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Author: Elias Kifle

Newsweek special report on U.S. elections 2008 (Part 2)

This is PART 2 of a seven-part in-depth look behind the scenes of the campaign, consisting of exclusive behind-the-scenes reporting from the McCain and Obama camps assembled by a special team of reporters who were granted year-long access on the condition that none of  their findings appear until after Election Day.

Like a lot of Americans, Barack Obama says his favorite movie is “The Godfather.” John McCain says his all-time favorite is “Viva Zapata!”, a little-remembered, highly romanticized 1952 Marlon Brando biopic. The hero of the movie is Emiliano Zapata, the leader of a (briefly) successful peasant revolt in Mexico in the early 1900s. McCain loves the idea of a budget-class, guerrilla-style war against the corrupt establishment. He never got over being nostalgic about his 2000 insurgency against George W. Bush and the Republican Party leaders who had settled on George H.W. Bush’s eldest son as heir apparent.

Though himself the scion of a kind of warrior royalty—his father and grandfather had been admirals, and his mother came from a wealthy family—McCain was leery of the overprivileged (and hated being called a
“scion”). He would eventually come to embrace the younger Bush at the 2000 Republican convention, awkwardly hugging a rather startled-looking Bush around the midsection, as high as McCain’s war-damaged arms could go. Privately, he told one of his closest aides that he strongly disliked Bush (the word the aide used was “detests”).

At the time of the 2000 campaign, McCain had pictured himself as Luke Skywalker, going up against the Death Star. Rumbling along with his aides and a gaggle of mostly friendly reporters in a bus called the Straight Talk Express, he had relished the team spirit—the unit cohesion, in the language of his military past—and the teasing back-and-forth. Not long after the 2000 election, he had spoken of the heady time with a NEWSWEEK reporter over a standard-issue McCain breakfast (glazed doughnuts, coffee) in his Senate office. He was sitting at one end of his couch, the purplish melanoma scar down the left side of his face veiled in shadow. “Yeah, we were a band of brothers,” he said, his voice low, his eyes shining.

The 2000 race had been a glorious adventure, a heroic Lost Cause. But the fact was that McCain had lost. In politics, insurgencies produce memories, not victories. Or so believed John Weaver, McCain’s longtime close aide and the man who had first persuaded McCain to start thinking about a presidential run back in 1997. In numerous conversations throughout 2005 and 2006, Weaver, along with other McCain friends and advisers, gently underscored this reality. In their view, Republican nominating politics usually adhered to a rule, attributed variously to Napoleon and Frederick the Great, among others, that God favors big battalions. The key to securing the GOP nomination was to lock up the big money early, round up the best organizers, secure the shiniest endorsements and win the label “inevitable.” That’s how George W. Bush had beaten McCain and everyone else in 2000, and that’s what John McCain needed to do for 2008.

McCain went along, grudgingly. He signed off in the fall of 2006 as his campaign rented sleek, corporate-looking offices in the Crystal City section of Arlington, Va., just across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C. The crystal palace quickly filled with veterans of the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign, many of whom had never before met McCain. For campaign boss, McCain shoved aside Rick Davis, his campaign manager from 2000, and appointed Terry Nelson, the political director for Bush-Cheney 2004. Boyish and soft-spoken, Nelson was an organization man. His approach was essentially Shock and Awe. By his own admission, he was not the sort of man you would hire for an insurgent-model candidacy of the kind McCain had run in 2000; his relevant experience was more appropriate to crushing that kind of campaign.

McCain was never comfortable playing the front runner. His comment when he first walked through headquarters was “It’s awfully big.” McCain was ill suited to be the establishment’s man. He was suspect to the true believers on the right, the Rush Limbaugh “dittoheads” who regarded him as a RINO (Republican in Name Only). While the Republican right wanted to build a wall and keep out all the immigrants, McCain was trying to forge a compromise—with Ted Kennedy, no less. The party stalwarts had reason to be doubtful about McCain, who could be salty in his private denunciations. To a couple of his closest advisers he grumbled, “What the f––– would I want to lead this party for?”

