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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Sheeko iyo Shaahid 2013: Sheekooyinka ku guuleystey sannadkan


Sheekooyinka Ku Guuleystey Sannadkan 2013



Guddiga Qiimaynta Sheekooyinka ee Baratanka Sheeko iyo Shaahid 2013, waxa ay soo saareen taxa sheekooyinka ku guuleystey baratanka sannadkan kaalmaha kowaad, labaad iyo saddexaad.
 
Kaalinta kowaad: Xamse Cabdi Ibraahim (Qoor cadde)
Baadigoobkii jannada bayhoofkii ka dambeeyay
 
Kaalint labaad: Saddaam Xuseen Carab
Maalmihii madoobaa
 
Kaalint saddexaad: Cabdiqani Xasan Ismaaciil
Waayihii Weris Mooge iyo qoyskeeda

Haddaba dhammaan ka qaybgalayaasha iyo dadwaynaha xiiseeya qoraalkaba waxa la ogaysiinayaa in ay maalinta maanta ee arbacada 21/8/2013, 15.30 (3.30 galabnimo) isu gu yimaaddaan Goobta Bandhigga Caalamiga ah ee Guriga Shaqaalaha, halkaas oo lagu bixin doono hadiyadihii.
Guddiga

Hargeysa, 20.08.2013

sheeko@redsea-online.com | info@hargeysabookfair.com www.redsea-online.com | www.kayd.org | www.hargeysabookfair.com

Cutubada Sida Degdega Ah u Jawaaba Ee Ciidanka Amaanka Somaliland oo Xalay Hawlgal Kadis ah Ku Qaaday Guryo Burco Ku Yaal




Somaliland Rabid Reaction Forces
Burco - Cutubo ka mid ah kuwa sida degdega ah u jawaaba ee Ciidamada Amaanka Somaliland ee loo yaqaano Rabid Reaction Unit (RRU), ayaa xalay saqdii dhexe hawlgal baadhiseed oo kadis ah ku fuliyay Guriga uu ka degan yahay magaalada Burco nin wadaad ah oo dhawaan laga soo daaayay Xabsiga weyn ee Guantanama ee dalka Maraykanka, warku waxa uu intaasi ku darayaa in ay ka kaxaysteen dhalinyaro uu dhalay wadaadka Guantanama laga soo daayay oo tiradoodu dhan tahay 3 balse isagii ay ka waayeen gurigiisa.

Sidoo kale Ciidanka Amaanka Somaliland cutubka sida degdega ah u jawaaba ee loo yaqaano RRU ayaa isla xalay saqbadhkii hawlgal baadhiseed oo kadis ah ku fuliyay Guriga uu ka degen yahay magaalada Burco Sheekh Siciid Axmed Jaar oo ka mid ah Ganacsatada Gobolka Togdheer, Ciidankan ayaa si xoog ah ku galay hoyga uu sheekhu Degannaa halkaana ka kaxaystay wali ma jiro war rasmi ah oo sheegaya meesha la geeyey sheekhaas.

Ciidankan oo watay Gaadiid aad u tiro badan  ayaa la sheegayaa inay markii ay soo gaadheen Aagga uu sheekhu degenaa farraqeen rasaas xaddi badan taas oo khal-khal iyo cabsi ku abuurtay shacabkii xaafaddaas degenaa.

Xaafadaha ku dhawaa goobta ciidanku ka samaynayey hawlgalka ayaa si aad ah loo xidhay, waxana la joojiyey guud ahaanba isu socodkii xaafadaas.

Good News for All Human-being: Ex-Somali Colonel Ordered by US Federal Magistrate to Pay $15 million in Torture Case



Former Somalia Colonel Abdi Aden Magan

By REGINA GARCIA CANO



Federal Judge Mark Abel awarded the compensation to Abukar Hassan Ahmed, who in a 2010 lawsuit said he endured months of torture in the 1980s during interrogations in Somalia. A judge had previously ruled that the former colonel, Abdi Aden Magan, was responsible for the torture.

