Sunday, May 18, 2014

‘My Ethiopia nostalgia’

DAILY MAIL: By MONICA KAYOMBO PREPARATIONS for my second visit to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, after my first in 2010, started like any other, but little did I know what awaited me at my point of destination.

This is one trip where I was not privy to the programme until I reached Addis Ababa.

Ethiopia is a country with a population of over 90 million people, making it the second most populous nation in Africa after Nigeria.

Having defeated Italy in a war after five years of invasion, Ethiopian got independent on May 3, 1941.

About 85 percent of Ethiopians depend on agriculture for their livelihood.

Amheric is the national language. Addis Ababa, the city that I visited means “ new flower’’ and many tourists visit Addis as it is fondly called, for many reasons, ranging from leisure to business.

On May 6, which was my day of departure, I had to arrive early at Kenneth Kaunda International Airport in Lusaka to meet the trip co-ordinator Collette Stephenson for preliminaries.

It was an educational tour to Addis, courtesy of Ethiopian Airlines.

A workmate Chimwemwe Mwale dropped me off at the airport two hours before departure, and by 13:06 hours, we took off for Addis via Harare.

However, we spent more than an hour at Harare International Airport due to a technical fault.

Nevertheless, it was while on board the Ethiopian airliner that I started enjoying the famous Ethiopian tomoca coffee.

We touched down at Bole International Airport in Addis at 21:00 hours to a warm welcome from members of staff at the Zambian embassy in Ethiopian led by Dorcas Chileshe, the press attaché.

After almost one hour of waiting at the airport, my colleagues and I were issued with temporary visas after it emerged that there was something wrong with our initial visas.

I was in a 17-member delegation that included director for Civil Service Travel, Davies Muunga, Rita Mwanakombo from Premier Travel, Danford Walenga, a sales representative at Ethiopian Airlines in Lusaka, Memory Chipango from Voyers Travel and Tours, Davies Mainza, Ruth Kalobwe from Discovery Travel and consultants from travel agencies in the country.

Before dinner, we were introduced to our tour guide, Wondwosson Getaneh, a marketing officer at Ethiopian Airlines.

We spent the first night at the luxurious Friendship International hotel.

A professional tour guide, Samrawiti Fekade joined us as we toured the Trinity Orthodox Church that was constructed by the late Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie.

We also visited the African Union building and the National Museum.

Our last day in Ethiopia was going to be Saturday, May 10.

Before that on Wednesday, May 7, we prepared ourselves for a trip to Liesak Exotic Resort which is about 45 Kilometres south of Addis Ababa.

Though the trip was exciting, I was in deep pain from a toothache that developed after I left Lusaka. With a swollen face, I visited some pharmacies in Addis Ababa, but could not get any medication due to a language barrier.

I only got some relief from pain-killers until Thursday when I was taken to Ethiopian Airlines staff clinic.

All colleagues in the entourage, especially Violet Tembo from Muvi Tv did what they could to make me feel better.

After having lunch, which of course included the traditional staple food ‘’injera’’ also known as tef at the Liesak Exotic Resort, we were massaged and allowed to remain in the sauna for as long as we wished.

Those who were brave enough went on boat cruise for as many times as they wished, while enjoying a cocktail of intoxicating drinks.

Liesak Resort hotel is in Boshoftu area, right on the banks of Lake Babogaya.

During our dinner at the resort, we were entertained by a traditional dance troupe comprising energetic boys and girls.

As though that was not enough, the dance troupe treated us to western music, and of course they did not disappoint us.

On top of that, the disc jockey played Zambian music including the famous kopala tunes like Kanselele and some of JK’s music.

The following day, we went back to Addis Ababa for a meeting with Ethiopian Airlines officials who wanted our views on how they could improve their services.

We later had an opportunity to visit the National Museum under the guidance of a Ms Fekade.

At the museum, we had an opportunity to see various fossils and paintings.

We were also told the story of King Solomon and Queen Sheba of the Bible and how the latter conceived Menelik, one of the forefathers of Emperor Haile Selassie.

We also visited the Trinity Orthodox Church which Haile Selassie started building in 1931 and was only completed in 1941, the year of Ethiopia’s independence.

Emperor Selassie, who ruled Ethiopia from November 2 1930 to September 12 1974, died on August 27, 1975, after an illness.

He is worshipped and perceived as a messianic figure by Rastafarians.

It is at the Trinity Orthodox Church where members of the Selassie family are buried, while outside the church are tombs of gallant fallen heroes.

Church services are usually conducted at the Trinity Orthodox Church and several Christians as well as non-Christians flock there to receive blessings from the priests who are there every 24 hours.

About 65 percent of Ethiopians are Christians of which the Orthodox Church claims the biggest share. On the political front, what surprised me is that there is almost no opposition to the ruling party in Ethiopia.

Out of 547 parliamentary seats, only one seat belongs to the opposition. The rest of the seats are held by the ruling People’s Revolution Democratic Party. Otherwise it was a fan-filled trip as we took time to take pictures at the famous scenic spot in Addis Ababa which is 3,200 metres above sea level.

This is a place where most Ethiopian athletes do their training. We also took time to visit the historic African Union (AU) building, though amid tight security as usual.

After our tour, we went back to Friendship International hotel where we spent a night in anticipation of Friday special! On Friday morning, we visited Ethiopian Airlines headquarters and mingled with senior management officials.

Later in the evening, we were taken for dinner at Yod Abbysinia Restaurant where we were given another treat by the cultural dance troupe to wrap up our tour of Ethiopia.

