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Author: EthiopianReview.com

Ethiopia's Tariku Bekele wins in Spain

Llodio, Spain – Ethiopia’s Tariku Bekele and Kenya’s Linet Masai captured top spots in style at the 25th ‘Cross Internacional Valle de Llodio’ held today (30) on a cold and rainy day for weather.

In doing so, Bekele became the first athlete to win the event three times, while the manner of Masai’s victory – she built a full minute advantage over her closest opponent – suggests Llodio’s spectators have just witnessed an athlete born to challenge for world distance running honours in the years to come.

MEN – Bekele succeeds, Komon unable to overcome the mud

The first remarkable movement of the 9.4km men’s race came when Leonard Komon of Kenya managed to reduce the leading group to just seven units after a change of speed. However, the leader of the reigning World silver medallist from Edinburgh was to be short-lived and the 20-year-old soon began to falter on Llodio’s muddy surface once Spain’s Ethiopian born Alemayehu Bezabeh took charge of the race.

At the halfway point, the Spaniard was making most of the pace duties with Bekele consistently staying two metres behind the leader.

By then, the 2007 World Junior XC silver medallist Vicent Chepkor was running four seconds behind the leading duo, while Komon’s chances of winning had vanished as he travelled another ten seconds adrift alongside his fellow Kenyan Mike Kiptoo and Spain’s Ayad Lamdassem.

Shortly before the bell (2km to go) Bezabeh’s dream of succeeding in front of his new home crowd also disappeared as he fell on a muddy section of the circuit, losing valuable seconds before regaining his balance, and was overtaken by Chepkor. Neither man managed to threaten Bekele again.

At the finish line, the reigning World Indoor 3000m champion, Bekele had a seven-second margin over Chepkor, himself 100m clear of Bezabeh, who at least kept Kiptoo at bay and made the minor podium position. As for a tired Komon, he had to be satisfied with a 8th place over one minute behind Bekele in his fourth consecutive appearance on Spanish soil in November.

Thinking of the next European XC Champs to be held in Brussels on 14 December, Bezabeh cemented his medal ambitions as he defeated, among others, Sweden’s reigning silver medallist in Mustafa Mohamed who finished in fifth, ten seconds behind the Spaniard.

WOMEN – Masai destroys any opposition

The women’s 7.36km contest featured two top-ten athletes from this year’s World XC Championships in the guise of Kenya’s Linet Masai and Margaret Muriuki Wangari, who placed third and eight respectively in Edinburgh.

The still 18-year-old Masai provided ample evidence that her bronze medal in Edinburgh was no fluke and from the second kilometre she was in full command of the event thanks to an injection of terrific pace which proved simply unaffordable for the rest.

The Beijing Olympic 10,000m fourth placer built a massive margin of 20 seconds before halfway on Portugal’s Ines Monteiro, herself ten seconds clear of Margaret Muriuki Wangari, while Hungary’s Aniko Kalovics ran in fourth.

The remaining laps just confirmed Masai’s overwhelming authority as her advantage become bigger and bigger to reach the amazing figure of 40 seconds at the bell on Monteiro, a brilliant winner at the opening IAAF permit in Oeiras earlier this month.

There were not major changes in the closing 2km loop and the 2007 World Junior Cross Country champion extended her winning gap to one full minute (25:12-26:12) on the in-form runner-up Portuguese who defeated Margaret Muriuki Wangari by the handsome margin of 29 seconds.

Masai is the sister of 2005 African Junior 5000m and 10,000 champion Moses Masai and has no relation to three-time World short course cross country champion Edith Masai.

Emeterio Valiente for the IAAF

RESULTS

Men (9.4km)

1. Tariku Bekele (Eth) 29:31
2. Vicent Chepkor (Ken) 29:38
3. Alemayehu Bezabeh (Esp) 29:53
4. Mark Kiptoo (Ken) 30:01
5. Mohamed Mustafa (Swe) 30:03
6. Ayad Lamdassem (Esp) 30:15
7. Stephane Joly (Sui) 30:28
8. Leonard Komon (Ken) 30:32
9. Javier Guerra (Esp) 30:44
10. Franscisco Javier Alves (Esp) 30:55

Women (7.36km)

1. Linet Masai (Ken) 25:12
2. Ines Monteiro (Por) 26:12
3. Margaret Muriuki (Ken) 26:41
4. Aniko Kalovics (Hun) 26:55
5. Rosa Morató (Esp) 27:00
6. Diana Martín (Esp) 27:10
7. Alessandra Aguilar (Esp) 27:39
8. Judit Plá (Esp) 28:12
9. Aicha Bani (Mor) 28:28
10. Teresa Urbina (Esp) 28:28

AFP reports hyenas, not Woyanne, kill two people in Ethiopia

AFP never reports about murders, corruption and other crimes by the Woyane regime in Ethiopia for fear of being expelled from the country. So this major international news organization has relegated itself to reporting local stories such as wild animals attacking people. The following AFP story is about the killing of two Ethiopians by hyenas in eastern Ethiopia. On the very same day, Woyannes (the human hyenas) no doubt have committed another murder, another torture, another rape, another looting… throughout the Ethiopia that we are certain AFP knows about, but fails to report.

