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Brazil to boost investments in Ethiopia
By Aaron Maasho | Reuters
2 hrs 59 mins ago

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Brazil signed cooperative agreements with Ethiopia on Friday and Brazilian companies are looking to expand investments in the fast-growing Horn of Africa country, an Ethiopian minister said.

Ethiopia's State Minister of Foreign Affairs Berhane Gebrekristos said a visiting Brazilian delegation had signed memorandums of understanding and agreements on education, agriculture, science and technology, and air transport.

Gebrekristos said Brazilian firms are showing an interest in Ethiopia's mining and infrastructure sectors, while officials from Brazil's state-controlled oil company Petrobras and development bank BNDES formed part of Brazil's delegation in Addis Ababa.

"There is a desire on the part of Brazilian companies to involve themselves here and the government along with us is ready to inform Brazilian enterprises to engage in Ethiopia as there is a huge opportunity here," Gebrekristos told journalists in Addis Ababa on the sidelines of an African Union summit.

"In terms of financing, there is a political commitment on the part of the Brazilian government that we are going to work on specific projects in the future," he said.

Latin America's leading economy has launched a drive to expand its economic ties with Africa, a sign of how crises in the rich world are pushing faster-growing emerging economies to trade and invest among themselves, economists say.

The BRICs countries - comprising Brazil, China, India and Russia - are now Africa's largest trading partners and its biggest new group of investors. BRICs-Africa trade is seen eclipsing $500 billion by 2015, according to Standard Bank.

http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-boost-investments-ethiopia-074357484.html
 
Thousands march for rights in rare Ethiopia protest

Thousands march for rights in rare Ethiopia protest
By Aaron Maasho | Reuters
7 hrs ago

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - About 10,000 Ethiopians staged an anti-government procession on Sunday in the first large-scale protest since a disputed 2005 election ended in street violence that killed 200 people.

The demonstrators marched through Addis Ababa's northern Arat Kilo and Piazza districts before gathering at Churchill Avenue in front of a looming obelisk with a giant red star perched on top, a relic of Ethiopia's violent Communist past.

Some carried banners reading "Justice! Justice! Justice!" and some bore pictures of imprisoned opposition figures. Others chanted, "We call for respect of the constitution".

A few police officers watched the demonstration, for which the authorities had granted permission.

"We have repeatedly asked the government to release political leaders, journalists and those who asked the government not to intervene in religious affairs," said Yilekal Getachew, chairman of the Semayawi (Blue) Party which organized the protests.

He said the demonstrators also wanted action to tackle unemployment, inflation and corruption.

"If these questions are not resolved and no progress is made in the next three months, we will organize more protests. It is the beginning of our struggle," he told Reuters.

Government officials were not immediately available for comment.

ANTI-TERRORISM LAW

Ethiopian opposition parties routinely accuse the government of harassment and say their candidates are often intimidated in polls. The 547-seat legislature has only one opposition member.

Though its economy is one of the fastest-growing in Africa, Ethiopia is often criticized by human rights watchdogs for clamping down on opposition and the media on national security grounds, a charge the government denies.

Critics point to a 2009 anti-terrorism law that makes anyone caught publishing information that could induce readers into acts of terrorism liable to jail terms of 10 to 20 years.

Last year, an Ethiopian court handed sentences of eight years to life to 20 journalists, opposition figures and others for conspiring with rebels to topple the government.

More than 10 journalists have been charged under the anti-terrorism law, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, which says Ethiopia has the highest number of exiled journalists in the world.

Muslims, who form about a third of Ethiopia's mostly Christian population, staged mosque sit-ins in 2012, accusing the government of meddling in religious affairs and jailing their leaders.

Ethiopia, long seen by the West as a bulwark against radical Islamists in neighboring Somalia, denies interfering, but says it fears militant Islam is taking root in the country.

http://news.yahoo.com/thousands-march-rights-rare-ethiopia-protest-160548831.html
 
Ethiopia ratifies Nile accord opposed by Egypt

Ethiopia ratifies Nile accord opposed by Egypt
By KIRUBEL TADESSE | Associated Press
1 hr 20 mins ago

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Ethiopia's parliament on Thursday ratified an accord that replaces colonial-era deals that awarded Egypt and Sudan the majority of the world's longest river.

The vote comes amid a bout of verbal jousting between Ethiopia and Egypt after Ethiopia last month started to divert Nile waters for a massive $4.2 billion hydro-electric dam dubbed the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.

