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SOMALIA CONCERNS
 

Despite a long questions and answers session in Parliament last Thursday (the first one based on the Parliament's brand new Code of Conduct), the Prime Minster felt compelled to call a impromptu press conference on November 25, to clarify his position on the latest events in Somalia. Thursday's talk of inflation, anti-corruption and solving religious extremism all of a sudden seemed very far away.For excerpts from saturday's press conference Click Here

 
Meles Speaks Out On Inflation

For the past month, state media had been busy talking to economists, political leaders, and even ordinary members of the society about their reactions to the increasing rate of inflation, about which there seems to be unanimous agreement among sellers and consumers, as well as among opposition as well as ruling political leaders. Click here for the prime minister's Thursday comments on inflation.

   
 
PM’s Office to Rescue Drug Companies

The Office of the Prime Minister ordered that recent moves to auction foreclosed pharmaceutical companies to be stopped until the industry’s problems were investigated.
 

As per the instruction from the Prime Minister’s Office, a committee, headed by a Ministry of Trade and Industry (MoTI) representative, was formed last week to study the problems faced by foreclosed companies as well as by the entire pharmaceutical industry and to propose solutions. Other committee members include the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development (MoFED) as well as representatives of the two banks involved.

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DBE Gets New Credit Policy

The Development Bank of Ethiopia (DBE) has introduced the fourth credit policy of its 98-year history.
 

The new policy, which has 64 pages, was approved by the Board of Management, chaired by Minister of Revenue, Melaku Fenta, in October; it has become operational this month.

It prioritises export, manufacturing industries and agro-processing sectors, and has demoted coffee, oilseeds, pulses, and gums from their position of traditional importance. Hides and skins have also been excluded from the prioritised list of all manufacturing industry products. 

   
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CBE Monopolizes China Export Banking

The nation’s central bank, National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE), has ordered that all bank processes concerning items being exported to China shall be undertaken and overseen by the Commercial Bank of Ethiopia (CBE) only.
 

NBE, which has the authority to regulate all financial institutions in the country, held a meeting with state and private-owned banks and issued the new order, which stated that the process of all exports going to China shall be handled by CBE alone and that no other bank can take part in these transactions.

   
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Ring Road Makeover


Tired of damaging hit-and-run accidents, the Addis Ababa City Roads Authority (AACRA) has floated a tender to clean the Ring Road and provide security to prevent future damages. There have been numerous accidents on the Road since it opened in June 2004, although cumulative figures were not available. The winner of the tender will be responsible for turning people who cause damage to the Road over to police through a mechanism that is yet to be arranged. It will also forward plate numbers to police of wrongdoing vehicles. AACRA Public Relations Officer, Negussie Sineshaw, told Fortune that the Authority and respective Districts had tried to clean segments of the road, as they do certain roads within their jurisdictions, but with little success.
 

(Compiled by FORTUNE Staff Writer, Feven Chane)
 

Ghosts of a Proletarian Past

“Let All Stand Guard for the Revolutionary Mortherland!” greets the sign in the Akaki-Kaliti District of Addis Abeba. This sign once welcomed attendees to a parade ground that, during the Soviet blessed military regime, more often than not celebrated the socialist vanguard and the brotherhood of comrades. Those days are long gone now, but interestingly, the sign, with all its ideological baggage, still remains intact. When is the next parade?

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

Expert Corner

Making Business Work for the Poor


There has been a big change in the United Nation’s engagement with    the private sector, influenced by its stewardship of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG). It was the urgent need to enhance the contribution of the private sector in achieving the MDGs that prompted Secretary General Kofi Annan to appoint a commission to examine how the role of the private sector in this major global effort could be maximised.

 

The Commission on the Private Sector and Development was convened to answer two questions: How can the potential of the private sector and entrepreneurship be unleashed in developing countries? How can the existing private sector be engaged in meeting that challenge?

Read More...

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
NEWS  
     
 

Nib Profits Fall as Regulatory Questions Loom

     
 

Amid concerns that the company's current practices may break industry regulations, Nib Insurance Company announced that it earned 3.4 million Br net profit in 2005-2006, which is less than what it made the previous year at 5.7 million Br.
 

But the company did manage to increase its gross written premiums from 33 million Br in 2004-2005 to 46 million Br this fiscal year, a 40pc rise.

 
 
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Customs Lawyer Cleared in One Case, Still Faces Another

     
 

The Federal High Court dropped one of the charges brought forward by the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission against the former Legal Department Head of the Ethiopian Customs Authority (ECA), Yohannes WoldeGebriel, who was also once chief prosecutor at the same Commission.

 
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Liquor Co’s Establish Alcohol Factory

     
 

MALCO S.C., established by local liquor companies to mitigate problems of pure alcohol shortage, is preparing to begin production in the end of the 2006/2007 budget year.
 

