Consultations on Ethiopia’s Demobilization, Reintegration Programme Held with Dev’t Partners

National Demobilization and Reintegration Programme (NDRP) for ex- combatants that is being developed by the National Rehabilitation Commission (NRC) was discussed with development partners today in Addis Ababa.

This meeting follows a first national consultation on demobilization and reintegration which was held in Mekelle on the 10th of March 2023; similar consultations will also be held in Bahir Dar, Semera and other cities in Ethiopia.

Speakers at the event included Ambassador Teshome Toga, Commissioner of the NRC; State Minister of Finance Semereta Sewasew; UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Dr. Catherine Sozi, and UNDP Resident Representative, Turhan Saleh.

Participants included Ambassadors, Heads of Development Cooperation and other senior staff from development partners.

Government Representatives from concerned federal institutions also participated in the consultative meeting.

The NRC was established by the Government in November 2022 for a period of two years to assist with demobilization and reintegration of ex-combatants across the country.

The draft National Demobilization and Reintegration Programme (NDRP) prepared by the Commission follows the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement between the Government of Ethiopia and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in November 2022.

This National Programme will support demobilization and reintegration of up to 250,000 ex- combatants in Ethiopia, and will be implemented in parts of the country making an important program that is integral to national efforts to consolidate peace and promote stability in the country, according to a joint press release.

The national recovery, rehabilitation and reconstruction program resource mobilization and implementation will take place in a coordinated manner with the view of promoting sustainable peace and development, and ensuring the disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of former combatants remain to be integral part of this process.

The support to the DDR process by partners is anticipated to play a significant role in the stabilization and peace building efforts, and in creating an environment in which a peace process, political and social reconciliation, access to livelihoods as well as sustainable development can take root, the press release said.

Based on the request of the Government, the United Nations (UN) is providing technical and financial assistance to the NRC through the operational coordination of UNDP.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency

DPM and FM Confers With Yemeni Foreign Minister

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Demeke Mekonnen has conferred with Yemeni Foreign Minister Dr. Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak.

During the deliberations Demeke briefed the Yemeni Foreign Minister on current affairs. Working to consolidate the peace process is a key priority of Ethiopia, he noted.

Demeke concurrently emphasized the need to capitalize on the historical ties between the two countries that predicate not only on interests but also age-old people-to-people relations.

While underscoring the need to further bolster the multifaceted ties, the Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister urged Dr. Mubarak, to work closely towards the reactivation of relations.

The Foreign Minister of Yemen for his part said Yemen and Ethiopia need political consultations.

He also said, the Government of Yemen will assist the Government of Ethiopia to expedite the voluntary repatriation of Ethiopians in Yemen.

The Foreign Minister of Yemen arrived in Addis Ababa yesterday for an official working visit to Ethiopia.

The objective of the visit is to exchange views on ways strengthening the bilateral relations of Ethiopia and Yemen, it was learned.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency

Angola participates in the IV African Cinema exhibit in Brazil

Angola is due to take part in the 4th African Cinema exhibition in Brazil, organised by the Faculty of Letters of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) of that South American country, to be held from March 22 to 25.

A statement from the Angolan Embassy in Brazil says that the event will show films such as “Air Conditioned”, by Fradique Bastos, “Na Cidade Vazia”, by Maria João Ganga, “Vou Mudar a Cozinha”, by Ondjaki, “Nossa Senhora da Loja do Chinês”, directed by Ery Claver and produced by Jorge Cohen.

The films “Carnaval da Vitória”, by Guilherme Resende Machado, “O Balanço do Tempo na Cena de Angola”, by Rui Duarte de Carvalho and “Lúcia no Céu com Semáforo”, by Ery Clever and Grete Marin, are also on the programme.

The event will also present the book “Cinografia Angolana ”, by Ana Paula Tavares, Carmen Secco, Fradique Bastos, Jorge Cohen and Ery Clever, as well as a lecture on Angolan cinema.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

Ethiopia Rejects Statement Issued By U.S. State Department As ‘Blanket Condemnations’

The US State Department has issued a statement determining that certain grave crimes were committed during the conflict in northern Ethiopia.

