Tuesday, May 19, 2026
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“LET’S TALK ABOUT LOCKS…”

“…reflecting on the braided and afro-heads of our jegenna (warriors) …winning the Battle of Adwoa, in defense of our dignity and sovereignty. If it was good enough for our ancestors why is not good enough for us?”

Hair, an “American tribal love-rock musical,” is an award winning 60’s play which emerged out of the counterculture hippie movement. The long haired personalities in the play, filled their flowing manes with flowers; symbols and statements of love, freedom and resistance against the status quo. The play ran in hundreds of cities in the USA, Europe and the world. During the same ‘60’s, the Black Panther Party was founded by Americans of African descent, countering racism and other forms of social and political injustice on their own terms, in and for their own communities. They famously donned large Afros and wore dashikis, growing from an Oakland area phenomenon to an over 68 city wide movement with thousands of members, all in Fro’s. Also rising in the 60’s was the Rastafari Movement whose devotees wore what is commonly known as dreads or dreadlocks, reflecting African roots. The word “dread” referenced Rastafarians fear or dread of the Most High, while on the other hand referred to the fear or dread that non-Rastas were said to experience upon encounter with the Rasta Man. This perception based on Rastas natural indigenous appearance juxtaposed to the “clean-cut” X-British colony choice of coiffure, typical for Jamaicans. Suffice it to say, hair in the 20th and 21st centuries have been front and center of counter-culture and resistance as well as expressions of spiritual and cultural identities.
Historically, however, Africans, have donned endless and exceptional hairstyles, an essential part of identity including one’s social status and belonging, be it to a family, a clan or a tribe. The hairstyle of a young girl entering puberty, or a young male seeking a wife, or an elder in mourning, the list is endless. In bridging the gap on the discourse on hair, then and now, and specifically as it relates to natural hairstyles for people of African descent, especially women; we still find ourselves in a quagmire of conflicts.
Did you know wearing natural black hair impacts opportunities for employment, housing, education and even health care, emphasis on women and youth? Be it afros, braids, bantu knots, cornrows, locks or other expressions of culture and identity through hair; why are qualified Black women with degrees being counseled by concerned kith and kin to straighten or cut natural hair or wear wigs in order to apply for certain posts? Why do schools on the continent and abroad deny admission to children and adolescents of Africa descent who wear natural hair various reasons?
We know that in the African Diaspora, anything too black or African is perceived as an affront or inappropriate to the status quo. And yes in 2019 there remains public outrage and outcries for justice based on discrimination against natural hairstyles, including locks. In a loss for Black hair in 2016, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against a lawsuit filed by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission verse Catastrophe Management Solutions, ruling that “…refusing to hire someone because of dreadlocks is legal”. However, just last month New York City Commission on Human Rights found that, “…judgment and mistreatment of people because of their hair or hairstyle will be considered a form of racial discrimination at work in school, or in public areas in the city.” Acknowledging the landscape of race and social inequality in the US is one thing, but what about right here at home in Africa?
Why should an African woman, proud of her heritage and hair be discourage or judged wrongly on appearance because she is not in straightened or imported hair from India? Why should students in South Africa to Kenya be denied education because of natural hair? Are African’s attitudes towards their identities influenced by Western standards so much that we deny our history and culture? Shouldn’t African hairstyles be encouraged as part of the Pan African narrative of an ‘Africa on the rise’? Should we mainstream African culture in professional and institutional environs, especially in consideration of Women’s Day? Does media/TV depiction adversely impact attitudes and policies on natural hair? These and other questions will help shape the upcoming LETS’ TALK ABOUT LOCKS… Art Exhibition and Colloquium on Saturday March 9 at bluSpace on Bole, curated and moderated by yours truly.
LETS’ TALK ABOUT LOCKS… will address heritage and identity as we explore perceptions and biases on African-ness as related to hair. Panelists include Adwoa Kufuor, Regional Gender Advisor, UNOHCHR; Victoria Maloka, Head of AU’s Gender Outreach; Child Psychologist Zahara Legesse-Kauffman, M.A. MSW; Pastor Zerubbabel Beta Mengistu, aka Pastor Zee, Beza Ministries; and Fine Artist Merid Tafesse, creator of the illustrations published in I LOVE LOCKS children’s book. It is safe to say we intend a 360 degree perspective. But as I close, I am reflecting on the braided and afro-heads of our jegenna (warriors) who defended Ethiopia against Italian invasion, winning the Battle of Adwoa, in defense of our dignity and sovereignty. If it was good enough for our ancestors why is not good enough for us? Happy Adwa Day.