Ethiopia's growing economy frequently suffers from power cuts and needs more electrical capacity. But Egypt fears the dam will mean a diminished share of the Nile, which provides almost all of the desert nation's water needs.

Egyptian politicians have suggested attacks against Ethiopia to sabotage the dam, and Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi on Monday warned that "all options are open" to challenge Ethiopia's Nile project.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn responded Tuesday, forcefully vowing "nothing" and "no one" will stop the dam's construction. He downplayed the prospect of conflict, saying Egypt leaders won't go to war unless they "go mad."

African Union head Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma on Wednesday urged dialogue and cooperation between Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan.

A 10-person Egypt-Sudan-Ethiopia experts panel concluded that the dam will not "significantly affect" water flow to Egypt and Sudan, according to Ethiopian officials. Sudan said it accepts the outcome of the finding and this week announced that it supports Ethiopia's project.

Ethiopia's 547-member parliament unanimously endorsed the new Nile River Cooperative Framework Agreement, an accord already signed by five other Nile River countries.

The accord, sometimes referred to as the Entebbe Agreement, is the product of decade-long negotiations. It was conceived to replace the 1929 treaty written by Britain that awarded Egypt veto power over upstream countries' Nile projects. Sudan and Egypt signed a deal in 1959 splitting the Nile waters between them without giving other countries consideration.

The new cooperative agreement — signed by Ethiopia, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya and Burundi — aims to establish a commission to oversee Nile projects. Congo and South Sudan, which succeeded from Sudan in 2011, have announced plans to join the new pact. Eritrea is participating as an observer in the 10-nation Nile Basin Initiative.

Egypt has previously said that it accepts most of the new agreement. But it opposes a clause saying member countries would work to ensure "not to significantly affect the water security of any other Nile Basin State." Egypt wanted the clause to say countries would not "adversely affect the water security and current uses and rights of any other Nile" states.

Ethiopian Minister of Water and Energy Alemayehu Tegenu told parliament that Ethiopia made two bold decisions concerning the dam. The first, he said, was to postpone ratification of the agreement by a year to accommodate Egypt's request for time until an elected government was in place.

"The second one was to let experts, including from Egypt and Sudan, inspect our Renaissance Dam," he said. "No other country does this but we did it in cooperation and friendly spirit. But we are seeing how our good intentions are being responded to. We can no longer wait. We need to go ahead with the ratification."

After ratifying the legislation, lawmakers called on the other five signatory countries to follow suit.

Ethiopia's Renaissance Dam has been under construction for two years on the Blue Nile River in Ethiopia's Benishangul-Gumuz region near Sudan.

http://news.yahoo.com/ethiopia-ratifies-nile-accord-opposed-egypt-094146070.html
 
Are US and UK 'turning a blind eye' as Ethiopia uproots natives?

Are US and UK 'turning a blind eye' as Ethiopia uproots natives?
California think tank issues double-barreled report alleging Washington, London are willfully ignoring gross violations.
By Mike Pflanz, Robert Marquand | Christian Science Monitor
Fri, Jul 19, 2013

Charges surfaced yesterday that American and British diplomats responsible for Africa are deliberately ignoring a brutal Ethiopian campaign to relocate local people in order to lease the cleared land to foreign corporations.

An American expert on Ethiopia who translated for US and British staff in the region of South Omo in 2012 released transcripts and audio tapes of conversations in from a joint fact finding mission there. In it, Omo tribals tell officials that girls and women, including their wives, were raped by "men with guns" in order to get them to leave the area.

The expert, Will Hurd, said that continuing denials by State Department officials of evidence of harm and forced evictions from Ethiopian land is “shocking,” in a report by the Oakland Institute, a California think tank.

Those charges come amid a controversial review by the World Bank of its policy of giving some $1.4 billion in aid to Ethiopia, and amid a new spotlight in Britain of whether its own foreign aid has been quietly supporting “land grabs” by Ethiopian authorities that are then turned into lucrative leasing deals.

Currently, Ethiopia accepts some $3.5 billion in aid per year and is considered a key Western ally in the Horn of Africa, though its government is regarded as authoritarian and repressive.

US aid officials yesterday categorically denied that anyone from their embassy had heard direct evidence of abuse in Omo and called the material “second-and-third hand” accounts.

