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Month: December 2008

Kangaroo court in Ethiopia convicts Teddy Afro

The Woyanne regime’s kangaroo court in Ethiopia has convicted popular Ethiopian singer Tewodros Kassahun (Tedy Afro) of hit-and-run and man slaughter during a hearing held today.

Ethiopia Zare reported that after the conviction, Judge Leul asked Tedy and his attorney if they have any statement to make that will be taken into consideration during the sentencing phase of the trial. Tedy Afro said that he doesn’t expect to get justice from this court and have nothing to say.

Sentencing is scheduled for Friday, Dec. 5.

Related posts:
* Woyanne throws Teddy Afro in jail
* Woyanne court rules against Tedy Afro
* Teddy Afro’s lawyer arrested
* Teddy Afro – Another victim of Ethiopia’s ruthless dictator

Window Dressing the Star Chamber

Alemayehu G. Mariam

Lipstick and Fingernail Polish

In July, 2008, the Zenawi regime commissioned an official report on riot control entitled “Modernizing Internal Security in Ethiopia”[1]. That report, prepared by retired British Colonel Michael Dewars, made “recommendations designed to create a modern security force that will function effectively by using strategies designed to pre-empt civil unrest which threatens the security of the State of Ethiopia and its People.” Col. Dewars, arguably one of the foremost experts in the world on riot control, was supposed to paint a kinder and gentler face for the Zenawi regime, and artfully excuse its manifest failure to prosecute the police thugs who murdered and wounded thousands of innocent Ethiopians after the 2005 elections.

Last month, the National Judicial Institute (NJI) of Canada issued a 209-page report on the “Independence, Transparency and Accountability in the Judiciary of Ethiopia” under the auspices of the Canadian International Development Agency.[2] This report, like Dewar’s, is intended to humanize Zenawi’s justice system with a façade of academic respectability. Dewars sought to provide the riot police lipstick; now NJI aims to provide fingernail polish to the judicial system. But the police and the court system in a dictatorship are merely tools of repression and control, and the means for legitimizing political power. A dictatorship with a police force and a court system is still a dictatorship just as a pig with lipstick and fingernail polish is still a pig.

Window Dressing the Star Chamber

The first sentence of the introduction to NJI report states, “The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (Ethiopia) has been engaged in court reform activities for more than a decade, designed to make Ethiopian courts more independent, accessible, effective, efficient, transparent, and accountable.” The decade-long reforms have been impressive, according to NJI: “Most of the people we met pointed out that the judiciary is now considerably more independent, more transparent and more accountable than it was prior to 1991 under either the monarchy or the Military Regime. There is no question that this is so.” (Italics added.) The “people” NJI talked to include “5 federal and state government officials, 2 members of the legislature sitting on Judicial Administrative Councils, 50 Court Presidents and judges in federal and regional Supreme Courts, eight judicial trainees, six court staff, three prosecutors, 8 lawyers, legal consultants and law teachers and 5 non-governmental organization and 14 judges of the Harari region.” NJI made no effort to assess “public perceptions and attitudes toward the judiciary.”

The NJI report effusively heaps praise on the Zenawi regime for its monumental achievements in all aspects of Ethiopian society: “The economy has been enjoying a buoyant expansion in the last five years, with an average gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate of more than 10 per cent… The Ethiopian government has embarked on an ambitious program of reforms to encourage economic and social development and poverty reduction… 1991 marked a profound change in the country’s judicial structure brought about by the federalization of the state structure. A sharp increase in the number of courts, especially at the lower levels of administration (where they were not previously available), brought the courts closer to the people, both physically and in allowing the use of local language in courts. According to published national statistics there were 2,729 judges in Ethiopia’s federal and regional courts in 2007, excluding the sharia courts and the social courts.” And so on….

