
By Elizabeth Blunt
BBC News, Mekelle, Ethiopia
The mountains of eastern Tigray in Ethiopia are bare and brown just three months after the end of the rains.
The people in the region are skilled farmers and hard workers but even they struggle to support their families from their tiny patches of worn-out land.
The answer used to lie across the border in Eritrea – more developed and industrialised and with two good ports, Ethiopia’s outlets to the sea.
The older farmers remember the days when they used to work on their farms until the harvest was in and then go as seasonal migrant labour to Eritrea.
It was an easy journey to make. The people on the other side of the border were like themselves, Christian highlanders, speaking a similar language.
The Eritrean capital, Asmara, was far easier to get to and more familiar than the distant Ethiopia capital, Addis Ababa.
Families intermarried.
Even today, many Tigrayans have friends and family in Eritrea, relatives they no longer see, cannot phone and can write to only courtesy of the Red Cross.
Barrier of steel
In a continent of notoriously porous borders, an impenetrable barrier has come down between Ethiopia and Eritrea and nowhere is this felt more acutely than in Tigray.
Its history, its economy – everything in Tigray is intertwined with and affected by what lies on the other side of the border.
The last war with Eritrea hit the region hard.
Not only was the war fought on the edge of its territory but Tigrayans suffered heavy casualties.
Its regional militia was involved as a well as the national army and the authorities here reckon that a third of those killed and wounded in the fighting came from their region.
Economically the war was a disaster.
The overthrow of Ethiopia’s Marxist military government had brought peace to Tigray in the early 1990s after a long guerrilla war.
New businesses opened and new hotels were built, only to close their doors from lack of business as soon as the war broke out.
Trade barrier
Worse still, even after the war was over the border stayed closed.
The region’s Vice-President, Abadi Zemo, says this makes promoting economic development very difficult.
“Tigray is located up in the north. We have an advantage – we are located much closer to the sea than other towns.
“But having this situation between us and Eritrea, it has put us in a very odd situation,” he says.
“An investor, when he comes to Tigray, he sees there is no war and there is no peace – that investor prefers to invest in the south.
“Had it been normal, Tigray might have been the best region in Ethiopia for investment.”
“It’s hard”, he says, “to persuade investors to come in, when the border is still closed and there is always, hanging over Tigray, the threat of another war.”
Despite this, the regional capital, Mekelle, is a busy little town and its own businessmen have had the confidence to come together and begin building a massive new shopping and office complex.
Old fighter
From inside Mekelle it is almost possible to forget the military situation along the border.
A substantial part of Ethiopia’s very large standing army is stationed in Tigray but those camps are well away from the town.
The United Nations has a peacekeeping force here too – but that is up on the border.
In Mekelle itself there is just a small liaison office, a few white-painted UN vehicles in the streets, occasionally a white-painted helicopter circling overhead.
The fact that the UN peacekeepers are still in place – at least until their mandate is next reviewed at the end of January – makes Tigrayans feel a little safer.
But still they worry about the future.
Abadi Zemo was a fighter himself once, before the government in Addis Ababa was overthrown and he became Tigray’s vice-president.
He knows the range of an AK-47 down to the nearest metre.
And he knows that on some parts of the border the two armies are so close that one slipped safety-catch, one stray bullet, one single soldier, could spark a new conflict.
“Imagine – 500m,” he says.
“Just, you know a Kalashnikov, and a soldier, a simple soldier. The range of a Kalashnikov? That would be 900m, perhaps 1,000m.”
The vice-president laughs at having given himself away as an old fighter, but he knows that one slipped safety catch, one stray bullet, and that simple soldier could start a new conflict.
Ethiopian Review is resuming its tradition of naming “Person of the Year” at the end of every year. The man or woman chosen as person of the year is believed to have made significant contributions for the betterment of Ethiopia in the past 12 months. Readers’ opinion is heavily weighed in making the selection, so let’s hear from you. The following are the nominees:
[In alphabetical order]
Alemayehu Gebremariam
Andargachew Tsige
Berhanu Nega
Bertukan Mideksa
Chris Smith
Daud Ibsa
Donald Payne
Ephraim Isaac
Haile Gebreselassie
Issayas Afeworki
Meseret Defar
Mesfin Woldemariam
Mohamed Omer Osman
Obang Metho
The announcement will be made on December 31, 2007.
