Partial List of Mass Execution of Oromos and Other Nation And
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Districts of Ethiopia
Region District or Woredas Zone Remarks Afar Region Argobba Special Woreda -- Independent district/woredas Afar Region Afambo Zone 1 (Awsi Rasu) Afar Region Asayita Zone 1 (Awsi Rasu) Afar Region Chifra Zone 1 (Awsi Rasu) Afar Region Dubti Zone 1 (Awsi Rasu) Afar Region Elidar Zone 1 (Awsi Rasu) Afar Region Kori Zone 1 (Awsi Rasu) Afar Region Mille Zone 1 (Awsi Rasu) Afar Region Abala Zone 2 (Kilbet Rasu) Afar Region Afdera Zone 2 (Kilbet Rasu) Afar Region Berhale Zone 2 (Kilbet Rasu) Afar Region Dallol Zone 2 (Kilbet Rasu) Afar Region Erebti Zone 2 (Kilbet Rasu) Afar Region Koneba Zone 2 (Kilbet Rasu) Afar Region Megale Zone 2 (Kilbet Rasu) Afar Region Amibara Zone 3 (Gabi Rasu) Afar Region Awash Fentale Zone 3 (Gabi Rasu) Afar Region Bure Mudaytu Zone 3 (Gabi Rasu) Afar Region Dulecha Zone 3 (Gabi Rasu) Afar Region Gewane Zone 3 (Gabi Rasu) Afar Region Aura Zone 4 (Fantena Rasu) Afar Region Ewa Zone 4 (Fantena Rasu) Afar Region Gulina Zone 4 (Fantena Rasu) Afar Region Teru Zone 4 (Fantena Rasu) Afar Region Yalo Zone 4 (Fantena Rasu) Afar Region Dalifage (formerly known as Artuma) Zone 5 (Hari Rasu) Afar Region Dewe Zone 5 (Hari Rasu) Afar Region Hadele Ele (formerly known as Fursi) Zone 5 (Hari Rasu) Afar Region Simurobi Gele'alo Zone 5 (Hari Rasu) Afar Region Telalak Zone 5 (Hari Rasu) Amhara Region Achefer -- Defunct district/woredas Amhara Region Angolalla Terana Asagirt -- Defunct district/woredas Amhara Region Artuma Fursina Jile -- Defunct district/woredas Amhara Region Banja -- Defunct district/woredas Amhara Region Belessa -- -
Ethiopia: 2015 HRF Projects Map (As of 31 December 2015)
Ethiopia: 2015 HRF projects map (as of 31 December 2015) Countrywide intervention ERITREA Legend UNICEF - Nutrition - $999,753 Concern☃ - VSF-G ☈ ! Refugee camp WFP - Nutrition (CSB) - $1.5m National capital Shimelba Red Sea SUDAN Regional intervention International boundary Hitsa!ts Dalul UNICEF - Health - $1.0m ! !Hitsats ! ! Undetermined boundary ! ! SCI Tigray, Afar, Amhara, Oromia, Kelete Berahile ☃☉ May-Ayni Kola ! Somali, Gambella, SNPR & NRC - ☉ Ts!elemti Temben Awelallo Lake IRC - ★ ! ☄ ! ♫ Tanqua ! SUDAN ! ! ! Dire Dawa Adi Harush ! Enderta Abergele ! Ab Ala Afdera Project woredas Tselemt ! NRC - Debark GAA - ☇ ! WFP (UNHAS) - Coordination ☈ Abergele! Erebti ☋☉ Plan Int. - ACF - ☃ Dabat Sahla ☃Megale Bidu and Support Service - $740,703 Janamora Wegera! Clusters/Activities ! Ziquala Somali region Sekota ! ! Concern - SCI Teru ! Agriculture CRS - Agriculture/Seed - $2,5m ☃ ☃ Kurri ! Dehana ! ☋ ! Gaz Alamata ! Elidar GAA - ☋ Amhara,Ormia and SNNP regions ! ☃☉ Gonder Zuria Gibla ! Gulf of ! Education Plan Int. - Ebenat Kobo SCI☃☉ ☃ ! Gidan ☄ Lasta ! Aden CARE - Lay Guba ! Ewa ! ☃ ! Meket Lafto Gayint ! Food security & livelihood WV - ☃ Dubti ☈ ☉ ! Tach Habru Chifra SCI - ☃ Delanta ! ! - Tigray Region, Eastern Zone, Kelete Awelall, ! Gayint IMC - ☃ Health ☉ Simada Southern Zone, Alamata and Enderta woredas ! ! Mile DJIBOUTI ☊ Mekdela ! Bati Enbise SCI- Nutrition ! Argoba ☃☉ WV - ☃ Sar Midir Legambo ☃ ! Oxfam GB - Enarj ! ☉ ! ! Ayisha Non Food Items - Amhara region, North Gonder (Gonder Zuria), Enawga ! Antsokiya Dalfagi ! ! ! Concern -
Ethnic and Religious Diversity in Higher Education in Ethiopia
ABEBAW YIRGA ADAMU Ethnic and Religious Diversity in Higher Education in Ethiopia The Case of Bahir Dar University ACADEMIC DISSERTATION To be presented, with the permission of the Board of the School of Education of the University of Tampere, for public discussion in the Paavo Koli Auditorium, Kanslerinrinne 1, Tampere, on May 22nd, 2014, at 12 o’clock. UNIVERSITY OF TAMPERE ABEBAW YIRGA ADAMU Ethnic and Religious Diversity in Higher Education in Ethiopia The Case of Bahir Dar University Acta Universitatis Tamperensis 1939 Tampere University Press Tampere 2014 ACADEMIC DISSERTATION University of Tampere School of Education Finland The originality of this thesis has been checked using the Turnitin OriginalityCheck service in accordance with the quality management system of the University of Tampere. Copyright ©2014 Tampere University Press and the author Cover design by Mikko Reinikka Distributor: [email protected] http://granum.uta.fi Acta Universitatis Tamperensis 1939 Acta Electronica Universitatis Tamperensis 1423 ISBN 978-951-44-9461-1 (print) ISBN 978-951-44-9462-8 (pdf) ISSN-L 1455-1616 ISSN 1456-954X ISSN 1455-1616 http://tampub.uta.fi Suomen Yliopistopaino Oy – Juvenes Print 441 729 Tampere 2014 Painotuote Dedicated to my selfless mother Yirgedu Meshesha with love! Table of Contents List of Abbreviations ..................................................................................................viii Acknowledgements ...................................................................................................... -