According to NJI, there was virtually no judicial system worthy of the name prior to Zenawi’s take-over of power in 1991: “The period up to the 1931 Constitution was a history of absolute monarchy where justice was administered at the whim and desire of the monarch without there being any uniform law on which to base the administration of justice. Even after it was formally established in the 1931 Constitution, the Ethiopian judiciary functioned under authoritarian regimes, the worst being the reign of terror of the Derg (1974 to 1991). The massive extra-judicial summary executions, disappearances and abuses under that regime destroyed hope for the rule of law and an independent judiciary. In 1974, the military government (Derg) took power and suspended the operation of the 1955 Constitution and key civil institutions. Countless special tribunals or courts were set up, usurping the powers of the judiciary. Judges were literally reduced to insignificance, dealing with petty and mundane matters of no interest to the junta… It has thus been impossible to have the culture of judicial independence develop until quite recently in Ethiopia.” (Italics added.)

Hogwash or Whitewash?

It is difficult to characterize the NJI report as hogwash or whitewash. More likely, it is both. Anyone who has taken (wasted) the time to read this piece of intellectual apologia and chicanery in defense of a dictatorship will conclude that it is nothing more than an elaborate crock prepared to window dress Zenawi’s “Courts of Star Chamber” (a court system that was used by the Tudor and Stuart monarchs in England to suppress political opposition, dissenters, and “freethinkers” and punish “all offences [as] may be here examined and punished if the King will.”) The co-authors of the report, a Canadian judge, a lawyer and other researchers, seem to be totally oblivious of a very simple truth: THE ESSENCE OF JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE IS THE RULE OF LAW. This simply means the supremacy of law over the arbitrary rule of men. In England, the rule of law is guaranteed in the Magna Carta. In 1215, King John was forced to be “bound by the law”, and his subjects secured the right to challenge arbitrary limitations on their liberties by the King and his men in a writ of habeas corpus (a legal process by which a person can challenge the circumstances of his imprisonment). In the United States, the U.S. Constitution is the supreme law of the land. Under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law; and anyone may challenge violations of his due process rights using a writ of habeas corpus in court.

In Canada, the rule of law means neither the prime minister, the Queen, the Governor General, Parliament or any other body can act in violation of the Constitution Act of 1867, the laws of Parliament, a provincial legislature or the common law of England as adapted. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees due process of law: “Everyone has the right to life, liberty, and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice… Any person charged with an offence has the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal.” (Italics added.) In the seminal case of Beauregard v. Canada (1986), Chief Justice Brian Dickson of the Supreme Court of Canada provided one of the clearest elaborations on judicial independence: “The role of the courts as resolver of disputes, interpreter of the law and defender of the Constitution requires that they be completely separate in authority and function from all other participants in the justice system… the principle of judicial independence has been the complete liberty of individual judges to hear and decide the cases that come before them; no outsider – be it government, pressure group, individual or even another judge – should interfere in fact, or attempt to interfere, with the way in which a judge conducts his or her case and makes his or her decision.” (Italics added.)

Could it be said even casually that Zenawi’s authority is exercised in accordance with the Ethiopian “Constitution” or other written, publicly disclosed laws? Can it be said that there is such a thing as due process of law in Zenawi’s courts? Are there any constitutional or legal safeguards against dictatorial rule in Ethiopia? How often is the writ of habeas corpus ( Art. 19, sec. 4 of the Ethiopian “Constitution”) used in court to challenge the hundreds of thousands of illegal arrests and detentions in Ethiopia? The rule of law allows citizens to enjoy the freedoms provided in a constitution, and ultimately safeguarded by courts: Is there freedom of speech in Ethiopia? Is there a free press? Is there freedom of association or the right to petition for grievances? Is the Ethiopian judiciary the guardian of the Ethiopia “constitution”? Is it within Zenawi’s arbitrary powers to remove any judge from the bench if he so wills it? Could any court or judge in Ethiopia assert total independence from the political control of the regime? Could any judge hold accountable regime leaders for corruption, malfeasance or misconduct in office? Can anyone deny the pervasive use of “telephone law” (a common practice in which judges are told how to decided cases) by regime officials? Is it possible to imagine the exercise of judicial review by Ethiopian courts? Can anyone realistically imagine the judiciary can be made an independent institution in Ethiopia, free of the intimidation and influence of regime officials? Aren’t party hacks the backbone of the Ethiopian bench?

