው የልዑካን ቡድን ሰመራ ከተማ፣ አፋር ክልል ደረሰ።

"ኢትዮጵያዊነት ከዘር በላይ ነው" በሚል መሪ ቃል  በሳንድያጎ ከተማ ለወገኖቻችን እርዳታ  በተሰበሰብው ገንዘብ የእህል  እርዳታ ይዞ የሄደው  የልዑካን ቡድን  ሰመራ ከተማ አፋር ክልል ደረሰ።

የልኡካን ቡድኑ አባላት ወ/ሮ ቅድስት ብርሃኑ፣ አቶ አቶ ስዮም ደገፋ እና ወ/ሮ እመቤት እንግዳው 

(YebboMedia Jan 10,2022 ጥር ፪፣2ሺ፲፬) "ኢትዮጵያዊነት ከዘር በላይ ነው" በሚል መሪ ቃል  በሳንድያጎ ከተማ ለወገኖቻችን እርዳታ  እንዲደርስ ከተደረገው  የገንዘብ ማሰባሰቢያ ዝግጅት  ላይ ከተዋጣው $195000 ዶላር ላይ 60% የሚሆነው  በባንክ ቤት ቀጥታ ወደ ኢትዮጵያ በማስተላለፍ ኢትዮጵያ ሄዶ ከአገር ውስጥ የእርዳታ እህል  በመግዛት ወደ አፋር ክልል ያቀናው የልዑኳን ቡድን ሳመራ  ከተማ በመደረስ እርዳታውን ነገ  እንደሚያከፋፍል  ገለፀ። 40% የሚሆነው  በእርዳታ  የተሰበሰብ  ገንዘብ በ eyezonethiopia.com ላይ በተሰራው  የእርዳታ  ማሰሳበስቢያ ድረ ገፅ ላይ ገቢ መሆኑን  ባለፈው  ባጠናቀርነው ሪፖርት ላይ ተዘግቧል።  

የልዑካኑ  ቡድን  አስተባባሪ  የሆኑት  ወ/ሮ ቅድስት ብርሃኑ  በውስጥ  መስመር  እንደገለፁት  ዛሬ  ማምሻውን ሰመራ  ከተማ  የገቡ  ሲሆን  በነገው  እለት ለ800 አባወራዎች  የሚሆን 200 ኩንታል  የበቆሎ  ዱቄት፣ 80 ኩንታል ሩዝ፣ 2400 ሊትር ዘይት  የሚለግሱ ሲሆን ከዚህም  በተጨማሪ  ለ200 ቤተሰቦች 5 ፍይሎችን የሚያበረክቱ  መሆኑን  ገልፀውልናል።
  
በልዑካኑ ቡድን እቅድ መሰረት እረዳታውን በወሎ እና በአፋር ለተጎዱ ወገኖች ማከፋፈል ስለሆነ ሌላ  ተጨማሪ  መረጃ  ስናገኝ  ለንባብ  እናበቀዋለን።. 



                                            
ሪፖርተር፤ ዐም

Monday, November 16, 2020

Ethiopia:Medical personnel were sent to the front lines to provide medical support to the Defense Forces

ለመከላከያ ሠራዊት የሕክምና ድጋፍ ለመስጠት ወደ ጦር ግንባር ለሚያመሩ የሕክምና ባለሙያዎች አሸኛኘት ተደረገ 
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ለኢፌዴሪ መከላከያ ሠራዊት የሕክምና ድጋፍ ለመስጠት ወደ ጦር ግንባር ለሚያመሩ የሕክምና ባለሙያዎች በአዲስ አበባ ከተማ አስተዳደር አሸኛኘት ተደርጓል።

በአሸኛኘቱ ላይ የከተማዋ ምክትል ከንቲባ አዳነች አበቤ፣ የከተማዋ ጤና ቢሮ ኃላፊ ዶ/ር ዮሐንስ ጫላን ጨምሮ በርካታ የሥራ ኃላፊዎች ተገኝተዋል። 

ምክትል ከንቲባ አዳነች አቤቤ፣ ሐኪሞቹ ለመከላከያ ኃይላችን ሙያዊ ድጋፍ ለማድረግ በመወሰናቸው አመስግነው፣ ለሕክምና ባለሙያዎችም ሆነ ለመከላከያ ሠራዊቱ አስፈላጊው ድጋፍ ሁሉ እንደሚደረግላቸው ገልጸዋል። 

የጤና ባለሙያዎቹ ወደ 1.7 ሚሊዮን ብር የሚገመት የሕክምና ግብዓት ከአዲስ አበባ አስተዳደር ተረክበዋል። 

የአዲስ አበባ ጤና ቢሮ ኃላፊ ዶ/ር ዮሐንስ ጫላ በዚህ ወቅት "የጤና ባለሙያች የመከላከያ ሠራዊቱን ለማገልገል ዕድል በማግኘታቹ እንኳን ደስ  አላችሁ" ብለዋል።

የሕክምና ድጋፍ ለመስጠት የሚሄዱት ባለሙያዎች 10 ስፔሳሊስት ዶክተሮች፤ 24 ነርሶች፤ አንድ ማደንዘዣ የሚሰጥ ስፔሻሊስት ዶክተርን ጨምሮ 48 የሕክምና ባለሙያዎች በሁለት ቡድን ተከፍለው እንደሚጓዙ ተገልጿል። 

በዋለልኝ ተዓምር 

Medical personnel were sent to the front lines to provide medical support to the Defense Forces
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 The Addis Ababa City Administration has provided medical assistance to the FDRE Defense Forces.