The McCain campaign was supposed to be a lavish money machine; the draft budget was for more than $110 million. But the money did not come in. Most campaigns can expect 80 to 85 percent of donors to honor their pledges. In the McCain campaign, fewer than half did. “They come, they eat our food, they drink our liquor, they get their pictures taken,” said McCain’s aide Mark Salter. “But they don’t send a check.” Most candidates don’t like doing the “ask,” begging strangers for dollars. McCain virtually stopped making calls, and his chief money raiser, Carla Eudy, stopped asking him to do it. The […continued on page 2]

OFDM, OPC accuse Woyanne federal police of defamation

By Bruck Shewareged | EthioPolitics.com

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – Two Ethiopian opposition parties, the Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement (OFDM) and Oromo People’s Congress (OPC), said in a joint statement that the National Information Security Service (NISS) and the Federal Police have no right to engage in a defamatory campaign against them by implicating them in subversive activities.

The two parties refuted the joint statement given by the NISS and the Federal Police on November 22 accusing then of supporting the outlawed Oromo Liberation Front (OLF).

The joint statement says that both parties are legally registered parties with many elected members of parliament. They said that their means of achieving their political goals is only through a peaceful and legal way.

The parties questioned whether the two institutions have the right to engage in an act of defamation against parties which respect the constitutional order and strive towards building a democratic order. They said that these two national institutions should stay out of party politics.

The OFDM and OPC also accused Ethiopian television of airing the NISS and Federal Police joint statement without considering the legal ramifications since it violates provisions in the political parties’ proclamation as well as the constitution which protects people from defamation.

In the joint statement, the two parties said that if a party is guilty of having members who have deserted the country, it is another party that should have bore the blame. The statement lists six people including Yonathan Dibisa who were senior members of the ruling party who later defected to Eritrea.

They accused the ruling party of lavishly taking care of former OLF members who were “known” to have committed serious crimes.

Recently, OFDM Secretary-General Bekele Jirata was arrested by the Federal Police on charges of recruiting and harboring terrorists.

The Federal Police Crime Investigation Unit told the Federal First Instance Court on Monday that it has confiscated 7,000 pages of documents that prove that the accused has been recruiting and training terrorists and requested a fourteen-day extension to wrap up its investigation.

Bekele, on his part, said that he is the Secretary-General of a legally registered party and has not taken part in any kind of subversive activities, and asked the court to grant him bail.

Police claims that it has obtained documents which prove the link between the accused and the OLF.

Police also said that the documents show that the suspects have organized themselves under an organization called “Hawi Bilisuma”, and contributed 50,000 birr to the OLF.

Police requested the court to deny the suspects their right to bail since they could destroy evidence that implicates them of complicity in a terror crime.

But the attorneys representing the accused argued that although the Federal Police has already been granted twice a 14-day investigation period, it had not made progress and asked the court to reject its request for an additional period and grant their clients bail.

They said that their clients have been prevented from meeting with family members. Some of the suspects even claimed that they have been tortured.

The Federal First Instance Court ordered the prison authorities to allow suspects to meet with their family members as it is their constitutional right.

The court also ordered investigation into the claim by the accused of being tortured. It also ordered the Federal Police to wrap up its investigation within seven days instead of the fourteen days it had requested.

Ethiopia: Flower export doubles, while people starve

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (Reuters) – Income from Ethiopia’s flower exports will more than double to $150 million this year, but future expansion may be hit by the global financial crisis, the head of a private industry body [that is affiliated with the ruling party] said on Monday.

“People’s priority in a global crisis is not to buy flowers. Their priority is to provide food,” Tsegaye Abebe, chairman of the Ethiopian Horticulture Association, told Reuters.

Abebe said Ethiopia’s fast-expanding sector, which hopes to rival neighbouring Kenya’s larger flower industry, was on track to produce between 800 million and 900 million stems for export this year worth $150 million.

That compares to 365 million stems worth $64 million in 2007. But plans to double exports again in 2009 would be affected by the crisis, which was forcing flower prices down in Ethiopia’s main European export markets, Abebe said.

Some of Ethiopia’s 106 producers, including local and foreign investors, had already begun diversifying into vegetables and fruits, he said. But Ethiopian flowers remained popular abroad because they were organic, Abebe said.

“We do not use pesticide. Our farmers are using integrated pest-control management without recourse to chemicals,” he said.

Offering tax breaks to attract investment, Ethiopia hopes flower exports will overtake coffee and be worth $1 billion in five years time. Flowers are now grown around the country, with farms employing about 60,000 people, mainly women.

Kenya earned about $1 billion from horticulture in 2007. Tanzania, Uganda and Rwanda are also developing flower industries.