Livelihoods and Land Use Change in Highland Ethiopia
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF Kathleen Guillozet for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Forest Resources presented on August 8, 2011. Title: Livelihoods and Land Use Change in Highland Ethiopia Abstract approved: ________________________________________________________________ John C. Bliss Abstract: This dissertation investigates livelihood and land use change dynamics in a community at the farm-forest periphery in highland Ethiopia. I use interviews and livelihood assessment data to compare the strategies used by members of different wealth groups to negotiate and maintain access to forest resources, and integrate socioeconomic, bio-physical and spatially explicit data to examine changing land use and household vulnerability. This approach sheds new light on scalar aspects of poverty-environment relationships with implications for environmental justice and rural development policy. Chapter one provides an overview of the context and approach to this research. Chapter two illustrates the importance of scale in understanding household vulnerability. It uses diverse data to describe political, historic, biophysical and economic factors that shape vulnerability. Chapter three describes household livelihoods and increasing foreign investment pressure in Ethiopia’s natural forests, with an emphasis on the history of forest management and access in the study site. It describes processes of forest boundary making and conflict in the study area. Chapter four outlines two scenarios to describe the amount of agricultural land required to replace forest incomes in the community under study. These scenarios, termed “fuelwood replacement” and “fuelwood replacement with agricultural intensification,” use agricultural land as a proxy for fuelwood incomes, retaining the connection to physical space that is inherent to natural resources, rather than presenting abstracted monetary values that disassociate resources from power and access dynamics. -
Research Article Assessment of Major Animal Health Problems and Their Impact on Beef Cattle Production in Doba District of West Harerghe Zone, Ethiopia
Hindawi Veterinary Medicine International Volume 2021, Article ID 5533398, 5 pages https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/5533398 Research Article Assessment of Major Animal Health Problems and Their Impact on Beef Cattle Production in Doba District of West Harerghe Zone, Ethiopia Umer Seid Geletu ,1 Ahmedin Abdureman Musa,1 Sisay Lemma Waqe,1 Munera Ahmednur Usmael,2 Yesihak Yusuf Mummed,3 Fufa Dawo Bari,4 and Abdulmuen Mohammed Ibrahim5 1College of Agriculture, Department Animal Science, Oda Bultum University, P.O. Box 226, Chiro, Ethiopia 2Oromia Bureau Livestock and Fishery Resources, West Hararghe Zone, Chiro Wereda, P.O. Box 226, Chiro, Ethiopia 3School of Animal Science and Randge Land, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia 4Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Veterinary Public Health, College of Veterinary Medicine and Agriculture, Addis Ababa University, P.O. Box 34, Bishoftu, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 5Office of Research Affairs, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia Correspondence should be addressed to Umer Seid Geletu; [email protected] Received 7 February 2021; Accepted 5 August 2021; Published 24 August 2021 Academic Editor: Carlos Alberto Hussni Copyright © 2021 Umer Seid Geletu et al. (is is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. (e aim of the current study was to assess the major animal health problems and their impact on beef cattle production in Doba district of West Harerghe Zone, Ethiopia. (e study area was purposively selected, and a simple random sampling method was used to selected households’ fatteners from each kebele and interviewed using structured questionnaires. -