 The event was attended by the city's deputy mayor, Adanech Abebe, and the city's health bureau chief, Dr. Yohannes Chalan.

 Deputy Mayor Adanech Abebe thanked the doctors for their professional support and said they would provide all necessary support to the medical staff and the army.

 The health workers received about 1.7 million birr in medical supplies from the Addis Ababa administration.

 Addis Ababa Health Bureau Head, Dr. Yohannes Chala, said, "Congratulations on the opportunity for health professionals to serve the Defense Forces."

 10 specialist doctors to provide medical support;  24 Nurses:  It is said that 48 medical professionals, including an anesthesiologist, are divided into two groups.

 By the miracle of my tall Walelig Taamir)


Sunday, November 15, 2020

Ethiopia: They Once Ruled Ethiopia. Now They Are Fighting Its Government.

 

NAIROBI, Kenya — When it comes to mountain warfare, the people of Tigray — an ancient kingdom in the far north of Ethiopia, spread across jagged peaks and lush farmland — have decades of hard-won experience.

Tigrayan fighters led a brutal war through the 1970s and ’80s against a hated Marxist dictator of Ethiopia, whom they eventually toppled in 1991, becoming national heroes. For most of the next three decades, Tigrayans ruled Ethiopia.

But after Abiy Ahmed, a peace-talking young reformer, came to power as prime minister in 2018, he brusquely sidelined Tigray’s leaders. Tensions exploded violently on Nov. 4, as the world was focused on the presidential election in the United States, when Mr. Abiy launched military strikes in Tigray.

Now Tigray is once again at war, fighting the federal government. But this time the risks could be even wider: the potential fracturing of Ethiopia and the upending of the entire Horn of Africa.

The battle pits the nation’s army and Mr. Abiy, an internationally feted winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, against the ruling party of Tigray, which commands a large force of well-armed and experienced fighters who know their own mountain terrain well. Already the conflict has escalated at alarming speed with intense fighting that has involved airstrikes and artillery barrages, sent thousands of civilians fleeing across borders — some in boats or even swimming — and led to reports of civilian massacres.

With such intransigent foes, analysts predict a potentially long and bloody fight that is already spilling over Ethiopia’s borders

 

On Friday, Tigray launched rockets at two airports in neighboring Amhara Province and on Saturday said it had fired a volley of rockets at the main airport in Ethiopia’s neighbor Eritrea, which Tigray accuses of siding with Mr. Abiy.

The rush to war has exacerbated ethnic divisions so badly that on Friday it prompted warnings of potential ethnic cleansing and even genocide.

 

“The risk of atrocity crimes in Ethiopia remains high,” said Pramila Patten, the United Nations’ acting special adviser for the prevention of genocide, and Karen Smith, the special adviser on protecting civilians, in a joint statement.

Until recently Ethiopia, a close American military ally, was seen as the strategic linchpin of the volatile Horn of Africa. But with its brewing civil war spilling into Eritrea, refugees streaming into Sudan and Ethiopia’s peacekeeping mission to Somalia now under strain because of its domestic turmoil, analysts worry that Ethiopia could destabilize the region.

The dispute between Mr. Abiy and the Tigrayans goes back to the early days of his term as prime minister two years ago.

He moved quickly to shake up the country after decades of stultifying, iron-fisted rule under the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. Political prisoners were freed from secret prisons, exiled dissidents were welcomed home and Mr. Abiy promised free elections and press freedom.

Those rapid, wide-ranging reforms, which eventually helped Mr. Abiy win the Nobel Peace Prize, were a pointed repudiation of the Tigrayan old guard. Leaders of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front were unceremoniously sidelined and, in some cases, prosecuted for corruption and human rights abuses.

Resentful and angry, the Tigrayan leaders retreated to Mekelle, the regional capital of Tigray. The two sides sparred over politics, funding and control of the army. Then in September the Tigrayans openly defied Mr. Abiy and proceeded with regional elections that had been canceled in the rest of Ethiopia because of the pandemic.

But that clash, ostensibly a dispute between Ethiopian elites, was also emblematic of a much wider threat to Mr. Abiy’s authority.

Although Ethiopia is one country, it contains 10 regions, many of them ethnic strongholds that have historically jostled for power. In moving so quickly to liberalize politics in 2018, Mr. Abiy may have inadvertently unleashed pent-up regional frustrations that had been simmering for decades.

