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Ethiopia: Fresh Cabinet Faces As Meles Starts New Term

ISSUE 195
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Headlines

Results Of Parliamentary Elections In The Hargeysa Region Announced

TFG Spy Found Aboard A UN Chartered Plane

Cyber-Dating Outsmarts Somaliland Suitors, Worries UN

Interview With Mark Bradbury, Somaliland Poll Observer

Rockshelters Of Las Geel. Republic Of Somalilandt

Yemen Arming Abdillahi Yusuf’s Faction ‎

Militia Leader, Alleged Terrorist, Calls For Islamic ‎Rule In Somalia, End To Interference

Kenyans Advised To Avoid Somali Coastline

People

Somali Poetry Event: The Great Somali Poet Maxamed ‎Xaashi Dhamac 'Gaarriye' In The UK

International News

Pirates: Latest Threat To Africa Food Aid The US Congress Looks At Revising Its Hunger ‎Program

WFP Welcomes Release of Second Food Aid ‎Ship Hijacked in Somalia - Press Release‎

Somali Man Fights Deportation

Yemen Denies Illegal Arms Supply

ANTI TERRORISM LEGISLATION
British Govt Proposes Banning 15 Groups

Ethiopia: Fresh Cabinet Faces As Meles Starts New Term

UN Special Representative To Visit Moscow And ‎Stockholm For Consultations On Somalia Peace Process

SOMALIA: Interim Gov't Denies Violating Arms Embargo

Sacked Somalia Bank Governor Lobbies Donors

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Dueling Priorities For Beijing In The Horn Of Africa

Sacked Somalia Bank Governor Lobbies Donors

Editorial & Opinions

Somaliland Election: An Account Of A Close Observer

Era Of Bipolar Power Structure Dawns In Somaliland

About Kulmiye...‎

Yusuf Uses Office To Arm Himself: The ‎Threat To Somaliland And Somalia

SOMALILAND: A LULLABY IN THE WIND

The Ten Most Important Things Somaliland Should Do To ‎Strengthen Democracy And Gain International Recognition

Starting Young

Tom Cookes, And SBS Radio Journalist Issa Farah Travel ‎To Jowhar In Somalia


ADDIS ABABA, 13 Oct 2005 (IRIN) – Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi announced a sweeping cabinet ‎reshuffle this week, pledging to overcome weaknesses in government and implement policies to end poverty. ‎ The new team is expected to cement Meles’s 14-year legacy of power by pushing through reforms and improving ‎governance. ‎

Critics, however, say many of the new ministers will not be accountable to parliament because they were not ‎elected by the people and do not reflect the ethnic diversity of the country. ‎ In the changes, some of Meles’s closest supporters and senior ministers lost their jobs. In all, 11 ministers were ‎replaced and one incumbent reshuffled to a new post. The team was unanimously approved by parliament on ‎Tuesday. ‎
Those who were dropped included Education Minister Genet Zewdie, Health Minister Kebede Tadesse and ‎Information Minister Bereket Simon. Deputy Prime Minister Adissu Legesse and Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin ‎retained their positions in the restructuring, which was announced live on state television. ‎

The 20-member cabinet - up from 17 - is charged with implementing the prime minister's five-year plan, which ‎includes boosting the country's fledgling democracy, increasing development and ensuring peace. ‎ Five of the new ministers are members of the Oromo ethnic community, Ethiopia’s largest with approximately 30 ‎million people. Seven are from the Amhara community, the second largest ethnic group in the country. Three ‎members, including the prime minister, are Tigrayan, who make up 6 percent of the population and spearheaded ‎the 17-year guerrilla war against the former Dergue regime. ‎
Analysts say that many of the big guns were removed from the cabinet so that they could dedicate themselves to ‎bolstering the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), which suffered heavy losses to ‎the opposition during the 15 May elections. ‎ ‎"Some of their top people have lost their ministerial portfolios because they have been taken to strengthen the ‎party rather than the government," explained political analyst Medhane Tadesse. ‎ ‎"Maybe the lesson they have learned from the election is that the party needs to be strengthened," he added. "The ‎same people, however, remain at the top." ‎

Ethiopia and its 71 million people face enormous problems. The UN warned in September that a simmering ‎border dispute with Eritrea threatened to spill over once more into another war. ‎
Although Ethiopia has seen a dramatic increase in recent years in school enrolment, statistics show most children ‎drop out after a year. Tens of thousands of children also die needlessly from preventable diseases, and hunger ‎continues to afflict millions. ‎

A much-heralded scheme to cut dependency on food aid has been beset by problems, particularly in terms of ‎getting support to the hungry. A programme to resettle families to supposedly fertile areas was widely criticized ‎after many of those who were relocated found themselves on land with no facilities. ‎
Aid, which has increased sharply in recent years, largely pays for emergency feeding rather than development ‎schemes. ‎The prime minister reasoned that at US $1.9 billion per year, Ethiopia’s aid is one of the lowest per capita in ‎Africa, making poverty reduction almost unachievable. He told parliament that the public's unprecedented swing ‎to the opposition during the May election had been a wake-up call. ‎ ‎"We have had problems with implementation and good governance, and this should be addressed," he said. "Our ‎people have provided us with constructive criticism and we will be working very diligently." ‎


OPPOSITION DISAPPOINTED ‎
Beyene Petros, chairman of the opposition United Ethiopian Democratic Forces, said that he was disappointed by ‎the cabinet appointments and believed development would continue to elude the poor. ‎

‎"The criteria [Meles] used were party loyalty rather than competence, which has been one of the main reasons ‎implementation of the policies has been poor in the past," he said. ‎
‎"I think the cabinet has actually been weakened with this reshuffle," said Bulcha Demeke, head of the opposition ‎Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement. He noted that relatively inexperienced people had replaced senior ‎ministers. ‎ ‎"Everything is now under the control of the prime minister. The control seems to be tighter than before with new ‎rules and regulations for the ministers and ministries," he said. ‎
However, the prime minister rejected criticism of his choice of ministers, saying a strong, effective government ‎was the result of a team, not individuals. ‎ ‎"The council of ministers is a team - like a football team - and the team's ability is not decided by each player. The ‎most decisive element is the general capacity of the group. If they complement each other, then it is a good ‎team," Meles said. ‎
He also rejected criticism that the cabinet included ministers who were not elected, explaining that their ‎appointments were based on capability rather than who voted for them. ‎

During the reshuffle the government established a women's affairs ministry to help address some of the ‎fundamental problems faced by women and girls. ‎Headed by newcomer Hirut Dilebo, the ministry aims to ensure that women start participating in decision-making ‎both inside and outside the government. ‎
The ministry also is tasked with bridging the huge gender gap in Ethiopia, where only 16 percent of girls attend ‎secondary school and five percent of women are infected with HIV compared to 3.8 percent of men. ‎


Meles was re-elected to another five-year term during the official opening of the new parliament on Monday even ‎as more than 100 opposition members boycotted the session. ‎
The EPRDF controls 59 percent of the 547-seat parliament after winning 327 seats during the elections and ‎subsequent re-runs of the vote. Opposition parties, which held only 12 seats in the last parliament, won the rest. ‎


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