(Reporting by Tsegaye Tadesse; editing by James Jukwey)

18 Ethiopians, Somalis drown off Yemeni coast

Sana’a, Yemen – At least 18 Somalis and Ethiopians drowned off Yemen on Monday, and 73 were still missing after smugglers forced them to jump overboard from two boats, rescuers said.

They told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa the smugglers ordered 236 migrants to swim ashore when the boats approached the end of their trip off the southern Yemeni town of Ahwar, around 220 kilometres east of the southern port city of Aden.

Thirteen bodies were recovered and buried by teams of a local humanitarian organization, and five bodies were buried by fishermen, they said.

About 145 people were rescued, according to officials at a refugee reception centre in Ahwar.

A breakdown of the dead or survivors was not immediately available. The two boats transferred the migrants from Bosasso in northern Somalia.

Many African migrants, mostly from strife-torn Somalia, try to reach Yemen, which they see as a gateway to the oil-rich Saudi Arabia.

Hundreds of people perish every year in the perilous exodus that takes thousands of desperate Somalis and Ethiopians to Yemen in small boats run by smugglers operating from Somali ports.

More than 33,000 people, the vast majority of them Somalis, have fled across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen this year. At least 230 people have been confirmed dead and an estimated 365 went missing as result of crossings gone wrong, often as a result of smugglers forcing the migrants overboard.

Last year, more than 113,000 people, mostly Somalis, arrived on Yemeni coasts, and more than 1,400 deaths were registered.

– DPA

Kangaroo court in Ethiopia convicts Teddy Afro

The Woyanne regime’s kangaroo court in Ethiopia has convicted popular Ethiopian singer Tewodros Kassahun (Tedy Afro) of hit-and-run and man slaughter during a hearing held today.

Ethiopia Zare reported that after the conviction, Judge Leul asked Tedy and his attorney if they have any statement to make that will be taken into consideration during the sentencing phase of the trial. Tedy Afro said that he doesn’t expect to get justice from this court and have nothing to say.

Sentencing is scheduled for Friday, Dec. 5.

Related posts:
* Woyanne throws Teddy Afro in jail
* Woyanne court rules against Tedy Afro
* Teddy Afro’s lawyer arrested
* Teddy Afro – Another victim of Ethiopia’s ruthless dictator

Foreign Embassies and Consulates in Ethiopia

Algeria Algerian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Algeria in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Nifas Silk Lafto K. Ketema
05 Addis Ababa
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251 1 71 96 66, 251 1 20 57 57
Fax: 251 1 71 96 68

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Angola Angolan Embassy in Addis Adaba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Angola in Ethiopia send edits
Rue Bole Road Wrada 18
Kebele 26 House No 006 CP 2962
City: Addis Adaba
Phone: 251 1 710118 – 711528
Fax: 251 1 514922
Email: [email protected]

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Austria Austrian Embassy in Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Austria in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Old Airport Area
P.O.B. 1219
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Ababa
Phone: (+251) (1) 71 21 44
(+251) (1) 71 24 45
Fax: (+251) (1) 71 21 40
Web Site: http://www.aussenministerium.at/addisabeba/
Email: [email protected]

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Belgium Belgian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Belgium in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Kebena District
Comoros Street
Kebele 08
P.O. Box 1239
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: + (251) (11) 662.12.91
+ (251) (11) 662.34.20
Fax: + (251) (11) 661.36.46
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday through Thursday 8 30 AM to 1 PM 1 30 PM to 4 PM
Friday 8 30 AM to 2 PM

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Botswana Botswana Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Botswana Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
P.O. Box 22282
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (2511) 715422
Fax: (2511) 714099

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Bulgaria Bulgarian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Bulgarian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopa send edits
Bole Kifle Ketema S/City
Kebele 06
Haile G/Selassie Road
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (00251 11) 661 00 32
Fax: (00251 11) 661 33 73
Email: [email protected]

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Canada Canadian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
The Embassy of Canada to Ethiopia send edits
Old Airport Area, Nefas Silk Lafto Sub City
Kebele 04, House No. 122,
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-11-371-3022
Fax: +251-11-371-3033
Web Site: http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/africa/ethiopia-contact-en.asp
Email: [email protected]

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China Chinese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Chinese Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Jimma Road, Higher24, Kebele 13, House No.792
P.O.Box:5643
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 002511-711959, 711960
Fax: 002511-712457
Web Site: http://et.china-embassy.org
Email: [email protected]