Resolving Mechanism in the Eastern Hararghe Zone of Oromiya Regional State, Ethiopia
The reintegrating role that can be played by a traditional conflict- resolving mechanism in the eastern Hararghe zone of Oromiya regional state, Ethiopia Nigusie Angessa* Abstract This article presents qualitative data on the reintegrating role that can be played by a traditional confl ict-resolving mechanism in the eastern Hararghe zone of Oromiya regional state. The study was conducted in one of the districts of the eastern Hararghe zone where resource-based inter- and intragroup confl icts are widely observed. The data used in the study were generated from one-on-one interviews, focus group discussions, and document analysis during fi eld work in the selected district. The study revealed that confl icts in the research site emanate from stiff competition among parties over scarce resources. Individuals’ avaricious behaviour, dilemmas, and uncertainty over their subjective and objective interests create competing goals, polarised groups and tensions, which in turn lead the parties to the confl icts. The confl icts become complex and cyclical due to unaddressed animosity, fear, frustration, and anger developed * Nigusie Angessa has an M.A. degree in Foreign Language Studies and has taken high level trainings in the areas of peace and conflict. He is a lecturer in the College of Social Sciences and Humanities, Haramaya University, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia. The author would like to acknowledge the key informants, Mussa Ahmed and Mohammed Musso, for their insight into the gumaa system used at the research site. 11 Nigusie Angessa among parties in conflict. The study indicated that in spite of its declining power and sphere of influence, a community-based traditional conflict resolution mechanism called ‘Gumaa’ plays a great role in constructively resolving the inter- and intragroup conflicts and reintegrating the conflicting parties– revitalising the socio-psychological factors which contribute to peace. -
Shashemene Subsheet 0738 D3
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Fieldwork and primary compilation of the map and explanatory notes was done by a combined team from the Geological Survey of Ethiopia (GSE) consisting of staff from the Regional Geology, GeoHazard Investigation and Hydrogeology Directorates, and Czech experts from AQUATEST a.s. and the Czech Geological Survey within the framework of the Czech Official Development Assistance Program supported by the Czech Government through the Czech Development Agency. We would like to thank the SNNPR Regional Water Bureau for their hospitality, guidance and relevant data delivery. The team is grateful to the management of the Geological Survey of Ethiopia, particularly to Director General (GSE) Mr. Masresha G/Selassie and Mr. Lata Alemayehu, Head of the GeoHazard Investigation Directorate, Mr. Tadesse Alemu, Head of the Regional Geology Directorate, as well as Mr. Muhudin Abdela Head of the Groundwater Resources Assessment Directorate, for their support. Finally, the team would like to acknowledge the untiring support of the local people who assisted the team by all means possible and facilitated the data collection and those who helped us in various different ways. The team is also grateful to the GSE drivers, who carefully drove during the field campaign. Žá ček V., Rapprich V., Aman Y., Berhanu B., Čížek D., Dereje K., Erban V., Ezra T., Firdawok L., Habtamu M., Hroch T., Kopa čková V., Málek J., Malík J., Mišurec J., Orgo ň A., Pécskay Z., Šíma J., Tarekegu D., Verner K. (2014): Explanation booklet to the Set of Geoscience maps of Ethiopia at a scale 1 : 50,000: sub-sheet 0738-D3 Shashemene. -
Hum Ethio Manitar Opia Rian Re Espons E Fund D
