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"ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

Postby revolutions » 07 Mar 2012, 19:36


    "ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው!" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

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Re: "ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

Postby revolutions » 07 Mar 2012, 19:39


Investigators from New York-based Human Rights Watch paid a visit to a Karuturi lease area in Gambela in May 2011 where they found that maize, sorghum, and groundnut crops planted by local Anuak farmers had been cleared without consent and residents moved off their land.
http://transformingethiopia.wordpress.com/



Re: "ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

Postby revolutions » 07 Mar 2012, 19:59



According to my observation, the main difference between Shabos and woyanes is:


Shabos brag about achieving food security to become masters of their own destiny :|

Woyanes brag about starving out Ethiopians in order to feed their Arab masters. :evil:



Re: "ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

Postby Semira » 07 Mar 2012, 22:53


Revolution,

Thanks for posting that. it you are serving the truth here. i don't know how such greasy news goes unnoticed by most ethiopian sites.



Re: "ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

Postby YEBANDAMERZE » 07 Mar 2012, 23:29


Worthless shabia pigs and their Aqatariwoch,

keep looking out the window........you have become irrelevant to Ethiopians.

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Re: "ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

Postby revolutions » 08 Mar 2012, 10:21



The UAE has been ranked globally among countries with the highest rates of obesity and diabetes.


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    Do you think obesity is a big problem in the UAE today? If so, what needs to be done to get to the root of the problem, in your opinion?
Yes, it's the biggest problem we have. Just look at the statistics. We have one of the highest rates in obesity and diabetes per capita. We are seeing more and more cases of Type 2 diabetes in children. Our sedentary lifestyle is killing us.

We are lucky to have good incomes, but the wealth has come at the cost of our health. We are always indoors and sitting down; we don't walk anywhere except in malls. We even drive to the shop around the block.

Don't get me wrong; I'm guilty of all this too, except maybe the good income. The change has to be a change in lifestyle, and it has to be done in schools. Children will motivate the parents.

No more ignoring physical exercise classes. What good is an education if you're too sick to take advantage of it? We need more parks and recreational areas where people can get a chance to be more active. It's also important to have more support for local sports.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/babylon ... y-lif.html





Re: "ዱባይ ዉስጥ ያለ 5-ስታር ሆቴል በሙሉ የሚጠቀመው የኢትዮጵያ አትክልት ነው" (ሼክ መሃመድ ኣላሙዲ)

Postby revolutions » 08 Mar 2012, 18:04


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Ethiopia: More than 3 million in need of food

January 21, 2012

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Hunger in Ethiopia Credits: UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe



About 3.2 million Ethiopians will need food and other emergency assistance during the first half of 2012, the Ethiopian government said Thursday.

Agriculture State Minister Mitiku Kassa said that, in addition to food, assistance was needed for water, sanitation, agriculture and education sectors.

The number needing assistance is down from last year, according to a report in Saturday’s edition of Brunei News.

The government estimated 4.5 million needed assistance last year.

“Periodic shocks such as droughts and heavy rains can add immediate crisis to chronic difficulties linked to high poverty levels, dependence on rain-fed agriculture, low availability of safe drinking water, poor hygiene and sanitation, and inadequate disease surveillance,” UNICEF reported. “As a result, children and women, especially pregnant women and children with poor nutritional status, are at higher risk of deathn 2011, UNICEF goals for Ethiopia were:

Six million children will be healthier because they will receive a series of essential child survival interventions, including nutritional screening and referral (with management of severe acute malnutrition for 210,000 children), vitamin A supplementation and deworming.

600,000 pregnant and lactating women will receive nutritional screening, and those who are undernourished will be referred for supplementary feeding.

Many rural and remote communities lack ready access to essential prevention and care. Mobile health teams will bring such services to 2 million people in Somali region, 90,000 people in Afar region and 302,000 people in the South Omo zone of the SNNP region.

Whether too much rain or not enough, both put access to safe water for drinking, hygiene and sanitation at risk. UNICEF will help 480,000 people in drought- and flood-affected areas maintain access to safe water.

UNICEF will ensure that 210,000 children in flood- and conflict-affected areas can attend child-friendly learning spaces, especially in the Afar, Amhara, Gambella, Oromiya, Somali, SNNP and Tigray regions.

At-risk children are especially vulnerable during times of natural disaster or other upheaval. UNICEF will ensure that child protection structures and mechanisms are in place to prevent and respond to the situation of at least 15,000 out of an estimated 40,000 vulnerable children in the worst-affected regions of Gambella and Somali, including the provision of child-focused social welfare services; additionally, survivors of gender-based violence will be able to tap into a network of necessary services through a stronger referral system.

http://www.examiner.com/united-nations- ... ed-of-food

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