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Cuba Cuban Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Cuba in Ethiopia send edits
Woreda 16, Kebele 05
Casa 39, Yeka Area
Addis Ababa, Ethiopía.
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: ( 251) 011 662 0460 or 011 662 0459
Fax: (251) 011 662 0460
Email: [email protected]

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Czech Republic Czech Embassy in Addid Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of the Czech Republic in Ethiopia send edits
Gen. Maj. Damtew St., W.21, K.01, H.No.29
(between the Hotel Ethiopia and Custom´s Authority)
PO Box 3108
City: Addid Ababa
Phone: (++251) 1 – 516 382 or 1 – 516 132
Fax: (++251) 1 – 513 471
Web Site: http://www.mfa.cz/addisababa
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

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Denmark Danish Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Danish Consulate General in Ethiopia send edits
c/o Royal Norwegian Embassy
Buna Road
Mekanisa
P.O. Box 12955
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (1) 711 399
Fax: +251 (1) 711 399
Email: [email protected]

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Finland Finnish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Finland in Ethiopia send edits
Mauritania Street
Nifas Silk Lafto Kifle Ketema (Old Airport Area)
Kebele 12
House No 1431
P.O.Box 1017
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-11-320 5920
Fax: +251-11-320 5923
Web Site: http://www.finland.org.et
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Office hours: Mon-Wed 8.00-16.30, Thu 8.00-16.00, Fri 8.00-13.00 Customer service: Mon-Thu 10.00-12.00, Fri closed

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France French Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of France in Ethiopia send edits
Quartier Kabana
PO Box 1464 – Addis Abeba
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: [251] (11) 140 00 00
Fax: [251] (11) 140 00 40
Web Site: http://www.ambafrance-et.org
Email: [email protected]

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Germany German Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
German Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Khabana, Woreda 12
Kabele 20
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251 1 55 04 33
Fax: 251 1 55 13 11
Email: [email protected]

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Greece Greek Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Greece in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Off Debre Zeit Road, P.O. Box 1168, Addis Abeba
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (002511) 654911-2
Fax: (002511)654883
Web Site: http://www.telecom.net.et/~greekemb/
Email: [email protected]

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Greenland Greenlandic Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Danish Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Bole Ketema, Kebele 03
H. No. ‘New’
P.O.Box 12955
Addis Ababa
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (0)116 18 70 75
Fax: +251 (0)116 18 70 57
Web Site: http://www.ambaddisababa.um.dk
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday to Thursday: 9:00 am to 3:00 pm Friday: 9:00 am to 12:00 noon

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Greenland Greenlandic Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Danish Consulate General in Ethiopia send edits
c/o Royal Norwegian Embassy
Buna Road
Mekanisa
P.O. Box 12955
Addis Ababa
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (1) 711 399
Fax: +251 (1) 711 399
Email: [email protected]

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India Indian Embassy in Ethiopia
Embassy of India in Ethiopia send edits
Arada District, Kebele-14
[Next to Bel Air Hotel]
H.No 224, Around Aware
Post Box No. 528
Phone: 00-251-11-1235538/39/40/ 41
Fax: 00-251-11-1235547/1235548
Web Site: http://www.indianembassy.gov.et/
Email: [email protected]

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Indonesia Indonesian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Indonesia in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Mekanissa Road Higher 23
Kebele 13, House No. 1816
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (251-1) 712-104, 712-185
Fax: (251-1) 710-873
Web Site: http://www.indonesia-addis.org.et
Email: [email protected]

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Iran Iranian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Iran in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
P.O.Box : 70488
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 200794 – 712012
Web Site: http://www.telecom.net.et/~iranet/

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Ireland Irish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Ireland in Ethiopia send edits
Debre Zeit Road
Woreda 20
Kebele 40
House 21
P.O Box 9585, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (11) 466 5050
Fax: +251 (11) 466 5020
Email: [email protected]

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Israel Israeli Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Israel in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Higher 16, Kebele 22
House no. 283, Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-11- 646 09 99
Fax: +251-11- 646 19 61
Web Site: http://addisababa.mfa.gov.il
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday to Thursday: 09:00 hrs to 13:00 hrs Friday: 09:00 hrs to 12:30 hrs