Ahmed filed the lawsuit in April 2010, stating that Magan oversaw his detention and torture in Somalia in 1988. Ahmed said that three months of torture he endured make it painful for him to sit and injured his bladder to the point that he is incontinent.

Ahmed said the torture occurred when Magan served as investigations chief of the National Security Service of Somalia, a force dubbed the Black SS or the Gestapo of Somalia because of its harsh techniques used to gain confessions from detainees.

One of Ahmed's lawyers, Christina Hioureas, on Tuesday said the judge's ruling sends a message that the United States will not be a "safe harbor for those who commit human rights abuses." She said that properties owned by Magan could be seized to cover the $15 million.



Somali torture victim Abukar Hassan Ahmed talks about the civil court case against former Somali Col. Abdi Aden Magan during an interview at The Associated Press bureau in Columbus, Ohio. Ahmed is seeking damages against Magan, who was found responsible last year for torturing Ahmed in the 1980s. (AP Photo/Paul Vernon)
A federal magistrate in Columbus has recommended that a former Somali colonel pay a human-rights activist he tortured in Somalia $15 million in damages.

Ahmed was a professor at the Somalia International University and a lawyer defending political dissidents when he was imprisoned and tortured. Ahmed in 2010 found out Magan was living in the United States through a Google search.

Magan lived for years in Ohio. He initially fought the lawsuit, brought by the San Francisco-based Center for Justice and Accountability, but stopped participating last year and now lives in Kenya. Court documents list Magan as representing himself. An email requesting comment sent Tuesday to the address listed for Magan on the court docket was undeliverable.

Magan had argued that the lawsuit was filed in the wrong country and too long after when Ahmed says the abuse happened. He also had said he faced his own ordeal in Somalia and fled after falling out of favor with the government.

Koh said that, "taking into account the relevant principles of customary international law, and considering the overall impact of this matter on the foreign policy of the United States, the Department of State has determined that Defendant Magan does not enjoy immunity from the jurisdiction of U.S. courts."

Ahmed is now legal adviser to the president of Somalia and divides his time between London and Somalia's capital, Mogadishu.
 
Siad Barre Former Somali Dictator Presiden
“Magan said he was above the law, that he was the law,” Nushin Sarkarati, one of Ahmed’s attorneys, said at the hearing. She said the Magan case is the first court judgment holding a Somali National Security Service official liable for human-rights violations.

Sarkarati said Ahmed, who now lives in England, was left with permanent physical injuries that made him unable to father children and with mental injuries that interrupt his sleep and generate flashbacks of his torture.

She had asked Abel to order a substantial penalty as punishment and to deter others.

“If you are black, you need justice,” Ahmed told the court during the May hearing. “If you are white, you need justice. If you are yellow, you need justice. So everybody needs justice. It is universal. “I don’t seek only my justice, but I seek justice for other people also, because I call them the silent victims of torture — in Somalia or in other countries.”

Magan has moved to Kenya and has not participated in the lawsuit for more than a year. He could not be reached for comment. Ahmed is a legal adviser to the president of Somalia.

Sarkarati is an attorney with the Center for Justice and Accountability, a San Francisco-based human-rights organization. The center, as well as Hioureas of Chadbourne & Parke in New York City and Kenneth R. Cookson of Kegler Brown Hill & Ritter in Columbus, represented Ahmed.
kgray@dispatch.com

Source: AP 

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Somaliland has refused to attend a conference in Brussels concerning reconstruction and development in Somalia, fearing it would undermine its priority of gaining independence.

 
On Tuesday [13 August 2013 Somaliland government has rejected to attend the upcoming New Deal conference for reconstruction and development of Somalia which is due to take place in Brussels on 16 of September.