Rivalries among ethnic groups like the Oromo, Amhara, Tigray and Somali burst into the open, leading to violent clashes that have increased in frequency and intensity this year, often killing scores of people. With Ethiopia’s shaky federation straining badly, Tigray emerged at the vanguard of a movement pressing for greater autonomy for Ethiopia’s regions.

Mr. Abiy, who started to imprison opponents, pushed for much tighter central control.

“Everyone saw this coming,” said Kjetil Tronvoll, a scholar of Ethiopian politics at Bjorknes University College in Norway. “Both sides felt insecure and started to mobilize troops. It was a clear signal of a civil war in the making.”

Mr. Abiy’s speed in prosecuting the war has sent waves of alarm across the region and dismayed those who once lauded him as a peacemaker.

With phone and internet connections cut off, it’s hard to know exactly what is happening in Tigray. But both sides agree that government warplanes have pounded targets around Mekelle, that some Ethiopian troops were pushed over the border into Eritrea and that the most intense fighting has raged in western Tigray. By Sunday at least 20,000 Ethiopian civilians had fled into Sudan, a refugee stream that the United Nations fears could quickly become a flood. Sudan says it is preparing for up to 200,000 refugees.

There have been accusations of war crimes against both sides, including a massacre reported by Amnesty International in which dozens of villagers were said to have been chopped to death with machetes, possibly by pro-Tigray militiamen.

 


  • Ethiopia: Rumors that Ethiopian officials are involved in mediation talks with the TPLF in Uganda are false

    "የኢትዮጵያ ባለሥልጣናት በኡጋንዳ ከሕወሐት ጋር በሽምግልና ውይይቶች ላይ ይሳተፋሉ ተብሎ እየተነገረ ያለው መረጃ የተሳሳተ ነው"፡- የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ ዐዋጅ መረጃ ማጣሪያ
    **************************

    የኢትዮጵያ ባለሥልጣናት በኡጋንዳ ከሕወሐት ጋር በሽምግልና ውይይቶች ላይ ይሳተፋሉ ተብሎ እንደሚጠበቅ በተለያዩ የዜና አውታሮች የቀረበው መረጃ የተሳሳተ እና በአስቸኳይ ጊዜ ዐዋጅ ግብረ ኃይል ያልተረጋገጠ ነው።
      
    የፌደራል መንግሥት በትግራይ ክልል የሕግ የበላይነትን ለማስከበር በቁርጠኝነት እየሠራ እንደሚገኝም የአስቸኳይ ጊዜ ዐዋጅ መረጃ ማጣሪያ አስታውቋል።

    የሚዲያ አካላት እንደ መሠረታዊ የጋዜጠኝነት አሠራር የኢትዮጵያን የሕግ የበላይነትን የሚመለከቱ ጥያቄዎችን ሁልጊዜ በአስቸኳይ ጊዜ አዋጅ ግብረ ኃይል ፕሬስ ሴክሪታሪያት በኩል እንዲያረጋግጡ ጥሪ ቀርቧል።
    "Rumors that Ethiopian officials are involved in mediation talks with the TPLF in Uganda are false." ፡
     ***************************

     Reports from various media outlets that Ethiopian officials are expected to participate in mediation talks with the TPLF in Uganda are false and unconfirmed by the Emergency Proclamation Task Force.

     The Federal Government of Ethiopia (FGS) is committed to upholding the rule of law in Tigray State.

     Media outlets have been called upon to verify Ethiopian rule of law questions through the Emergency Proclamation.



    ከድብደባው ሸሽታ ከሀገር ስትወጣ ተያዘች : አየር መንገዱ ለህወሀት ያሾለከው : በአየር መንገዱ መከራ ያየችው ነፍ...

    Friday, December 20, 2019

    Ethiopia launched its first satellite into space on Friday

    (Reuters) - Ethiopia launched its first satellite into space on Friday, as more sub-Saharan African nations strive to develop space programs to advance their development goals and encourage scientific innovation.

    Before dawn on Friday, senior officials and citizens gathered at the Entoto Observatory and Research Centre just north of the capital Addis Ababa to watch a live broadcast of the satellite's launch from a space station in China.

    "This will be a foundation for our historic journey to prosperity," deputy prime minister Demeke Mekonnen said in a speech at the launch event broadcast on state television.

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    The satellite was designed by Chinese and Ethiopian engineers and the Chinese government paid about $6 million of the more than $7 million manufacturing costs, Solomon Belay, director general of the Ethiopian Space Science and Technology Institute, told Reuters.

    "Space is food, space is job creation, a tool for technology...sovereignty, to reduce poverty, everything for Ethiopian to achieve universal and sustainable development," he said.

    The satellite will be used for weather forecast and crop monitoring, officials said.

    The African Union adopted a policy on African space development in 2017 and declared that space science and technology could advance economic progress and natural resource management on the continent.

    (Reporting by Dawit Endeshaw and Tiksa Negeri; Writing by Maggie Fick; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)