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Description: Jurisdiction: Ethiopia, Mozambique, Rwanda and Burundi
Italy Italian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Italy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Villa Italia – Kebenà – P.O. Box 1105 – Addis Abeba
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 00251111235717, 1235685
Fax: 1235689
Web Site: http://www.ambaddisabeba.esteri.it
Email: [email protected]

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Jamaica Jamaican Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Jamaican Consulate in Ethiopia send edits
Debrezeit Road
Higher 20, Kebele 45
House # 921, P.O. Box 5633
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-6543-22
Fax: 251-114-654-747

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Description: HONORARY CONSUL: MR GEBRE E GEBRU
Japan Japanese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Japan in Ethiopia send edits
House No.653, Kebele 7
Woreda 18
(P.O. Box 5650)
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-51-10-88
Fax: +251-1-51-13-50

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Kenya Kenyan Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
High Commission of the Republic of Kenya in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Fikre Mariam Road
High 16 Kebelle 01
P.O. Box 3301
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 11 6610033
Fax: + 251 11 6611433
Email: [email protected]

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Description: Other countries of accreditation: Republic of Djibouti, AU
Kuwait Kuwaiti Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Kuwait in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Bole Road, Nouse 128
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 6615411, 6615412
Fax: (+251-11) 6612621

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Lesotho Basotho Embassy in Kebele, Ethiopia
Embassy of the Kingdom of Lesotho in Kebele, Ethiopia send edits
P.O. Box 7483 Wereda
17 Kebele 23 H.2116/K, Addis
Ethiopia
City: Kebele
Phone: +2511 612828/614368/9
Fax: +2511 612837
Email: [email protected]

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Madagascar Malagasy Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Madagascar in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
LP 60004
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 61.25.55 – Résidence : 61.11.55
Fax: (251.1) 61.01.27
Email: [email protected]

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Malawi Malawian Embassy in Ethiopia
Malawian Embassy in Ethopia send edits
Woreda 23, Kebele 13, House. No. 1021
P.O.Box 2316
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
Phone: (+251-11) 3711280
Fax: (+251-11) 3719742
Email: [email protected], [email protected]

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Mali Malian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mali send edits
Embassy of Mali
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 2712601
Fax: (+251-11) 2712601
Email: [email protected]

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Mauritius Mauritian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mauritius in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
P.O Box 200222, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 002511615997
Fax: 00 25 11 614704
Email: [email protected]

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Mexico Mexican Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mexico in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia send edits
Shola Axion (to former Jacross Compound),
Bole Kifle Ketema
Kebele:14
House Number: New Block: B5/6
P.O. Box 21021 Code 1000
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: (251-116) 479-333
Fax: (251-116) 479-333

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Mozambique Mozambican Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mozambique send edits
P.O.Box 5671
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 3728622/3, 3718593
Email: [email protected]

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Namibia Namibian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Namibia in Addis Ababa send edits
Bole Road W. 17, Kebel 19
House No. 002
P.O. Box 1443
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-611966 or 612055
Fax: +251-1-612677
Email: [email protected]

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Netherlands Dutch Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Netherlands Embassy in Addis Ababa send edits
P.O.Box 1241
Old Airport Zone
H24, K13, House 001
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-711100
Fax: + 251 (0)1 711577
Web Site: http://www.mfa.nl/add/
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday – Friday 08.00 – 13.00 hrs 14.00 – 17.00 hrs

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Norway Norwegian Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Royal Norwegian Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopa send edits
Buna Board Road, Mekanissa
PO Box 8383, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: +251-11-3710799
Fax: +251-11-3711255 / 3713605
Web Site: http://www.norway.org.et/
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday – Friday: 0830-1600
Saturday & Sunday: closed
Visa section: 0900-1200 Tuesday and Thursday
Telephone hours for Visa Section: Monday 1000 1200

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Romania Romanian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Romania in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Woreda 17, Kebele 19, Houses No. 0910, Bole Road
or P.O. Box: 2478
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (00) (251) (1) 610156
Fax: (00) (251) (1) 611196
Email: [email protected]

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Russia Russian Embassy in Addis-Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Russia in Addis-Abeba, Ethiopia send edits
P.O.Box 1500, Yeka Kifle-Ketema, Kebele 08, Fikre-Mariam Street, Addis Ababa
City: Addis-Abeba
Phone: +2511 612-060, 611-828
Fax: +2511 613-795
Email: [email protected]

