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Sunday, February 2, 2014
90 year old surgeon keeps a steady hand in Ethiopia
Australian surgeon Catherine Hamlin has just celebrated her 90th birthday, and for most people, this would be a good enough reason to slow down.
By Naomi Selveratnam
Australian surgeon Catherine Hamlin has just celebrated her 90th birthday, and for most people, this would be a good enough reason to slow down.
Source: World News Australia Radio
By Naomi Selveratnam
Australian surgeon Catherine Hamlin has just celebrated her 90th birthday, and for most people, this would be a good enough reason to slow down.
But Dr Hamlin says she will continue her work with women in Ethiopia with the potentially life-threatening medical condition, obstetric fistula.
When Catherine Hamlin celebrated her 90th birthday, she didn't want gifts or a party.
Instead, she says she wished for her hands to remain steady enough to continue to operate on some of the thousands of women who come to the hospital she and her late husband, Reg, established in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.
Dr Hamlin says it's not difficult to feel compassion for the women coming to seek help for a painful and potentially life-threatening condition.
"These patients are very touching to people meeting them because of their poverty, because of their needs. And to know that there are young women who would be ruined if they're not repaired, you don't have to have special gifts. If you just see one it draws out your compassion in your heart."
Dr Hamlin's work involves women who have developed a hole, or fistula, near their vaginas after prolonged, obstructed births.
The condition, when untreated, can cause incontinence, as well as severe infection-- and in extreme cases, paralysis.
The work of Dr Hamlin's hospital is supported by a fund-raising group in Australia.
Chief Executive Officer of the group, Lucy Perry, says the condition is debilitating.
"They're in so much pain. They have serious internal injuries but people often forget too, because they're dripping urine, they're incontinent, just the acid in their urine eats away at their skin and their skin breaks down. Just walking is a huge discomfort to them. And just that ability to decide when you go to the toilet is such a basic human dignity that allows you to live your life properly."
Dr Hamlin says obstetric fistulas frequently lead to women being excluded from their community in rural parts of Ethiopia.
"They don't understand what is the cause of this. They think they've been cursed by God and they have no idea that it's due to a mechanical factor. Either the baby's too big or the pelvis is too small and they can't deliver normally. And they don't realise that this was the cause of them being incontinent when the baby comes out."
Dr Hamlin says when she and her husband arrived in Ethiopia as fellow doctors in 1959, they never imagined the condition would end up being the main focus of their lives.
"We happened to have come to Ethiopia. We didn't know anything about fistulas when we came. And we met these patients and we met these patients and we became very much involved straight away with trying to help them and we read all the literature about how to repair them and we contacted doctors in Egypt who were doing these operations. And we had to learn really, how to operate."
Despite being more than 20 years over Australia's retirement age, Dr Hamlin says she has no plans to stop working.
Every day, she walks from her home in Addis Ababa to the hospital, where she still operates on an average of two patients a week.
Other surgeons do many more operations - more than two-thousand a year, and almost all patients are completely cured.
Dr Hamlin says the best 90th birthday presents she can have are donations to help keep her hospital running.
Lucy Perry says even the smallest donations can make a difference.
"Anything from ten dollar packs of slippers for our patients. A ten dollar pack buys five pairs of slippers. Our patients arrive barefoot generally. So anything from small items like that right through to, we need to pay for obstetric fistula surgery, we need to pay for caesareans, we need to pay for accomodation for our long term patients who need training and more integration back into society, right up to $35,000 fully equipped midwifery centres in regional Ethiopia."
The Hamlin organisation once received Australian government funding, but that's stopped.
Now, it relies entirely on public donations to keep the hospital running.
Lucy Perry says it makes planning for the future of the hospital a challenge.
"It has had quite an impact, it was a million dollars a year. Our entire budget to run the hospital and the midwifery college is five million dollars a year so to lose 20 per cent of our income is an enormous amount. But at the same time, I've always said that if I'm doing my job properly, we'll never need to apply for AusAid funding again because we'll have enormous support from the Australian public."
Dr Hamlin says she wants donors to realise that despite the number of operations at her hospital, there are still many women in rural parts in Ethiopia suffering from obstetric fistulas.
"I just love the patients and I feel this tremendous need to awaken the Western world to this need."
