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Ethiopia

German entrepreneur finds his niche in Ethiopia

(DPA) Addis Ababa — When he was 35, Martin Kuster asked himself what he calls the typical Western question: “When you have everything, what comes next?”He had a good job, security and a cushy life in Munich, but he needed more.

Three years later, he finds himself in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, having left his life in Germany, dropped the umlaut from his surname and moved here to find what was missing.

Kuster says he wanted to fulfil his dreams of opening his own business but never thought that would get done in one of the world’s most impoverished countries, with a sluggish bureaucracy and a challenging business climate.

“The first time I visited in 2001, I couldn’t handle it. Everything was dirty and different from what I was used to,” said Kuster, 42, who labelled himself a “typical European yuppy” before his move to Ethiopia.

Kuster, who has an Ethiopian wife who fled the brutal Derg regime in the 1980s, said his perception of doing business in the country changed at a beer garden in Munich.

He sat drinking strong Bavarian brew at a festival with a group of Ethiopian friends, and then the idea came to him.

“I saw how they enjoyed the Bavarian culture, with sausages, beer, and all that. And at that moment the idea came up. I said, ‘Aha! A German restaurant,'” said Kuster, originally from Ingolstadt.

“I was set on the idea and there was no way out,” he said.

He convinced his wife, who was perfectly happy to remain in Germany, that it was time to return home and in 2005, the doors to Munich Goes Ethiopia were open.

But setting up shop in a country so different from his own was not easy, Kuster said, adding that he didn’t take into account the slow pace of business in Ethiopia or that much of his imported goods would get stuck in customs – a miscalculation that cost him time and money.

Nonetheless, he brought a part of Germany to Addis Ababa, serving roasted pork and other Bavarian cuisine alongside local Ethiopian beers served in chilled one-litre mugs in a beer tent.

But another venture soon called his name.

Prodded by a visiting friend to open a breakfast joint, Kuster’s imagination was piqued and he soon set up Mr Martin’s Cozy Place, a quaint bed and breakfast which at first served German grub but now is mostly a bar and cafe, with cheap, clean rooms that attract the backpacking crowd – particularly Germans.

Like many businesses in the Horn of Africa country, getting this one on its feet was a challenge.

“I thought I would have to give up everything and become a taxi driver,” said Kuster, who had sold the restaurant a year after opening it due to “shareholder differences.”

Sure enough, the Cozy Place picked up and Kuster could begin focusing on what he really wanted to create: a wellness centre.

Four months ago, in the heart of Addis Ababa, Kuster opened Happy Up, a 24-hour spa that provides massages, a sauna and other treatments.

It’s an unexpected business in a country where more than half the population lives on less than two dollars a day, but Kuster said the demand is there and having attempted to open businesses in the city before, he was sure he could achieve this goal.

“There is growing need for wellness centres in Addis Ababa. The concept here is total recreation,” he said, sitting on one of the green and orange couches in the spa’s brightly lit waiting room, as soft classical music played in the background.

Beyond the entrepreneurial skills he acquired from owning and operating three businesses, Kuster said he has grown as a person in Ethiopia, in a way that would not have been possible in Germany.

“In Germany I was 120 kilograms. I took tablets for gastroenteritis. I was nervous. I couldn’t sleep. I had problems,” said Kuster, sitting in a blue and white checkered bathrobe after a jaunt to the sauna at Happy Up.

“I had all these financial problems here, but I slept well. After three months I threw all the tablets away.”

So despite the headaches of investing in a developing country, Kuster’s feet are firmly planted in Addis Ababa, with his wife heavily pregnant with their second child and “more ideas” coming to Kuster with every week.

“The positive personal change is outstanding. Things have finally come into place.”

Woyanne’s Agia Forum reaction to H.R. 2003

from Aiga Forum [email protected]
to [email protected], [email protected], [email protected],
cc [email protected]
date Oct 2, 2007 7:41 PM

subject Re: EPRP and Yosef have to apologize for their misinformation on H.R. 2003

Never mind about your inner squabbles but if your struggle was for HR2003 to make it to the house then congratulation! But if it was and is to make it a law of the US then aren’t you ahead of yourself!? Since when does a bill become a law simply because a zealot congressman finds a way to sneak in his bill to make it out of the House?

HR2003 will not become a law and even if it becomes it won’t buy you a seat in Menelik Palace! This we can guarantee you over our dead body! Can you say the same on your part?

