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BRIAN UMONY SCORES AS ST. GEORGE THRASH SIDAMA BUNNA | CASTEL PREMIER LEAGUE

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Ugandan Brian Umony made it to the score sheet for Ethiopia's St. Goerge as the side claimed a 5-1 win against Sidama Bunna in the Castel Premier League on Sunday. Umony netted the defending champions' second goal in the 16th minute after Minyahel Teshome's opener three minutes earlier in the match. Adane Girma (34’) and Ramkel Lok (38’) thereafter extended the score as Umony's colleagues' brilliance rose to new levels on the evening. Two penalties awarded for both, St. George and Sidama Bunna were also converted by Girma (his second for the hosts) and former St. George player Andualem Negussie. St. George were recovering from 2-0 defeat at the hands of Adama Kenema the previous weekend. Source:http://www.kawowo.com/index.php/football/item/23844-brian-umony-scores-as-st-george-thrash-sidama-bunna-castel-premier-league.html

Faced with climate change, Ethiopia rediscovers an ancient staple crop

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Often dubbed the false banana, the giant enset is a staple crop in certain parts of Ethiopia. As climate change brings increasingly frequent droughts, the plant's versatility and resilience could help fight hunger. When 52-year-old Gebre Ynitso was a child in Ethiopia, he and his fellow villagers tended a towering plant with broad, lush green leaves. They harvested its roots and leaves for food and collected its fibers to weave into hats, sacks and even mattresses. No part of the plant went to waste. "I would play hide-and-go seek in the dense enset plantation," said Ynitso, who also helped his parents transplant the enset, as the eye-catching crop is known. Ynitso also made toys out of its roots. Endemic to Ethiopia, the plant has been cultivated there for more than 7,000 years. It's often dubbed the false banana because of its similarity to the banana tree. The enset can withstand droughts as well as heavy rains, making it ideal for cultivation in Ethiop

Concerns raised over UK export of nuclear weapon 'ingredient' to Ethiopia

THE UK Government has been urged to provide assurances of “strict scrutiny” over the export of material which can be used to manufacture nuclear weapons to a country with defence links to North Korea. Data shows that in January this year, the UK approved the export of £1,193 of deuterium compounds to Ethiopia under a licence granted by the government’s Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS). The material has uses ranging from the construction of nuclear reactors and the manufacture of medicinal drugs, to the production of nuclear weapons. The information, collected by the Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT), also shows the deuterium has been exported to Ethiopia under a “dual-use” licence as goods for both military and civilian purposes. But SNP MP Stephen Gethins, a member of the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, has raised concerns over the transaction, pointing out there is no record of any nuclear power reactor in Ethiopia. The country ha

CLEAN PEACE: STUDENT CREATES JOBS FOR YOUTHS IN ETHIOPIA

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With a $10,000 grant and an idea Telavive Taye '17 returned to her childhood home of Hawassa, Ethiopia, to create an enterprise she hoped would promote peace and prosperity. Photo from Davidson College The recipient of a Projects for Peace grant from the Davis United World Scholars Program, Taye established a car wash managed completely by and for youth, with the goal of engaging them in a productive business in a growing city with high rates of unemployment. In fact, official estimates place the country's rate of youth unemployment at more than 50 percent. As a partner to the Davis program, Davidson's Center for Civic Engagement solicits project applications from Davidson students and submits the most outstanding ones to the Davis program for consideration. The program seeks grassroots projects that promote peace and address the causes of conflict. Taye, a biology major who plans to attend medical school, moved with her family in 2005 from their home in Hawassa

Chinese textile firm leases industrial sheds in Hawassa Park

- Indian garment factory opens doors By Birhanu Fikade Following the recent visit of Prime Minister Hailemariam Dessalegn, a Chinese firm has finalized deals to lease two manufacturing sheds with 11,000 and five thousand sq.m areas at the Hawassa Industrial Park which currently is under construction, The Reporter has learnt.  Indochine, a renowned Chinese textile firm mostly engaged in souring activities has wired the down payment of USD 200 thousand via the National Bank of Ethiopia and currently the firm has acquired 11,000sqm. Anila Kularatne, who currently undertakes the establishment of the Indochine International, a subsidiary of the China based Indochine Apparel Ltd, told The Reporter that the company has deposited the minimum capital required from foreign investors.  According to Kularatne, the company will be involved in manufacturing garments and will install plants for laundry, denims and the like. Though Kularatne opted not to disclose further details before fi