Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Meeting deadly disease head-on

© UNICEF Ethiopia/2017/Nahom Tesfaye​
Ethiopia is one of the countries hardest hit by the strongest El Niño event in history. The natural hazards that followed have left more than 5 million people in need of life-saving emergency assistance.
Amidst the worst drought in decades, the people in the Somali region of Ethiopia watch their crops die and their livestock starve. With reduced access to food, clean water and sanitation facilities, as well as the inevitable lowered household incomes - thousands of people are falling victim to diseases like measles and acute watery diarrhoea (AWD), which in turn can lead to conditions like malnutrition. The poorest women, men and children are the most vulnerable.
Since 2015, there has been a surge in cases of AWD. Caused by bacterial, viral and parasitic organisms, the disease spreads through contaminated food and water, particularly in areas with poor sanitation facilities. AWD can last for days and the disease causes severe dehydration and fluid loss. The body is left drained of water and salts crucial for survival. Unfortunately, when food is scarce, people do what they must to survive.
Consider the community of Gabagabo kebele in the Tuli Guled district, which is all too familiar with AWD. A small local health centre is separated from the main road by 10 km of rough track that is hard to navigate on both wheels and foot. This stretch is even more daunting for someone in the throes of illness.
Patients who managed to make it to the centre found an under-resourced facility overwhelmed by the ever-growing number of AWD cases. "The Health Centre didn't have the required personnel or the supplies to treat cases," explained Mr. Mohammed Ahmed, Head, Gabagabo Health Centre .
There was just one ambulance and five workers on site.
In a joint response to the problem, a Case Treatment Centre (CTC) was set up within the grounds of the existing health centre. Five additional health workers and one vehicle were deployed to the facility. The CTC was equipped with medicine to treat AWD, water and sanitation supplies, and other items to support raising awareness in the communities.
Kelsuma Abdulahi, a mother of six, was unconscious when she was driven to the CTC. She had contracted AWD after consuming contaminated water. Kelsuma stayed in the centre for five days. However, the very next day her 20–year-old pregnant daughter got sick, which brought Kelsuma back to the centre, as a caregiver this time.
"The problem is affecting everyone in my family and I am forced to leave my home," she said.​
She is not alone. Many around the country are faced with the same challenges.
The effort to mitigate the problem and prevent the spread of disease is an on-going priority for the Government and humanitarian partners alike. ​​
About the project
In an effort to address the issue of AWD, the government deployed some 900 health workers to eight affected zones in the Somali Region of Ethiopia, which were fiercely hit by the disease.
In support of the government's effort, UNOPS signed a $1.7 million project agreement with the Ethiopia Humanitarian Fund, managed by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)​.
UNOPS support comes in three main ways. First, the provision and management of an efficient and timely payment system to benefit some 300 health care workers, who look after communities in remote and under-served areas. Second, the management of a 42-vehicle fleet that helps ferry staff and medicines to remote locations. And third, a supply chain management system that uses five heavy vehicles to move supplies from warehouses.
This 'common services' approach enhances and enables the overall AWD response in Ethiopia, which is a collaboration between Ethiopia's Region Health Bureau, the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, the World Food Programme (WFP), UN Regional Coordination Office, OCHA, and international and national NGOs. ​​​Read more here