Dr. Desta Meghoo is a Jamaican born
Creative Consultant, Curator and cultural promoter based in Ethiopia since 2005. She also serves as Liaison to the AU for the Ghana based, Diaspora African Forum.

About Food Safety

The First FAO/WHO/AU International Food Safety Conference was held in ADDIS ABABA, 12–13 February 2019. The Conference included technical panel presentations and discussions as well as ministerial panels involving Health, Trade and Agriculture officials and experts to address key food safety issues and strategic actions. Discussions focused on sharing perspectives, emerging problems and best practice examples.
The thematic sessions covered were:
The burden of foodborne diseases and the benefits of investing in safe food;
Safe and sustainable food systems in an era of accelerated climate change;
Science, innovation and digital transformation at the service of food safety;
Empowering consumers to make healthy choices and support sustainable food systems.
As the issue of Food Safety is a burning one for Ethiopia as well and considering the role the private sector plays, I quote below from background material prepared for the session on the burden of foodborne diseases and the benefits of investing in safe food and more specifically on the issue of LEVERAGING PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENT FOR SAFE VALUE CHAINS.
“Although the developments in food systems have yielded many positive results over the past three decades in developing countries, the associated structural transformations have also resulted in significant challenges, including increased incidence of food safety issues. In a context characterized by poor infrastructure, lack of packaging and other inputs, lack of technical expertise, inadequate policies and weak institutional support, a substantial infusion of fixed investment and working capital will be required if small and medium agro-industries are to fully exploit market opportunities. Private sector investment along the value chain is motivated by expected returns relative to perceived risk and uncertainty. One of the key determinants of private sector investment in agribusiness is therefore the availability of adequate and well-tailored financial services, which allow the private sector to manage and cope with risks and fund investments, including those required for ensuring food safety along the value chain. Public-private partnerships can also serve as a mechanism for risk sharing with the public sector to lower the barriers to entry for the private sector. However, the importance of transparency cannot be overemphasized and the role of civil society in maintaining public confidence in the integrity and value of such partnerships is an important consideration.
Private actors – from small holders, small and medium agro-enterprises, large national and international agribusiness companies, and financial institutions – require an enabling in related medical expenses each year. Yet a large proportion of these costs could be avoided by adopting preventive measures that improve how food is handled from farm to fork. The economic cost of unsafe food varies across countries according to their level of economic development. This variation is linked to the complex interplay of a wide range of economic, demographic, dietary, and environmental health factors. At country-level it is important to recognize the need for effective investment, a better understanding of the cost of reducing the burden of unsafe food, and the achievable impact on the country’s food security, public health, and economy. Any food safety standards that are developed and implemented (inter)nationally have associated costs for governments, industry and consumers. Nonetheless, the economic benefit and public health cost reduction resulting from reliable food safety systems outweigh the cost of food safety investment. Governments, in particular in low-and middle-income countries, not only need to invest more in food safety, but also invest more strategically. This means investing in foundational knowledge, human resources, and infrastructure; realizing synergies among investments in food safety, human health, and environmental protection; and using public investment to leverage private investment. A transparent and constructive dynamic between food safety authorities and the food industry is fundamental in enabling public confidence in the food supply. The assurance of reliable and effective enforcement of regulation is fundamental to building a credible system. However, it is important that countries consciously seek a productive balance between enforcement and facilitation and support to value chain actors to meet requirements. environment to achieve their full potential. The public sector needs to put in place a set of enabling policies and provide public goods that create the enabling environment to foster private sector investment. The public sector can also support clustering of agribusinesses within specific geographic areas (e.g. technology parks) with assured infrastructure and access to output and input markets. Investment flows into value chains in which small-holder producers and processors are involved (e.g. as raw material suppliers) can be stimulated by improving coordination in the chain through strengthening groups that bring these actors together, while also building their technical and managerial capacity to meet market requirements.
In previous decades, government and donor investments in food safety in low and middle-income countries often focused on exports and formal sector food production and retail. This was driven by the economic benefits of export and the belief that modernization of the food system would improve productivity and deliver safer food and more benefits to workers. While both export sectors and formal food businesses remain key to many
countries’ development strategies, recent years have seen increasing evidence of the huge health and economic burdens falling on domestic consumers who primarily access food, especially perishable, higher-nutrient produce, from informal outlets and distribution channels. A broad-based food safety strategy is needed which gives balanced attention to trade and domestic matters, and, for the latter, covering food safety risks in formal and informal markets. Food safety has complex bidirectional linkages with nutrition, livelihoods and equity. For example, unsafe food is associated with stunting and malnutrition and predisposes people to gastro-intestinal illness and affects the most vulnerable people who have limited food choices and often rely on informal markets. Concerns about food safety may push people away from fresh produce and towards low-nutrient, highly processed foods, with adverse long-term health consequences. In low and middle -income countries, hundreds of millions of people, many of them women, depend on food production, processing, and retail for their livelihoods. Wherever possible, food safety interventions should act to secure rather than threaten these livelihoods.”

