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Ethiopia

Aksum obelisk ‘ready to go up’

Official sees September unveiling after wrinkles ironed out

(ANSA) – Addis Ababa – A holy monument returned to Ethiopia after years of foot-dragging is to be re-erected later this year after the final technical wrinkles are ironed out, the Italian ambassador to the East African country said Tuesday.

Raffaele de Lutio told ANSA that a concrete slipway leading up to the obelisk’s site has been completed and the base itself has been reinforced to prevent the monument causing damage to a recently discovered necropolis.

He voiced the hope that the official ceremony will take place ”within the first week of September, just before the Ethiopian New Year which falls on September 11”.

A delegation from the United Nations cultural heritage body UNESCO is expected to arrive ”by Easter” to give the go-ahead, the envoy said. The revered obelisk, looted by Benito Mussolini’s Fascist troops, was flown back and re-assembled amid fanfare at the holy city of Axum almost four years ago.

Ethiopians, who consider themselves descendants of the ancient civilisation, clamoured for it to be put up immediately.

But there was a last-minute glitch when the United Nations’ cultural body UNESCO – which has nominated Axum a world heritage site – warned its erection might damage the necropolis found under the site.

Work on the obelisk has gone forward since 2005, when the Italian government staged a grand ceremony to restore the huge stone to its rightful owners.

Speaking to students on a recent visit to Ethiopia, Italian Premier Romano Prodi said Italy’s act of restitution would be ”unconsummated” until the obelisk was back in its rightful place. The necropolis find was one of the most exciting at the site in years.

The ancient tomb city stretches for hundreds of square metres and contains invaluable evidence of the ancient kingdom ruled by the Queen of Sheba which dominated the Horn of Africa 2,000 years ago.

When the monument was put back together in situ in April 2005, Ethiopian strongman and premier Meles Zelawi reiterated his country’s gratitude to Italy for returning the obelisk after almost 70 years.

Zelawi wrote to then Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi to thank him for his ”courage” in restoring to Ethiopia a potent symbol of national pride.

He said the gesture would ”significantly improve” relations between the two countries.

Thousands of Ethiopians gathered to celebrate the return of the third and final section of the 24-metre-high obelisk.

TROUBLED HISTORY.

The 160-tonne obelisk, believed to be some 1,700 years old, was taken from Axum in 1937 by the invading army of Mussolini, eager to make up some ground on the European imperial powers and send home symbols of conquest.

It was originally intended as the centrepiece for EUR, Rome’s model Fascist neighbourhood which went up in the late 1930s.

But in the end it was placed in front of the Fascist Ministry for African Colonies, which today houses the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The obelisk became a source of contention between Italy and Ethiopia for decades, with Ethiopian governments demanding its return and accusing Rome of breaking a 1947 pledge to return the monument.

Rome signed two later accords, in 1956 and 1997, to repatriate the treasure.

A final deal was reached in 2003 after Ethiopia threatened to sever diplomatic ties with Rome.

Italian authorities had trouble finding an aircraft able to carry the three massive blocks. In the end, they rented an Antonov, the world’s largest civilian cargo plane.

A special runway was built and radar installed for the plane to land safely at Axum 200m above sea level and some 800km north of the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.

Italy sent out machinery to put the great stone in place but it was later decided to repackage the sections and wait for the rainy season to end.

As well as being a Coptic (Egyptian Christian) holy place, Axum is a popular tourist venue littered with some 120 stones like the obelisk, some half-standing but most lying on the ground.

Made of dark basalt, the Axum obelisk is actually a funeral stele – a stone tower that was used to mark graves.

Unlike most surviving steles, which are blank, it is decorated with carved designs of windows and doors and topped with a sort of stone crest.

Axum, which dominated the Horn of Africa from the first to the sixth century AD, was reputed one of the four great powers of the time along with Rome, China and Persia, pouring out ivory, animals, textiles, gold, jewels and spices to Roman, Arabian and Indian markets.

It declined as Arab invaders swept in from the north but retained its prestige as the birthpace of Christianity in Ethiopia.

It also enjoys a mythic aura thanks to a legend that Menelik I, son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, brought the Ark of the Covenant to Axum from Jerusalem, 1,000 years before Christ.

Some believe the Ark – symbol of God’s covenant with the Jews – is still hidden there in a small church built in 1965 by Haile Selassie, last Emperor of Ethiopia and a claimed descendant of Solomon.

Aksum obelisk 'ready to go up'

Official sees September unveiling after wrinkles ironed out

(ANSA) – Addis Ababa – A holy monument returned to Ethiopia after years of foot-dragging is to be re-erected later this year after the final technical wrinkles are ironed out, the Italian ambassador to the East African country said Tuesday.