In its 2007 report, Human Rights Watch concluded:

In high-profile cases, courts show little independence or concern for defendants’ procedural rights. The two-month recess in the treason trial in August-September 2006, coupled with frequent shorter adjournments, ensured the defendants’ prolonged detention. The trial judges put off addressing defense objections to evidence and ignored claims of serious mistreatment by prison authorities. Although criminal courts in Ethiopia have some independence with respect to less prominent cases, the judiciary often acts only after unreasonably long delays, sometimes because of the courts’ workloads, more often because of excessive judicial deference to bad faith prosecution requests for time to search for evidence of a crime. (Italics added.)

The fact of the matter is that Zenawi holds absolute power — unbounded by any law — and pretensions to the creation of an independent judiciary in the context of such dictatorial rule is not just window dressing, it is an act of gross mendacity. Zenawi does not want an independent judiciary. Zenawi can’t handle an independent judiciary. He wants absolute power and complete control. It is delusional for anyone to believe — and intellectually dishonest for the for the NJI to propagate the canard — that the independence of the judiciary in Ethiopia can be achieved through technical refinements to the judicial structure and training of judicial officers under the rule of a one-man dictatorship.

Dictatorship and Judicial Independence are Like Oil and Vinegar

Dictatorship and judicial independence are like oil and vinegar. They do not mix. As vinegar is mostly water, dictatorship is mostly about the rule of one man. As oils are “hydrophobic” (chemically repel water), truly independent courts are “tyrano-phobic”. They repel arbitrary and dictatorial rule. For the two liquids that repel each other to remain in a stable configuration, the lighter of the two liquids must float to the surface and stay there in a unified mass. Oil is lighter than vinegar and therefore ends up on top in a unified mass. Dictatorship is heavier than the rule of law, and the courts must necessarily remain in a state of suspended animation under the relentless gravitational pull of a dictatorship.

Judicial Independence Pakistan Style (The Pinstripe Revolution)

There is an interesting lesson to be learned from the Pakistani “Pinstripe Revolution”, a four-month long lawyers’ movement in 2007 that came to symbolize the titanic and decades-old struggle between the rule of law and military rule in Pakistan. In 2007, General Pervez Musharaff, much like his predecessor junta leaders that dominated Pakistan’s history, declared an emergency and suspended the Constitution in a brazen attempt to subordinate the judiciary to his military dictatorship and maintain himself in power both as an army chief of staff and civilian president. Musharaff began the assault on the judiciary by literally removing from the bench Pakistan’s Chief Justice, Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, on allegations of abuse of office. Chaudhry, well-known for his fearless judicial style particularly in human rights abuse cases, had expressed the view disapproving the amalgamation of military and civilian power in one person. Musharaff put Chaudhry under house arrest and installed one of his lackeys as an acting chief justice to implement his plans. He also ordered judges in the upper echelons of the bench to take a new oath under the emergency provisional constitutional order, which the Supreme Court later nullified. Musharaff also ordered the arrest and detention of the president of the Pakistan Supreme Court Bar Association and other leading lawyers of that bar. These flagrant actions had a chilling effect on the Pakistani bar and bench. Pakistani lawyers understood the grave threat posed to the independence of the judiciary by Musharaff’s actions. Thousands of black-suited lawyers and activist mounted mass protests throughout the country and galvanized civil society in defense of the independence of the judiciary, garnering support from lawyers all over the world. After four months, Musharaff threw in the towel, and the Pakistani lawyers emerged victorious. The full Supreme Court bench was reinstated. In the end, the rule of law won the day in Pakistan and the independence of the judiciary was defended by the men in black and pin-striped suits.

