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Ethiopia

Ethiopian corn to hit South America markets

EDITOR’S NOTE: Woyanne exports corn while Ethiopians are starving.

BANGALORE, INDIA: Floriculture company Karuturi Global, which is in the process of diversifying into agricultural crops, expects to begin sales of corn from its Ethiopian operations in the first quarter of 2009 with sales of around 78,000 tonne during the three-month period.

“We are in talks with various buyers, especially in South America and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa. In both these markets, corn sees high human consumption. With global demand for corn being high, we are looking at increased sales for human consumption and production of animal feed. We expect gross sales of Rs 65-75 crore,” CMD Ramakrishna Karuturi said.

According to the London-based International Grain Council, the global production of corn in the 12 months to June 2009 is seen at 775 million tonne, a shortfall of 12 million tonne.

On the floriculture business, Mr Ramakrishna said Karuturi Global is seeing robust sales for Christmas and New Year, with shipments of 40-42 million rose stems.

“Contrary to popular perception that slowdown impacts sales, we find sales getting diverted towards flowers as they are relatively more affordable than other gift items such as apparel or perfumes,” he said. The company is hoping to ship some 12 million stems of red roses for Valentine’s Day in February and another 30-35 million of assorted colours.

Karuturi recently won orders for supply of flowers to two supermarket chains in Europe.

The Economic Times

Menelik Wosenachew dies at 69

Menelik Wosenachew

One of the most legendary Ethiopian singers, Menelik Wosenachew, has passed away yesterday at the age of 69, ETV reported.

Menelik had started working at Addis Ababa’s National Theater in 1965. But he spent most of his career in exile.

Menelik’s peers included other legendary singers such as Tilahun Gessesse, Mahmoud Ahmed, and Alemayehu Eshete.

More at EthioTube.net

China to open vocational school in Ethiopia

BEIJING (Xinhua) — China and Ethiopia will join together in early 2009 to establish a vocational school for Ethiopians, the two ministries of education said Wednesday.

Zhang Xinsheng, China’s vice minister of education, said the school would enroll 330 students in the first term. It will offer courses including engineering, electrics, electronics, automobile, computer, textile and apparel.

Twelve teachers from the Tianjin University of Technology and Education had been dispatched to Ethiopia for teaching preparations, Zhang said.

As the largest China-foreign joint school to date, construction of the 114,000-square-meter building was financially supported by China’s Ministry of Commerce and completed in October of 2007.

Wondwossen Kiflu, Ethiopian education minister, said that he hoped the school would inspire more such cooperation between the two nations. He also noted that the school would set up Chinese language courses.

The joint school, which plans to enroll 3,000 students on campus in the near future, would add teaching subjects such as architecture, bridge and road construction, and cartography to cater to Ethiopia’s needs, said Zhang.

Ethiopian Community in Washington honors Teddy Afro

PRESS RELEASE

Ethiopians in Washington, DC metro area honored popular Ethiopian singer Tewodros Kassahun (Teddy Afro) at the Washington Marriot on Sunday December 21, 2008. Nearly 500 Ethiopians attended the event

Teddy Afro is currently languishing in prison after the authoritarian regime in Ethiopia convicted him on trumped up charges.

The entertaining and educational tribute was presided by artists Tamagne Beyene and Alemtshay Wedajo who delivered the welcoming speech and Teddy Afro’s biography.

Artist Tamagne Beyene

Ato Alemayhu Zemedikun, former Deputy Attorney General and Prosecutor at the Ethiopian supreme court, provided an overview of the current regime’s abuse of the justice system to harass and try try to silence voices of dissent such as artist Teddy Afro, opposition party politicians, human rights activits, journalists and members of civic society.

Artist AlemTsehay Wodajo

Dr. Alemayhu Abebe discussed he history and sufferings of Ethiopian artists and heroes under dictatorial regimes for exercising their right to free speech, with special emphasis on the work of Teddy Afro.

All presenters expressed that the revenge-motivated charges against Teddy Afro are solely related to his songs for freedom and his criticism of the current authoritarian regime for failing to live up to its responsibilities, killing hundreds of citizens and promoting division among the various Ethiopian ethnic groups.

Attorney Alemayehu Zemedkun

Ethiopian poets and writers Tewodros Abebe and Behailu Mengesha read enlightening and inspiring poems dedicated to Teddy Afro.

Musical performances by various artist including the famous Shambel Belayneh and a new documentary film featuring Teddy Afro narrated by Tamagne Beyene made the event educational and extraordinarily entertaining.

Artist Behailu Mengesha

Throughout the event, participants were urged to understand the significance of unity in order to overcome the forces of injustice, human rights violation and oppression by reinforcing Teddy Afro’s vision towards peace, personal integrity, forgiveness, tolerance, national healing and the struggle against injustice.