Speaking on BBC Somali Service, Somaliland’s Foreign Minister Mohamed Bihi Yonis said Somaliland previously informed EU officials that Somaliland is willing to attend ‘Brussels Conference’ with its own name since Somalia and Somaliland are two separate administrations.

“The priorities of Mogadishu government and Somaliland are quite different, for instance our needs aren’t similar but we [Somaliland] will welcome any support to develop our initiatives,” added Mr. Yonis.

He noted that Somaliland is in talks with the Somali Federal Government in Mogadishu and that Somaliland is in a better position to gain the region’s long awaited recognition.

Analysis: In Kismayo, fragile peace or a gathering storm?



A convoy of trucks, comprising Kenyan forces as part of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), and Ras Kamboni, a Somali militia allied to the government, drive through huge stockpiles of charcoal in the Somali port city of Kismayo on March 15, 2013. Kismayo has been fought over by multiple groups for over 20 years, most recently taken from Al-Shabaab by African Union troops and Somali forces in September 2012. The charcoal industry generates millions of dollars in tax revenue for whoever controls its export
© Phil Moore/IRIN
KISMAYO/NAIROBI,  (IRIN) - When bullets tore through the streets of Kismayo in June, leaving over 70 dead as rival militias twice fought for control of the Somali port city, many international aid agencies halted a cautious scale-up of activities.

One of the few to stay was the World Health Organization (WHO).

“For us, conflict means casualties. We are doctors; we have to be there,” Omar Saleh, WHO Somalia’s emergency health coordinator, told IRIN.

But for most international organizations - many of which had just returned to Kismayo after militant Islamists Al-Shabab were driven out late last year - the June violence proved too dangerous.

As stability returned through July, activities slowly resumed. Still, the political and security crises that fuelled the fighting are at risk of deepening.

Jubaland issue


The recent disputes over Jubaland, a state-within-a-state whose leadership and borders are not recognized by the administration in Mogadishu, constitute a test of federal principles outlined in Somalia’s provisional constitution. The central government also seeks control of and revenue from Kismayo, Jubaland’s de facto capital.

Jubaland, which, in its maximum extent, is considered to include the regions of Gedo and Lower and Middle Juba, has 87,000sqkm of mainly fertile land and some 1.3 million people of many different clan allegiances.

The Jubaland issue is also complicating relations between the central government in Mogadishu, regional powers Kenya and Ethiopia, and the African Union (AU) mission in Somalia (AMISOM). And with key players in Kismayo temporarily distracted, the crisis could be giving Al-Shabab a much-needed breather to regroup.

These developments threaten gains made this year by aid agencies and risk extending an already complex humanitarian situation in the city, where 60,000 people are in need of aid, according to estimates by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

“Whenever territory is taken by military operations, there is at least a temporary lag setting up a functioning administration. This hampers the ability of humanitarians to access people in need,” Philippe Lazzarini, the UN’s top humanitarian official for Somalia, told IRIN.

“The change in power can stoke insecurity rooted in competition among rival factions, as we saw in Kismayo and the Juba regions,” he added.

Many years under pressure

For several years, Kismayo, 200km north of the Kenyan border, was a key stronghold and source of income for Al-Shabab. The militants took control of the city in August 2008, after defeating the militia of Barre Adan Shire (widely known as Hiiraale), and remained in control of it until their defeat in September 2012.

Kismayo was a key target in AMISOM’s operation against Al-Shabab - the militants controlled the lucrative charcoal trade out of the port and also taxed imported goods.

While civilians report some stability during Al-Shabab’s control of the city, there were also limited livelihood opportunities, and access to education and healthcare was often difficult. Al-Shabab also banned polio vaccination in Kismayo and elsewhere in south-central Somalia, and according to reports, the group forcibly taxed and recruited the city’s residents.

“Conditions for the population were so precarious under Al-Shabab,” Soldan Haji Aden, director of the Alikar Center for Peace, Human Rights and Democracy in Kismayo, told IRIN. “Residents and internally displaced persons [IDPs] who came to Kismayo could not find healthcare, water, food, shelter or some kind of livelihood.”