H.R. 2003 Is Vital for Judicial Independence in Ethiopia

We must all support H.R. 2003 because it provides robust mechanisms to ensure the growth and full development of an independent judiciary in Ethiopia. (See e.g. H.R. 2003, Sec. 2 (1); Sec. 3 (3), (4); Sec. 4 (2) (A); Sec. 5 (3) (c)). Specifically, H.R. 2003 provides support for a “judicial monitoring process, consisting of local and international groups, with special focus on unwarranted government intervention on strictly judicial matters, and to investigate and report on actions to strengthen an independent judiciary.” By having such a monitoring process, it is possible to restore confidence in the judiciary and insulate it from political influence and interference. Unlike the voluminous catalogue of meaningless NJI recommendations, H.R. 2003 provisions relating to judicial independence require a credible and demonstrable commitment by the regime to respect the rule of law.

Rex Non Potest Peccare (The King Can Do No Wrong)

In English common law, there is the maxim which declares, “The King can do no wrong.” It was King Charles II who proclaimed that the King rules by divine right and therefore can do no wrong. There is an equivalent Amharic maxim, “Negus eye-keses, se-my eye-tares (One can not sue or charge a king or plough the sky.”) The constitutional idea behind the maxim was to provide sovereign immunity while ensuring no official wrongdoing would go unchallenged in a court of law. Charles II, however, took it literally. He believed there could be no redress for royal abuses. The King could not be sued in civil court, neither can he be charged in a criminal indictment. The King can not be held accountable for his official acts or omissions. There can be no claims for damages against the King, nor does an injunction lie as an equitable remedy against him. The King can do no wrong because the King is above the law. The King is the Law. When the King is the law, there is no need for the rule of law. No need for a constitution. No need for courts and judges and lawyers. As the eminent Paksitani jurist Fakhruddin G. Ebrahim said, “If the constitution is the soul of a nation, then the judiciary is its heart. Our nation is without a heart and a soul just now.” So it is in Ethiopia, just now! “There is no question that this is so.”

[1] http://www.ethiopianreview.com/content/5335
[2] NIJ Ethiopia Judiciary Assessment

Foreign Embassies and Consulates in Ethiopia

Algeria Algerian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Algeria in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Nifas Silk Lafto K. Ketema
05 Addis Ababa
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251 1 71 96 66, 251 1 20 57 57
Fax: 251 1 71 96 68

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Angola Angolan Embassy in Addis Adaba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Angola in Ethiopia send edits
Rue Bole Road Wrada 18
Kebele 26 House No 006 CP 2962
City: Addis Adaba
Phone: 251 1 710118 – 711528
Fax: 251 1 514922
Email: [email protected]

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Austria Austrian Embassy in Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Austria in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Old Airport Area
P.O.B. 1219
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Ababa
Phone: (+251) (1) 71 21 44
(+251) (1) 71 24 45
Fax: (+251) (1) 71 21 40
Web Site: http://www.aussenministerium.at/addisabeba/
Email: [email protected]

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Belgium Belgian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Belgium in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Kebena District
Comoros Street
Kebele 08
P.O. Box 1239
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: + (251) (11) 662.12.91
+ (251) (11) 662.34.20
Fax: + (251) (11) 661.36.46
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday through Thursday 8 30 AM to 1 PM 1 30 PM to 4 PM
Friday 8 30 AM to 2 PM

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Botswana Botswana Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Botswana Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
P.O. Box 22282
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (2511) 715422
Fax: (2511) 714099

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Bulgaria Bulgarian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Bulgarian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopa send edits
Bole Kifle Ketema S/City
Kebele 06
Haile G/Selassie Road
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (00251 11) 661 00 32
Fax: (00251 11) 661 33 73
Email: [email protected]