Hum anitarian Response Fund Ethiopia OCHA, 2011 OCHA, 2011 Annual Report 2011 Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Humanitarian Response Fund – Ethiopia Annual Report 2011 Table of Contents Note from the Humanitarian Coordinator ................................................................................................ 2 Acknowledgements ................................................................................................................................. 3 1. Executive Summary ............................................................................................................................ 4 1.1 2011 Humanitarian Context ........................................................................................................... 4 1.2 Map - 2011 HRF Supported Projects ............................................................................................. 6 2. Information on Contributors ................................................................................................................ 7 2.1 Donor Contributions to HRF .......................................................................................................... 7 3. Fund Overview .................................................................................................................................... 8 3.1 Summary of HRF Allocations in 2011 ............................................................................................ 8 3.1.1 HRF Allocation by Sector ....................................................................................................... -
519 Ethiopia Report With
Minority Rights Group International R E P O R Ethiopia: A New Start? T • ETHIOPIA: A NEW START? AN MRG INTERNATIONAL REPORT AN MRG INTERNATIONAL BY KJETIL TRONVOLL ETHIOPIA: A NEW START? Acknowledgements Minority Rights Group International (MRG) gratefully © Minority Rights Group 2000 acknowledges the support of Bilance, Community Aid All rights reserved Abroad, Dan Church Aid, Government of Norway, ICCO Material from this publication may be reproduced for teaching or other non- and all other organizations and individuals who gave commercial purposes. No part of it may be reproduced in any form for com- financial and other assistance for this Report. mercial purposes without the prior express permission of the copyright holders. For further information please contact MRG. This Report has been commissioned and is published by A CIP catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library. MRG as a contribution to public understanding of the ISBN 1 897 693 33 8 issue which forms its subject. The text and views of the ISSN 0305 6252 author do not necessarily represent, in every detail and in Published April 2000 all its aspects, the collective view of MRG. Typset by Texture Printed in the UK on bleach-free paper. MRG is grateful to all the staff and independent expert readers who contributed to this Report, in particular Tadesse Tafesse (Programme Coordinator) and Katrina Payne (Reports Editor). THE AUTHOR KJETIL TRONVOLL is a Research Fellow and Horn of Ethiopian elections for the Constituent Assembly in 1994, Africa Programme Director at the Norwegian Institute of and the Federal and Regional Assemblies in 1995. -
OCHA East Hub Easthararghe Zone of Oromia: Flash Floods 290K 13
OCHA East Hub East Hararghe Zone of Oromia: Flash floods Flash Update No. 1 As of 26 August 2020 HIGHLIGHTS Districts affected by flash floods as of 20 August 2020 • 290,185 people (58,073HHs) were affected due to the recent flood and landslide • 169 PAs in 13 districts (Haromaya, Goro Muxi, Kersa Melka Belo, Bedeno, Meta, Deder, Kumbi, Giraw, Kurfa Calle, Kombolcha, Jarso and Goro Gutu) were affected. • Over 42,000IDPs in those affected woredas were also affected including secondary displacement in some areas like the 56HH IDPs in Calanqo city of Metta woreda • 970 houses were damaged out of which 330 were totally damaged resulting to the displacement for 1090 people. Moreover,22,080 hectares of meher plantations were damaged impacting 18885 people in 4 districts and landslides on 2061 hectares affected 18785 people. A total of 18 human deaths as well as 135 livestock deaths reported. • 4 roads with total length of 414kms were partially damaged which might cause physical access constraints to 4-5 woredas of the zone. 290K 13 affected Districts affected people SITUATION OVERVIEW East Hararghe zone is recurrently affected by flood impact. Chronically,9 woredas of the zone, namely, Kersa, Melak Belo, Midhega Tola, Bedeno, Gursum, Deder, Babile, Haromaya ad Metta were prone to flooding. The previous flood in May affected 8 of the these woredas were 10,067 HHs (over 60,000 people) in 62 kebeles were affected. During this time, over 2000 hectares of Belg plantations were damaged. Only Babile woreda was reached with few assistances from some partners. The NMA predicted that above normal rainfall will likely to happen in the Eastern part after June. -