In a second report yesterday, the Oakland Institute charges that much of the $3.5 billion in annual development aid given to Ethiopia helps underwrite land grabs that harm indigenous peoples, much of it through a recent policy known as “villagization” that is in the midst of resettling 1.5 million herders and local farmers.

In recent weeks, Ethiopia has confirmed it is making some 8.2 million acres of land available for leasing, and in recent years mega-farms have been started by Indian and Saudi corporations.

The use of World Bank aid in Ethiopia came under fire and scrutiny last fall after some $900 billion was approved that human rights groups said would underwrite the salaries of local officials in the fertile western Gambella region of Ethiopia that were involved in forced evictions.

Gambella has undergone a “villagization” campaign that has removed 45,000 families from their homes in recent years.

The World Bank said at first it would not investigate legal charges of harm in Ethiopia, then put that decision on hold when its own investigative panel said there was an “undeniable” case to be made for a look. Ethiopia said in February it would not cooperate with the panel. But this week the World Bank said that issues with Ethiopia have been resolved and an investigation will take place.

Ethiopia maintains that programs where people move from the land are “voluntary.” Human rights groups details lists of abuses including torture, rape, and other brutal means designed to put out a message that locals should leave.

Yesterday the Monitor reported this:

The US and British governments are “turning a blind eye” to human rights abuses carried out to force Ethiopian nomads off their land so that it can be leased to foreign farming companies, a new report has claimed.

US aid officials who traveled to Ethiopia's southern Omo Valley in January, 2012 heard direct accounts of rapes, beatings, and intimidation from the alleged victims, according to the report, released by the Oakland Institute, a California think tank.

But more than a year later, in an annual State Department report on Ethiopia, officials wrote instead that “partners did not find evidence” to support claims of state-sanctioned harassment, mistreatment, and arbitrary arrest.

The US team was accompanied by two aid workers from Britain’s Department for International Development (DFID), which 11 months later circulated a report with the conclusion that the allegations of rape and harm “could not be substantiated.”

US and British officials were looking into an Ethiopia's resettlement of 260,000 nomadic peoples by putting them in new villages and clearing the land for mostly foreign-owned mega-farms that grow crops including sugar cane and cotton.

“During their investigation, the DFID and USAID representatives were given first-hand accounts of human rights abuses but the agencies have subsequently claimed, and still claim, that these accounts have not been substantiated,” the report’s author, Will Hurd, wrote.

“The blind eye turned by USAID and DFID to the human rights violations and forced evictions that accompany the so-called development strategy of Ethiopia is shocking,” he said.

It was “difficult not to conclude” that the US and Britain had chosen to support Ethiopia’s policy because it was “a strategic” ally in Africa, said Mr. Hurd, who knows local Ethiopian dialects and acted as a translator for the US and UK teams.

A USAID spokesman denied the claims, saying in an email that US officials on the trip, "did not come into contact with any of the victims of the alleged abuses."

A spokesman for the British aid agency said that, “We condemn all human rights abuses and, where we have evidence, we raise our concerns at the very highest level,” but did not directly address whether its field staff in this case reported up the chain of command and what the response had been.

The spokesman also said: “To suggest that agencies like DFID should never work on the ground with people whose governments have been accused of human rights abuses would be to deal those people a double blow.”

Hurd of the Oakland Institute concluded his report by accusing the US and UK agencies of being, “…willful accomplices and supporters of a development strategy that will have irreversible, devastating impacts of the environment and natural resources and will destroy the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of indigenous people.”

Ethiopia’s so-called “villagization” policy, which is also being pursued in the western Gambella region, will allow children to go to school, sick people to see doctors, and clean water to be provided, Ethiopia says.

The policy has been implemented simultaneously with Ethiopia's effort to lease large chunks of land, and has been colloquially described as a “land grab.” Villagization has also been widely criticized for forcing people to move against their will, and of failing to provide social services in the new villages. The January 2012 USAID and DFID field mission to South Omo was in part designed to investigate such allegations. Hurd has lived in southern Ethiopia for close to a decade and is fluent in local languages. His transcripts of audio recordings of meetings between the aid staff and elders from the Mursi and Bodi tribes were included in his report. “Many vehicles came driving through our area when we were sitting in the shade,” one Mursi man told the aid workers, according to the transcripts. “When they got out of the cars they were carrying their guns in a threatening manner. They went all over the place, and they took the wives of the Bodi, and raped them, raped them, raped them, raped them.

“Then they came and raped our wives here.”

Forcing people used to living off their cattle into settled villages would slowly starve them, another said.

