Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Baustellenkonzert

Ich bin beeindruckt!! In Österreich pfeifen die Bauhackler den Frauen nach, hier die die Frauen quasi mir. Also ok, sie pfeifen nicht aber rufen mir nach! Ob das jetzt positiv ist oder nicht kann ich natürlich nicht beurteilen, weiß ja nicht was sie sagen! Aber es ist bestimmt was Nettes ;-) Also ICH zumindest würd mir nur nette Dinge nachrufen :-D

lg
Dominik!!

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Ethiopia faces food crisis as drought worsens

By ARGAW ASHINE, NATION Correspondent

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA, Tuesday

Many parts of eastern and southern Ethiopia are experiencing severe drought after the rains failed last year

One of the worst hit regions is Borana, some 650 kilometres south of Addis Ababa in Oromia state, which neighbours Kenya.

"Six people have died in Dire and Moyale districts. We are now struggling to deliver food and medical supplies," the Borana region's administrator, Abdulkadir Abdi, told journalists visiting the area.  Three children and two adults have died in Liben and Guji districts in the region's east and north respectively.

Hospital sources confirmed that the deaths were related to hunger and lack of clean water.

Chala Wordofa, the head of Oromia's Disaster Prevention and Control office, acknowledged that parts of the region have had a long dry season, but added that the authorities are keenly monitoring the situation.

"At the moment there is no immediate threat, but things could get out of control if sufficient quantities of food and water are not delivered on time," he said.

However, speaking in Parliament on Tuesday, Ethiopian Prime Minster Meles Zenawi downplayed the situation in Borana, saying it was simply due to "failure of the mid-year (meher) rains and will not affect our speedy economic growth".

Mr Zenawi dismissed the reports of human and livestock deaths during his briefing to parliament on national economic issues, but opposition MPs said the situation was critical and called for urgent government action.

According to a report by humanitarian agencies, about 8 million people in Ethiopia require food aid, 1 million of them urgently.

Ironically, Ethiopia is facing a food crisis when crop production has risen by 45 per cent in the past five years.

UN and international agencies working on the ground refused to quoted by the media unless the information was confirmed by Ethiopian government officials.

"We know how the situation is worsening but the Ethiopian government is sensitive to a single press statement," a senior UN official in Addis Ababa said.

However, a UN assessment report indicates that 29 schools have been forced to close and more than 4,000 children have dropped out of school in Borana district due to severe climatic conditions and migration by the local pastoral community.

Quelle

Friday, March 14, 2008

Fake fears over Ethiopia's gold

By Elizabeth Blunt
BBC News, Addis Ababa

Ethiopia's national bank has been told to inspect all the gold in its vaults to determine its authenticity.

It follows the discovery that some of the "gold" it had bought for millions of dollars was gold-plated steel.

The first hint that something was wrong reportedly came when the Ethiopian central bank exported a consignment of gold bars to South Africa.

The South Africans sent them back, complaining that they had been sold gilded steel.

An investigation revealed that the bank had bought a consignment of fake gold from a supplier, who is now under arrest.

Other arrests followed, including business associates of the main accused; national bank officials; and chemists from the Geological Survey of Ethiopia, whose job it is to assay the bank's purchases of gold and certify that they are real.

But what has clearly now got the government even more worried is that another different batch of gold in the bank's vaults has also been found to be fake, and this time it was gold which had been there for several years, after being seized from smugglers trying to take it to Djibouti.

Mining

The Ethiopian parliament's budget and finance committee ordered the inspection of all gold in the national bank's vaults.

A report from the auditor-general on the affair is expected to be presented to parliament during its current session.

Gold is mined in Ethiopia in considerable quantities, and a trader selling gold to the central bank has to have it tested and certified by the Geological Survey.

Whether the bank bought fake gold in the first place, or whether real gold from the vaults has been swapped for gilded steel, the fraud has cost the bank many millions of dollars, and it must have involved collusion on a considerable scale.

Quelle: