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Monday, August 28th 2006

8:43 AM

More than 11,000 farmers engage in regular, household extension program in Harari state

Harar, August 26, 2006 (WIC) - More than 11,000 farmers have been engaged in regular and household agricultural extension program in Harari state this season ,the regional Agriculture and Rural Development Bureau said.

Bureau head , Abdurkadir Adem, told WIC today that the rainy season is suitable for farming despite its negative consequences in some parts of the country.

He said 51 development agents deployed in 17 rural kebeles have thus been providing training and education on crops and backyard vegetables development, animal rearing, post-harvest technology ,soil and water conservation.

Efforts would also be made to engage farmers in household agricultural packages so that they could become food self-sufficient in short period of time by producing various backyard vegetables and crops, he added.

According to Abdurkadir ,the bureau has been supplying over 2,000 quintals of fertilizers, 100,000 quintals of select wheat and haricot bean seeds, and pesticides to farmers engaged in the extension program since last month.

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Monday, August 28th 2006

8:41 AM

Harris Corporation to deliver High-Power AM Systems to Radio Ethiopia

25 August 2006
Harris Corporation to deliver High-Power AM Systems to Radio Ethiopia

Harris Corporation have announced a turnkey radio transmission sale to Radio Ethiopia, a segment of the Ethiopian Radio and Television Agency (ERTA).
Harris will deliver high-power AM transmitters to stations in Harar (3DX-D100, 100 kW) and Mekele (DX-D200, 200 kW) this fall through Technology Systems and Solutions, a Harris dealer representative based in Ethiopia.
The transmitters, which are ready for DRM and HD Radio conversion, will deliver a higher quality signal to a large part of the country.
The new transmission system will dramatically improve the quality of AM radio transmissions throughout the country by the end of 2006.
According to Alemayehu Atomsa, general manager of ERTA, Harris was selected for its ability to offer turnkey systems and services, technical superiority and the company's ongoing presence in Ethiopian radio facilities.
Atomsa commented: "By upgrading our high-power AM transmission infrastructure we will have the ability to deliver radio broadcasts to a much larger population."
Debra Hutttenburg, Vice President and general manager of Harris Broadcast Communications Divison's Radio Broadcast Systems business unit commented: "Harris is pleased to announce the sale of high-power AM transmission systems to Radio Ethiopia as it prepares to take a major step toward improving national communications."
Huttenburg added: "Harris has long been active in Ethiopia, with more than 40 transmitters currently installed in radio facilities around the country. Radio is the best means of communication for many African countries, and therefore it is crucial to maintain a healthy transmission infrastructure. Our 3DX and DX high-power AM transmitters are among the most reliable on the market and will offer a robust AM signal to the Ethiopian population for years to come."
The transmitters to be delivered under this contract have a proven record of reliability and high efficiency with installations around the world. This operational efficiency ultimately reduces costs for the broadcaster. Further promoting cost-efficiency, Harris will deliver the transmitters as the central piece of a turnkey package featuring antennas/towers, transmission line and additional RF equipment. Harris will also provide civil work and integration services leading up to installation.
(DS)
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Monday, August 14th 2006

11:36 AM

Immigrant finances hospital in his Ethiopian hometown

By STEVE VISSER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 08/13/06

Sebri Omer isn't a big man today, at least in size.

He was even smaller when as a teenager three decades ago he walked away from the city of Harar and his family into the Ethiopian countryside.

The trip, by foot, to the East African country of Djibouti led eventually to Philadelphia, then to Georgia, to Buckhead and finally to Buford where his four children attend school. A man of entrepreneurial spirit, who finished high school at age 22 in Philadelphia, he and his wife, Ashut, have owned convenience stores and a carwash in Gwinnett and Jackson counties.

He also is the chief executive officer of a small hospital that is an ocean and a continent away.

Three years ago, he opened the Yemage Medical Center in Harar, a city of 172,000 people and one of the poorest places in the world.

"I don't think I owed something to my country but I wanted to do something for the city where I was raised," said Omer, 45, who owns a Shell store in Jefferson. "I just wanted to do something ... invest in my homeland."

Sincerity in action

Today, the hospital is still a small operation, growing from 25 beds in 2003 to 45. Services advertised on its Web site (www.yemagemedicalcenter.com) range from HIV treatment to dental services to surgery. The goal is to provide decent medical care in an area where the life expectancy is about 50 and government hospitals have few resources.

But it is an ongoing struggle. Omer, who has lived in Gwinnett for five years, is a successful middle-class American, not a Bill Gates who can create a powerhouse foundation.

Omer has no medical background, but he got the inspiration to build the hospital when he returned to Harar in 1997 with the idea of buying a hotel. Instead, he found one of his relatives hospitalized in a room that resembled a youth hostel dormitory.

"It was terrible — 20 to 25 people in a single room — it was not acceptable at all," said Omer, who had become accustomed to medical care in the United States. "At that point, doing the hotel was out of the question."