“We are waiting for death, we are only waiting for death,” he said. “There is no food anywhere. The only things we have to put in our stomachs come from our cattle.”

One of the British representatives told the meeting that “beatings and rapes and lack of consultation and proper compensation...are totally unacceptable” and would be raised “very strongly” with officials in Addis Ababa, according to Hurd’s transcripts.

But the subsequent DFID report was shelved for 11 months.

“It’s up to the officials involved to swiftly re-examine their role and determine how to better monitor funding if they are indeed not in favor of violence and repression,” said Anuradha Mittal, executive director of the Oakland Institute.

An electronic comment by USAID officer Raphael Cook states that, "To date, the observations of the Embassy and the donor community as a result of these visits do not support allegations that the Government of Ethiopia villagization process in South Omo involved coercion or was accompanied by systemic and widespread human rights abuses."

In the January 2012 trip the email continues, "The information collected by the team was second- and third-hand information and despite best efforts, those interviewed did not have any specifics on the names or whereabouts of the victims."

http://news.yahoo.com/us-uk-turning-blind-eye-ethiopia-uproots-natives-153132559.html
 
Ethiopia tests thousands for HIV in record attempt

Ethiopia tests thousands for HIV in record attempt
Associated Press
By ELIAS MESERET
December 1, 2014 12:39 PM

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — More than 3,300 people were tested for HIV Sunday in the Ethiopian region of Gambella, a massive turnout that exceeded expectations among AIDS campaigners who had hoped to test 2,000 people, according to local officials.

Rahel Gettu, an official with the U.N. Aids agency in Ethiopia, said they believe they broke the world record for the number of HIV tests carried out in one day. She said their claim was yet to be verified and confirmed by Guinness World Records.

She said 3,383 people were tested for HIV within eight hours in a single event ahead of World Aids Day. Eighty-two of them received positive results.

About 6.5 percent of Gambella residents have HIV or AIDS, a rate higher than the national average of 1.5 percent. Officials hope that voluntary AIDS testing in this region that borders South Sudan can lead to a reduction in the number of new infections.

"It will help to bring together communities. It helps people to know their status in order to make informed choices about their lives forward," said Seid Alemu, a director at Ethiopia's Federal HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Office, referring to voluntary testing for HIV.

Millions of Africans live with HIV or AIDS, and many get infected each year despite widespread international efforts to stem the epidemic. The U.N. Aids agency warned ahead of World AIDS Day that, unless action is scaled up in the next five years,"the epidemic is likely to spring back with a higher rate of new HIV infections than today."

The agency is urging more funding for AIDS in an approach that focuses resources and efforts on 30 countries that together account for 89 percent of new HIV infections worldwide.

http://news.yahoo.com/ethiopia-tests-thousands-hiv-record-attempt-125700159.html
 
Ethiopia bets on grand projects in drive for industrial power

Ethiopia bets on grand projects in drive for industrial power
Reuters
By Edmund Blair and Aaron Maasho
February 9, 2015 2:21 AM

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Chinese workers mingle with Ethiopians putting the finishing touches to a metro line that cuts through Addis Ababa, one of a series of grand state infrastructure projects that Ethiopia hopes will help it mimic Asia's industrial rise.

Brought to its knees by "Red Terror" communist purges in the 1970s and famine in the 1980s, Ethiopia has been transformed in the last quarter century, becoming one of Africa's fastest-growing economies.

At the heart of the state's "Growth and Transformation Plan" are railway, road and dam projects to give the landlocked nation cheap power and reliable transport, as well as the metro line - the first urban light railway network in Sub-Saharan Africa.

"This is the future," said Abate Yaye, 27, from the poor south as he helped complete the $475 million system being built by China Railway Engineering Corp, much of it on concrete stilts to keep it above the crowded streets of an expanding capital.

"We will become an example for the whole of Africa."

Hefty state-led investment has kept the economy of Africa's second most populous nation growing at more than 8 percent a year for over a decade, but economists say Ethiopia's rulers need to relax their grip and give room for more private enterprise to maintain momentum.

Foreigners cannot invest in banking and telecoms and foreign retailers are barred, while Ethiopian banks are directed to buy low-yielding government development bonds.

"This is a country where, relative to rest of Africa, there is pretty good state capacity and a commitment to a development mission," said S. Kal Wajid, the outgoing Ethiopia mission chief for the International Monetary Fund.

