Saturday, April 4, 2026
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USAID donates over 600,000 mosquito nets to Afar

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Health bureau says awareness is increasing

The United States Agency for International Development has donated over 600,000 mosquito nets to the Afar region where around 28 percent of the population suffers from the disease.
The nets were shipped via cars and camels to distribute them to 30 Werdas in the region. The donation is part of the US President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) which launched a campaign to distribute six million long lasting insecticide treated nets in Afar, Amhara, Oromia, and Tigray states. usaid-2
The Afar Health Bureau says the region has been seeing success in their attempts to convince more people to use the nets. A survey indicated that prevention practices were on the rise and that ownership of long lasting insecticide- treated mosquito nets had more than doubled in the last five years.
Yasin Habib, is the deputy head of the region’s health bureau. He lauded the handover of the nets at a ceremony last Wednesday at Afamabo Wereda, near the Djibouti border.
“In the past, many died from this disease but now because we can provide better treatment in hospitals, distribute more drugs in the pharmacy and provide nets from donors we have made progress in fighting the disease but we still have a long way to go; just providing nets won’t solve the problem, we need insecticide treated nets, malaria control services, and to continue to raise awareness about prevention,” he said.
Malaria is a leading cause of illness and death in many areas of Ethiopia. According to the Ministry of Health, about 60 percent of the Ethiopian population lives in Malaria- prone areas and nearly two million cases of malaria were treated last year alone. Ethiopia’s national strategic plan aims to reduce malaria cases by 40 percent from 2016 figures. From 2016 to 2017, nearly 140, 000 cases treated in Afar which has a population of 25 million.

NISCO pays 19mln birr for fire damage insurance

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Modern Building Industries PLC, AMAGA and Dana Trading PLC whose properties were damaged by fire received payments from Nyala Insurance S.C. (NISCO).
NISCO’s CEO, Yared Mola presented a check for 7,416,799 birr to Modern Building Industries PLC, on February 15, 2018 who lost machines, laboratory equipment, material stocks and products in fires.
AMAGA PLC and Dana Trading PLC also received checks for 5.2 million and Birr 6.3 million, respectively, against losses and damages to their respective properties.
Yared said claim payments are a moment of truth when the insurer’s credibility is really tested and Nyala Insurance by settling these claims has proved it can be trusted by its esteemed customers.
He emphasized that, apart from handling claims on time, NISCO regularly provides effective risk management and safety trainings that are vital to reassuing the business community that they are committed to them.
The company representatives thanked NISCO and its management for their prompt responses and praised Nyala Insurance for being the right business partner at a time of such big losses, and added, they are very committed to enhancing their business relations.
Previously, NISCO paid out 28.7 million birr to MBI after they lost property in a fire. NISCO has 45 branches throughout the country.

Aid as necessary for African countries as trade, Bill Gates

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“There’s no tradeoff where if you take less foreign aid you get more trade, those two things exist absolutely separately. Trade terms for Africa are actually in almost every case extremely favorable,” Co-Chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Bill Gates stated during a conference call with African journalists. The call revolved around the 2018 Annual Letter by the two Co-Chairs of the foundation which focused on their response on 10 tough questions they received over the years from nonprofit partners, government leaders and the general public.
Speaking on a question regarding why the Foundation doesn’t focus on building capacities of trade instead of focusing on aid, Gates stated that for the United States African Growth and Opportunity Act gives Africa the lowest tariffs for trade.
“The key is to raise up the health and education and infrastructure and the quality of governments in Africa so that there’s more output, high quality output. And, yes, over time growing the economies of the African countries, including through trade, growing the private sector, will be key to them achieving middle income status and being self-sufficient. But the foreign aid is helpful to that because the key thing is, you’ve got to get the health and nutrition and education up to a very high level to drive the economic growth at full speed,” he told Capital.
Gates further stated that “Of course, Ethiopia has a plan where they’re growing the infrastructure. They’re improving the health. They’re improving the farming output. And that over a 20-year period will move Ethiopia up to a kind of middle income status. And then probably the foreign aid will go and focus on countries that are not as far along.”
He underlined that when looking at malaria bed nets or vaccines for pneumonia or diarrhea or certain kinds of expertise, like the partnership the Foundation has had in Ethiopia with the Agricultural Transformation Agency, the benefits there have been strong. “And, of course, in agriculture that becomes private sector and over time, as the livestock is more productive, as the seeds are more productive, that does result in trade. So in agriculture it is a direct connection to improving trade results. In the case of health, there’s no direct financial payback, but it’s those healthy kids going to school that will be key to the future economic growth,” Gates said.
Speaking on the issue of unemployment among the youth on the continent, Gates stated that there are appropriately expectations by those youth, that the government will provide the stability, the food, the education and economic opportunity; it’s a big enough population bulge that that won’t be easy to do.
“Of course, this challenge was faced in the past by China and India and many Asian countries that managed both in agriculture and manufacturing and services to have good enough health of the population, and good enough education that they, both the domestic and the export market, were able to create that employment. Usually what happens is you raise the productivity in the agricultural sector and create value-added jobs in agriculture. You also have migration into the cities. So then in the cities you have to create in services and manufacturing quite a bit of new jobs.”
“There’s a partnership between Ethiopia and UNIDO that’s fairly unique in terms of looking at bringing factories, including a number of Chinese and other factories. And, of course, there’s been a lot of work to build the infrastructure, like the rail and road connections through Djibouti. So as the country gets the increased electricity and improved infrastructure, there should be some opportunity for Ethiopia in particular to follow a Vietnamese-like model. But a ton of things need to work very well for that to happen in terms of the education quality, and the infrastructure quality, and the predictability of the government policies,” he said.

Dangerous Crossings; new campaign hopes to inform migrants on dangers of their journey

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UNHCR launched a major information campaign in the Horn of Africa region to raise awareness of the dangers of crossing to and through Yemen. The main feature of the campaign is the music video Dangerous Crossings, and video testimonies by victims of the smuggling trade. The music video features prominent artists who are credible to target audiences: Yeshi Demalash, Dawit Nega and Tadele Roba from Ethiopia, Maryam Mursal and Armaanta from Somalia and Hany Adel from Egypt. The video testimonies are powerful firsthand accounts by refugees and migrants from the region.
“This campaign is very important to the fight against the adversities of irregular migration especially in the Horn of Africa. It is part of a sustained effort to inform people in the region about the dangers involved in taking the route to Yemen in the hopes of being able to continue from there to a destination of choice; be it in Europe, Saudi Arabia or other gulf states,” said Matthew Crentsil, Deputy Representative of UNHCR.
The method of the awareness raising, combining the appeal of music performed by popular artists with statements by ordinary people who have survived terrible ordeals on the journey is thought to be more effective than others. The campaign engages young people, their families and communities, stimulates discussion, and challenges the smuggler’s tales about Yemen as a safe destination.
“It is quite distressing to know that every week, more than five thousand people, refugees and migrants, cross the red sea or Gulf of Eden to Yemen. The smugglers are organized in criminal gangs and cooperate across borders. At every stage of the journey people are expected to pay large sums of money and the fees go far beyond what had already been agreed on.
To reach people tools such as social media, radio, TV print media, billboards and posters are being used. Yemen has been ravaged by a vicious war since 2015 and is today the largest humanitarian crisis in the world with epidemics and famine added to the horrors of war. But, startlingly every year, tens of thousands of people continue to cross the sea from the horn of Africa to the war torn country, risking their lives at the hands of smugglers. In 2016, 117,000 people went on that journey and approximately he same number last year.