Ms Perry says Dr Hamlin needs her patients as much as they need her.
"She said to me once, oh if I stop operating, I'll die. And she's still operating weekly and she's amazing. I've sat with her in theatre a number of times and she has amazing steadiness of hand. She doesn't wear glasses, she sits down to operate and the team around her sit around her. She said to me in theatre once, the day I lose the steadiness is the last day I'll operate."
Dr Hamlin's sister, Ailsa Pottie agrees.
"I think she just loves the work and people say 'oh you know you're wonderful to give up a good career in Australia', as though it's some sort of terrible hardship for her. But she just loves the people and she loves the work, and she's just committed."
But Dr Hamlin does have a plan in place to keep her work going for the women of Ethiopia, when her hands one day do become unsteady.
Lucy Perry explains.
"We have 90 midwives in training at the moment. In time, as we can deploy those midwives out into the countryside, and they can be alongside women in Ethiopia when they give birth, we will be able to reduce the incidence of obstetric fistula. And then we can look towards the future of really putting our effort into general obstetrics and really being able to give to the women of Ethiopia emergency obstetric services when they need them. So that's the vision. Catherine has said to me over the years, she had wanted to achieve that in her lifetime and last time she said that to me she said it won't be in my lifetime, but it might be in your lifetime. And I'm 50 years younger than Catherine so I've got my work cut out for me."
Catherine Hamlin says it is the dedication of her staff that helps the hospital to thrive, and will keep her foundation running for many years to come.
"I've got a good staff that are committed to help and they're inspired to go on with this work and they will keep the hospital going until we're free of fistulas in the countryside."
Source: World News Australia Radio
Woman in "fake" Saudi princess case worked as prostitute in Dubai, witness says
By Beatrice Thomas
(Getty Images - for illustrative purposes)
The woman at the centre of a $20m London property fraud case allegedly worked in Dubai as a prostitute 20 years ago, a former friend has claimed.
Negat Ali, an Ethiopia-born south London furniture dealer, has previously told a London court that Sara Al Amoudi was not a Saudi princess as she has claimed but a former prostitute originally from Ethiopia and they had previously worked together in a restaurant in Yemen.
In her witness statement, obtained by Arabian Business, Ethiopian-born Ali said she became friends with Al Amoudi in Yemen between 1985 and 1989, saying her mother, a woman named Hassina, owned a restaurant in Sanaa and the family had a bad reputation.
She claimed between 1989 to 1994 Al Amoudi, said to have variously claimed to be aged 30 and 43, was based in Dubai and worked as a prostitute.
“I was travelling between Dubai and Yemen at the time and would meet up with the defendant,” she said. “I stayed in her flat in Dubai for a week in 1993 or 1994.”
She said the defendant, who has used the names Sofia, Leena as well as Sarah, also lived with her in London for most of 1999 when she had almost no money, worked at The Stork Club as a hostess and later Jaks after she had a baby that same year.
“I believe that she had both an Ethiopian and Yemeni passport at that time,” she said in the statement. “I understand that fake Yemeni passports can be purchased for $250. I have heard that the defendant told the hospital she was only visiting from Dubai and that the baby came early.”
Ali said Al Amoudi borrowed £500, which she never returned, as well as around £1,000 for her mother and family in Ethiopia.
She said while she had not seen her for several years she believed she covered up her face “to prevent her own community from recognising her”.
"She is very secretive and wears wigs to disguise her identity,” she said in the statement.
Al Amoudi claims to be the daughter of Sheikh Mohammed Hussein Al Amoudi, a Saudi businessman who was ranked the 63rd richest man in the world by Forbes in 2011 and is estimated to have a wealth of around $12.3bn.
Her real identity and alleged wealth are central to allegations by London property developers Amanda Clutterbuck and Ian Paton that she is a fraud and she convinced them to transfer six luxury London apartments worth £14m ($20.8m) into her name as part of a larger property deal they believed would be funded by the Al Amoudi family.
The couple claim funds for the larger deal failed to materialise and the woman refused to return ownership of the six apartments, which are based in upmarket London areas such as Knightsbridge and Belgravia.
Al Amoudi denies the claims, claiming the flats are rightfully hers, and told the court she has a fortune of up to £10m and was addicted to shopping.