Considering the Report of the Joint Investigation by the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) and the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (UN-OHCHR), this statement does not contain new findings, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ethiopia stated in a statement issued on Tuesday.

The statement said the Government of Ethiopia does not accept the blanket condemnations contained in the statement and does not see any value in such a unilateral and adversarial approach.

The statement is selective as it unfairly apportions blame among different parties in the conflict. For no apparent reason, the statement appears to exonerate one party from certain allegations of human rights violations such as rape and other forms of sexual violence despite the clear and overwhelming evidence about its culpability, it added.

“The statement is untimely. It is coming shortly after the launching of national consultations on options for a transitional justice policy. One of the pillars of transitional justice policy is accountability. This foresees that there will be further investigations into allegations of the kinds of crimes the statement alleges. These investigations will consolidate those undertaken by the Inter-Ministerial Taskforce implementing the recommendations of the EHRC-OHCHR Joint Investigation. It thus prejudices these national efforts to thoroughly investigate allegations, whoever is the culprit.”

The U.S. statement is inflammatory, it said adding that whatever the intentions of the US State Department, this statement will be used to advance highly polarized campaigns pitting one community against others in the country.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated: “this partisan and divisive approach from the US is ill-advised. As Ethiopia is implementing the Peace Agreement, such apportioning of blame is unwarranted and undercuts the support of the US for an inclusive peace process in Ethiopia.”

According to Foreign Ministry, the visit of the US Secretary of State gave hope that the two countries are poised to mend their bilateral relations.

The Government of Ethiopia hopes that despite the US’s statement, the frank discussions held and understanding reached during the Secretary of State’s visit to Ethiopia will help restore the strategic relations between Ethiopia and the United States, it affirmed.

The Government of Ethiopia will continue implementing all measures of accountability, including finalizing the nationwide consultation on transitional justice and ensuring that justice is done for all victims.

Friends of Ethiopia are welcome to constructively support this process, Ethiopia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said

Source: Ethiopian News Agency

Malawi cannabis: Farmers let down after paying out cash

Malawian farmer Ethel Chilembwe has paid out hundreds of dollars, cleared six hectares of land and got ready for the training, but after two years of waiting she has not cultivated a single cannabis plant.

Malawi legalised cannabis farming for industrial and medicinal use in February 2020 hoping to take advantage of the booming global demand and move away from the reliance on tobacco as an export crop.

Ms Chilembwe, who has for the last seven years been a tobacco farmer in Kasungu in the west of the country, also scented an opportunity to replace her shrinking returns.

She was not the only one and, like her, hundreds of other farmers have been left disappointed.

The United States Cannabis Association-Malawi (USCA), a private Malawian company, has been one of those at the centre of this failure, yet it still hopes that things will work out.

As part of its vision for how the country could benefit from cannabis, the government wanted to involve as many small-scale farmers as possible who would source seeds from local private companies and then sell the harvest back to them.

But things did not work out as planned.

As part of a requirement to get a growers’ licence from the government, Ms Chilembwe joined hands with other tobacco farmers nearby and registered a co-operative group.

Having already paid $1,500 (£1,200) to acquire the licence, Ms Chilembwe says the group paid thousands more dollars to USCA for registration, seeds and training in 2021.

But she got neither the seeds nor the training.

“I think the problem lies with [USCA], who cannot deliver what they promised, and then the government itself which does not seem willing to help us

“This is why we are stuck,” the farmer tells the BBC.

The land where she hoped to set up greenhouses has remained bare, something she says has led to a huge loss to her family.

But she is not the only one affected.

“We have got a contract with [USCA] which they gave us a price of $80-$150 per kilogram,” says Maquenda Chunga, another farmer.

Mr Chunga is a former politician who served as an MP for five years up to 2019 and supported the legalisation of cannabis in parliament.

The co-operative of 15 farmers which he leads managed to raise some $250,000 to set up greenhouses.

However, he says USCA only supplied a fraction of the expensive seeds paid for.

The initial harvest they managed to produce now lies in boxes inside a small store house with nowhere to go despite USCA also having committed itself to buy the harvested hemp.