Raffaele de Lutio told ANSA that a concrete slipway leading up to the obelisk’s site has been completed and the base itself has been reinforced to prevent the monument causing damage to a recently discovered necropolis.

He voiced the hope that the official ceremony will take place ”within the first week of September, just before the Ethiopian New Year which falls on September 11”.

A delegation from the United Nations cultural heritage body UNESCO is expected to arrive ”by Easter” to give the go-ahead, the envoy said. The revered obelisk, looted by Benito Mussolini’s Fascist troops, was flown back and re-assembled amid fanfare at the holy city of Axum almost four years ago.

Ethiopians, who consider themselves descendants of the ancient civilisation, clamoured for it to be put up immediately.

But there was a last-minute glitch when the United Nations’ cultural body UNESCO – which has nominated Axum a world heritage site – warned its erection might damage the necropolis found under the site.

Work on the obelisk has gone forward since 2005, when the Italian government staged a grand ceremony to restore the huge stone to its rightful owners.

Speaking to students on a recent visit to Ethiopia, Italian Premier Romano Prodi said Italy’s act of restitution would be ”unconsummated” until the obelisk was back in its rightful place. The necropolis find was one of the most exciting at the site in years.

The ancient tomb city stretches for hundreds of square metres and contains invaluable evidence of the ancient kingdom ruled by the Queen of Sheba which dominated the Horn of Africa 2,000 years ago.

When the monument was put back together in situ in April 2005, Ethiopian strongman and premier Meles Zelawi reiterated his country’s gratitude to Italy for returning the obelisk after almost 70 years.

Zelawi wrote to then Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi to thank him for his ”courage” in restoring to Ethiopia a potent symbol of national pride.

He said the gesture would ”significantly improve” relations between the two countries.

Thousands of Ethiopians gathered to celebrate the return of the third and final section of the 24-metre-high obelisk.

TROUBLED HISTORY.

The 160-tonne obelisk, believed to be some 1,700 years old, was taken from Axum in 1937 by the invading army of Mussolini, eager to make up some ground on the European imperial powers and send home symbols of conquest.

It was originally intended as the centrepiece for EUR, Rome’s model Fascist neighbourhood which went up in the late 1930s.

But in the end it was placed in front of the Fascist Ministry for African Colonies, which today houses the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

The obelisk became a source of contention between Italy and Ethiopia for decades, with Ethiopian governments demanding its return and accusing Rome of breaking a 1947 pledge to return the monument.

Rome signed two later accords, in 1956 and 1997, to repatriate the treasure.

A final deal was reached in 2003 after Ethiopia threatened to sever diplomatic ties with Rome.

Italian authorities had trouble finding an aircraft able to carry the three massive blocks. In the end, they rented an Antonov, the world’s largest civilian cargo plane.

A special runway was built and radar installed for the plane to land safely at Axum 200m above sea level and some 800km north of the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.

Italy sent out machinery to put the great stone in place but it was later decided to repackage the sections and wait for the rainy season to end.

As well as being a Coptic (Egyptian Christian) holy place, Axum is a popular tourist venue littered with some 120 stones like the obelisk, some half-standing but most lying on the ground.

Made of dark basalt, the Axum obelisk is actually a funeral stele – a stone tower that was used to mark graves.

Unlike most surviving steles, which are blank, it is decorated with carved designs of windows and doors and topped with a sort of stone crest.

Axum, which dominated the Horn of Africa from the first to the sixth century AD, was reputed one of the four great powers of the time along with Rome, China and Persia, pouring out ivory, animals, textiles, gold, jewels and spices to Roman, Arabian and Indian markets.

It declined as Arab invaders swept in from the north but retained its prestige as the birthpace of Christianity in Ethiopia.

It also enjoys a mythic aura thanks to a legend that Menelik I, son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, brought the Ark of the Covenant to Axum from Jerusalem, 1,000 years before Christ.

Some believe the Ark – symbol of God’s covenant with the Jews – is still hidden there in a small church built in 1965 by Haile Selassie, last Emperor of Ethiopia and a claimed descendant of Solomon.

Woyanne’s solution for inflation: Arrest businessmen!

For the Woyanne tribal thugs, it seems every solution comes from the barrel of the gun. If they want to bring down the price of commodities, they go out and arrest vendors. The irony here is that most business activities in Ethiopia are controlled by Woyanne. Most major industries, from trucking to food distrubution are owned by officials and members of the Tigrean People Liberation Front (Woyanne), including Meles Zenawi’s wife Azeb Mesfin, who is becoming the richest Women in Africa using her status as the wife of a brutal dictator.