By Frank Jomo
Mineweb.com
One of India’s leading coal mining companies – New Delhi based Sainik Coal Mining Pvt. Limited has been granted a mining license by the Ethiopian government to exploit and further explore vast potash reserves in the Dallol Depression, in the arid Afar region near the Eritrean border.
The license granted by Ethiopia’s Minister of Mines and Energy Alemayehu Tegenu enables Sainik to mine the potash deposits, which were discovered by an American geologist 37 years ago in Musely and Crescent areas on a large scale. The deposit is estimated as containing 160 million tonnes.
According to Ethiopia’s Reporter Newspaper the mining license grants Sainik an exclusive right for a large scale potash mining within the license area, 10 sq. km for twenty years. The company has also acquired exploration rights for potash and other saline minerals, such as magnesium and calcium.
According to Sainik Director Nitin Wagh, his company anticipates producing one million tonnes of potash per year by and a total of 20.85 million tonnes of potash in the next twenty years. The company plans to use solution mining/evaporation pond techniques to work the deposit. The agreement signed between the company and the Ethiopian government indicates that Sainik has set aside US$451,164,784 for the project.
The agreement further says Sainik intends to process and market the refined product to the international market and to this endeavour, the company is already in talks with large potash consumers for long-term business agreements. Potash is used in the making of fertilizer.
Sainik has been in Ethiopia, especially in the western region hunting for coal reserves for years. The company says it has shelved its plans for coal mining because coal deposits in Ethiopia are not viable for large-scale production.
Before Sainik Coal Mining Company, a Norwegian company was also granted a license by the ministry of Mines and Energy to exploit the potash reserves in the Dallol Depression. However the project was called off following the Ethiopia – Eritrea conflict that reached a climax in 1998. The bloody conflict came to an end in 2000 but the Norwegian company had already made up its mind not to go ahead with the project prompting the Ethiopian government to revoke the license.
Sainik plans to start production in the next two to three years and will be presenting a Bankable Feasibility Study (BFS) to the Ethiopian government in nine months time.
(AFP) – About 200 would-be immigrants from Ethiopia and Somalia are dead or missing after two boats they were travelling in sank off the coast of Yemen on the weekend, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said yesterday.
One boat with 148 people on board sank on Saturday near the Yemeni coast after an argument between traffickers in charge of the vessel, killing at least 58 people with 37 still missing, the UNHCR said.
Another boat with 270 passengers hit a rock and sank on Sunday as it was trying to evade a Yemeni security patrol. Only 173 passengers were able to swim to shore and the rest, including a number of children, remain missing.
“The survivors of the second boat told us that the traffickers were violent with them during the trip,” said UNHCR spokeswoman Astrid van Genderen Tort.
“The passengers were violently roughed up and one man, who could not bear the beating any longer, jumped overboard and drowned,” she said.
The number of illegal immigrants traversing the Gulf of Aden shot up dramatically between September and December, UNHCR said.
More than 1,400 clandestine immigrants have died in the zone this year.
Woyannes in Sweden disguising themselves as Eritreans have announced that they have created an alliance against the Government of Eritrea. Read the following news posted on Walta, a Woyanne news agency.
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Eritrean political, civic organizations in Sweden form united front for democratic Eritrea
Addis Ababa, December 18, 2007 (WIC) – Eritrean political and civic organizations in Sweden have agreed to form a united front ”to fight the dictator and its supporters in Sweden.”
According to a press release sent to WIC, the Eritrean civic and political organizations in Sweden have conducted a series of meetings under the banner ”In support of our oppressed people, unite our efforts against the dictatorship.”
The meeting ” discussed deeply the plight of the Eritrean people and confirmed that Eritrea is now in a downward spiral of poverty and unrest. The politics in Eritrea is poisoned and need urgent cure and be transformed for the wider health of the Eritrean people, ”the release said.
After evaluating the past campaign and peaceful demonstrations they realized that the best option to fight the dictator and its supporters in Sweden is to build a common united broad front, it further noted.
The meeting finally formulated a comprehensive plan of action capable of strengthening the suffering people, weakening and then destroying the dictatorship and building a durable democracy in Eritrea, according to the press release.
The meeting also elected a five-person interim board leading the process of common understanding and its implementation, it was learnt.