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Showing posts with label Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. Show all posts
Friday, August 5, 2011
UN News: SC President H.E. Mr. Hardeep Singh Puri (India) on thedeath of four Ethiopian peacekeepers in Sudan, Posted by Menelik Zeleke
03 August 2011
Informal comments to the media by H.E. Mr. Hardeep Singh Puri, Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations and President of the Security Council for the month of August on the death of four Ethiopian peacekeepers in Sudan and the situation in Syria.
Friday, June 3, 2011
Ethiopia commutes death sentences on Mengistu officers, Posted by Meosha Eaton
* Ex-dictator, officers sentenced for genocide in 2008
* Mengistu not in group
* Group, religious leaders appealed for leniency
By Aaron Maasho
ADDIS ABABA, June 3 (Reuters) - Ethiopia said on Wednesday it had commuted the death sentences of 23 of former dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam's henchmen convicted of genocide in 2008, reducing the penalties to life imprisonment after an appeal.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Ethiopia exports up 48 pct in 8 months to March - PM, Posted by Meosha Eaton
* Coffee exporter targets $3 bln for 2010/2011
* Meles sees growth for year at projected levels
By Barry Malone
ADDIS ABABA, April 5 (Reuters) - Ethiopia's exports rose 48 percent in the eight months to March, its prime minister said, rallying after Africa's biggest coffee exporter missed its revenue target in first-half 2010/11.
Though still one of the world's poorest nations, Ethiopia has posted double-digit growth rates for six consecutive years, according to government figures, making it Africa's fastest growing non-oil producer.
The country targets $939.5 million in coffee exports this year, nearly double the $528 million it earned during the 2009/2010 fiscal year.
Ethiopia devalued its birr currencyby 16.7 percent in September last year to bolster competitiveness, the fourth such move since 2009.
Zenawi said last month that the devaluation had boosted exports in the past six months and helped narrow the country's burgeoning trade gap, although analysts have expressed concern the devaluation may risk importing inflation.
Officials had set a goal of $1.29 billion in revenue for the first half of the financial year (July-Dec), but its earnings by the end of that period met 86 percent of that at $1.11 billion.
The country set a target of $3 billion in revenue this year after a resurgence of coffee sales and diversification into new commodities earned $2 billion in the previous fiscal year (July-June).
"Exports increased by 48 percent," Meles Zenawi told parliament on Tuesday, in an eight-month performance update. "Agricultural output grew by 12.57 percent."
He said the economy was expected to grow by 11.2 percent this year, in line with projections.
Meles told Reuters in November the economy would grow at between the 11 percent predicted by his finance ministry and 15 percent.
Authorities reject claims from the opposition and some foreign analysts that it inflates growth figures to attract investment. (Editing by Ruth Pitchford' Ron Askew)
* Meles sees growth for year at projected levels
By Barry Malone
ADDIS ABABA, April 5 (Reuters) - Ethiopia's exports rose 48 percent in the eight months to March, its prime minister said, rallying after Africa's biggest coffee exporter missed its revenue target in first-half 2010/11.
Though still one of the world's poorest nations, Ethiopia has posted double-digit growth rates for six consecutive years, according to government figures, making it Africa's fastest growing non-oil producer.
The country targets $939.5 million in coffee exports this year, nearly double the $528 million it earned during the 2009/2010 fiscal year.
Ethiopia devalued its birr currency
Zenawi said last month that the devaluation had boosted exports in the past six months and helped narrow the country's burgeoning trade gap, although analysts have expressed concern the devaluation may risk importing inflation.
Officials had set a goal of $1.29 billion in revenue for the first half of the financial year (July-Dec), but its earnings by the end of that period met 86 percent of that at $1.11 billion.
The country set a target of $3 billion in revenue this year after a resurgence of coffee sales and diversification into new commodities earned $2 billion in the previous fiscal year (July-June).
"Exports increased by 48 percent," Meles Zenawi told parliament on Tuesday, in an eight-month performance update. "Agricultural output grew by 12.57 percent."