Last month London’s Daily Mail published pictures of Al Amoudi at the Mayfair nightclub No 5 Cavendish with male acquaintances and other glamorous women.
The court has heard allegations that as part of Al Amoudi’s alleged scam, two of the women pictured – Samera “Amani” Al-Mutawakel, 30, and 36-year-old Maha Al Mutawakel-Ramsden – were represented as her sisters and fellow Saudi princesses.
The developers claim the pair are no such thing but are, like her, prostitutes.
A High Court judge has been spending weeks considering evidence in the property case.
Source: arabianbusiness.com
Ethiopia “kidnaps” Chief Rebel Negotiators in Kenya Contrary Ethiopia Denies Abduction of any ONLF Officials
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| Sulub Abdi Ahmed and Ali Hussein ONLF Negotiators |
NAIROBI - An Ethiopian rebel group on Tuesday alleged that the Ethiopian intelligence services have abducted two senior rebel officials from the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.
The Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) said in a statement on Tuesday that their chief negotiators, Sulub Abdi Ahmed and Ali Hussein (who is also known as Ali Dheere), were kidnapped late on Monday.
The two rebel leaders had been staying in Nairobi to attend a third-round peace talks with Ethiopian government as negotiators, according to the ONLF.
The allegations could not be verified independently and Ethiopian officials were not available for comment on Tuesday.
The separatist group said the actions of the Ethiopian government’s agents will have a huge affect on the ongoing Kenyan-mediated peace efforts to bring about a lasting solution to conflict in Ethiopia’s Ogaden Region.
“This heinous act constitutes a breach of confidence in dealing with Ethiopia and will gravely hamper any further talks with Ethiopia”, the ONLF said.
“This cowardly act, will further invigorate the quest of the Somalis in Ogaden for freedom”, the statement adds.
The group called up on the Kenyan government to urgently apply diplomatic pressure on Addis Ababa so that the abducted ONLF officials are swiftly freed.
“We call upon the Kenyan government, which took the responsibility to be a neutral venue, and as a facilitator to investigate fully this travesty and request the Ethiopian government to return the abductees”, the statement said.
Ethiopia launched military offences against the ONLF after the group took responsibility for an attack on a Chinese-run oil exploration field in April 2007 that killed 65 Ethiopians and nine Chinese workers.
The Ogaden rebel group has since been designated as a terrorist entity by Ethiopia, which is a key regional ally of the US in its so-called global “war on terror”.
Ogaden, which covers majority of Ethiopia’s eastern Somali Region has been a conflict zone between ONLF and government forces.
Ethiopia says the group has been defeated and it no longer is a threat in the region, which borders neighbouring Somalia where Ethiopian troops are fighting Al-Qaida allied Al-Shabaab.
Since Ethiopia staged offences in the Ogaden region, international rights groups have accused Addis Ababa’s Special forces of committing abuses in the region, with some right groups referring to the situation in Ogadan as the “Darfur of Ethiopia”.
Ethiopia has repeatedly dismissed the allegations.
Ethiopia Denies Abduction of any ONLF Officials
Adis-Ababa — An Ethiopian official from the Somali region of Ethiopia who gave an interview to the VOA somali branch denied allegations that the Ethiopian Government abducted two highly ranked ONLF memebers from Nairobi.
Abdinur Abdullahi Farah who is the presidents advisor in the Somali region of Ethiopia told the VOA that the two officials reached an agreement with the Ethiopian Government and are now in the region peacefully.
the two ONLF members are Ali Mohamed Hussein and Sulub Abdi Ahmed who were spearheading talks with the Ethiopiuan Government inside Kenya.
Congress Passes Bill to Tamper Land Grabs Causing Forced Evictions in Ethiopia
by Tracy
In a historic move, the U.S. Congress has taken a stance on land grabs-related human rights abuses in Ethiopia. The 2014 Omnibus Appropriations Bill contains provisions that ensure that U.S. development funds are not used to support forced evictions in Ethiopia.
The bill prevents U.S. assistance from being used to support activities that directly or indirectly involve forced displacement in the Lower Omo and Gambella regions. It further requires U.S. assistance in these areas to be used to support local community initiatives aimed at improving livelihoods and to be subject to prior consultation with affected populations.
The bill goes further and even instructs the directors of international financial institutions to oppose financing for any activities that directly or indirectly involve forced evictions in Ethiopia.