Uhuru commissions Kshs 42 billion Isiolo-Moyale road

President Uhuru Kenyatta Wednesday commissioned the Kshs 42 billion Isiolo-Moyale road which connects Kenya to Ethiopia, the second most populous country in Africa.
The Isiolo-Moyale highway is a key plank of the Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia (LAPSSET) Corridor Project.
The road project was implemented in three phases: 121 Km Merille River-Marsabit, 121 Km Marsabit-Turbi and 121 Km Turbi-Moyale.
Addressing residents in Moyale town, President Kenyatta said the commissioning of the new road and the Isiolo International Airport last Sunday will promote cross-border trade and lift the lives of Kenyans.
“There will no longer be challenges of traveling and even accessing markets for our goods and services. With this road and the Isiolo international airport, Kenyans are sure of improving their economy,” said President Kenyatta.
He added: “As you have heard, it used to take three days to travel from here to Isiolo and Nairobi, now it takes only hours.”
The President, who was accompanied by Deputy President William Ruto, said the Jubilee Administration also implementing the Lamu port project which will be completed by next year.
He said once complete the Government will launch the construction of Lamu-Garissa-Isiolo road which will open up the second transport corridor in Kenya.
“With the opening up of this road, Moyale will become a market centre for Kenyan goods and services. Our brothers from Ethiopia will be coming here to purchase goods from us,” said President Kenyatta.
“Once all these projects are complete, Moyale residents will not be waking up saying they are going to Kenya. Rather they will enjoy all services like other Kenyan citizens,” he added.
Coupled with the planned resort city of Isiolo as well as the Isiolo International Airport, the Isiolo-Moyale road will significantly boost security and tourism in Northern Kenya.
The new road is also set to open up Northern tourism belt to increase the tourism activities in Mt. Kenya, Samburu, Meru, Aberdares and Marsabit National Parks as well as the wildlife conservancies within the region.
President Kenyatta said the reason he is seeking a second term, is so that Jubilee can entrench the transformational development trend the country has embarked on over the last four-and-a-half years.
He urged Kenyans to vote for Jubilee to prevent the opposition from derailing the foundation for economic growth and shared prosperity that his Administration has laid in the last four-and-a-half years.
“We have expanded electricity connections more than ten times what was there previously. We have offered free maternity services to all mothers delivering in public hospitals and next year we will expand NHIF services to provide health insurance cover for mother and child for one year to ensure robust health,” said President Kenyatta.
He called on the residents to come out in large numbers on August 8 and vote for him and his team.
“We are kindly requesting for your votes. On August 8, please come out and vote peaceful. I don’t want people to fight because of elections,” said the President.
The President said his Government will also offer free day secondary school education from form one to form four to ensure quality education for all Kenyan children.
He thanked the African Development Bank (AfDB) and other donors for financing the Isiolo-Moyale road project.
Deputy President Ruto said the Jubilee Administration has ensured equitable development across the country through various projects aimed at improving the livelihoods of all Kenyans.
“The journey which used to take three days has now been reduced to eight hours. In 2013 there were only 800 households connected to electricity in Marsabit County, now we have expanded it to 10,000 homes,” said the Deputy President.
He urged Moyale residents to reject the opposition, which has nothing to offer in terms of development, and instead vote for Jubilee whose development delivery track record speaks for itself.
Other speakers included the gubernatorial candidates for Marsabit County Mohamed Mohamud Ali (Jubilee) and Ukur Yattani (Frontier Alliance Party). Read more here

Shops close in Ethiopian capital over tax dispute

(iStock)
Addis Ababa - Shops closed their doors in Addis Ababa's largest market on Tuesday in protest at a recent hike in business taxes, bringing anger over the policy to the nation's capital.
Small businesses receiving their annual assessments have found themselves taxed at rates up to four times higher than in previous years.
That is according to residents of two towns outside Addis Ababa where strikes started earlier this month.
Both towns are in Oromia, where violent anti-government protests broke out in 2015 that were only quelled when a nationwide state of emergency was imposed last October.
Since then, Oromia has mostly been at peace, but this week's strike is one of the first instance of widespread, organised resistance against the government since the emergency decree.
Shops and bus companies in the Oromia town on Incinni closed for three days last week in protest of the tax hike, a local resident told AFP on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.
Protesters who marched from a market to the district administration to demand the levies be decreased were turned back by security forces, the resident added.
They are "angry because the tax promulgation is unfair, and scared to protest because if they do a shooting might occur," the resident said.
Businesses also closed in Ambo, a flashpoint during the 2015-2016 unrest, a resident there said.
Federal police officers in the town threatened shopkeepers who weren't open during business hours.
On Tuesday, an AFP reporter said a minority of shops in the capital's largest market Mercato hadn't opened, and some striking shopkeepers said they had received letters threatening consequences if they did not come to work.
Many merchants declined to speak in detail about the strike for fear of government retaliation, and around 10 plainclothes security officers forced an AFP reporter to leave Mercato.
The strike comes at a sensitive time for Africa's second most-populous nation, still under emergency rule.
The government has denied raising taxes, with Fasika Belay, a spokesman for the Ethiopian Revenues and Customs Authority (ERCA), saying that perhaps businesses are "confused" on how levies are calculated. Read more here

Ethiopia Today: Ethiopian Instrumental - Full Album

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Body of MSUM swimming instructor heading home to Ethiopia

MOORHEAD —— The body of the 24-year-old Minnesota State University Moorhead swimming instructor who died in the Red River earlier this summer is heading home to Ethiopia after a successful crowdfunding campaign to pay for travel costs.
Friends of Fanuel Shewarega Asrat set up a GoFundMe page following Asrat's death, which was confirmed July 1 when crews discovered his body in the river after he went missing June 29.
The online fundraising goal of $19,290 was reached to cover the costs of sending Asrat back to his home country nearly 8,000 miles away.
Some of the funds will also be used to cover funeral costs and student debt.
Fanuel was a senior at MSUM, majoring in economics. His LinkedIn account showed that he was a swimming instructor there. He also served as treasurer of the MSUM Economics Society and as an accountant and bookkeeper for the university's Roland Dille Center for the Arts.
Asrat described himself on the website as an "economist by training, inquisitive through instinct, hard working by choice."
MSUM spokesman Dave Wahlberg said the university will be hosting a vigil for Asrat when students return to campus from summer break. A specific date for a vigil has has not been set. Read more here
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