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (AFP) – Hyenas have killed two people in eastern Ethiopia, police said on Saturday.

A drunk man was mauled to death on Thursday while the remains of a university student were found three days after being reported missing.

Police said of the man that “only the front parts of his teeth, a portion of his skull and ripped cloth shreds were found the next day”.

Two female students were also attacked early this year and one of them killed.

An Ethiopian in Malta jailed for 10 months

An Ethiopian resident of the Marsa Open Centre was jailed for 10 months yesterday after he was found guilty of trafficking in and possessing cannabis resin and escaping from custody.

The court, presided over by magistrate Lawrence Quintano, heard how 25-year-old Yassin Mohammed was apprehended after police on patrol saw him throw an object from the car on which he was a passenger on 20 July in Paceville. The car {www:driver} also threw something out of the window.

The police later found cannabis resin, some joints and E200. The car driver had told the police that he threw away the joint Mohammed had given him.

The court said it was convinced that Mohammed dealt in drugs and, given the small {www:amount} of drugs found, it jailed him for 10 months and fined him E500.

Police Inspector Stephen J. Gatt prosecuted while Dr Mark Busuttil was defence counsel.

The Independent
Archive

Ethiopia's star athlete Kenenisa Bekele hit by injury

Ethiopian Olympic 5,000 and 10,000 metre champion Kenenisa Bekele could be out for up to four months with a stress fracture.

At the Beijing Olympic Games, the 26-year old became only the fourth man to win a Olympic distance double.

But he finished third at the 2008 Seven Hills 15km race in Njimegen, Netherlands, after struggling with the injury in the latter stages.

“I was advised by doctors not to take part in the race,” admitted Bekele, who first felt pains in training for the run.

“But after warming up for the race, I felt better and decided to take part.”

The injury means he is likely to miss the cross county and indoor seasons in 2008 and early 2009.

By Reda Maher | Eurosport

Ethiopia moves coffee trade to Commodity Exchange

By Jason McLure

Ethiopia, Africa’s biggest coffee producer, has halted daily auctions and will begin trading the beans on the national commodity bourse from Dec. 2 to reduce fraud and help reassure buyers of quality.

The Ethiopia Commodity Exchange, which began trading corn and wheat this year, opened eight warehouses in growing areas and will take control of the country’s grading and quality control system. Traders other than large growers and co-operatives that sell directly to international buyers will be forced to use the bourse, exchange director Eleni Gabre-Madhin said today.

“This is an important signal to the world that Ethiopia’s domestic market is trying to clean up its act,” she told reporters in the capital Addis Ababa. “Ethiopia loses a significant premium on international markets because of its inability to meet certain standards.”

Under a coffee law passed in August, the country is seeking to regulate an industry that employs 1.2 million growers and accounts for 35 percent of export earnings. While Ethiopia, on the Horn of Africa, shipped $525 million of coffee abroad last year, its beans aren’t used in setting benchmark international prices because of inconsistent quality, Gabre-Madhin said.

Top-grade coffees from the regions of Sidamo, Yirgacheffe, and Harar sell for almost twice as much as some other areas, and samples of traded lots are often fraudulently switched, she said.

“Exporters faced the risk that what they bought wasn’t what they paid for,” Gabre-Madhin said. “There has been a lot of adulteration of coffee” and “leakages from one region to another. All of this is designed to address that.”

The new law includes jail terms of three to five years and fines of almost $5,000 for those rigging coffee quality.

The changes also seek to strengthen the position of farmers over middlemen who have more information about coffee prices, Gabre-Madhin said. “Ethiopia’s farmers get the lowest percentage share of the export price of almost any country,” she said.

Bloomberg

Ethiopians in Israel celebrate 'Sigd'

By ABE SELIG | Jerusalem Post

Singing, dancing and reveling in the fulfillment of years spent yearning for a return to Jerusalem, thousands of Ethiopians from all over the country descended on the capital’s Haas promenade in Armon Hanatziv Thursday to celebrate Sigd, the annual Beta Israel festival commemorating the revelation on Mt. Sinai and the acceptance of the Torah.