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Canada Canadian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
The Embassy of Canada to Ethiopia send edits
Old Airport Area, Nefas Silk Lafto Sub City
Kebele 04, House No. 122,
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-11-371-3022
Fax: +251-11-371-3033
Web Site: http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/africa/ethiopia-contact-en.asp
Email: [email protected]

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China Chinese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Chinese Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Jimma Road, Higher24, Kebele 13, House No.792
P.O.Box:5643
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 002511-711959, 711960
Fax: 002511-712457
Web Site: http://et.china-embassy.org
Email: [email protected]

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Cuba Cuban Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Cuba in Ethiopia send edits
Woreda 16, Kebele 05
Casa 39, Yeka Area
Addis Ababa, Ethiopía.
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: ( 251) 011 662 0460 or 011 662 0459
Fax: (251) 011 662 0460
Email: [email protected]

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Czech Republic Czech Embassy in Addid Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of the Czech Republic in Ethiopia send edits
Gen. Maj. Damtew St., W.21, K.01, H.No.29
(between the Hotel Ethiopia and Custom´s Authority)
PO Box 3108
City: Addid Ababa
Phone: (++251) 1 – 516 382 or 1 – 516 132
Fax: (++251) 1 – 513 471
Web Site: http://www.mfa.cz/addisababa
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

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Denmark Danish Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Danish Consulate General in Ethiopia send edits
c/o Royal Norwegian Embassy
Buna Road
Mekanisa
P.O. Box 12955
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (1) 711 399
Fax: +251 (1) 711 399
Email: [email protected]

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Finland Finnish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Finland in Ethiopia send edits
Mauritania Street
Nifas Silk Lafto Kifle Ketema (Old Airport Area)
Kebele 12
House No 1431
P.O.Box 1017
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-11-320 5920
Fax: +251-11-320 5923
Web Site: http://www.finland.org.et
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Office hours: Mon-Wed 8.00-16.30, Thu 8.00-16.00, Fri 8.00-13.00 Customer service: Mon-Thu 10.00-12.00, Fri closed

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France French Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of France in Ethiopia send edits
Quartier Kabana
PO Box 1464 – Addis Abeba
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: [251] (11) 140 00 00
Fax: [251] (11) 140 00 40
Web Site: http://www.ambafrance-et.org
Email: [email protected]

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Germany German Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
German Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Khabana, Woreda 12
Kabele 20
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251 1 55 04 33
Fax: 251 1 55 13 11
Email: [email protected]

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Greece Greek Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Greece in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Off Debre Zeit Road, P.O. Box 1168, Addis Abeba
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (002511) 654911-2
Fax: (002511)654883
Web Site: http://www.telecom.net.et/~greekemb/
Email: [email protected]

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Greenland Greenlandic Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Danish Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Bole Ketema, Kebele 03
H. No. ‘New’
P.O.Box 12955
Addis Ababa
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (0)116 18 70 75
Fax: +251 (0)116 18 70 57
Web Site: http://www.ambaddisababa.um.dk
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday to Thursday: 9:00 am to 3:00 pm Friday: 9:00 am to 12:00 noon

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Greenland Greenlandic Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Danish Consulate General in Ethiopia send edits
c/o Royal Norwegian Embassy
Buna Road
Mekanisa
P.O. Box 12955
Addis Ababa
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (1) 711 399
Fax: +251 (1) 711 399
Email: [email protected]

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India Indian Embassy in Ethiopia
Embassy of India in Ethiopia send edits
Arada District, Kebele-14
[Next to Bel Air Hotel]
H.No 224, Around Aware
Post Box No. 528
Phone: 00-251-11-1235538/39/40/ 41
Fax: 00-251-11-1235547/1235548
Web Site: http://www.indianembassy.gov.et/
Email: [email protected]