“We had hope, [that] if we borrowed the money from the bank we knew that we would pay it back,” adds the disgruntled former parliamentarian.

He blames the government for not ensuring that USCA would live up to its promises.

USCA is one of the four private entities licensed by the government to produce cannabis in Malawi.

In order to acquire this licence, a company had to “have a warehouse, and ability to process either medicinal or industrial hemp”, says the Cannabis Regulatory Authority (CRA), in a statement issued to the BBC.

But USCA has neither a warehouse nor the processing facility.

The company has nearly 7,000 farmers on its register.

Its chief executive officer Paul Maulidi blames a fall out between the local owners of the company and foreign investors who allegedly pulled out of an investment deal.

The head of CRA says the money that was raised from the farmers was spent on running USCA’s office operations, and this left them with no funds to carry out their plans.

But Mr Maulidi still believes things can work out. He only joined the company last year and insists he is there to make things right.

“There must be some people who can come in and say let’s do something about it to rectify the situation. I still feel farmers need to be helped,” Mr Maulidi says.

“We are engaging with the co-operatives who are coming here and we are telling them of our plans and how we can execute those plans.”

The CRA says it has asked the company to fulfil its contracts or refund the farmers.

Furthermore, it has given USCA a three-month grace period after its licence had expired and says it will only renew it if farmers’ concerns are addressed.

The authority has asked USCA “to fulfil their agreement with farmer co-operatives or else they should pay back the money”, the regulator told the BBC in an email response.

But the problem is not just with USCA.

Out of the four companies operating in the cannabis industry in Malawi, only one still has a valid licence. The other two are yet to launch commercial operations according to the regulator.

The government insists farmers will get help.

The farmers “should come forward and present their case through the CRA to us and we will show the direction as to how they can be assisted”, says Dixie Kampani, an assistant minister in the department of agriculture, but he did not elaborate on the plan.

There has however been one success.

Invegrow, a company owned by a mix of local and foreign investors, employs hundreds of people, and grows cannabis from the nursery to the flowering and harvesting stage.

This is in addition to having a processing factory on site in the capital, Lilongwe, where they produce cannabis oil for local sales and export as well as other by-products like animal feed.

But they are yet to sign up many farmers.

“We have been piloting with 100 farmers for production of seeds only for the past one year,” says Nebert Nyirenda, the company director.

The growing of the crop for sale is a separate process.

If the scale of their operations is anything to go by, cannabis farming in Malawi could be out of reach for the majority of the farmers it was initially targeted at.

“We have invested $4m since 2013, part of it went to research and lobbying but the bulk has gone into setting up the infrastructure you can see here,” Mr Nyirenda adds.

Malawi is still saying that it can make a success out of cannabis.

But for now farmers like Ms Chilembwe and Mr Chunga who had hoped to benefit say they have been left financially scarred by this experience.

UNITA youth wing begins 5th Congress works

Viana – The 5th ordinary congress of the Revolutionary United Youth of Angola (JURA) started Wednesday in the Municipality of Viana, in Luanda, with internal work, with emphasis on the presentation and analysis of contributions related to the proposed agenda of the national committee meeting.

The official opening ceremony of the three-day congress is scheduled for Thursday, during which the new leader of the Youth Organization will be elected to replace the outgoing secretary-general, Agostinho Kamuango.

Manuel Armando Nelito Ekuikui and João Lucombo are the two candidates vying for the top JURA position.

Speaking to the press, João Lucombo promised that he will prepare JURA to defend the interests of Angolan youth if he wins the elections, while Nelito Ekuikui stressed that he intends to empower Angolan youth to be authors of their own achievements, challenges and dreams.

JURA´s 5th congress foresees the assessment of key issues to solve problems affecting youth such as unemployment, homelessness and social conditions in general.

The congress, which brings together more than 500 delegates from all provinces of the country, will be held under the slogan “JURA – Innovate and Mobilize to Win”.

The United Revolutionary Youth of Angola was founded on July 18, 1974, by David Janotão, who was the first leader of the youth organization.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)