Kismayo and the surrounding region were also hit hard by the 2011 food crisis. While famine was not declared in Lower Juba, the situation was classified a humanitarian emergency. Many of those displaced by the food crisis crossed the border to go to the Dadaab refugee camps in Kenya, but tens of thousands of people fled to Kismayo, where many other IDPs have gathered since the early 1990s.

“When Al-Shabab controlled Kismayo, it was very difficult to get food to feed my family,” Fadumo el Moge, a mother of five in Kismayo, told IRIN. “There was no work and Al-Shabab controlled the city and stopped humanitarian assistance. I had to rely on support from my family abroad.”

Glimmer of hope, but serious problems

Kenyan and Somali troops - the former mostly operating as part of the AU mission - attacked Kismayo in September 2012. Supported by local militia Ras Kamboni, the mixed force launched a combined ground, air and naval assault on 28 September and quickly ousted the militants from their last major urban stronghold.

While there remain major concerns about access and security, UN agencies and NGOs have launched or extended a variety of programmes, directly or through partners. Several have sent in short missions involving international staff, and humanitarian needs assessments have also been carried out.

“The challenges in Kismayo largely mirror those found throughout southern and central Somalia,” Lazzarini - who made his first visit to Kismayo as Humanitarian Coordinator in July 2013 - told IRIN. “People lack sufficient health services. They need clean water, sanitation services and education.”

Key humanitarian risks include the possibility of a polio outbreak taking hold given the long ban on vaccination, the spread of waterborne and infectious diseases within densely populated urban areas and IDP camps, and the ongoing threat of conflict in the city and beyond.

“The situation in Kismayo is better than before,” said Saleh of WHO, which is running polio vaccination and emergency surgery programmes. “But there are major problems. Kismayo Hospital needs total renovation. We need to establish long logistic lines for supplies and medicine and build up the people who are there after so much capacity has been lost. We are progressing, however, slowly but surely.”

The World Food Programme (WFP) launched two basic programmes in January through local partners: wet feeding at five centres, reaching about 15,000 people each day, and a nutrition programme to treat high levels of malnutrition among women and young children.

Médécins Sans Frontières - which withdrew from Kismayo in 2008 after the murder of three staff members - was also active in the city, but it recently announced plans to close all of its Somalia programmes due to “extreme attacks” on its staff. A number of other agencies are present, but are reluctant to share details of their operations.

Recent setbacks

Kismayo’s uneasy peace was shattered in June, when fighting broke out between rival militias laying claim to the presidency of Jubaland. The violence underscored the fragility of Kismayo’s early recovery and the dangers that remain.

“The tensions have been a setback - in particular, the fighting on 28-30 June, which resulted in more than 70 deaths and hundreds of civilian casualties,” said Lazzarini.

Clashes first broke out in early June and then again at the end of the month, with rival factions battling for control of the city. WHO reported a 44 percent rise in weapons-related injuries in Kismayo in June. The fighting pitted Ahmed Mohamed Islam “Madobe” - who was elected president of Jubaland in May by a conference of clan representatives - and his Ras Kamboni militia against other figures who also declared themselves leaders of the region.

Human Rights Watch criticized the militias for disregarding the safety of civilians, while a leaked letter from Somali Foreign Minister Fawzia Yusuf to the AU accused the Kenyan military of backing Ras Kamboni in the June clashes and of using heavy weapons in civilian areas. Analysts say Kenya has been encouraging the creation of Jubaland, which could act as a buffer zone on its northern border.

On 4 August 2013, in Uganda’s capital, Kampala, regional heads of state decided in a communique that control of Kismayo’s airport and seaport should be handed back to the Federal Government - backing Mogadishu against Madobe.

