Video: Made in Ethiopia (Reuters)

Following the recent article by Andargachew Tsige, which has revisited Kinijit’s method of peaceful struggle, there is a growing debate within the Kinijit family about whether it is possible to wage a peaceful struggle in Ethiopia in the face of the extremely repressive measures and brutal tactics that are being used by the ruling Tigrean People Liberation Front (Woyanne) to silence the opposition. The Woyanne went as far as forcing Kinijit leaders to change the party’s name. As a result, several Kinijit parliamentarians and council members are currently in exile. Recently, five prominent Kinijit MPs went to Asmara and they are currently exploring the possibility of establishing provisional Kinijit headquarters in Asmara. The Kinijit leaders in Ethiopia should stay out of this debate if they want to stay out of jail. No body expects them to advocate any thing other than peaceful struggle. In this regard, the recent statement by Wzt. Birtukan Mideksa preaching about peaceful struggle has no useful purpose. Such a debate can and needs to take place among Ethiopians in the Diaspora, since we are free to express our honest views in this matter without fear of getting arrested or killed. In order to facilitate the debate, Ethiopian Review is conducting a poll. Please vote and express your views.
VOTE HERE
Commentary by William Pesek
(Bloomberg) — Beijing has spent more than Ethiopia’s $13 billion economy improving its air quality. The marathon world-record holder, an Ethiopian, isn’t impressed. He’s taking a pass on running 26 miles (42 kilometers) in the city this summer.
Haile Gebrselassie was favored to win the gold at the Beijing Olympics in August. Instead, the 34-year-old may focus on running the 10,000-meter event, fearing his history of asthma won’t mix well with China’s smog.
China pooh-poohed Steven Spielberg blowing off the Olympics on human-rights grounds related to Sudan. It’s harder to dismiss athletes worried about their health as self-serving troublemakers. Justine Henin, the 2004 gold medalist in tennis and the world’s top-ranked women’s player, may avoid Beijing because of air-quality concerns.
Could Beijing medals come with an asterisk because some of the best athletes weren’t there? It’s a humiliating prospect for officials who see the games as a coming-out party.
Beijing 2008 is supposed to be China’s full arrival on the international scene, according it new levels of respect and nuance. Imagine the disappointment if headlines focus on designer facemasks and competitors wheezing toward finish lines. Or if they draw attention to how many athletes will be staying in Japan and South Korea, not Beijing.
Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi thinks it’s much ado about nothing. “Most athletes who are coming to Beijing are satisfied and have confidence in the air quality, environment and sports facilities in Beijing,” Yang said last week. “They have full confidence in these conditions.”
Environmental Nightmare
Presumably, Yang hasn’t noticed that International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge is open to rescheduling endurance events to protect athletes from poor air quality. More than Sudan, Tibet or Taiwan, pollution may be a public-relations nightmare for China.
What’s more, environmental degradation is becoming China’s biggest long-term economic challenge. It’s not clear China’s leaders understand that the needs to grow rapidly and reduce pollution are in direct conflict.
Premier Wen Jiabao did say recently that China “must increase our sense of urgency and intensify efforts to make great progress” on the environment. The government, he said, will redouble efforts to close high-pollution factories and clean up major river basins.
Last month, China launched its first national survey of pollution sources. It also has elevated the State Environmental Protection Administration to a full ministry. While that’s all well and good, it’s not the giant step forward advertised.
Growth Favors
The new ministry won’t control regional and grassroots anti-pollution watchdog agencies. That will leave them under the direction of local leaders who focus solely on rapid economic growth to win favor in Beijing. It’s not a mere bureaucratic detail.
China is getting impatient with activists linking politics to the Olympics. Spielberg’s resignation as an artistic adviser to the opening and closing ceremonies made headlines. Actor George Clooney is urging Omega Watches, an Olympic sponsor that he promotes, to speak out on China’s Sudan policies.
Icelandic singer Bjork probably generated the most news of her career in Beijing recently by calling for Tibetan independence. The free-Tibet movement sees the Olympics as an ideal news peg.
Admittedly, what a couple of celebrities say won’t matter much to a nation governing 1.3 billion people. One could argue famous Americans should direct their ire at U.S. abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay.