According to Anuradha Mittal, executive director of the Oakland Institute, “We welcome this move as it aims to address one major flaw of U.S. assistance to Ethiopia. The step taken by the U.S. Congress is very significant, as it signals to both the Ethiopian government and the U.S. administration that turning a blind eye to human rights abuses in the name of development is no longer an option.”
Several reports from the Oakland Institute have raised alarm about the scale, rate, and negative impacts of large-scale land acquisitions in Ethiopia, which would result in the forced displacement of over 1.5 million people. The relocation process through the government’s villagization scheme is destroying the livelihoods of small-scale farmers and pastoralist communities. Ethiopian security forces have beaten, arrested, and intimidated individuals who have refused to relocate and free the lands for large-scale agricultural plantations.
Ethiopia’s so-called development programs cannot be carried out without the support of international donors, primarily the U.S., one of its main donors. Oakland Institute’s on-the-ground research has documented the high toll paid by local people as well as the role of donor countries in supporting the Ethiopian policy.
This bill represents an important first step toward Congress’ initiating a comprehensive examination of U.S. development practices in Ethiopia. As the oversight authority of the State Department, Congress must now ensure that the provisions are fully upheld and implemented. This warrants thorough scrutiny of USAID programs to Ethiopia and their contribution to forced resettlements and human rights abuses.
With this bill, USAID, the State Department, as well as the World Bank, will have to reconsider the terms and modalities of the support they provide to the Ethiopian government. According to Frederic Mousseau, Oakland Institute’s policy director, “This is a light of hope for the millions of indigenous people in Ethiopia who have sought international support from the international community to recognize their very destruction as communities and people.”
Source: oaklandinstitute.com
Ethiopian Delegates Leave for Djibouti Amidst Transit Tensions
The delegation is hoping to convince the Djibouti authorities to rethink their decision on the transit processes
A high level delegation, led by Transport Minister Worqneh Gebeyehu, left for Djibouti on Friday afternoon. They are hoping to overturn a decision by the Djibouti government to halt the transit of containers unless fees are paid in advance.
The delegation comprises of seven senior officials of Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn's administration, including Mekonnen Abera, director general of the Ethiopian Maritime Affairs Authority, sources disclosed to Fortune.
The delegation is scheduled to meet its counterpart in Djibouti for two-day talks, which will be led by Moussa A. Hassan, the Djibouti minister of Infrastructure & Transport, and comprises of Illyas M. Dawaleh, minister of Economy, Finance & Planning, and Aboubaker O. Hadi, chairman of Djibouti's Ports & Free Zones Authority (PFZAD).
The bilateral meeting was provoked after Aboubaker's office issued a directive, on November 28, 2013, revising a regulation that allows Ethiopian freight forwarders to clear containers from ports in Djibouti and get invoiced for transit fees two weeks after their release. The new directive changes this and imposes a requirement on freight forwarders in Djibouti to "present a bank transfer letter in hard currency" in order to secure the release of containers from the Djibouti and Doraleh ports.
Originally setting the deadline for December 7, 2013, authorities in Djibouti have now extended this until January 15, 2014.
"The purpose of our visit to Djibouti is to ensure the status quo," said a senior administration official who has travelled to Djibouti as a member of the delegation.
He meant the return of the container clearing procedures to its previous state of affairs.
Djibouti freight forwarding companies pay fees for port handling, vessel agents, container demurrage and storage for cargo which has remained at the port for more than eight days on behalf of Ethiopian forwarding agents. They send original receipts for these expenses as well as invoices claiming commissions from their Ethiopian partners. This is so the latter is able to access foreign exchange from commercial banks to order transfers.
Companies in Djibouti have been complaining over the years that they are owed close to 20 million dollars by their Ethiopian partners. The latter blame banks for keeping them in the cold before granting them access to foreign exchange.
"We accept that they have legitimate concerns we need to address," said a high ranking government officials who is in Djibouti to negotiate the impasse. "But the way they want us to respond is not acceptable."
Indeed, the move Djibouti has taken to make its point has made Ethiopian businesses furious, and is perceived as a small harbour state twisting the arms of a large landlocked neighbour.
"They have already begun to block the passage to containers, even before the deadline arrives," said a manager of a freight forwarding company in Addis Abeba, working in partnership with a prominent agent in Djibouti.