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Indonesia Indonesian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Indonesia in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Mekanissa Road Higher 23
Kebele 13, House No. 1816
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (251-1) 712-104, 712-185
Fax: (251-1) 710-873
Web Site: http://www.indonesia-addis.org.et
Email: [email protected]

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Iran Iranian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Iran in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
P.O.Box : 70488
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 200794 – 712012
Web Site: http://www.telecom.net.et/~iranet/

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Ireland Irish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Ireland in Ethiopia send edits
Debre Zeit Road
Woreda 20
Kebele 40
House 21
P.O Box 9585, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 (11) 466 5050
Fax: +251 (11) 466 5020
Email: [email protected]

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Israel Israeli Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Israel in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Higher 16, Kebele 22
House no. 283, Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-11- 646 09 99
Fax: +251-11- 646 19 61
Web Site: http://addisababa.mfa.gov.il
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday to Thursday: 09:00 hrs to 13:00 hrs Friday: 09:00 hrs to 12:30 hrs

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Description: Jurisdiction: Ethiopia, Mozambique, Rwanda and Burundi
Italy Italian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Italy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Villa Italia – Kebenà – P.O. Box 1105 – Addis Abeba
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 00251111235717, 1235685
Fax: 1235689
Web Site: http://www.ambaddisabeba.esteri.it
Email: [email protected]

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Jamaica Jamaican Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Jamaican Consulate in Ethiopia send edits
Debrezeit Road
Higher 20, Kebele 45
House # 921, P.O. Box 5633
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-6543-22
Fax: 251-114-654-747

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Description: HONORARY CONSUL: MR GEBRE E GEBRU
Japan Japanese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Japan in Ethiopia send edits
House No.653, Kebele 7
Woreda 18
(P.O. Box 5650)
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-51-10-88
Fax: +251-1-51-13-50

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Kenya Kenyan Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
High Commission of the Republic of Kenya in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Fikre Mariam Road
High 16 Kebelle 01
P.O. Box 3301
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 11 6610033
Fax: + 251 11 6611433
Email: [email protected]

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Description: Other countries of accreditation: Republic of Djibouti, AU
Kuwait Kuwaiti Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Kuwait in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Bole Road, Nouse 128
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 6615411, 6615412
Fax: (+251-11) 6612621

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Lesotho Basotho Embassy in Kebele, Ethiopia
Embassy of the Kingdom of Lesotho in Kebele, Ethiopia send edits
P.O. Box 7483 Wereda
17 Kebele 23 H.2116/K, Addis
Ethiopia
City: Kebele
Phone: +2511 612828/614368/9
Fax: +2511 612837
Email: [email protected]

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Madagascar Malagasy Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Madagascar in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
LP 60004
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 61.25.55 – Résidence : 61.11.55
Fax: (251.1) 61.01.27
Email: [email protected]

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Malawi Malawian Embassy in Ethiopia
Malawian Embassy in Ethopia send edits
Woreda 23, Kebele 13, House. No. 1021
P.O.Box 2316
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
Phone: (+251-11) 3711280
Fax: (+251-11) 3719742
Email: [email protected], [email protected]

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Mali Malian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mali send edits
Embassy of Mali
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 2712601
Fax: (+251-11) 2712601
Email: [email protected]

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Mauritius Mauritian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mauritius in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
P.O Box 200222, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 002511615997
Fax: 00 25 11 614704
Email: [email protected]

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Mexico Mexican Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mexico in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia send edits
Shola Axion (to former Jacross Compound),
Bole Kifle Ketema
Kebele:14
House Number: New Block: B5/6
P.O. Box 21021 Code 1000
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: (251-116) 479-333
Fax: (251-116) 479-333

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Mozambique Mozambican Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Mozambique send edits
P.O.Box 5671
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 3728622/3, 3718593
Email: [email protected]

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Namibia Namibian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Namibia in Addis Ababa send edits
Bole Road W. 17, Kebel 19
House No. 002
P.O. Box 1443
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-611966 or 612055
Fax: +251-1-612677
Email: [email protected]