So far, Omer and his staff at the hospital say the care has been provided through a leveraging of financing, seed money from Omer and payments from patients.

Omer said he got the first financing by selling a convenience store in Sugar Hill in 1999 to pay for medical supplies and salaries. He went to the local Ministry of Health, which he persuaded to pay for the land. The property helped secure a $300,000 construction loan from a bank where the officials, he believes, banked as much on his sincerity.

If so, he proved them right a few years ago, when he sold his carwash on Buford Highway to provide a new infusion of money to the hospital.

"The hospital in Ethiopia wasn't making any money," he said this week while working the counter at his Shell station off I-85 in Jefferson, his sole remaining store. "The choice was to have one store here and sell the others to help the hospital."

So far, he said, he has contributed about $40,000 to the medical center, which demonstrates how far a dollar can go in a country where the United Nations reports that 44 percent of the people live on $2 a day. Omer said he pays a doctor about $560 a month. But he said he would not have been able to outfit the hospital if it hadn't been for Medshare International, a DeKalb County-based organization that collects used or surplus medical supplies — such as the 45 beds — and donates them to poor places around the globe.

"Sebri is an unusual individual who has taken mainly his own resources to create something for poor people," said Nell Diallo, managing director of Medshare. "When he found out about us, he realized what he was able to do."

Omer said inpatient charges — about $7 a day for those who can afford it — usually cover the overhead, the mortgage and the cost of the salaries for the handful of doctors, nurses and pharmacists that make up the staff. But the hospital is still short of equipment. It doesn't even have the cash for an ambulance. And Omer wants to expand its service so more people, many chronically ill, will get the better care.

"We are using outdated X-ray machines," Dr. Fitih Getachew, the 27-year-old assistant medical director of the Yemage Medical Center, said by telephone last week. "There is a CT [CAT scan] machine in Addis Ababa [that nation's capital] but most of the patients can't afford to go to Addis."

While patients pay more at Yemage than at the government hospitals in Harar, Getachew said the center still provided more free care than paid care.

Yemage means hope

On Thursday, Yemage had 35 beds full and had treated about 20 other patients, many of whom suffer from HIV-related diseases, malaria and tuberculosis, Getachew said. The walk-in number can sometimes reach dozens a day.

Omer said he is establishing a foundation to raise money to expand the hospital's ability to provide care. He hopes to recruit volunteer doctors and nurses in the United States to assist and mentor his medical staff.

Another goal is to establish a hospice. "The AIDS situation is pretty strong in Ethiopia and those people need a place where they can stay in their final moments," Omer said. "Health care in Ethiopia is not civilized like it is here in the United States."

Harar, a city of both Muslims and Christians, has had a long history in a country that predates the Old Testament. The city attracts tourists who come to see its many mosques and ancient sites and also to see its hyena men — daredevils or animal behaviorist experts — who feed wild hyenas by hand and mouth-to-mouth each evening.

Omer had left the city under the fear of death as a 17-year-old high school student in 1977. Ethiopia had been a caldron of official oppression and separatist movements for years. Untold thousands of mostly young people were killed, jailed and tortured in 1977 and 1978, according to information provided by the Library of Congress.

He said he wasn't political and didn't belong to any organization warring with the government. He was from the Harari tribe, not the Oromo, which put its name on a separatist movement.

It would be 20 years before he returned home again.

"It was extremely hard for my parents to send me, but they did not want me to get killed so they helped me get out of there," he said. "The trip was dangerous. You could be attacked by animals or troublemakers on the road."

He spent a couple of years in Djibouti and then immigrated to the United States as a refugee. He graduated from West Philadelphia High School and went to a junior college. He ended up in Buckhead working for upscale hotels, where he heard patrons talk about owning their own businesses.

In 1996, he got a Small Business Administration loan to buy the Shell station in Jefferson.

His success here gave him reason to believe he could succeed in Harar. His decision to name the hospital the Yemage Medical Center after his 7-year-old son, Yemage, wasn't simply one of parental love or vanity.

Yemage, in his Harari tongue, means hope.

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Wednesday, August 9th 2006

9:13 AM

Out of Africa, Into Helpful Hands

Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 27, 2006; Page B03

When Wendell Chesson came to the District from Liberia 25 years ago, he did not know where to find housing, where to learn English or how to locate health care. Now, he said, new African immigrants won't have to face the same challenges.

Chesson and dozens of other African-born District residents celebrated the opening of the African Resource Center yesterday at a converted house on Vermont Avenue near U Street NW. The center is part of a growing effort by African immigrants to provide a voice for their community.

In order to be heard, we have to build an institution," said Abdul Kamus, an Ethiopian immigrant who devised the plan for the African Resource Center and will serve as its executive director. "Starting today, the community is in charge of helping each other through this center."