But the violence had already taken its toll. A critical polio vaccination campaign, which targeted tens of thousands of at-risk children, was halted. Although the effort was restarted in July, the delay is concerning given the 100 cases of polio confirmed in Somalia in 2013.

WFP’s food distribution activities were also disrupted, threatening recent gains in food security since the 2011 crisis. “The port has largely been inaccessible, so for essentially two months we couldn’t get food there,” Challiss McDonough, WFP’s spokesperson, told IRIN. “We did an exchange with another organization but had to suspend cooked meals in late July. We are in the process of getting more food there and hope to be able to resume by mid-August.”

The instability in Kismayo also threatens hopes of early refugee repatriation from Kenya. According to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), some 96,000 refugees in Dadaab - representing over 35 percent of the camp’s population - have origins in Lower Juba and are unlikely to agree to any negotiated return while significant violence still threatens the region's capital and civilian population.

Despite the negative humanitarian outlook following June’s violence, some agencies remain upbeat.

“The local authorities told me that they are ready to ensure the security of humanitarian workers,” said Lazzarini. “We are redeploying staff… We will continue to work hard to scale-up our activities, not only in Kismayo but throughout southern Somalia.”

But as MSF’s recent withdrawal from the country demonstrates, the conditions for humanitarian activity in Kismayo and elsewhere will likely remain precarious for some time.

OCHA recognises that the situation in the city "remains tense", and as MSF’s recent withdrawal from the country demonstrates, the conditions for humanitarian activity in Kismayo and elsewhere will likely remain precarious for some time

zf/rz

Why a Former Model Is Covering Up for Love


(Twitter.com/CarleyElle)
By Beth Greenfield, Shine Staff | Healthy Living

A British model and mom is ditching her life of posing in lingerie for one of modesty and obedience as a Muslim wife, said U.K. reports on Monday.

More on Shine: Iranian Politician Deemed to Pretty to Hold Office

“Meeting Mohammed has made me really look at my life,” Carley Watts, a model who regularly bares almost all for publications such as Elite Online Magazine, told the Sun about her lifeguard boyfriend, Mohammad Salah. She added, "My friends think I'm mad and that this is just a phase."

The two met while Watts was vacationing in Salah’s native Tunisia in April, when, Watts explained, every man flirted with her except for Salah.

"I saw it as a challenge," she told the Sun. "I went over one day and asked him his name. His English wasn’t very good so at first we spoke in a mixture of English and what little French I remember from school. We went for a walk on the beach together and things developed from there, but all we did on the first trip was have a kiss." She went back to visit him three weeks later and they soon fell in love.

So in October, the model says, she and her 2-year-old daughter, Alanah, will move from Norfolk to Monastir, in Tunisia, where she will convert to Islam before marrying Salah in the spring. 

Boyfriend Mohammad Salah and daughter Alanah. Photo: Facebook
In Tunisia, the divide between secularists and Islamists has widened since the ouster of former President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali more than two years ago. The role of Islam has grown in Tunisian society and been included in a new constitution, but the divisions are seen as less severe than in countries such as Egypt.

Watts’s spokesperson did not return a call from Yahoo! Shine seeking comment on Monday. But in the Sun interview, Watts acknowledged that she and her fiancé are quite different.

"Mohammed is solely focused on family life,” said Watts, who claimed her old job required her to "generally act outrageous."

"Now my life is set to change beyond belief," she told the Sun. "I don’t have any worries, though.”

Her new in-laws won’t be informed of her modeling career, she said, adding that the fact of her being a single mom was alarming enough. “He explained that he loved me and wanted me to be his wife and they have come round to that,” she said. “He accepts that [glamour modeling] is what I do and doesn’t try to change me. But he says once we are married my body is for his eyes only.” Watts now covers her shoulders and ankles out of respect when she is with her future in laws. She also fasted during Ramadan last month.