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Netherlands Dutch Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Royal Netherlands Embassy in Addis Ababa send edits
P.O.Box 1241
Old Airport Zone
H24, K13, House 001
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-711100
Fax: + 251 (0)1 711577
Web Site: http://www.mfa.nl/add/
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday – Friday 08.00 – 13.00 hrs 14.00 – 17.00 hrs

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Norway Norwegian Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Royal Norwegian Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopa send edits
Buna Board Road, Mekanissa
PO Box 8383, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: +251-11-3710799
Fax: +251-11-3711255 / 3713605
Web Site: http://www.norway.org.et/
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday – Friday: 0830-1600
Saturday & Sunday: closed
Visa section: 0900-1200 Tuesday and Thursday
Telephone hours for Visa Section: Monday 1000 1200

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Romania Romanian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Romania in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia send edits
Woreda 17, Kebele 19, Houses No. 0910, Bole Road
or P.O. Box: 2478
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (00) (251) (1) 610156
Fax: (00) (251) (1) 611196
Email: [email protected]

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Russia Russian Embassy in Addis-Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Russia in Addis-Abeba, Ethiopia send edits
P.O.Box 1500, Yeka Kifle-Ketema, Kebele 08, Fikre-Mariam Street, Addis Ababa
City: Addis-Abeba
Phone: +2511 612-060, 611-828
Fax: +2511 613-795
Email: [email protected]

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Rwanda Rwandan Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Rwanda send edits
Africa Avenue H-17K-20
P.O.Box 5618
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 6610300, 6610357, 6610387
Fax: (+251-11) 6610411
Email: [email protected]

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Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Saudi Arabia Embassy , Ethiopia send edits
W24, K13, House No. 002
PO Box 1104
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-710303
Fax: 251-1-711799

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Senegal Senegalese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Senegal Embassy , Ethiopia send edits
Africa Avenue, W17, K20, House No. 777
PO Box 2581
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1) 611376
Fax: (+251-1) 610020

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Serbia Serbian Embassy in Addis Ababa W15 K26, Ethiopia
Embassy of Serbia in Ethiopia send edits
W15, K26, House No. 923
PO Box 1341
City: Addis Ababa W15 K26
Phone: +251-1-517804
Fax: +251-1-516763 / +251-1-514192
Email: [email protected]

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Sierra Leone Sierra Leonean Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Sierra Leone in Ethiopia send edits
Koreda 23, Kebelle 12, House no. 002 P.O. Box 5619
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +25-117-1003
Fax: +25-117-11911
Email: [email protected]

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South Africa South African Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of South Africa in Ethiopia send edits
Alexander Pushkin Street, Higher 23, Kebele 10, House 1885, Old Airport Area
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1)-713034 / 713035 / 711002 / 711017
Fax: +251-1-711330
Email: [email protected]

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Spain Spanish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Spain in Ethiopia send edits
Entoto Road, W11, K01, House No.036
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-550222
Fax: +251-1-551131
Email: [email protected]

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Sudan Sudanese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Sudan in Ethiopia send edits

City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-515-241
Fax: +251-1-517-030 / +251-1-518-141

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Sweden Swedish Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Sweden, Addis Abeba send edits
Lideta subcity
Kebele 07/14, House No. 891
P. O. Box 1142
Addis Abeba
Ethiopia
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: +251 (11) 518 0000
Fax: +251 (11) 518 0030
Web Site: http://www.swedenabroad.com/addisabeba
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday-Tuesday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Visa (applications and processing): Monday-Tuesday, Thursday-Friday 9.30 a.m. to 12 p.m. Wednesday closed. Phone hours: 2 to

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Switzerland Swiss Embassy in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia
Embassy of Switzerland in Estonia send edits
Old Airport, W24, K13
City: Addis Abeba
Phone: (+251-1) 711107, 710577, 711608
Fax: (+251-1) 712177
Email: [email protected]

