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/ 24 October 2006
Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said on Tuesday Ethiopia was ”technically” at war with Somalia’s Islamists because they had declared jihad on his nation. ”The jihadist elements within the Islamic Court movement are spoiling for a fight. They’ve been declaring jihad against Ethiopia almost every other week,” Meles told Reuters in an interview. ”Technically we are at war.”
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/ 19 October 2006
Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi on Thursday urged Eritrea and rebel groups he said it supports to talk peace and stop trying to destabilise his Horn of Africa country. The United Nations said Eritrea’s decision to move troops and tanks into a United Nations buffer zone between the two countries was a ”major breach” of a 2000 peace agreement.
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/ 18 October 2006
South African President Thabo Mbeki has ended his mediation role in Côte d’Ivoire’s political crisis and a regional body recommended that the heads of the African Union and a West African body replace him. ”President Mbeki’s mediation role in Cote d’Ivoire has ended upon his own request,” African Union chairperson Denis Sassou Nguesso said on Tuesday.
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/ 17 October 2006
Ethiopia said on Tuesday that Eritrea’s deployment of troops and tanks to a demilitarised buffer zone along their border was just the latest in series of violations of a 2000 truce. Addis Ababa said it was ”carefully monitoring” the situation in the so-called Temporary Security Zone along the frontier.
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/ 10 October 2006
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo warned of a possible genocide in the Darfur region on Tuesday, as cash-strapped African peacekeepers struggle to stem the violence in Sudan’s remote west. Nigeria is the largest troop-contributing nation to the African Union (AU) force in Darfur, which is caught in an international diplomatic tug-of-war over a United Nations takeover of the peacekeeping mission.
The African Union needs increased United Nations support if it is to continue its peacekeeping operation in Darfur, European Commission aid chief Louis Michel said on Monday. ”In the current situation, the AU cannot assume completely the job if it does not have an important contribution from the UN.,” Michel told reporters at the AU headquarters.
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/ 26 September 2006
Europe will give tens of millions in additional aid to the cash-strapped African Union when European Union commissioners make a landmark visit to the bloc’s headquarters next week, officials said on Tuesday. As the pan-African body struggles to keep afloat and expand its peacekeeping mission in Sudan’s troubled Darfur region, the European Commission will donate â,¬55-million.
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/ 25 September 2006
The African Union will add 4Â 000 troops to its extended Darfur peacekeeping mission, bringing the number of police and soldiers in western Sudan to 11Â 000, a spokesperson for the AU said on Monday. ”The Peace and Security Council of the AU … has endorsed the new concept of operation,” said Assan Ba, spokesperson for the AU in Addis Ababa.
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/ 19 September 2006
The death toll from a diarrhoea epidemic in Ethiopia has climbed to at least 182, with nearly 20Â 000 others infected since the outbreak erupted in June, the United Nations said on Tuesday. The UN humanitarian agency said the disease had spread to five Ethiopian regions that were ravaged by devastating floods.
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/ 14 September 2006
Devastating floods are continuing to ravage large parts of Ethiopia since heavy rains first burst river banks last month, unleashing killer torrents of water, the United Nations said this week. Across the country, flooding has affected about 357Â 000 people, more than 136Â 000 of whom are homeless.
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/ 8 September 2006
Ethiopia said it has arrested nine members of a rebel hit squad that was planning to assassinate government leaders, state media reported on Friday. The suspects were working for the rebel Oromo Liberation Front, which has been fighting for greater autonomy in southern Ethiopia, the National Intelligence and Security Service said.
Ethiopia on Friday appealed for at least -million to help thousands of people displaced by fatal floods that have ravaged the Horn of Africa nation since the beginning of this month amid fears of more floods. As emergency workers struggled against poor weather, federal authorities said the funding would help alleviate suffering in the flooded regions.
Two global rights groups on Wednesday expressed grave concern over the treatment of several Ethiopian prisoners detained for months since violent protests over disputed elections last year. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists and London-based Amnesty International decried the conditions in which three detainees are being held.
Heavy rain, swirling waters, mud, silt and marsh combined on Wednesday to hamper frantic efforts to reach thousands of villagers marooned by deadly flash floods in southern Ethiopia, officials said. The elements, combined with the reluctance of pastoralist herders to leave their surviving cattle for higher ground, frustrated the delivery of the first overland relief supplies.
The first overland relief supplies for tens of thousands of victims of fatal flash floods reached devastated southern Ethiopia on Tuesday, amid fears of a sharp rise in the death toll. In addition to the 626 people known so far to have been killed across the country, thousands of heads of valuable livestock have drowned.