The event was concluded by honoring Artist Tewodros Kassahun and calling for his immediate and unconditional release.

The cost of organizing the event was entirely covered by donations obtained from attendees.

For further information:
Organizers of the Tribute for Teddy Afro
[email protected]

The Biggest Scientific Breakthroughs of 2008

By LEE DYE

The year 2008 closes with two enormous scientific and technological challenges unresolved: How to create renewable and benign sources of energy and how to lessen the damage we’re doing to the global climate system.

Those twin issues are the “greatest challenge facing modern science,” according to Nobel laureate Steven Chu, the gifted physicist who has been nominated to head the Department of Energy. He will be at the center of the effort to deal with these vexing problems, and his nomination signals a new day in that effort.

Clearly, those two issues dominated the world of science during 2008, a year that also saw much progress in fields as diverse as genetic engineering, the imaging of new planets outside our solar system and the maturing of social media that has altered everything from how we meet people to financing a costly and victorious campaign for the presidency of the United States. It’s difficult to pick a single scientific achievement that stands out above all others because science, as a whole, doesn’t work that way.

Science is and always will be a work in progress. Discoveries today are built upon past discoveries as progress is achieved, inch by inch. But rarely has there been a year when two inseparable issues dominated so much of our lives.

Energy and climate moved science from the lab to our living rooms and they were the “hot button” scientific issues of 2008.

The “breakthrough” in this case is not just hardware; it’s a growing understanding of the urgency in solving these critical problems. Here’s our list of the top 10.

Energy and Climate Change

The year the earth stood still. Polluted air, a lopsided dependence on shaky sources of foreign oil and congested highways couldn’t convince Americans that it was time to get serious about new sources of energy. But more than four bucks per gallon at the gas pump did the trick.

Biofuels, hybrids and photovoltaic cells slipped into our conversations like invaders from another planet. Progress was reported from all areas of energy production but not all roads led us closer to energy independence. Corn isn’t going to replace gasoline. That may be the most important energy “discovery” in 2008. Corn displaces agricultural land normally used for food production and, according to one study, it takes about 28 gallons of water to produce enough biofuel from corn to push a car just one mile. Substitute water wars for gas wars.

That disappointment grew out of research that was dictated by funding. Washington thought corn was a good idea and that’s where a lot of research funds went. It should be the other way around. Let discoveries chart the course; let the funding follow. Stay fluid.

Throughout the year, discoveries flowed in from hundreds of labs: wearable electronic circuits that can use body movements to recharge batteries; solar panels so flexible they can be “painted” on a roof; photovoltaic cells that are twice as effective at converting sunlight to electricity; and a new generation of fuel-efficient vehicles.

The Sun Is Rising

Construction is under way on new wind farms, with huge turbines generating electricity from the passing breeze, and vast acreage is being converted to solar collectors. Scientists at several institutions made progress in creating a way to store solar energy by using solar power to split water into oxygen and hydrogen and using the hydrogen as fuel.

It took a long time but the sun is finally rising as our most promising source of clean, sustainable energy.

Cells, a New Beginning

Scientists achieved several goals in what was once thought impossible — reprogramming adult cells to act as stem cells, morphing into new cells. That progress, labeled by Science magazine as the “breakthrough of the year,” could potentially solve two huge problems.

It now appears much more likely that scientists will be able to reprogram cells to fight a wide range of diseases, including muscular dystrophy and Parkinson’s disease, as well as many others. And it eases the ethical problem of using embryonic stem cells, which results in the destruction of the embryo, because mature cells may be reprogrammed to do the job. Furthermore, it is likely that a patient’s own cells can be reprogrammed in the near future, thus lessening the need to introduce foreign cells.

It is, put mildly, a new day in medical research.

But the road ahead is still bumpy. The process is not well understood and there is some concern that reprogrammed cells might not always act the way they are supposed to. But many researchers around the world are working to solve those problems.

A Really Big Machine

The grandest new toy to go online in 2008 is the Large Hadron Collider, a 17-mile-long, ring-shaped particle accelerator on the French-Swiss border meant to recreate the conditions during the first instant after the Big Bang. The machine, built by 26 nations for $8 billion, gives scientists their best chance yet to find the postulated Higgs boson or so-called “God particle,” which is believed to be the particle that gave mass to all other particles. But every new accelerator, erroneously referred to as atom smashers, seems to come with its own agenda. Who’s to say, at this point, what the Hadron will tell us about the beginning of the universe?

Unfortunately, the collider had to be shut down after operating a few days in September because it sprang a helium leak. It is scheduled to be operational again in June. But, fortunately, it didn’t do what some folks feared it might — create black holes that could destroy the earth. Physicists have tried to dehorn that myth, noting that particle collisions happen naturally all the time and the planet is still here.

