Monday, October 6, 2025
Home Blog Page 2145

Record 15,000 places set, as registration opens for 2023 Safaricom Women First 5km

0

Race organizers of Great Ethiopian Run will launch registration on 27th February for the 2023 Safaricom Women First 5km with a record 15,000 places on offer to participants for the race which this year takes place on Sunday 26th March 2023, four days after International Women’s Day.
This year also marks the second time that Safaricom Ethiopia is taking on the role of headline sponsor with a three-year partnership as a title sponsor. Commenting on their ongoing support for the event, Fayda Zewdu, Head of Consumer Segments, Safaricom Ethiopia said: “We are proud to be the title sponsor for the WOMEN FIRST 5K Run once again as it matches our commitment to investing, supporting and championing women’s empowerment in Ethiopia. Our three-year partnership with Great Ethiopian Run demonstrates our desire to create more opportunities for development in the most inclusive way.”
‘’Since entering the market in Ethiopia, Safaricom has worked hard to advocate for women’s empowerment and our partnership with them is a great fit. We are delighted to have such a committed partner as our title sponsor’’ said General Manager, Dagmawit Amare.
This year the WOMEN FIRST 5km celebrates its 20th edition and the event launch which is taking place at Hyatt Regency Addis Ababa will be attended by Haile Gebrselassie and race ambassador Meseret Defar. Also present will be a representative from Women and Social Affairs Ato Sileshi Tadesse, Women Rights and protection lead CEO.
The race’s 20th edition also welcomes SENQ Malt, National Election Board of Ethiopia, Dashen Bank and Ethio Post as the four new senior sponsors.
As part of its vision to “make running a lifestyle for everyone” Great Ethiopian Run is inviting participants to sign up for its 4-week Fitness Challenge, a training program designed specifically for participation in the race.
Registration with an entry fee of 450 birr per participant can be enacted at any branch in Addis Ababa of Dashen Bank as well as via the Amole mobile app. The race route remains unchanged with the traditional start and finish venues by Atlas Hotel in Bole.

Netsanet Assefa

0

Name: Netsanet Assefa

Education: Diploma

Company name: Netsanet Export

Title: CEO

Founded in: 2010

What it do: Export traditional food

Hq: Addis Ababa around Kotebe

Number of Employees: More than 100

Startup capital: 100,000 birr

Current Capital: Over 10 million birr

Reason for starting the Business: To motivate and empower women

Biggest perk of ownership: Being a role model for Ethiopian working women

Biggest strength: Work discipline and commitment

Biggest challenge: Lack of technology to meet the market demand

Plan: Expand the business and facilitate more job opportunities for women

First career: Lead cabin crew at Ethiopian airlines

Most interested in meeting: PM Abiy Ahmed

Most admired person: Assefa G/Mariam, late national anthem author

Stress reducer: Listening to gospel songs

Favorite past time: TTime with my children

Favorite book: Bible

Favorite destination: USA

Favorite automobile: Jeep

Rotary Ethiopia rallies to kick polio out through creative charity event

0

Rotary Ethiopia unveils the Imagine Rotary Art Exhibition district wide charity event with the theme ‘End Polio for Good’ on February 23, 2023 at the Alliance Ethio-Française.
The exhibition which commemorates the establishment of Rotary International some 118 years ago in 1905 by Paul Harris, showcases 70 pieces of paintings from 19 local artists from different mediums with the aim of raising funds to eliminate polio for good. The exhibition will remain open from February 23 to March 4, 2023.
The exhibition was opened by Rotary District 9212 Governor Azeb Asrat and guest of honor Rigbe Gebrehawaria, Commissioner for Disability Rights and Rights of Older People at the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission.

(Photo: Anteneh Aklilu)

“As wild polio virus type 1 outbreak in parts of Africa remains a huge threat, the beginning of this year, saw several cases of circulating vaccine derived polio virus type 2 in Democratic republic of Congo Algeria, Niger and Central African Republic,” explained Teguest Yilma, Rotary, National Polio Plus Committee Chair and organizing team leader, adding, “Today, Ethiopia too is faced with ongoing poliovirus (cVDP2) outbreaks in many parts of the country, and is considered as very high risk due to sharing contagious borders with infected areas.”
“It is very critical that we work collectively to rapidly address these outbreaks and push forward the message of consistent high-quality immunization against polio,” sensitized the committee chair whilst highlighting that such fund raising events are integral in the fight against polio.
“The exhibition will help to raise awareness about Rotary’s effort to end polio for good by mobilizing all relevant stakeholders in the final push to eradicate the disease once and for all,” said Azeb Asrat speaking at the opening ceremony which was attended by a variety of guests, including diplomats, GPEI partners, Rotarians and Rotaractors.
“We have much work to do. Our goal of ridding the world of the disease is closer than ever. We have reduced polio cases by 99.9 percent,” the Rotary District 9212 Governor further added.
Sharing her experience as a polio survivor, Rigbe, who is also a consultant on polio eradication, championed for equality for polio survivors, “Polio is a deadly disease that paralyses children. The survivors in our community should not be alienated due to their disability but rather should be given equal opportunities and equal treatment.”
As a founding partner of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, Rotary has been working for more than three decades to eradicate this illness, which is one of its top humanitarian priorities. To date, enormous progress has been made in reducing the number of cases of polio globally by 99.9% and in eliminating the disease from all but Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Rotary has been working to eradicate polio for more than 35 years spending over 2.1 billion dollars across multiple projects.
The opening event was attended by a variety of guests, including diplomats, Global Polio Eradication Initiative partners. otarians and Rotaractors