Despite the tooth-ache problem, I did not abandon my journalistic duties. Through it all, I decided to depend and trust in God. Despite the security checks at almost every point we stopped, I will always have that nostalgia for Ethiopia and its people.

SOURCE: DAILY MAIL

Friday, May 16, 2014

Ethiopia’s ‘Super Grain’ Teff Finds Its Way To European Supermarkets

Ethiopia’s ‘Super Grain’ Teff Finds Its Way To European Supermarkets

Ethiopia’s ‘Super Grain’ Teff Finds Its Way To European Supermarkets - See more at: http://afkinsider.com/56266/ethiopias-super-grain-teff-finds-way-european-markets/#sthash.R52kpMgp.dpuf
Ethiopia, one of the world’s poorest countries, is also the native home of teff, a highly nutritious ancient grain increasingly finding its way into health-food shops and supermarkets in Europe, CCTV Africa reported. Teff’s tiny seeds are high in calcium, iron and protein, and boast an impressive set of amino acids.

Naturally gluten-free, the grain can substitute for wheat flour in anything from bread and pasta to waffles and pizza bases. Like quinoa, the Andean grain, teff’s superb nutritional profile offers the promise of new and lucrative markets in the west.

Tedd is grown by an estimated 6.3 million farmers in Ethiopia, with fields of the crop covering more than 20 percent of all land under cultivation. But growing appetite for traditional crops and booming health-food and gluten-free markets are breathing new life into the grain, increasingly touted as Ethiopia’s “second gift to the world”, after coffee.

Source: CCTV

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Ethiopia's rare mountain lions

Ethiopia's rare mountain lions
A German conservation group is compensating local farmers in Ethiopia’s Kafa region,whose lifestock is often seized by rare mountain lions.
In return, the farmers are helping protect the big cats.
Project goal: documenting and protecting the lions of Kafa (among the very few African lions not living in a savannah region), preserving the rich biodiversity of the Kafa Biosphere Reserve and ensuring balanced wildlife numbers
Duration: 2009 to 2014 under the NABU Cloud Forest Protection project, since 2013 - Nabu lion protection program
Implementation: in a pilot project, local farmers are compensated for their livestock seized by the lions. They inform NABU about lion sightings and their behaviour patterns
Size: Kafa Biosphere Reserve (780 square kilometers)
Funding: around 3.2 million Euros from the International Climate Initiative’s (IKI) forest protection program
Key species: African lion (Panthera leo) The Kafa Biosphere Reserve in Ethiopia is known for its wild coffee, hippos and crowned eagle. But lions?
Scientists were taken by surprise when a rare female mountain lion was sighted there two years ago.
Now, a few of the beasts, including some from the former zoo and presidential palace in Addis Ababa, seem to be at home in Kafa’s mountain cloud forests.
But, local farmers aren’t so happy with the big cats increasingly attacking their livestock during the dry season.
German conservation group NABU is helping to compensate farmers and banking on their traditional reverence for lions to help protect the big beasts.
Source DW

Liyou Libsekal wins 2014 Brunel African Poetry Prize

PRESS RELEASE

The winner of the second Brunel University African Poetry Prize is Liyou Libsekal, an Ethiopian poet who lives in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

The two runners-up are Amy Lukau (Angola) and Nick Makoha (Uganda) Judges 2014: Kwame Dawes, Kadija George, Mpalive Msiska, Daljit Nagra and Chair, Bernardine Evaristo The judges praised Liyou’s poetry for its accomplished modulation between the concrete and the abstract; her impressive use of the fully realised image; and the power and beauty of her language.

Liyou Mesfin Libsekal was born in 1990 in Ethiopia and grew up traveling with her family, spending the majority of her childhood in different parts of East Africa.

She earned a BA in Anthropology from George Washington University in 2012, with a minor in international affairs and a concentration in international development.

Liyou returned to Ethiopia after spending a short time in Vietnam. Since January 2013 she has written on culture and the changing environment of her rapidly developing country for the Ethiopian Business Review.

The Shortlisted Poets 2014 Viola Allo (Cameroon); Inua Ellams (Nigeria); Amy Lukau (Angola); Nick Makoha (Uganda); Vuyelwa Maluluke (South Africa) About the Prize The prize is for African poets who have not yet published a full-length poetry collection.

Entrants submit ten poems and we received 579 entries and drew up a shortlist of six poets. Bernardine Evaristo, founder and chair of the prize, says this about the prize: ‘I have judged several prizes in the past few years, including chairing the Caine Prize for African Fiction in 2012, an award that has revitalized the fortunes of fiction from Africa since its inception in 1999.

It became clear to me that poetry from the continent could also do with a prize to draw attention to it and to encourage a new generation of poets who might one day become an international presence.

African poets are rarely published in Britain. I hope this prize will introduce exciting new poets to Britain’s poetry editors.’ Last year the prize was won by Somali poet, Warsan Shire, who has since been translated into several languages, travelled to six countries as a writer, had a chapbook published in the US, and been appointed the first Young Poet Laureate for London.

Liyou Libsekal will be appearing at the Times Cheltenham Literature Festival on October 10th with Bernardine Evaristo. Visit: http:// www.cheltenhamfestivals.com/literature/ for more details once the 2014 programme is online.

The Brunel Prize works closely with The African Poetry Book Fund’s New Generation African Poets’ Series – who will publish chapbooks by the following BUAPP poets in 2014 and 2015: Liyou Libsekal, Warsan Shire, Nick Makoha, Amy Lukau, Viola Allo, Inua Ellams and Vuyelwa Maluleke.

Source Ethiosports

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