Diarrhoea has killed 150 people and infected nearly 12Â 000 in flood-ravaged Ethiopia, the United Nations said on Monday, as aid agencies and governments struggled to deliver food and supplies to tens of thousands left homeless. Flash floods that began swamping villages and towns earlier this month have already killed about 900 people.
Ethiopia on Monday stepped up evacuation warnings in low-lying areas as heavy rains threatened more of the flash floods that have already killed at least 600 people and affected tens of thousands around the country. Authorities said unusually heavy seasonal downpours in the highlands have raised water levels to a critical level at three dams.
Emergency workers in south-west Ethiopia scrambled on Thursday to rescue thousands marooned by the latest in a series of deadly flash floods across the nation feared to have killed nearly 900 people. With 876 people in southern, eastern and northern Ethiopia already reported dead or missing, officials warned that the toll was likely to climb higher.
The death toll from devastating floods in south-west Ethiopia soared to 364 on Wednesday, police said, bringing to almost 900 the number killed or missing in raging waters nationwide this month. Authorities said they feared for the worst and were preparing for the possibility that several hundred more may have drowned from weekend flooding.
Ethiopia braced on Wednesday for a sharp rise in the death toll from flash floods that have killed at least 455 people in the south and east of the country this month and have now spread north. As efforts continued to rescue up to 20 000 people marooned in the south and locate 250 missing in the east, new floods were reported north of the capital.
Rescuers battled heavy rains in south-west Ethiopia on Tuesday to save up to 20 000 people marooned by floods that killed at least 125 on the weekend as forecasters warned of more downpours. Poor weather grounded helicopter flights in the remote region, forcing authorities to deploy emergency personnel by boat to at least five inundated villages.
At least 125 people were killed overnight and up to 20 000 marooned by flood waters in south-west Ethiopia after swollen rivers broke their banks and swept through villages, police said on Monday. ”The death toll has reached 125,” Inspector Daniel Gezhegn, a police spokesperson, said. The floodwaters swept through five villages.
Five people have drowned and hundreds been displaced in northern Ethiopia since midweek after swollen rivers burst their banks, officials said on Friday. The flooding, which started on Wednesday, comes less than a week after flash floods killed 254 in an eastern township of the country.
Hopes faded on Tuesday for finding survivors from hundreds of people missing after murderous weekend flash floods devastated a town in eastern Ethiopia, officials and residents said. With the death toll from flooding in and around Dire Dawa hovering at 206, they said frantic rescue efforts were continuing but conceded chances were slim.
The death toll from flash floods in eastern Ethiopia has risen to at least 190, with 39 children among the victims, an official said on Monday. Floods tore through the eastern town of Dire Dawa early on Sunday, and as many as 10 000 people have been displaced in and around the town.
At least 72 people were killed early on Sunday in flash floods after an intense, sudden downpour pounded eastern Ethiopia, many of the victims swept away while asleep, medical officials and rescue workers said. Doctors said they had received bodies from villages that were inundated in the country’s Dire Dawa region.
Three explosions in Dire Dawa, a railway town in eastern Ethiopia, on Monday caused minor damage but no injuries, a police official said. Police had arrested one person suspected of involvement and an investigation was continuing. While such explosions are relatively rare in Ethiopia, Addis Ababa this year has been hit by several mysterious blasts.
Ethiopia’s 1 700-year-old obelisk, returned to the country 14 months ago, will be re-erected after the rainy season that ends in September, the United Nations agency in charge of culture said on Monday. Stolen by Italian fascist invaders in the 1930s, the Ethiopian national treasure was returned in April last year.
Horn of Africa power Ethiopia said on Thursday it was tracking military movements by Somalia’s newly powerful Islamists and would ”crush” any attack on President Abdullahi Yusuf’s interim government. ”We will use all means at our disposal to crush the Islamist group if they attempt to attack Baidoa, the seat of the transitional federal government,” said Ethiopian Information Minister Berhan Hailu.
The United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) issued an urgent appeal on Monday for ,7-million to save the lives of hundreds of thousands of children in Ethiopia. Unicef said that unless it secured the funding, it would have to cancel the second half of a programme that reaches seven million children twice a year.
The International Development Association, an arm of the World Bank, has written off ,616-billion of Ethiopia’s debt under the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative, the bank’s country office disclosed on Wednesday. In a statement, the World Bank said Ethiopia’s economic performance over the past three years had been ”strong and broad-based”.
Members of a group listed by the United States as a terrorist band are now running the capital of neighbouring Somalia, days after Islamic fighters wrested control of the city from warlords, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said on Tuesday. ”The renowned extremist and terrorist organisation, al-Ittihad, is at the helm of the current leadership in Mogadishu,” Meles told lawmakers.