He said the economy was expected to grow by 11.2 percent this year, in line with projections.
Meles told Reuters in November the economy would grow at between the 11 percent predicted by his finance ministry and 15 percent.
Authorities reject claims from the opposition and some foreign analysts that it inflates growth figures to attract investment. (Editing by Ruth Pitchford' Ron Askew)
Friday, April 1, 2011
Ethiopia PM says anti-dam groups keep Africa poor, Posted by Meosha Eaton
* Ethiopia building huge dams to beat power shortages
* Says western campaigners only focus on Africa
By Barry Malone
ADDIS ABABA, March 31 (Reuters) - Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi denounced Westerners on Thursday campaigning against hydropower dam projects in Africa as "borderline criminal" and said they were helping to keep Africans poor.
Ethiopia is building five hydropower dams -- some funded by the World Bank -- and announced on Wednesday that it would shortly start building a huge 5,250 megawatt (MW) dam on the Nile, despite an escalating row with Egypt over the river's use.
Western NGOs have been campaigning against some of the dams on environmental or human rights grounds.
"These people will not allow the disturbance of butterflies even if this means millions of people have to be subjected to the deadliest killer disease of all -- poverty," Meles told a conference on hydropower in Africa in Addis Ababa.
"I am not a believer in conspiracy theories but, if I were, I would conclude that these people want Africa to remain as it is with all its misery and poverty so they can come and visit nature in its pristine state in winter every so often."
Meles said the groups were from Europe and the U.S.
Power shortages are common in Africa and have hindered investment, even though the continent has abundant potential resources of solar, hydro, oil, gas, coal and geothermal power.
Ethiopia aims to produce 15,000MW of power within 10 years as part of a plan to spend $12 billion over 25 years to overcome chronic power shortages and export to other African countries.
One of the Ethiopian dams, the 1.4 billion euro Gibe III that is expected to generate 1,800MW, has been the subject of a major international campaign over the rights of tribal people.
Over 400 NGOs led by Survival International this month signed a petition against Gibe III. They say that 200,000 Ethiopians who rely on fishing and farming may become dependent on aid to survive if the dam goes ahead.
Meles said the impact of the dam projects would be "negligible" and those affected would be compensated.
"These groups have done virtually nothing to stop their countries from building all the dams they can while at the same time single-handedly subjecting our planet to the threat of catastrophe because of global warming," Meles said.
"(Yet) they are trying to stop projects in poor countries like Ethiopia that are infinitely more environmentally and socially responsible."
Meles is Africa's usual lead negotiator at climate change talks and has in the past suggested European carbon emissions caused his country's 1984/85 famine.
(Editing by Richard Lough and Elizabeth Fullerton)
* Says western campaigners only focus on Africa
By Barry Malone
ADDIS ABABA, March 31 (Reuters) - Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi denounced Westerners on Thursday campaigning against hydropower dam projects in Africa as "borderline criminal" and said they were helping to keep Africans poor.
Ethiopia is building five hydropower dams -- some funded by the World Bank -- and announced on Wednesday that it would shortly start building a huge 5,250 megawatt (MW) dam on the Nile, despite an escalating row with Egypt over the river's use.
Western NGOs have been campaigning against some of the dams on environmental or human rights grounds.
"These people will not allow the disturbance of butterflies even if this means millions of people have to be subjected to the deadliest killer disease of all -- poverty," Meles told a conference on hydropower in Africa in Addis Ababa.
"I am not a believer in conspiracy theories but, if I were, I would conclude that these people want Africa to remain as it is with all its misery and poverty so they can come and visit nature in its pristine state in winter every so often."
Meles said the groups were from Europe and the U.S.
Power shortages are common in Africa and have hindered investment, even though the continent has abundant potential resources of solar, hydro, oil, gas, coal and geothermal power.
Ethiopia aims to produce 15,000MW of power within 10 years as part of a plan to spend $12 billion over 25 years to overcome chronic power shortages and export to other African countries.
