Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (APA) – Ethiopian security officials on Saturday arrested a South African man with over 70 capsules of suspected drug inside his stomach.
The arrest of the South African man happened a few days after the death of two Tanzanian men who were also arrested with over 60 drug capsules in their stomach.
The two Tanzanians died last after undergoing medical treatment in hospital in Addis Ababa.
According to the Ethiopian police, more than 77 drug capsules were found in the stomach of the South African who was traveling from Dubai to Tanzania on Ethiopian Airlines.
The man is reported to be safe and getting medical treatment at the Ethiopian Federal police hospital.
The Ethiopian Federal police crime prevention and control department said that the man was apprehended at the Bole International Airport by members of the Airport Drug Control Division.
“The individual was admitted to the hospital after he was apprehended with this huge amount of drug capsules inside his stomach. The capsules were taken out of the man’s stomach with medical treatment,” said police.
Meanwhile, the Ethiopian federal police also announced the seizure of a large amount of cannabis while being smuggled to Britain in more than 40 mail bags via the Ethiopian postal service.
However, the police say no arrest has been made so far in connection with the postal cannabis mail and that they are continuing with investigations.
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (PANA) – Ethiopia’s financial sector will miss out on the possible investments from American major financiers because of its lack of a domestic stock exchange market to help attract foreign capital, an investor said.
An American investment consultant, Jonathan Auerbach, said in Addis Ababa Thursday that Ethiopia’s lack of a stock market was making it difficult to direct Amer i can institutional investors to put funds in the country’s vibrant economy.
“You have got to make a decision on whether you need a capitalist or a socialist system,” Auerbach said, adding “Ethiopia is the only country in the world with a big population that does not have a stock-market… you need to have a stock market.”
Ethiopia does not have a stock market but the country launched the first commodities exchange late last year, allowing for coffee trade.
The American says Ethiopia’s vibrant banking industry will inspire confidence fr om global investors if the country has a system of tapping in foreign direct investments into its economy.
“Major banks would be drawn back into Ethiopian market. Ethiopia is the fifth largest economy in the sub-saharan Africa in terms of the Gross Domestic Product,” he said at a press conference.
“There is no transparent platform to allow people and companies to invest in Ethiopia,” Auerbach, who is on an 11-country tour of Africa, said, noting that his firm was prospecting for business opportunities in Africa.
The firm of investment advisers is seeking to put its clients’ funds in Africa’s most promising sectors such as agriculture, finance and the telecommunication companies.
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (Afrique en ligne) – Ethiopia’s dictator Meles Zenawi said on Friday he was in consultations with his ruling party about the possibility of quitting as Prime Minister and retaining his role as the party leader after next year’s elections.
The Ethiopian Premier, who has been at the helm of the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) for the last 18 years, said on Friday that he has had enough and wanted to do something different after the next elections.
Ethiopia is about 15 months away from the next elections, due in 2010.
The Prime Minister says he is considering quitting the post and remaining as party leader (a la Russia’s Putin) if his party members agree to the position, but said he would make a final decision on this later.
“I do not think there is a conflict of policy here. My desire is that I have had enough here and I have to move on. I want to leave this position (Prime Minister) without leaving the party as leader but I have to respect the decisions of the party,” Meles told journalists.
Meles was asked about two conflicting signals he had given about his intentions not to seek a new mandate during the next elections in 2010. He said his personal decisions not to seek the post of Prime Minister must be balanced by the party position.
The EPRDF says it has yet to decide on who would be the next leader but the party has begun the search for a new leader of the party. The party sources say they are looking for the “new face of Ethiopia” if the current premier insists on not running for the post.
“I cannot be a member of the party and not respect its decisions. My open decision is that there will be no conflict between my position and that of the party. If there is a conflict, I will have the freedom to chose but I will try to resolv e the differences,’ the PM said.
Meles said among his major achievements were leading the Ethiopian transition process from military rule to a democratic system that employs a parliamentary system of leadership.
The PM said he was glad Ethiopia’s transition from military rule to democracy did not suffer from setbacks such as those witnessed in Eastern Europe.
He said Ethiopia had transformed its political system to a full democracy, despite certain limitations the three arms of government still suffered.
He also said Ethiopia’s move from economic stagnation to rapid growth was equally an achievement during his tenure as Prime Minister. [This guy doesn’t get tired of lying. Ethiopia under the Woyanne rule remains one of the poorest countries in the world where millions of children do not have enough food to eat and have no access to school.]
“We took Ethiopia into one of the seven few elite states with a higher economic growth rate in the world, that is an achievement,” Meles, who holds a record as one of the few African leaders to conduct regular press interviews, told a three-hour long briefing.
He said under his rule, steps to fight corruption had also been initiated but expressed disappointment at some very lenient sentences that some people charged with corruption were getting away with. [Meles and his wife, Azeb Mesfin, are thought to be the most corrupt politicians in Africa who amassed incredible wealth in the past two decades.]
ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA (EuroNews 24) – Ethiopia’s Prime Minister dictator Meles Zenawi has said the arrest of the country’s opposition leader was not a political decision, arguing the authorities were left with no other choice.
Authorities arrested and sentenced Birtukan Midekssa to life in prison in January after she reportedly said she never expressed remorse to obtain a pardon in 2007. She was given three days to deny or confirm the reports.
We were put in an almost impossible situation politically and legally. The law says if a pardon is given under false pretenses it has to be annulled, Meles told journalists late Friday.
The Ethiopian leader accused Birtukan of banking on support from powerful friends in powerful positions — presumably Western nations — when she made the comments during a recent trip to Sweden and Germany.
Had we indulged on her assumptions the message that we would have conveyed would be ‘nothing happens to you no matter what you do. If you have friends in all the right places, you can ride roughshod with everything’, Meles said.
That message I think is a very dangerous political message to convey in an emerging democracy. The rule of law and equality involves everyone.
Birtukan, the head of the Unity for Democracy Justice party, had been detained with dozens of opposition figures and supporters following disputed 2005 elections.
The United States, a staunch ally of Ethiopia’s dictatorship and the country’s top aid contributor, has expressed concern over the arrest and called for more political freedom in the Horn of Africa nation.
Birtukan’s party made its most spectacular electoral gains ever in the 2005 polls and cried foul over reported fraud, claiming it was robbed of victory by Zenawi’s ruling party.
The ensuing unrest left close to 200 people dead and drew international condemnation.
Ethiopia’s next general elections are expected to be held in 2010.
ADDIS ABABA (SAPA) – The defense ministers of South Africa and Ethiopia’s tribalist dictatorship signed a memorandum of understanding in Addis Ababa on Friday, South Africa’s defense spokesman Sam Mkhwanazi said. [The current South Africa regime is as full of scumbags as the apartheid regime.]
Defense Minister Charles Nqakula and his Ethiopian counterpart Arto Siraj Fegesa agreed that both countries would work towards developing procedures for military co-operation including the exchange and training of military personnel, instructors and observers and promoting technical co-operation.
Co-operating in the field of military medical services, knowledge and training would also be on the agenda.
The agreement was motivated by their commitment to support peace efforts on the continent under the auspices of the African Union, which has its headquarters in the northern African country.
Nqakula said co-operation between the two countries would benefit their respective populations who were “yearning for peace, stability and development on the African continent”.
This was in line with Freedom Charter principles that there should be peace and friendship on the African continent and beyond, said Mkhwanazi, relaying the essence of the meeting by telephone.
The agreement between the militaries of the two countries would serve as a springboard to ensure that they do whatever is necessary to ensure that conflict is eradicated on the African continent, added Mkhwanazi.
(The Guardian) – AHEAD of a proposal for the proclamation of the United States of Africa by 2017, continental leaders will by January next year establish an Authority of the Africa Union to work out the details of the plan.
Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade, who announced the two dates in Dakar yesterday, said that an extraordinary AU meeting would be held to adopt the recommendations of the organisation’s last summit early this month in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The summit reached a consensus on the establishment of the AU Authority to coordinate efforts geared towards establishing the United States of Africa.
Opening a two-day international symposium on the Great Green Wall (GGW), President Wade said after this meeting, the countries were expected to adopt the new texts, before promulgating them.
Pan-African News Agency reports quoted Wade as saying that “the United States of Africa will be proclaimed in 2017, to allow for the time needed to work out the different African institutions,” he said.
He said at the just-ended AU summit, a “Group of 20 African countries were ready to go their own way and set up a Federal Union. We primarily had the idea of establishing a Federal Union. Eventually, we agreed to the resolutions of the summit providing for the establishment of an Authority.”
Also, Libyan leader and AU Chairman, Col. Muammar Gaddafi, yesterday said he would like a United States of Africa to include “Caribbean islands with African populations”.
Speaking in Tripoli as AU new chief, Gaddafi hinted that this could include Haiti, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic.
He sympathised with Somali pirates, describing their actions as self-defence.
Last week, he said that multi-party democracy was not right for Africa.
Gaddafi’s critics believe he is too erratic to be chairman of the 53-nation AU.
Celebrating his new role at his compound in Tripoli on Tuesday, Gaddafi suggested Caribbean islands should join the AU and become a bridge between Africa and Latin America.
He told the gathering of about 400 guests that Somali pirates were only hitting back against other countries stealing marine wealth from the region’s waters.
Gaddafi said the United Nations (UN) should protect Somali waters from the piracy of other countries.
He also said he would use his 12 months at the helm of the AU to try to resolve Africa’s conflicts, including Darfur and Somalia.