73-84 Association of Arabica Coffee Quality Attributes with Selected So
East African Journal of Sciences (2015) Volume 9 (2) 73-84 Association of Arabica Coffee Quality Attributes with Selected Soil Chemical Properties Adugnaw Mintesnot1*, Nigussie Dechassa2,and Ali Mohammed1 1Jimma University, Department of Horticulture, P. O. Box 307, Jimma, Ethiopia 2Haramaya University, Department of Plant Sciences, P. O. Box 138, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia Abstract: Coffee (Coffea arabica L.) bean quality attributes differ based on the origin of the produce. Several agro-ecological conditions influence coffee bean quality attributes. Soil chemical properties may be some of the factors affecting the quality attributes. However, no study has so far been conducted to elucidate the association of coffee bean qualities with soil chemical properties in both major and minor coffee growing regions of Ethiopia. Thus, this research was conducted with the objective of establishing association of chemical soil properties with coffee cup quality attributes. Coffee beans as well as soil samples from which the beans originated were subjected to chemical analysis. The coffee beans and the corresponding soil samples originated from large scale coffee plantations (Bebeka, Gemadro and Goma), districts from southwestern major coffee growing region (Gore, Jimma, Lemkefa), West (Gimbi), East (Badano, Chiro, Darolebu, Habro and Melkabelo), South (Yirgacheffe) and northwestern minor coffee growing districts (Ankasha, Bure, Mecha and Jabi). The soil samples were collected from the depth of 0 - 50 cm near the coffee trunks and samples of ripe coffee cherries were picked up from the trees during the 2010/11 harvest season. Selected chemical properties of the soil, namely, available potassium, cation exchange capacity, exchangeable acidity, exchangeable bases, available micronutrients, available phosphorus, total nitrogen, soil pH, electrical conductivity, and percent organic carbon were determined from 53 soil samples in Jimma University soil laboratory and Wolkitie Soil Testing and Soil Fertility Improvement Centre using the established procedures. -
Floristic Composition and Carbon Pools Along Altitudinal Gradient: the Case of Gara–Muktar Forest, West Hararghe Zone, Eastern Ethiopia
Forestry Research and Engineering: International Journal Research Article Open Access Floristic composition and carbon pools along altitudinal gradient: the case of gara–muktar forest, west hararghe zone, eastern Ethiopia Abstract Volume 4 Issue 1 - 2020 Forests play vital role in combating climate change through carbon sequestration in the Asaminew Wodajo,1 Mehari A Tesfaye,2 atmosphere and serving as a carbon sink in the form of carbon pool systems of forest 3 ecosystems. The species composition and carbon stock in the different carbon pools Muktar Mohammed 1Bonga Agricultural Research Centre, Ethiopia, and analysis of the influence of the environmental gradients were studied by systematic 2Central Ethiopia Environment and Forest Research, Ethiopia sampling method collecting data in thirty-six quadrant plots of 20x20m each distributed 3Oda Bultum Universities, Ethiopia along transect lines. Diameter at breast ≥5cm and total height measured for each tree in the main plot. Above and below ground biomass was estimated using allometric equation, Correspondence: Mehari Alebachew Tesfaye, Central Ethiopia while the litter carbon was estimated by taking 50% of dry biomass as carbon. Soil sample Environment and Forest Research Centre box 30708, Addis was collected using auguring method and analyzed following Walkley-Black method, Ababa, Ethiopia, Tele +251911356756, while bulk density was performed using core sampling method. The data was analyzed Email was performed using one way ANOVA of R software. The carbon stocks in aboveground, belowground, litter biomass and soil organic carbon showed distinct variation along Received: November 27, 2020 | Published: February 28, 2020 environmental gradients. The aboveground and below ground carbon stock was showed a decreasing trend along with increasing altitude, while soil organic carbon and liter carbon showed increasing trend along with increasing in altitude.