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Ethiopia Police Arrests Over 30 Over Price Hike

(APA) – Ethiopian police have arrested over 30 traders for allegedly making a 600 percent increase on the price of salt on the market. The wholesale traders were arrested at the weekend while attempting to stock the commodity so as to make it scarce on the market.

One kilogram of salt was on sale in Addis Ababa for 10 Birr (one USD) up from 1 Birr and 25 cents over night.

Ethiopian Federal Police accused the arrested people of trying to make salt scarce in the country, which has a huge salt resource.

Ethiopian Ministry of Trade and Industry said it will act in collaboration with the police against the “illegal” traders.

It is the first time that government has taken such a tough stance against traders who make high profits on basic food commodities.

Ethiopia plans 5,000 km railway line

ADDIS ABABA, March 10 (Reuters) – Ethiopia plans to build a railway network spanning 5,000 km (3,107 miles) to connect different parts of the vast Horn of Africa nation as it develops its energy and mineral resources, a minister said on Monday.

Transport and Communication Minister Junedine Sado said work on the railway line is expected to start in the near future and that the government had established an agency to look into the construction of the railway line.

“As the country develops its natural resources in the field of mining — exploiting its vast deposits of iron ore in the west, gas and oil fields in the east and commercial agriculture — it requires an effective transportation system,” he told reporters.

Junedine did not say where the funding would come from.

But at least one foreign firm, the U.S. Ayr Logistics Limited has expressed interest in investing in the project.

A joint Ethiopian-Djibouti railway line spanning over 1,000 kms connects landlocked Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa with the Red Sea port of Djibouti.

Egyptian police kill Sudanese, detain Ethiopians trying to cross into Israel

EL-ARISH, Egypt (AP) – Egyptian authorities shot and killed a Sudanese man trying to cross into Israel for work and detained eight other Africans early Monday, a security and hospital officials said.

Border guards opened fire at a group of nine people south of the Rafah crossing point, killing Adam Othman Mohammed, 29, while he was trying to cut through the barbed wire after they ignored warning shots fired into the air, said a security official, speaking on the customary condition of anonymity.

Mohammed was shot in the head and arrived dead at the Rafah central hospital, said Imad Kharboush, head of the North Sinai’s emergency unit.

One of the detained eight is Abraha Taha, 19, from Ethiopia and the rest are Eritreans including two women, Huda Barakat, 28, and Mariam Sadiq, 26.

In a separate incident, border guards shot and critically wounded Ibrahim Afwerki, 32, Eritrean, while he was trying to get into Israel from the central Sinai border area. He was taken to El-Arish general hospital, Kharboush said.

Dozens of African migrants have been detained over the past year as they have tried to cross into Israel from the Sinai desert, and seven have been killed this year by Egyptian border guards.

The Africans began trickling into Israel in 2005, after neighboring Egypt quashed a demonstration by a group of Sudanese refugees and in recent months, the number has surged as word spread of job opportunities in Israel.

Israel last year asked Egypt to do more to stem the tide.

More than 7,000 African migrants have entered the Jewish state illegally in just over a year, including at least 2,000 since January, according to U.N. officials in Israel.

Grisly Scenes as Woyannt troops vacate Mogadishu market

(Garowe Online) – Five dead bodies were discovered and buried Sunday in the Somali capital after Ethiopian troops vacated 30th Avenue, a major thoroughfare that runs adjacent to Mogadishu’s main Bakara market.

The Ethiopian [Woyanne] army contingent had been stationed at 30th Avenue for the past nine days, residents said.

A local who returned to his home after the Ethiopians [Woyannes] left the area told Garowe Online that he saw the dead bodies, who were all men.

He described dead body parts bit off by wild animals after the corpses lay on the streets for several days.

The troops were dispatched to 30th Avenue last Saturday, when rebels and government troops fought for hours along the road and into Bakara market, killing scores of people.

Police officers stationed at three locations inside Bakara market were abruptly withdrawn today, following several grenade attacks last night and today, officials said.

Casualty reports were difficult to confirm but the police withdrew to the outskirts of Bakara and took control of strategic roads leading into the market.

The free movement of people and traffic resumed after the security forces left the market, although stores did not open for business.

Police spokesman Abdullahi Shasha told reporters later today that security forces had detained several people for attacking the police at Bakara last night and this morning.

His claim could not be independently verified.

Somalia’s Ethiopian-[Woyanne] backed interim government has faced a bloody insurgency since early 2007, with daily shootings, roadside bombings and assassinations.

More than 6,500 people died in the violence last year, with another 600,000 civilians displaced by the conflict, according to UN figures.