Thanks

Woyanne's Agia Forum reaction to H.R. 2003

from Aiga Forum [email protected]
to [email protected], [email protected], [email protected],
cc [email protected]
date Oct 2, 2007 7:41 PM

subject Re: EPRP and Yosef have to apologize for their misinformation on H.R. 2003

Never mind about your inner squabbles but if your struggle was for HR2003 to make it to the house then congratulation! But if it was and is to make it a law of the US then aren’t you ahead of yourself!? Since when does a bill become a law simply because a zealot congressman finds a way to sneak in his bill to make it out of the House?

HR2003 will not become a law and even if it becomes it won’t buy you a seat in Menelik Palace! This we can guarantee you over our dead body! Can you say the same on your part?

Thanks

Ethiopian man sought in Las Vegas slaying

(Associated Press) LAS VEGAS — A 55-year-old Ethiopian man was being sought in connection with the abduction and slaying of a southern Nevada auto dealer, police said.

Abebe Tefera Goshu was sought on a warrant issued Sept. 29 in Las Vegas on charges of murder and kidnapping in the death of 33-year-old William Kenyatta “Kenya” Jones, according to a police statement released Monday.

Relatives reported Jones missing Sept. 26. Authorities reported that his body was found two days later in a house that Goshu owns in North Las Vegas. The Clark County coroner reported that Jones died of a gunshot to the head.

Jones owned a North Las Vegas car dealership called 702 Motors, according to his Oct. 7 obituary, which also described him as a father of three.

Washington Post refuses to make correction

The following are email exchanges with Washington Post reporter Nora Boustany and Ombudsman Deborah C Howell:

——————————————-
from Elias Kifle [email protected]
to [email protected]
date Oct 4, 2007 11:58 PM
subject article on HR 2003

Hello Nora,

I’m writing in regards to your article on a U.S. Congress bill on Ethiopia, H.R. 2003. I believe that you have been misinformed. Mr Hailu (you misspelled his name as Haiylu) Shawel was in Minneapolis during the vote. He has been under physicians’ watch for the past 3 weeks and cannot travel any where. It would have been impossible for him to be in Washington DC on that day. But his deputy, Ms. Bertukan Mideksa, and another official of the party, Dr Berhanu Nega, were there. Both of them had testified at the Africa Subcommittee hearing right before the vote took place by the full House. The person who told you that Hailu Shawel was at the meeting could be Mesfin Mekonnen. I think he misled you on purpose because he wants to get credit for his group for helping pass H.R. 2003. Which is far from the truth. Neither Hailu Shawel nor Mesfin Mekonnen had any thing to do with the bill. It was members of the Coalition for HR 2003 who labored day and night to persuade members of Congress to pass the bill. You can find out the correct information from the author of the bill, Africa Subcommittee chairman Donald Payne’s office. It is important that you post a correction for the sake of WP’s and your own credibility.

Regards,
Elias Kifle
Publisher, ethiopianreview.com

————————————————-
from Elias Kifle [email protected]
to [email protected]
date Oct 5, 2007 12:11 AM
subject false report

Dear Ombudsman,

I am writing in regards to this article which contains a couple of incorrect information:

This is the second from last paragraph:

“Passage of the bill sends a strong signal to the Ethiopian regime, the State Department and the international community. It shows that the U.S. government is on the record in supporting human rights in Ethiopia. For us this is historic,” said Mesfin Mekonen, an Ethiopian American who is chairman of the International Council of the Coalition for Unity and Democracy in Ethiopia, a group active in Washington.

Correction:

Mr Mesfin Mekonnen is not the chairman of the International Council of the Coalition for Unity and Democracy in Ethiopia. The chairman of this (now defunct) group is Dr Taye Woldesemayat. Ask Mesfin Mekonnen himself.

This is the last paragraph:

Passage of the bill came after intense lobbying by Ethiopian democracy activists. Hailyu Shawel, president of the coalition and an opposition prisoner who was recently released by the Ethiopian government, attended the House session for the vote along with dozens of others.

Correction:
Neither Mesfin Mekonnen nor Hailyu (correct spelling: Hailu) Shawel were at the Congress when the bill was voted on by the House. Hailu Shawel was on that day — and is still — receiving a medical treatment in Minneapolis. Mesfin Mekonnen was not at the Congress on that day, according to every one who was there.

The reason I am contacting you about this matter is because I believe that it is a deliberate misinformation on the part of Mr Mefin Mekonnen and his group who are at odds with the Ethiopian community. The same thing happened to a report for The Hill newspaper a few weeks ago. Possibly the same person had provided a misinformation about two Ethiopian political figures which caused a lot of uproar in the community. So please look into this matter and take appropriate actions.