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Tanzania Tanzanian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Tanzania in Ethiopia send edits
P. O. Box 1077, Addis Ababa,
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (251-1) 511063, 612904, 518155

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Togo Togolese Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Togo in Ethiopia send edits

City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251 152-26-75 / +251 152-35-22

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Tunisia Tunisian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Tunisia in Ethiopia send edits
W17, K19, House No. 008
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-612063
Fax: +251-1-650233

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Turkey Turkish Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Turkey in Ethiopia send edits
Africa Avenue, W17, K19, House No. 018
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-612321
Fax: +251-1-611688

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Uganda Ugandan Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Uganda in Ethiopia send edits
Kirkos Kifle Ketema, Kebele 35, H. No. 031
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-5513114 / +251-1-5513088
Fax: +251-1-5514355
Email: [email protected], [email protected]

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Ukraine Ukrainian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Ukraine in Ethiopia send edits
Woreda 17, Kebele 23, House 2111
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: +251-1-611698
Fax: +251-1-621288
Email: [email protected] / [email protected]

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United States American Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
US Embassy in Ethiopia send edits
Entoto Street
P.O.Box 1014
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: 251-1-550666
Fax: 251-1-174001
Web Site: http://addisababa.usembassy.gov/
Email: [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday – Friday 8:30a.m. – 12:00 p.m. & 1:30 – 3:30 p.m.

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Western Sahara Sahrawian, Sahraouian Consulate in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Mission of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic send edits
P.O.Box 3008
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 2718666
Fax: (+251-11) 2718667
Email: [email protected]

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Yemen Yemeni Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Yemen send edits
P.O.Box 664
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1) 711811, 712204, 710990
Fax: (+251-1) 710991
Web Site: http://www.yemenembassy-ethiopia.org

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Zambia Zambian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Zambia send edits
P.O.Box 1909
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-11) 3711302
Fax: (+251-11) 3711566
Email: [email protected]

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Zimbabwe Zimbabwean Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Embassy of Zimbabwe in Ethiopia send edits
W17, K19, House No. 007
City: Addis Ababa
Phone: (+251-1) 613877
Fax: (+251-1) 613476

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Mobile internet users in S. Africa 15 milllion, in Ethiopia 0

In contrast, there are only about 20,000 Internet service subscribers in Ethiopia, and 0 mobile Internet (accessing the Internet on cellphones) users under a policy instituted by the dictatorial regime of Meles Zenawi that is intended to keep the people of Ethiopia in the dark. Other African nations such as South Africa strive to make information technology accessible to ever one as the following report shows.

THE massive growth of internet usage in South Africa will see mobile internet users in South Africa rise to 15 million in the country according to a report released by a leading information and computer technology firm.

BMI-TechKnowledge also projected mobile internet browsing and mobile e-mail access to rise in the next five years.

“There will be 15-million mobile internet users in South Africa by 2013,” said the organization.

The report that BMI-TechKnowledge has released is entitled SA Consumer Handset Model and Cellular Activities.

Ryan Smit, consumer market analyst at BMI- TechKnowledge, and author of the report, said mobile internet browsing and mobile e-mail access are expected to increase rapidly and forecasted that more than 15 million users would access the internet directly or indirectly on their handsets by the same year.

South Africa’s mobile phone industry has grown immensely in recent years.

According to a recent survey, the country is now the world’s fourth fastest growing cellular communications market, accounting for 80 percent of the population, which equals more than 39 million users.

This represents a market value of US$2.4 billion. It is by far the fastest growing such industry in the whole African continent.

Cutthroat competition characterizes the mobile phone industry in South Africa where three mobile networks, Vodacom (the biggest in the country in terms of subscribers), Mobile Telephone Networks (MTN) and Cell C, operate.

Last year, cellphone number portability was introduced across the three networks.

This enables subscribers to change from one network to another while retaining their cellular phone numbers.

IT News Africa