Watts seems drawn in by the customs. “Single mums don’t exist in his world and men who get unmarried women pregnant go to prison. It is all about family and he idolizes his mother. These are the kind of values I love about their culture,” she explained. “Women are treated with respect and they also respect themselves and their bodies. They don’t do one-night stands or casual flings. When I’m with Mohammed I feel so content, calm and happy. I know he’s the kind, family man for me.”

She added, "Since meeting him I feel like my life has a different meaning and direction. Morals and family values are more important to me now.I know it sounds mad when I’m still getting my boobs out for a living, but it’s for the best."

A handful of critics on Twitter had nothing but vitriol for the model’s decision. “You've pissed away ur career, & now ur'e nothin but a controlled woman, a slave,” wrote one. Another warned her not to unpack in Tunisia. But a lone tweeter praised Watts, writing, “Welcome to islam dear, masha allah [praise God], finally u got right path.”

Several African leaders in Addis for Zenawi memorial



Several African leaders and high-level delegations from Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, Somalia, Kenya, South Africa, South Sudan and Djibouti are also expected this morning in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, to attend the first memorial service of the late Ethiopian prime minister, Meles Zenawi.

Sudanese president Omar Hassan Al-Bashir was among the first to jet in on Monday.
The widow of the late premier and board chairperson of the Meles Zenawi Foundation (MZF), Azeb Mesfin, said that the occasion will be marked across the nation on Tuesday, with various events planned to commemorate the legacy of the former Ethiopian leader.

At the memorial service, African leaders will pay tribute to the late prime minister for his outstanding efforts at both national and continental level to maintain regional peace and security, as well as his lead role in environmental protection and climate change negotiations.

Zenawi, regarded as one of Ethiopia’s greatest leaders, died on 20 August 2012 after leading the country for over two decades.

Source: NewVision

Remembering Meles Zenawi: His Vision and His Legacy

Meles Zenawi was a man who strongly believed that development and democratization were the keys to success, but he was not someone who merely followed ideological concepts. He believed that development should bring tangible benefits to the people at home.

late Males Zenawi
August 20, 2013 marks a year since the sudden and tragic death of the late Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi.  The anniversary will be commemorated nationally to mark the former Premier’s legacy. It will pay tribute to the brilliant and life-long achievements as an untiring and unforgettable leader who made an outstanding contribution to the current renaissance of Ethiopia. He was the architect of the country’s National Security Policy and Strategy and played an influential role in the construction of the policies. His astute knowledge, negotiating skills, and an uncanny capacity for communication allowed him to become a major influence in the development of Africa and in the engagement of the continent’s international diplomatic efforts. Meles Zenawi had an unyielding conviction of the importance, and the necessity,  of reconciliation, peace building, and above all - trust. He devoted his life to the peace and security of Africa, particularly the Horn region. His brilliance as a politician was commended and recognized by many of his peers on an international level. It inevitably raised Ethiopia’s diplomatic and economic influence not only in Africa but in many international fora.

Poverty can be said to be one of mankind’s worst enemies; and no one can deny that Ethiopians have seen the worst of it. Indeed, the country’s name even became synonymous with poverty. By the same token, Ethiopia has never seen a leader who worked so tirelessly to fight to overcome the country’s level of impoverishment, a major source of shame. Zenawi was a man who strongly believed that development and democratization were the keys to success, but he was not someone who merely followed ideological concepts. He believed that development should bring tangible benefits to the people at home.  His economic policies were designed to lead to the economic developments that also led to the construction of schools and health stations. The results were that millions were lifted out of poverty.   

Zenawi was a modern leader in the best sense of the word. He believed that increasing women’s participation and the protection of their rights necessarily contributed to a healthier socio-economic path for Ethiopia. The pro-poor economic policies that he pursued and his vigilant fight against corruption and other malpractices enabled Ethiopia to register one of the fastest growing economies in the world for a decade. His vision allowed Ethiopia to establish a strong developmental state, a success story for other African countries to emulate. It was designed to lift the country out of poverty and foster the country’s ambition to be a part of the group of middle-income countries by 2025.