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Rwanda Rwandan Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Rwanda send edits
Africa Avenue H-17K-20
P.O.Box 5618
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 6610300, 6610357, 6610387
Fax: (+251-11) 6610411
Email: [email protected]

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Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Saudi Arabia Embassy , Ethiopia send edits
W24, K13, House No. 002
PO Box 1104
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-710303
Fax: 251-1-711799

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Senegal Senegalese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Senegal Embassy , Ethiopia send edits
Africa Avenue, W17, K20, House No. 777
PO Box 2581
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1) 611376
Fax: (+251-1) 610020

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Serbia Serbian Embassy in Addis Ababa W15 K26, Ethiopia
Embassy of Serbia in Ethiopia send edits
W15, K26, House No. 923
PO Box 1341
City: Addis Ababa W15 K26
Phone: +251-1-517804
Fax: +251-1-516763 / +251-1-514192
Email: [email protected]

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Sierra Leone Sierra Leonean Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Sierra Leone in Ethiopia send edits
Koreda 23, Kebelle 12, House no. 002 P.O. Box 5619
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +25-117-1003
Fax: +25-117-11911
Email: [email protected]

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South Africa South African Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of South Africa in Ethiopia send edits
Alexander Pushkin Street, Higher 23, Kebele 10, House 1885, Old Airport Area
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1)-713034 / 713035 / 711002 / 711017
Fax: +251-1-711330
Email: [email protected]

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Spain Spanish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Spain in Ethiopia send edits
Entoto Road, W11, K01, House No.036
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-550222
Fax: +251-1-551131
Email: [email protected]

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Sudan Sudanese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Sudan in Ethiopia send edits

City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-515-241
Fax: +251-1-517-030 / +251-1-518-141

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Sweden Swedish Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Sweden, Addis Abeba send edits
Lideta subcity
Kebele 07/14, House No. 891
P. O. Box 1142
Addis Abeba
Ethiopia
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: +251 (11) 518 0000
Fax: +251 (11) 518 0030
Web Site: http://www.swedenabroad.com/addisabeba
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday-Tuesday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Visa (applications and processing): Monday-Tuesday, Thursday-Friday 9.30 a.m. to 12 p.m. Wednesday closed. Phone hours: 2 to

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Switzerland Swiss Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Switzerland in Estonia send edits
Old Airport, W24, K13
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: (+251-1) 711107, 710577, 711608
Fax: (+251-1) 712177
Email: [email protected]

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Tanzania Tanzanian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Tanzania in Ethiopia send edits
P. O. Box 1077, Addis Ababa,
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (251-1) 511063, 612904, 518155

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Togo Togolese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Togo in Ethiopia send edits

City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 152-26-75 / +251 152-35-22

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Tunisia Tunisian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Tunisia in Ethiopia send edits
W17, K19, House No. 008
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-612063
Fax: +251-1-650233

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Turkey Turkish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Turkey in Ethiopia send edits
Africa Avenue, W17, K19, House No. 018
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-612321
Fax: +251-1-611688

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Uganda Ugandan Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Uganda in Ethiopia send edits
Kirkos Kifle Ketema, Kebele 35, H. No. 031
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-5513114 / +251-1-5513088
Fax: +251-1-5514355
Email: [email protected], [email protected]

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Ukraine Ukrainian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Ukraine in Ethiopia send edits
Woreda 17, Kebele 23, House 2111
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-611698
Fax: +251-1-621288
Email: [email protected] / [email protected]

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United States American Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
US Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Entoto Street
P.O.Box 1014
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-550666
Fax: 251-1-174001
Web Site: http://addisababa.usembassy.gov/
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday – Friday 8:30a.m. – 12:00 p.m. & 1:30 – 3:30 p.m.

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Western Sahara Sahrawian, Sahraouian Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Mission of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic send edits
P.O.Box 3008
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 2718666
Fax: (+251-11) 2718667
Email: [email protected]

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Yemen Yemeni Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Yemen send edits
P.O.Box 664
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1) 711811, 712204, 710990
Fax: (+251-1) 710991
Web Site: http://www.yemenembassy-ethiopia.org

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Zambia Zambian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Zambia send edits
P.O.Box 1909
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 3711302
Fax: (+251-11) 3711566
Email: [email protected]

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Zimbabwe Zimbabwean Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Zimbabwe in Ethiopia send edits
W17, K19, House No. 007
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1) 613877
Fax: (+251-1) 613476

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