Sudan Genocide
Yet China’s support for Sudan’s genocidal regime is hard to defend. China likes to keep its foreign and economic policies separate. It needs Sudan’s oil and argues it has every right to be its biggest trading partner. China also is a key enabler of Sudanese President Umar al-Bashir, protecting him at the United Nations.
Chinese sales of assault rifles and other small arms to Sudan have grown rapidly, nonprofit group Human Rights First said last week. It said China sold Sudan $55 million of small arms from 2003 to 2006 and provided it with 90 percent of such weaponry since 2004, when a UN arms embargo began.
Outrage over China’s African adventure is dominating Olympics coverage overseas. Just like the Eliot Spitzer scandal has caused a distraction in the U.S., the Darfur issue is sucking the air out of the good-news stories China wants to promote.
That is, when the story isn’t about Beijing’s air. When you think of forces that could derail China’s 11 percent growth, pollution is a big, albeit underappreciated, one.
Right to Breathe
Nothing captures the tension between China’s boom and the need to maintain social stability as much as the environment. If you think the fastest Chinese inflation rates in 11 years are troubling now, just wait until factories used to polluting with abandon are reined in and have to raise prices.
Ask Chinese officials about pollution risks and many will say you are exaggerating. Yet how is that so when the World Bank says China is home to 16 of the world’s 20 most-polluted cities? Or that, according to human-rights groups, 750,000 people in China die each year from illnesses related to foul air?
Human-rights campaigners tend to focus on China’s treatment of dissidents and censoring of the Internet. Soon enough, the biggest problem for China’s population might be the right to breathe.
(William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)
To contact the writer of this column: William Pesek in Tokyo at [email protected]
(The Economic Times) – NEW DELHI: India’s growing fashion design industry is now seen as a role model by countries like Ethiopia, which is nowhere on the global fashion radar and hence keen to emulate its growth and success.
A group of four designers from the Horn of Africa country, is currently in India as part of a collaborative effort by the Indian Embassy in Ethiopia and the Ethiopian government.
Known for its cotton that is said to be the best in the world, the African country does not have a fashion industry per se and designers who hail from the country are few and far between.
“It is only recently that we have started making a noise in our country about fashion,” Hiruth Gougsa, who runs ‘Mela,’ a store in Addis Ababa, which specialises in jewellery, bags, home furnishings and other accessories told media.
Gougsa is one of the four women chosen to attend a workshop conducted by the Pearl Academy of Fashion late last year, aimed at imparting basic know how on fashion, focussing on the intricacies of design, craft, forecasting trends, couture and techniques among others in the industry.
The workshop included a 15 day study tour where participants will visit India and gain first hand exposure of its fashion.
“The Indian ambassador in Ethopia offered us an opportunity to share India’s design experience with them and we accepted. We are currently in the process of designing a course curriculum in Ehiopia to be used in their fashion institutes and schools,” says A K G Nair, who heads Pearl Academy of Fashion.
(Associated Press) MADRID, Spain — Haile Gebrselassie expects more athletes to follow his lead and drop out of some events at the Beijing Olympics because of the air pollution.
The two-time Olympic 10,000-meter champion said Monday he was disappointed about not competing in the marathon, but that there was no way he would run the race at the games in August.
“My decision not to run (the marathon) in Beijing is definite. Now I have to decide whether to run the 10,000 meters,” Gebrselassie told the Efe news agency. “I was in the city in August and I know what the extreme conditions of pollution, heat and humidity are. It’s going to be the hardest marathon in history.”
The IOC’s top medical officer, however, said Beijing’s air quality is better than expected and that humidity might be a greater threat to athletes than the city’s noxious air.
“They can say what they like but the reality is different,” Gebrselassie said. “I’d love to go for it, but health is my first priority.”
Justine Henin has already said she won’t defend her tennis gold medal. The four-time French Open champion blamed the pollution for aggravating her asthma.
Some long-distance runners could wear face masks to counter the problem.
The 34-year-old Gebrselassie, who holds the world marathon record of 2 hours, 4 minutes, 26 seconds, sees the 10,000 as a viable option.
“The 10,000 presents a lot less problems. It’s four times shorter, it’s being run in the afternoon, it’ll be less hot with less humidity,” the Ethiopian said.
Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press
This story is from ESPN.com’s automated n