The Growth and Transformation Plan is a prime example of Zenawi’s legacy. In its first two years, the performance of the plan has been highly successful, forming a sound basis for what needs to be done to sustain and ensure its continued success over the next three years. Its success underline’s the World Bank’s analysis that in the last decade under Meles Zenawi’s leadership, Ethiopia experienced strong and broad-based growth, experiencing 9.9 percent per year in 2004/5-2011/12 compared to the regional average of 5.4 percent. This was essentially due to the expansion of the agricultural and services sectors. This economic growth brought positive trends in reducing poverty, in both urban and rural areas, reducing the number of Ethiopians living under extreme poverty by 9 percent within five years. Overall it also made considerable progress in most of the human development indicators: primary school enrollments quadrupled, child mortality cut in half, numbers of people with access to clean water doubled, and the fight against malaria and HIV/AIDS strengthened dramatically. The flow of FDI to the country in 2012 reached a billion US dollars, making Ethiopia second only to South Africa as a recipient. In other words, the country has become one of the most attractive destinations for Foreign Direct Investment in Africa.

Zenawi’s efforts to begin the construction of the Ethiopian Grand Renaissance Dam and the move to take greater advantage of the Nile River are another major example of his successes, and will be one of his greatest legacies. It is a project that will not  only bring about economic growth and stability for Ethiopia, but will have the additional effect of increasing Ethiopia’s hydroelectric power export leverage throughout north-east Africa, and also launch major social changes in Ethiopia by increasing the usage of cleaner energy, bringing electricity into rural areas, and elevating the standards of living for Ethiopians and its neighbors.

Ethiopia still faces a marathon struggle to eliminate poverty, but it has experienced nearly a decade of double-digit annual economic growth. Under Zenawi’s governance, Ethiopia’s economic growth has been described by the IMF as “the fastest for a non-oil exporting country in Sub-Saharan Africa.” His efforts in the war on poverty and backwardness gained him a plethora of international commendations. In 2005, Tabor 100, a U.S. based NGO, awarded him  its prestigious Crystal Eagle International Leadership Award for his contribution toward economic and social transformation in Africa.

Significantly, the former Prime Minister also made great strides in democratizing Ethiopia. For most of the 20th century, Ethiopia was ruled by highly centralized governments. This changed abruptly when Zenawi and the EPRDF came to power in 1991, launching an ambitious reform effort to initiate a transition to a more democratic system of governance and decentralizing authority within a federal structure. Other elements of change included the introduction of a private media for the first time. His critics might disagree but for most Ethiopians the arrival of Zenawi and EPRDF, on Ginbot 20 1991, can be described as the “birth of democracy” in Ethiopia.  His efforts for the promotion of democracy, for the creation of a democratic developmental state, did not go unnoticed in the international community. He was awarded the Good Governance Award of the Global Coalition for Africa for his leadership during the challenging period of transition in Ethiopia.

Called one of Africa’s strongmen by the international media, Zenawi’s powerful leadership skills were recognized regionally throughout Africa and internationally.  He was widely appreciated for his efforts against terrorism and providing security to the Horn of Africa. He also gave much attention to consolidating the role of a peacemaker in the region, and more widely. His mediation efforts between Sudan and South Sudan were impressive, and he did much to stabilize Somalia as the mandate of the Transitional Federal Government came to an end, as well as contributing to the UN peacekeeping forces to Liberia, Rwanda, Sudan and Burundi. His achievements in promoting peace and stability in Africa were widely recognized not only within Africa but also internationally.  In 2009, he was awarded Rwanda’s National Liberation Medal, the “Uruti,” for helping to liberate Rwanda and end the genocide in the country; and he was also given the World Peace Prize for his contributions to global peace and his efforts to stabilize the Horn of Africa through the work of the regional Inter-Governmental Authority for Development.