Social Media

Here’s a newcomer to the annual year’s top 10 list, and it slipped in so quietly that a lot of lists missed it entirely.

Some of its components have been around for awhile — Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, etc. — but during 2008 they took center stage, changing the way many of us interact and providing vital information during disasters ranging from fires to warfare to terrorism.

Social Networking Here to Stay

This year, it helped President-elect Barack Obama make history, raising enough money from millions of citizens to finance a successful campaign for the presidency. Obama used the new kid on the block, Twitter, to keep his followers informed and, of course, to lift a little change out of their pockets.

Social networking is here to stay and several sites remain the hottest on the Internet. Earlier this month. Google reported that four of the 10 “fastest-rising” search terms in 2008 were for social-networking sites, including three in Europe — Facebook login (3), tuenti (4), nasza klasa (7) and wer kennt wen (8).

Dead Mice Resurrected

Geneticists in Japan cloned dead mice that had been frozen for 16 years and produced 13 healthy, live mice. The breakthrough suggests that it may be possible to bring back extinct animals, like the wooly mammoth, that have been dead and frozen for some time, a feat that was once thought impossible. This process relied on transferring the nuclei from dead cells drawn from the brains and blood of the dead mice and injecting just that part into unfertilized mouse eggs, creating embryos.

But it will be difficult to resurrect animals that have been dead for a long time, the scientists said in announcing their discovery, because cells from dead animals decay quickly, even if frozen.

It’s not quite Jurassic Park but maybe it’s a step in that direction.

Spacewalk, Made in China

Low earth orbit isn’t exactly crowded but it grew a little tighter this year when a Chinese astronaut took a 15-minute spacewalk outside the Shenzhou VII capsule 213 miles above the Earth. It was China’s third manned venture into space, and the country plans to launch its own space station in a little more than a decade.

China is now recruiting more astronauts — or “taikonauts” in Chinese lingo — for future missions.

Planets, Anyone?

Discovery of new planets outside our solar system came in rapid fire during 2008 and, for the first time, astronomers were able to image several planets, not just infer their existence from various clues. New telescopes, and new techniques, revealed huge planets orbiting at great distances from their stars, so none of them are likely to harbor life as we know it. But it was a significant milestone in the search for whatever, or whoever, is out there.

Previously, astronomers relied on faint movements of the stars from the gravitation of an orbiting planet, called the wobble effect, as one means of finding planets. They could also measure the slight dimming of a star when a planet passed between the star and the earth. But neither of these techniques allowed them to actually see the planets, which were too dim to be seen near a brilliant star. Now, they can begin analyzing their data to learn more about the planets’ atmosphere and, thus, more about whether they could sustain life.

None of the exoplanets imaged so far are likely candidates but maybe someday …

Can You See Me Now?

Invisibility Cloaks on the Horizon

Have you ever wished you could be invisible, a fly on the wall that no one could see? Well, stay tuned.

Some clever researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, say they are close to inventing a “cloak of invisibility” that can deflect anything that travels as a wave, like light and sound. You can’t see it, you can’t hear it, how you going to know it’s there?

This magic resulted from the creation of new substances, called metamaterials. The surface has incredibly tiny structures that are small enough to interfere with individual waves. If you were cloaked in such material, light waves would bend around you and meet up on the other side. You would have disappeared without a clue.

The technology could have many practical applications, some of which are obvious. Think stealth bomber.

Life on Mars?

Not yet, at least not that we know of. But NASA’s intrepid spacecraft Phoenix, cobbled together partly with some leftover parts at a paltry cost of $420 million, showed once and for all that there is ice beneath Mars’ north pole. That increases the possibility that there is, or at least was, life somewhere on the Red Planet, because water is essential for life as we know it.

Phoenix wasn’t exactly looking for life but months of poking and digging and analyzing produced some reason for hope. The small craft found salts and clays, which require water to form, and it dug up ice crystals from the red soil.

Because of the planet’s varying distances from the sun, and its tilted axis, the polar regions do warm up about every million years or so, making those areas more suitable for life. Even a microbe would be a welcome sight.

Your Genome, Cheap

DNA guru James Watson had his entire genome sequenced. It took a couple of months and cost only about $1 million. Now, it seems, everybody wants to get into the act.

A number of companies began offering genome sequencing, and the cost dropped to about $200,000. Still others opened shop, offering an abbreviated profile that would search for a wide range of potential illnesses for a few hundred dollars. But health authorities across the country became alarmed because of the potential for mistakes and difficulty in interpreting what the findings actually mean, and regulatory agencies leaped into action with new and proposed rules.

So at the moment it’s not clear how available any of these services are likely to be but it’s probably only a matter of time. At least we would know more about what to dread, even if we can’t cure it yet.