Young and old, secular and religious Ethiopian-Israelis from as far off as Haifa and Ashdod arrived on chartered buses just before noon, passing by make-shift booths which sold everything from ice cream to books of psalms written in Amharic, their native tongue. The Kesim, or Ethiopian rabbis, led the crowd in communal prayers, bestowing blessings upon the masses as the crowd responded by continually twitching their hands – bringing the air of holiness towards them.

Older men with white turbans walked past high-school age youths, their hair done up for the occasion in spikes and large afros. The girls, also dressed to a T, sauntered back and forth, chatting and giggling with their friends.

“We’re here to celebrate the Sigd,” said one girl, Tehilla, shy and smiling. “But it’s not just about Sigd, it’s also about unity. Look around: Today all the Ethiopians in Israel are standing together as one.”

In addition to the holiday’s theme of receiving the Torah, Sigd is also seen as a time of personal reckoning for the Ethiopian community, as members fast and use the holiday for introspection.

Before their arrival in Israel, Ethiopians had also looked upon Sigd as a time for reflecting on the ultimate goal of returning to Jerusalem.

But with over 80 percent of the Ethiopian Jewish community – more than 120,000 – living in Israel today, the holiday has taken on a more national undertone.

“It’s true that this is a holiday that celebrates the Torah and the holiness of Jerusalem,” said Yisraela, who was dressed in a long skirt, her hair covered by a sequined purple scarf. “But because we’re here now, the spirit of the holiday has changed for us.

“When we were in Ethiopia, part of Sigd was to pray that we would merit coming to Jerusalem. Now that we’re here, we’re living in Israel, the soul searching that I think we need to do is about how we can succeed in Israeli society, and how we can truly fulfill the pilgrimage to Jerusalem, in its fullest sense.”

While many of the people milling around on Thursday afternoon told The Jerusalem Post that the dream of immigrating to Israel had now been fulfilled, their commentary on the Ethiopian experience in Israel differed greatly.

“It goes both ways,” said Dago, a soldier in uniform who had arrived from Netanya. “The fact that I’m in the army means that on some level, I’ve already been accepted into Israeli society,” he said. “But it depends on the situation. I grew up around Ethiopians, but when I wasn’t around them, sometimes I felt like an outsider. You’re always in your group, you know, Morrocans are Morrocans, Russians are Russians, and Ethiopians are Ethiopians. But in the army, there’s none of that,” he said. “There’s no Ethiopian and there’s no Russian. You’re a soldier and a warrior, and that’s were it ends.”

But Rami, sitting nearby, said the younger generation felt more accepted because they’d grown up here. “I came here when I was a small boy,” he said in smooth, fluent Hebrew. “But my parents, they’ve been here for more than 10 years, and they still struggle with the language and the mentality. For them, their generation, I’m afraid it’s going to be hard here for the rest of their lives.”

Still, as some measure of the Beta Israel’s acceptance inside the Jewish State, this year’s Sigd was the first to be recognized as a national holiday, after the Knesset added it to the list of official state holidays in July.

The rigors of immigration and acceptance weren’t showing on the faces of Thursday’s revelers. Smiles, shouts and cries of joy, along with the steady beat of bongo drums, lent a carefree air to the atmosphere as the eclectic mix of Ethiopian society mingled and danced.

“Finally there’s a coming together of the young and the old,” said Rabbi Joseph Schonwald, as he strolled through the crowd with his wife Rolinda. Schonwald, who had been on a mission to Ethiopia in the late 1990s, explained that that the enthusiastic participation seen on Thursday had not always been a given in previous years.

“Now you see the young kids taking part in the prayers, giving respect to the elders, to the Kesim,” Schonwald said. “That’s what’s different today. The youth used to use the Sigd as a social gathering, and they would sit back and smoke cigarettes or drink beer while the older generation took part in the religious services.

“Now, with the increased involvement of religious leaders in the development towns and Bnei Akiva, the youth are more interested in the spiritual side. Just from looking around, you can see the Bnei Akiva kids have increased two-fold.”

As he was speaking, a young woman approached Schonwald and touched his shoulder. “Kes Yosef,” she said, eyes gleaming. “Do you {www:remember} me? You worked with my family when we were still in Quara.”

“I do,” Schonwald replied, turning back towards his wife. “The last time I saw her she was just a little girl. I remember standing on top of an anthill and telling her and her family that we wouldn’t rest until they were in Jerusalem. Now,” he continued, fighting back tears, “It’s finally come true.”

As the {www:celebration} continued, throngs of revelers danced up and down the promenade, banging drums and singing songs. The colorful umbrellas of the Kesim were visible atop the crowd, and a sanitation worker, Manzar, from the Muslim Quarter in the Old City, gazed on in wonder.

“I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said. “It’s amazing to me that we have so many different people in this city, and they all love it because it’s so close to God.”

Jerusalem Post