But he said private business needed room to grow and generate income so the economy could reap greater benefit from the new projects. "Where you are making a lot of infrastructure investment, there is a risk that the pay-off may not be as big as you thought," he added.

DEBT LIMITS

Others in Africa have looked with envy at Asia's inexorable rise but few governments, if any, have proven as single-minded as Ethiopia has in mobilising its resources in a bid to turn an agrarian nation of 96 million people into a manufacturing hub.

Yet it comes at a cost. The IMF said last year Ethiopia was "on the cusp" of shifting from low to moderate risk of debt distress. Total debt at about 50 percent of gross domestic product was still manageable, but tougher if it rises much more.

"In the next five-year plan, there should be a clear indication of a change of emphasis and a significant emphasis on the private sector," said Wajid, referring to the next Growth and Transformation Plan starting in July.

The government insists it will not rack up unsustainable debts because funds are used to finance infrastructure and other projects such as sugar factories and industrial zones.

Investors also say Ethiopia benefits from better security than others in a region blighted by Islamist militant attacks. And few executives cite corruption as a big hindrance in business, although it can be elsewhere in Africa.

But Ethiopia is no model for political and media freedom - there is just one opposition party member in the 547-seat parliament and international rights groups say the authorities muzzle critics. The government insists politics is open to all and that it allows free speech.

The current five-year growth programme ends in June and the government has given little away about the next plan. But it remains clear about its economic goals.

"Without investing in infrastructure, it is now abundantly clear that Africa cannot sustain growth," Finance Minister Sufian Ahmed told Reuters in December.

Sufian's deputy Abraham Tekeste said this month the new plan would likely continue "most of the priorities" of the last one.

The government can point to a list of investors suggesting its formula works. Clothes retailer Hennes and Mauritz is starting to source supplies from Ethiopia, consumer goods maker Unilever is building a factory, Diageo and Heineken have bought breweries.

U.S. private equity giant KKR invested in a flower farm last year while an Ethiopian winery is among the investments of 8 Miles, an African-focused fund chaired by singer Bob Geldof who launched Live Aid to help Ethiopian famine victims.

LIMITED ROOM

The government's ban on foreign retailers is aimed at encouraging local manufacturing, to cut back on imports, not wanting a consumer culture that could drain foreign exchange.

Central bank foreign reserves barely cover two months of imports - an inadequate level, according to the IMF. Other east African states have at least four months.

The government says it wants to keep banks in the hands of Ethiopians and telecoms controlled by the state as the sectors provide funding for national projects such as infrastructure. Earnings from the state telecoms monopoly are helping fund a railway linking Addis Ababa to a port in Djibouti, for instance.

But that leaves few domestic funds available in the market for businesses that could create jobs in future.

"If they are looking at achieving their goal of being a middle-income country and getting employment, you must enable access to financial options," said James Kanagwa of pan-African lender Ecobank, one of half a dozen foreign banks with representative offices in Addis Ababa but barred from commercial work.

Ethiopia, with average annual per capita income of $470, aims to reach middle-income status by 2025, which the World Bank says starts at $1,046.

For now, even Ethiopian banks have limited room for manoeuvre. They must invest the equivalent of 27 percent of their loan portfolio in the development bonds, hindering their ability to lend to the private sector.

"The lending capacity of banks is growing very slowly," said Mulugeta Asmare, president of Bank of Abyssinia, one of 16 private banks in a sector dominated by state-owned Commercial Bank of Ethiopia.

Banks must rely on equity and deposits for funding, in a nation where only one in 10 people have a bank account, because there is no developed capital market.

After launching a debut $1 billion Eurobond in December, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said tapping international markets did not herald "liberalising the financial sector".

"If you have an efficient effective state development model, great," Colin Coleman, managing director for Goldman Sachs based in South Africa, told a conference in Addis Ababa last month.

"But you must allow businesses to develop in order to get the dynamism in the economy."

https://news.yahoo.com/ethiopia-bets-grand-projects-drive-industrial-power-072148898--sector.html
 
With big projects, Ethiopia shedding famine stereotype

With big projects, Ethiopia shedding famine stereotype
By ELIAS MESERET
17 hours ago

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Ethiopia's planned new airport on the outskirts of the capital is still years from becoming a reality but Tewodros Dawit can already envision how grand it will look.