Meles Zenawi was chosen to lead and represent a number of regional and international organizations. He was a co-chair of the Global Coalition for Africa, which brought together senior African policy makers to build consensus on development issues. He served as the Chairman of the Organization for African Unity, the present day African Union, and in 2007, was elected by the AU to chair the executive committee of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development NEPAD, leading the organization for nearly a decade. He also had the honor to represent Africa at G8 and G20 Summits.

His contributions were not limited to economic, social and diplomatic exchanges. He was internationally recognized for his efforts to bring world attention to climate change and its impacts in Africa. His role in negotiations identified him as a leader that stood up for Ethiopia and the rest of Africa in these forums and highlighted the way a few developed states were severely crippling the many and indeed damaging the world by pollution. Indeed, from 2009, Meles Zenawi played a major role in developing the African Union’s position on climate change. He was selected to lead the African Delegation to the Global Conference on Climate Change at Copenhagen in 2009, to present an African consensus on climate change. His interventions received widespread support especially from the European Union; and the following year he was named as co-chair of the Advisory Group on Climate Change Financing by the UN. He promptly proved his value by producing a study of an alternative financing mechanism for developing countries that had been critically damaged by climate changes to which they had never contributed.

The former Prime Minister’s diplomatic skills  allowed him to play a significant role in a number of international fora and summits, producing a series of successful economic alliances. He co-chaired the Beijing Summit, which led to the adoption of the Beijing Action Plan for China-Africa relations, and attended G20 and G8 Summits on behalf of Africa. The results of these led to significant economic progress, cultural exchanges, and support for Africa’s development of international political, economic, trade, and financial systems.

Meles Zenawi was a man of the people. He was always at the forefront of the perilous journey undertaken to uproot the repressive regime of the past on the battlefield. Once in office, he led the efforts to democratize the nation and ensure equality and prosperity for the Ethiopian people.  His intellectual qualities, his magnanimity and humility, together with his energy, vision, and determination, put him at the forefront of safeguarding the interests of Ethiopia and of Africa to achieve freedom and prosperity. He left a huge legacy for the Ethiopian people to encourage them to continue on the path of peace, stability, unity, progress, and cohesion.  With his vision to be carried on, his untiring devotion would be rewarding.

Kenyan hunt for Al-Shabaab group which killed four police officers



Kenyan police have intensified a major manhunt for a heavily armed Al-Shabaab force which attacked a police post in north east Kenya on Friday (August 16). The attackers who apparently numbered around fourty in all, killed four police officers and burned down a security camp near the border with Somalia.

A fifth officer managed to escape. The County Commissioner said security officers from the Rapid Deployment Unit and other police units had been deployed in the area and were pursuing the group which was said to fleeing towards the border.

The Commissioner said the attackers managed to loot the Administration Police Post and seize number of guns and ammunition before destroying it. In May, four security officers and two civilians were killed in a similar border incursion by Al-Shabaab fighters, who targeted the Abdi Sugow Administration police camp in Dadaab district

Source: mfa.gov.et

South Sudan Cabinet resolves to join the Nile Basin Initiative



The South Sudan Council of Ministers on Friday unanimously passed a resolution endorsing the country’s bid to join the Nile Basin Initiative.

The Minister of Information, Michael Makuei Lueth, told reporters after a cabinet meeting that the Council had passed a resolution allowing the country to become the ninth member of the NBI.

The Minister said this would decision enable South Sudan to engage with other states on Nile Water issues on an equal footing.

He said it was important to join the NBI because it would help the country benefit from assistance that is given to support projects aimed at improving lives and the living standard of people dependent upon water from the Nile.
"It will also make the country participates in discussions and resolutions of issues related to water management. But this can only happen if you are a member of the Initiative”.

The other members of the Nile Basin Initiative are: Burundi, DR Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda. South Sudan is also expected to sing the NBI Cooperative Framework Agreement  which has so far been signed by six members of the NBI - Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda.

Source: mfa.gov.et