One of the Ethiopian dams, the 1.4 billion euro Gibe III that is expected to generate 1,800MW, has been the subject of a major international campaign over the rights of tribal people.
Over 400 NGOs led by Survival International this month signed a petition against Gibe III. They say that 200,000 Ethiopians who rely on fishing and farming may become dependent on aid to survive if the dam goes ahead.
Meles said the impact of the dam projects would be "negligible" and those affected would be compensated.
"These groups have done virtually nothing to stop their countries from building all the dams they can while at the same time single-handedly subjecting our planet to the threat of catastrophe because of global warming," Meles said.
"(Yet) they are trying to stop projects in poor countries like Ethiopia that are infinitely more environmentally and socially responsible."
Meles is Africa's usual lead negotiator at climate change talks and has in the past suggested European carbon emissions caused his country's 1984/85 famine.
(Editing by Richard Lough and Elizabeth Fullerton)
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Meles : High time for Africa to discuss on alternative dev't paradigms, Posted by Meosha Eaton
Addis Ababa, March 28, 2011 (Addis Ababa) - Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said that it is high time for Africa that issues of alternative development paradigms be discussed.
Meles said comparative studies of Africa's development and that of a number of Asian countries have shown that the neo-liberal paradigm cannot bring about economic transformation or sustained and accelerated growth.
Meles was speaking here on Monday at the opening of the 4th Joint AU/ECA Conference of Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development .
The Premier said the primary objective of a developmental state would be to bring about radical transformation of the political economy of a country such that value creation through producing globally competitive products and services becomes the only dominant path to wealth accumulation.
He said this task is done through both removing all bottlenecks to production activities, including by providing comprehensive support to such actors and by systematically eliminating the sources of unproductive rent-seeking activities.
Meles said the present meeting should enable to explore the possibilities of a new development paradigm centered on the establishment of developmental states.
Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Dr. Jean Ping on the occasion said Africa registered 5.7 per cent economic growth in 2010 budget year.
Dr. Ping said structural change is significant to make sustainable the economic growth and also curb basic development problems of the African people.
Therefore, Africans are expected to implement new alternative development principle, he said.
UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ECA, Abdoulie Janneh on his part stressed the need for African states to play significant role in the efforts to speed up development.
The theme of the conference entitled "Governing Development in Africa" indicates that states are expected to play significant role towards the same goal, he said.
Meles said comparative studies of Africa's development and that of a number of Asian countries have shown that the neo-liberal paradigm cannot bring about economic transformation or sustained and accelerated growth.
Meles was speaking here on Monday at the opening of the 4th Joint AU/ECA Conference of Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development .
The Premier said the primary objective of a developmental state would be to bring about radical transformation of the political economy of a country such that value creation through producing globally competitive products and services becomes the only dominant path to wealth accumulation.
He said this task is done through both removing all bottlenecks to production activities, including by providing comprehensive support to such actors and by systematically eliminating the sources of unproductive rent-seeking activities.
Meles said the present meeting should enable to explore the possibilities of a new development paradigm centered on the establishment of developmental states.
Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Dr. Jean Ping on the occasion said Africa registered 5.7 per cent economic growth in 2010 budget year.
Dr. Ping said structural change is significant to make sustainable the economic growth and also curb basic development problems of the African people.
Therefore, Africans are expected to implement new alternative development principle, he said.
UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ECA, Abdoulie Janneh on his part stressed the need for African states to play significant role in the efforts to speed up development.
The theme of the conference entitled "Governing Development in Africa" indicates that states are expected to play significant role towards the same goal, he said.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
MACTV News: PM Meles calls on Diaspora Ethiopian to strengthen dev't efforts , Posted by Menelik Zeleke
Addis Ababa, February 21 (WIC) – Prime Minister
Meles Zenawi has urged Ethiopians in the Diaspora to strengthen their
joint efforts in the endeavors to successfully implement the five-year
Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP).
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