Authorities in Addis Abeba hope that Djibouti relaxes its latest demand. They believe there is no reason why it should not honour a port utilisation agreement its government signed in 2003, which stipulates that neither country can act unilaterally in breach of the agreement.
"I'm confident that we will work this out, with their officials coming back to Addis Abeba in the next few weeks," said a senior government official working for the customs authority.
However, the delegation that has travelled to Djibouti is expected to arrive back in Addis Sunday evening.
Djibouti Signs Development, Tourism Agreement With Chinese Firm
Djibouti has signed an agreement with Chinese company Touchroad International Holdings to support a number of tourism and development projects in the country, the Djiboutian Information Agency reported Monday (January 27th).
Under the agreement, Touchroad will finance the construction of a new shipyard at Obock, and new luxury hotels and an airport for tourists on the Ras Syan and Seven Brothers Islands.
Touchroad said it will also open a new regional headquarters in Djibouti.
Djibouti, France Sign Agreement to Develop Municipal Library
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| Djibouti |
Mayor of Djibouti Hussein Abdillahi Kayad signed an agreement Monday (January 27th) with Director of the French Institute of Djibouti (IFD) Dominique Richard to develop the city's municipal library, the Djiboutian Information Agency reported.
Under the agreement, IFD will provide theoretical and practical training in library management on a weekly basis. Training will cover cataloguing of documents, collection maintenance, public services and all other skills necessary for the proper management of the library.
The municipality is expected to maintain the upkeep of the library facility.
The library is the only structure of its kind in Djibouti and is stocked with 2,800 books for adults and youth previously donated by IFD.
Djibouti sets sights on geothermal energy
Djibouti, a small nation on the eastern coast of Africa, has announced ambitious plans concerning clean energy. Like other African countries, Djibouti has taken a strong interest in clean power because of the economic stability is represents. While clean technologies also represent an expensive investment,renewable energy has the potential to help countries save a significant amount of money in terms of energy costs. Through the adoption of renewable energy, countries are able to produce the electrical power they need domestically, rather than rely on foreign sources of oil and coal.
$31 million in investments being made for geothermal power projects Government officials have announced that they will be investing some $31 million into geothermal energyprojects throughout the country. This initiative is meant to make Djibouti more energy independent and reduce its reliance on neighboring Ethiopia. Djibouti has a population that is less than one million people and the entire country’s peak energy demand stands at 70 megawatts of electricity. Currently, as much as 65% of the nation’s power comes from energy systems in Ethiopia.
50MW project set to begin development in 2015 The initiative underway in Djibouti has received financial backing from numerous organizations, including the African Development Bank. The country will begin developing new geothermal energy projects in 2015. The first project that will receive Djibouti’s focus is estimated to have a total energy capacity of 50 megawatts. This capacity will be doubled as the second phase of this project is completed sometime in 2016.
Geothermal power could help Djibouti find economic prosperity in the near future Some of the projects that will receive backing in Djibouti are being managed by the Reykjavik Energy Invest of Iceland. The company has garnered acclaim in Iceland for its involvement in the geothermal sector and has helped develop the world’s first magma-powered geothermal energy system. Djibouti officials believe that geothermal power will reduce the country’s reliance on fossil-fuels, providing the country with more economic stability and creating new jobs for the people that need them.
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Russia urges sides to stabilize Nagorno Karabakh situation
YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS: Russia urges Armenia and Azerbaijan to take additional measures to stabilize the situation in the zone of conflict. Armenpress reports that the statement made by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federations says in particular: “We are concerned about the worsening of the situation in the zone of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. There have been casualties among the military in the incidents that have become more frequent in the recent days in which the ceasefire has been violated on the border and the line of contact. There have been reports about wounded among the civilian population”.
In case the situation keeps worsening, “negative aftermaths are inevitable for the process of the Nagorno Karabakh settlement. The implementation of the agreements reached at the Azerbaijani-Armenian summit in Vienna on November 19, 2013 may be seriously complicated”, - the commentary said.
Russia urges the sides of the conflict “to take additional measures aimed at stabilization of the situation, including the use of mechanisms envisaged in the ceasefire consolidation agreement of February 4, 1995”, - says the statement.
Source: armenpress.am
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