About 16 percent of new immigrants in the region are from Africa, according to a 2001 Brookings Institution study, but community leaders said African-born people have less of a cohesive identity than do Latino or Asian immigrants. The D.C. Council voted in March to create an Office of African Affairs, many years after similar offices were founded to serve the Latino and Asian/Pacific Islander communities.

"We have many cultural differences, but when it comes to achieving benefits, we have to do it for all Africans," Chesson said. "There might be a few Ethiopians here and a few Nigerians there, but if we put all the countries together, we are a big group."

The African Resource Center will teach people about their rights and provide information about education, health care, immigration procedures, language access programs and other services, Kamus said. The staff will work with the Office of African Affairs to bring relevant issues to the attention of elected officials.

"We have always thought immigration was about Latinos," said Juan Carlos Ruíz, general coordinator of the National Capital Immigration Coalition. "We've been illuminated and educated, and we pledge our full support for the development of this organization."

One initial focus of the African Resource Center will be trying to develop solutions for the problems created by the law, passed in 2001 but enforced only recently, that does not allow taxi drivers to register the vehicles they own in the District unless they live in the city. Most of the city's drivers live outside the city, and Kamus said a majority are African immigrants. D.C. Taxicab Commission Chairman Causton Toney attended yesterday's celebration and promised to work with community leaders to find solutions.

"The invitation for me to come here was a clear indication of the desire to bridge the gap between the government and the community," Toney said. "Now we can work together."

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Tuesday, August 8th 2006

12:26 PM

THE 11TH HARARI SPORTS AND CULTURAL FESTIVAL;

THE 11TH HARARI SPORTS AND CULTURAL FESTIVAL;
July 19, 2006 Fellow Hararis; THE ORGANZING COMMITTEE WOULD LIKE TO THANK ALL VOLUNTEERS AND ALL THOSE DEDICATED TORONTONIAN HARARIS WHO SUPPORTED US PHYSICALLY, MORALLY AND FINANCIALLY. WE THANK ALL OUR YOUTH WHO CONTRIBUTED IMMENSLY ANDTHE HARARI COMMUNITY OF ONTARIO BOARD AND ITS DEDICATED MEMBERS WHO WERE ALSO THE ESSENTIAL PART OF THIS SUCCESS. Toronto, the city where the Harari Sports and Cultural Federation (HSCF) was established and its First Constitution was ratified, had the privilege of hosting the 11th Annual Harari Sports and Cultural Festival. By the viewpoint of the overwhelming response we received from the attendees, the event was a great success, especially, with the massive turnout, which turned out to be the most on record. Nevertheless, considering all the effort we have exerted and the sacrifices we have made, we sincerely apologize and regret a few of our shortcomings that did not meet our guests’ expectations. The presence of our Harari Regional State President, His Excellency Murad Abdulhadi and his entourage along with the magnificent Hablul Band added significant value and color to the entire event and made this year’s festivities quite a winner. The event was kicked off Sunday by a Musical Bercha Session that went well into the night. During the week long event, the transportation department, lead by Jamal Durri did an incredible job in transporting material back and forth between the community center and the field. The coordination and team work of the food and beverage team, lead by Ayni Abdella was pretty impressive. There was plenty of food available for all during the entire event. The financial committee headed by Fakiha Muktar, did well with regard to the sales of foods, beverages and T-shirts. The lack of space for parking was a nuisance, especially, on the first day. While others were lucky, we regret that some did get parking violation tickets. The Security and First Aid Team headed by Meftuh Shash did a wonderful job even though some of our kids were difficult to handle. The first aid area was covered well and only two minor incidents were reported and treated in a timely manner. The sports teams of both the youth and the adult, headed by Esmael Sukar and Afandi Waber were seen fiercely competing. We extend our thanks to our Field Organizer – Fuad Mohammed Issa, MC Zaidan and the Camera Men Megas Abdureshid and Jamal Yusuf who have captured the historical moments of the event. As a tradition, the Mawlud led by Sheikh Jamaa was very exciting to all. Men dressed in white and ladies in their colorful traditional dresses, chanting Zikri, gave the celebration its rightful significance. By all accounts, Ziwariqa day was the day that everyone relaxed. It was beautiful day weather wise, and it appeared that everyone had a good time. Harari Day was always an event that many people look forward to. Even though, the timing was delayed and the closing event was pushed further, the show in itself, once started was great. Even though some had reservations with the choice of the Friday Gala night venue, Hablul rocked the place but was cut short by how late the party has started. Selling snacks like Sambusa and drinks was a good idea. Saturday Gala Night was the night of all nights with Hablul Band entertaining the crowd once again. Lot’s of people showed up – and danced the night away. Thanks to our guests, Hablul Band and Nawala, and to our local artists Murad Bulle and Zinat Basha for their efforts in making the event a success. Thanks to all who came to Toronto and made this festival one of a kind.

Released by: The Organizing Committee.

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