For more background reading:
https://www.who.int/food-safety/international-food-safety-conference/background-documents/
Ton Haverkort

Zeleke Beyene

Name: Zeleke Beyene

Education: 8th grade

Company name: Zeleke Fashion

Title: Owner

Founded in: 1968

What it does: Sews fashionable clothes

HQ: Piassa

Number of employees: Five

Startup Capital: 2,000 birr

Current Capital: Three Million birr

Reason for starting a Business: Interested in the profession

Biggest perk of ownership: I can do what I want

Biggest strength: Commitment

Biggest challenge: Lack of raw material

Plan: To open a big company

First career: Tailor
Most interested in meeting: Haile G/Selassie

Most admired person: Haile G/Selassie

Stress reducer: Reading

Favorite past-time: Working

Favorite book: Ke Atse Lebne Dengel Eske Atse Thedros By Tekletsadik Mekuria

Favorite destination: Hawassa

Favorite automobile: Peugeot

Kenenisa, Tirunesh lead Cross Country Legends

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Kenenisa Bekele
Titles: 2001 (U20), 2002 (long and short), 2003 (long and short), 2004 (long and short), 2005 (long and short), 2006 (long and short), 2008 (long)
Accumulating a record-breaking 27 gold medals at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships during an unprecedented period of success, it is doubtful whether the Ethiopian’s total will ever be surpassed.
Announcing his arrival on the global stage aged 18 by taking silver in the senior men’s short course race at the 2001 World Cross Country Championships in Ostend, he returned the following day to win the U20 race by a 33-second margin.
This was only the start as Bekele went on to complete a scarcely believable five successive senior long and short course doubles (from 2002-2006) before completing a record-breaking sixth long course crown in 2008 in Edinburgh.
Grete Waitz
Titles: 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1983
Arguably the first global star of women’s distance running – which in the 1970s was still in very much an embryonic state – the pioneering Norwegian set world records on the track, dominated on the road and left a huge legacy at the World Cross Country Championships.
Claiming the first of four successive senior women’s titles in Glasgow 1978, she regularly trounced the opposition and claimed victory by a record-breaking 44-second margin at the 1980 edition in Paris.
Waitz notched up a fifth crown in 1983 and added bronze medals in 1982 and 1984 to her proud record.
John Ngugi
Titles: 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1992
The first man to establish a genuine dynasty of success at the World Cross Country Championships, the enigmatic Kenyan will be remembered as a true legend of the event.
Claiming his first victory in the senior men’s race in 1986 in Neuchatel, Switzerland, Ngugi then went on to retain his title for the following three editions. His victory in 1989 in cloying mud in Stavanger, where he triumphed by almost half a minute, is regarded as his signature triumph.
He added further gloss to his World Cross record by adding a fifth title in the Boston snow in 1992.
Tirunesh Dibaba
Titles: 2003 (U20), 2005 (long and short), 2006, 2008
During an extraordinary career which boasts three Olympic titles and five World Championship track crowns, the stylish Ethiopian has long proved the master of the seemingly impossible. And as her record of eight individual medals (five gold and three silver) proves, she has been just as impressive at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships.
Winning her first medal, a silver, aged just 16 in the U20 race at the 2002 edition in Dublin, she returned 12 months later to strike U20 gold in Lausanne.
As a senior she claimed a trio of long course victories in 2005, 2006 and 2008 but perhaps her finest hour came in St Etienne 2005 when completing the long and short course double.
Paul Tergat
Titles: 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 (long), 1999 (long)
The Kenyan distance great may have frequently just missed out on the ultimate track prizes courtesy of his nemesis Haile Gebrselassie, but during the second half of the 1990s he was invincible over the country (a surface, interestingly, Gebrselassie could never master).
Possessing a long loping stride, Tergat claimed the first of his world cross-country titles in Durham in 1995 to kick-start a sequence of five successive men’s senior titles. His streak was finally brought to an end in 2000 – when he had to settle for bronze – but by then his legacy had already been assured.