"The airport we are planning to build is going to be huge. Very huge," Tewodros said one recent afternoon as he examined project plans in his office in Addis Ababa. "It will be one of the biggest airports in the world. I don't know what other countries are planning in this regard for the future but no country has created this much capacity so far in Africa."

Ethiopia, once known for epic famines that sparked global appeals for help, has a booming economy and big plans these days. The planned airport is one of several muscular, forward-looking infrastructure projects undertaken by the government that have fueled talk of this East African country as a rising African giant.

Addis Ababa increasingly looks like an enormous construction site, with cranes and building blocks springing up in many corners of the city. Britain, long a source of charitable aid for Ethiopia, announced last month that Ethiopia's growing economy means the time has come for "transitioning support toward economic development to help generate jobs, income and growth."

Over the last decade Ethiopia's economy has grown at an average of 11 percent, more than double the rate for sub-Saharan Africa, according to U.N. figures. The growth is fueled in part by huge public expenditure on energy and infrastructure projects that make the country attractive to long-term private investment. The projects are being funded mostly through loans obtained from partners such as China, India and the World Bank.

Tewodros, the chief executive of the Ethiopian Airports Enterprise, said the planned new airport would have the capacity to handle up to 100 million travelers per year, a figure that he said dovetails with the ambitious plans of national carrier Ethiopian Airlines. He said the new airport would relieve Addis Ababa's Bole International Airport, whose passenger terminal is undergoing a $250 million expansion amid growth in passenger numbers from 900,000 in 2000 to more than 7 million in 2014. The old airport has been engulfed by residential areas — a major reason behind the decision to build a new airport on the capital's outskirts.

Ethiopian Airlines, Africa's largest based on fleet size and its most profitable, has been rapidly expanding over the years as it focuses mostly on the booming Africa-Asia market, according to the aerospace consulting firm CAPA Aviation Centre.

"Ethiopian's expansion in Asia has been much faster and its pursuit of Asia-Africa transit passengers is much more aggressive" than its big rival Kenya Airways, the firm said. Ethiopian Airlines now has daily non-stop flights to the Chinese cities of Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai. China has become Africa's biggest trading partner.

Tewodros said the planned new airport, expected to be complete within a decade, would cost several billion dollars but offered no specific figure. The government is still assessing potential financiers, with a loan from Export-Import Bank of China a strong possibility. The government is expected to announce in the coming weeks which of three locations under consideration has been picked as the site, he said.

"It is only natural that Ethiopia plans on having a mega airport not only to host Ethiopian Airlines but also to host a lot of transit traffic that passes through Addis," said Zemedeneh Nigatu, a managing partner in Ethiopia with accounting firm Ernst & Young who is also a consultant for Ethiopian Airlines.

This country of nearly 90 million people earned about $3.2 billion from aviation-related services last year, four times more than the traditional coffee exports, according to Zemedeneh.

"Already aviation is a major part of the Ethiopian economy and this is a financially feasible project," he said of the new airport plans. "The country should keep its eye now on Gulf airports and carriers that are its competitors."

Other projects recently completed or under construction include the $475 million Addis Ababa Light Rail Transit project aimed at eliminating the lack of public transportation options.

Behailu Sintayehu, who led the railway project, said the 34 kilometer (21 mile)-long system would have lines going under and above ground with the capacity to transport 15,000 people per hour in each direction. It becomes operational in less than two months, he said.

Road construction is also underway in many parts of the capital.

"The country was preoccupied with fulfilling its basic needs in the past. Now it has become ambitious and is undertaking massive infrastructure projects by itself," said Abel Abate Demissie, a researcher with the think tank Ethiopian International Institute for Peace and Development.

Abate said the projects underscore what he called Ethiopia's "I can do it attitude" amid the African stereotypes of poverty and scarcity. Ethiopia's famine in the 1980s was so severe it spawned the 1985 Live Aid concert to raise funds to combat it. Today, the country has increased capacity to feed itself.

Ethiopia's government has injected an average of 14.7 percent of government spending on the agriculture sector since 2003, according to Ethiopia's Agricultural Transformation Agency. Agricultural production of cereals has increased by 45 percent between 2006 and 2014, it said.

Abate singled out the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on the Nile River as the crown jewel. The $4.2 billion dam is expected to produce 6,000 megawatts, making it Africa's largest hydroelectric power plant and giving Ethiopia the capacity to be a major exporter of electricity to neighboring countries.

http://news.yahoo.com/big-projects-ethiopia-shedding-famine-stereotype-155240918--finance.html
 
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