Located 73km from Addis Abeba in Mojjo town, in the Oromia Regional State, the company was established with a capital of eight million Birr. Construction of the plant has already been completed on 7,000sqm of land, and preparations are underway to import machinery from England, according to a source.

 
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Six Found Guilty of Kidnapping and Extortion

     
 

Six people, including members of the Ministry of National Defence (MoND) and the Federal Police Commission, who were charged by the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission for kidnapping and extortion, have been sentenced to 14 years of imprisonment and 2,000Br each in penalty fees.

 
 
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Agency Wants 28m Br before Returning Adama Factory

     
 

The Nazareth Soap Factory, which was established by two businessmen in 1976, was returned to its rightful owners 26 years after forced nationalisation; but although the return was publicly announced in September 2006, the proprietors have yet to receive the Factory.
 

The reason for the delay is that the owners are expected to make a 28 million Br payment before the hand-over is actualized. The money request is a reimbursement for three machines that were installed at the Factory during state ownership.

 
 
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House to Dissolve Social Rehab & Development Fund

     
 

The House of Peoples’ Representatives debated on November 23, 2006 a draft proclamation calling for for the dissolution of the Ethiopian Social Rehabilitation and Development Fund (ESRDF).
 

The Council of Ministers drafted the proclamation after concluding that the purpose of the Fund - undertaking emergency rehabilitation and development projects as needs arose - was no longer there and that federal and regional government bodies were already carrying out the works previously undertaken by ESRDF, creating duplication of activities.

 
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Eng. Capacity Building Program Picks Co.’s

     
 

The Engineering Capacity Building Program (ECBP), a government led collaboration between Ethiopia and Germany, has chosen 12 private companies to include in its first phase.
 

The program, which is being undertaken by the Ministry of Capacity Building (MoCB) and the German Technical Corporation (GTZ), started work in 2005. The 174 million euro program is funded by both governments, with 94 million euros funded by the German Government and 80 million euros funded by Ethiopia.

 
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Ambo Factory Relaunches Partner Search

     
 

The Ambo Mineral Water Factory has cancelled a call for joint venture Expressions of Interest (EOI) and replaced it with another one. The first time around, it received responses from three international companies.
 

The sparkling water bottler is located 130Km west of Addis Abeba in the Oromia Regional State, five kilometres from Ambo town, and was established over 70 years ago. It announced the EOI with its eye on a 147.3 million Br expansion and renovation plan.

 
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Controversial ICT Master Plan Tender Cancelled

     
 

The push to complete a national ICT master plan that would eventually connect federal offices nationwide was stymied recently when the Ethiopian Information and Communication Technology Development Agency (EICTDA) suddenly cancelled a controversial tender issued to find a consultancy firm to prepare it.

 
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Factories Still Waiting for Scrap Metal Privilege
 

 

 
  Representatives from five steel manufacturing factories complained to Kassu Ilala, Minister of Works and Urban Development (MoWUD), that the privilege given them to manufacture reinforcement bars for the Ministry’s housing project has not been upheld by the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development (MoFED).  
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Turkish Trade Fair Embraces Muslim Neighbours

     
 

Turkey's long coveted ascendance to the European Union has once again met resistance by its neighbours to the West. As the country reassesses its options, Turkish businessmen are looking to the rest of the world. Its predominantly  Muslim neighbours to the East, of course, are becoming logical partners, but other county's like Ethiopia are fast becoming trading partners too.

 
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REVIEW-The Convergence on Inflation

     
 

Viewers of Ethiopian Television have had a rare occasion of being exposed to debate on an issue so dear to the individual consumer: what to make of the double digit inflation.

With the exception of the opinion of Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Genetu Teshome, those on the show televised on Wednesday and Thursday, November 15 and 16, 2006, were far from reflecting the official line.

 
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INTERVIEW-LUCY Ethiopia’s Texan Star

     
 

Four years ago, the Ethio-American Trade and Investment Council invited an Ethiopian delegation led by then Minister of Trade and Industry, Kasahun Ayele, currently Ambassador to Berlin, to visit four different American states and explore Ethiopian cultural exhibition possibilities. On the Houston leg of the visit, the team sat down in a Mexican restaurant and began seriously envisioning a wide-ranging exhibit that could attract millions of people, one that would include a six-year loan of Lucy, Ethiopia’s beloved fossil. According to Dirk Van Tuerenhout, PhD Curator of Anthropology at the Houston Museum of Natural Science, Lucy will be the real star for his museum’s visitors when the show opens just under a year from now. But are the benefits worth the risks? Tamrat G. Giorgis, FORTUNE STAFF WRITER, sat down with Dr. Tuerenhout to find out.

 
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