——————————————-
from Deborah C Howell [email protected]
to [email protected]
date Oct 5, 2007 11:21 AM

Dear Mr. Kifle:

I talked to Nora Boustany, who wrote that piece. She says that you are wrong. Those two men were there and that she talked to them. There was an editing error on Mr. Mekonnen’s position and that will be corrected. Thank you for writing.

Ms. Boustany said: “Shawel and Mekonnen were at the hearing the day before the vote and at the session of the vote. They were in the gallery and I spoke to Mekonnen twice by cell phone while he was there giving me a blow by blow account. Shawel is undergoing medical treatment in Minnesota. He came especially to DC to meet with Rep. Smith and to attend the vote and returned back to Minnesota immediately. You can check with Smith’s office. I had identified Mekonnen as a member of the CUD International Committee, a local group here that has been lobbying very actively, which is different from what the desk changed it to.

Deborah Howell
Washington Post Ombudsman
202-334-7521
——————————————-
from Elias Kifle eliaskifle @gmail.com
to Deborah C Howell [email protected]
date Oct 5, 2007 11:47 AM
Re:

Dear Deborah,

I just spoke with Congressman Smith’s office (202-225-3765). They said that they are not aware of Mr Shawel’s presence on Tusday. They suggested that I speak with the Foreign Affair Committee’s Africa Subcommittee that authored the bill. I called the Africa Subcommittee chairman’s office (202-225-3436 ). They said Hailu Shawel was invited to come, but he did not show up. They said he was not among the group that was invited. So I believe that Nora Boustany has been deliberately misinformed.

Regards,
Elias Kifle

——————————————-
from Nora Boustany [email protected]
to Elias Kifle [email protected]
date Oct 5, 2007 5:26 PM
subject Re: article on HR 2003

Dear Mr. Kifle,

My understanding from Rep. Smith’s office is that Mekonnen has been very active along with other democracy advocates in lobbying his office and pushing for a vote. I am sure you are all great patriots, though the
smear campaign underway today is beginning to make me doubt your prioritites. You should all be celebrating today, not attacking one another. I am sure you have all had a role and I urge you to keep me
informed of your activities as Mr. Mekonnen has. I have no preference. Mr. Shewal was here this week, albeit briefly and met with Smith and his staffers, according to his spokesman today. Please, before attacking my
credibility, why don’t you worry about yours.

Thanks. Nora

Nora Boustany
Foreign Staff Writer
Human Rights, Development, Trends
Tel: 202 334 7474
Fax: 202 334 5651
——————————————-

from Elias Kifle [email protected]
to Nora Boustany [email protected]
cc [email protected] Ombudsman
date Oct 5, 2007 6:05 PM
subject Re: article on HR 2003

Dear Nora,

I am sorry if you feel that I have attacked your credibility. That was not my intention. I also did not question any body’s patriotism. This is not a question of patriotism, but truth and accountability. What I and many in the Ethiopian community did not like is that your report contains some glaring errors. It seems that Mesfin Mekonnen has deliberately misinformed you. The undeniable fact is that Hailu Shawel and Mesfin Mekonnen were not in Congress when the vote on HR 2003 took place Tuesday. The last time Mr Shawel was in Washington DC is about three weeks ago. He was invited by Congressman Donald Payne to come on Tuesday, but could not make it because he is in Minneapolis receiving medical treatment. You can easily verify this information by calling Congressman Payne’s office. So instead of trying to defend your credibility (which you do not have to), and explain Mr Mekonnen’s role, you can simply make a correction to your piece and case is closed.

H.R. 2003 is not about patritoism. It is about democracy and accountability in Ethiopia. It includes Ethiopian politicians like Mesfin Mekonnen who must be held accountable when ever they engage in misinformation and lies.

Regards,

Elias

————————————-
from Nora Boustany [email protected]
to Elias Kifle [email protected]
date Oct 9, 2007 11:01 PM
subject Re: article on HR 2003

Mr. Kifle,

we corrected his title, but not the fact that he was up in the gallery watching the vote. Thanks for your interest. Best Regards. Nora

Nora Boustany
Foreign Staff Writer
Human Rights, Development, Trends
Tel: 202 334 7474
Fax: 202 334 5651

Thank You from the family of Aleqa Ayalew Tamiru

Due to public demand the website aleqayalewtamiru.org has being started. The website’s initial message is to say thank you to the people of Ethiopia within and out of the country, the media and the Ethiopian Orthodox Churches around the world. It is going to be a place where people can read unpublished documents and point of views on various national, religious, political and social issues. We hope you can help us provide the link.