India and China in the Global Economy

According to the World Bank and IMF, China and India are both now growing much faster than the West. Their greater populations mean that their output will overwhelm the West’s well before 2100. The global economy history book indicated that their brutal realism about international economic relations, so similar to the attitudes of Britain in 1815 and the United States in 1915, will ensure their success.
Martin Hutchinson, a renowned British author and market analyst, asserted that just as the 19th Century belonged to Britain and the 20th Century to the United States, so the 21st Century will belong to China and India, with no other obvious claimant to the 22nd century. He noted that China and India’s assertiveness, in both economic and geopolitical spheres, is reminiscent not of the hesitant Britain and United States of today, but of their activities in the period when they were rising to global hegemony, around 1815 and 1915 respectively.
According to history, around 1815, Britain claimed the right to seize neutral merchant ships, prevent them from trading with France and collect any British citizens who might be serving on them. Its effective closure of United States trade through the 1807 Orders in Council was the main cause of the War of 1812. Around 1915, the United States maintained massive protective tariffs against the world’s trade, far higher than others’. It also built the Panama Canal and invaded Mexico and Haiti, asserting its rights in the Western Hemisphere much as Vladimir Putin does in neighboring countries today.
Martin Hutchinson stated that, India follows the relatively benign model of Britain 1815 and the United States 1915 fairly closely. Indeed, India is not yet quite as assertive in foreign policy as was either previous emerging hegemon. China on the other hand is in many respects more like the Kaiser’s Germany, claiming disputed areas of ocean by building artificial islands thereon. They are also building a navy that, like the Kaiser’s High Seas Fleet, can be aimed at only one other power, the existing hegemon.
Economically, the case for China and India’s emergence is rock solid. According to figures by Price Waterhouse Coopers earlier this year, even if there is considerable slowing in growth after 2020, by 2050 China will have a GDP of $61 trillion to the United States $41 trillion. Meanwhile, India with GDP of $42 trillion will also have surpassed the United States to become the world’s second largest economic power. In practice, Price Waterhouse Coopers’s estimates are likely to be too conservative. Certainly its estimate of growth for the United States between now and 2050 is higher than has been achieved in the “recovery” from the 2008-9 debacle. Its estimates of growth for India and China both look low.
That is not to say China and India will be as rich as the United States in per capita terms by 2050, even if they grow faster than Price Waterhouse Coopers estimates. Nevertheless they will be considerably richer than they are currently, especially in India’s case. With total GDPs larger than the United States they will be able to project force more effectively than will the United States, even with the help of its NATO allies. Russia, fading from sixth place in GDP (on a purchasing power parity basis) in 2014 to eighth place in 2050, less than one tenth the size of China, will also be a declining force internationally, even if it has managed to annex a few neighboring economic basket cases.
According to Martin Hutchinson, looking beyond 2050, it is difficult to see what might dislodge China and India from their hegemony. Price Waterhouse Coopers estimation revealed that, of individual countries in 2050, in economic terms, the fourth is Indonesia, with a GDP about 30% of the United States and double that of the largest European country, Germany. In terms of population, China and India are several times the size of the next largest country, and will remain so, increasing their geopolitical clout accordingly.
They will still be much poorer than the United States in 2050, and so they will presumably enjoy some further catch-up in terms of wealth and living standards and hence increase their lead in terms of raw GDP. India’s year 2100 population is projected as 1.6 billion by the United Nations and China’s at 1 billion. This compares with a mere 450 million projected for the United States.
Martin Hutchinson noted that it is possible of course that other countries may combine, in much the same way as the EU has attempted so painfully to do. Nigeria’s population is projected as 752 million in 2100. Africa’s population as a whole is projected to approach 4 billion, since fertility rates will remain much higher there than in other regions throughout the 21st century. The world’s population overall is now projected in 2100 to be a grossly overcrowded 11.2 billion. China and India together will represent only 23% of the total compared with today’s 31%, thus be theoretically vulnerable to a new competitor.
An African federation, if one could be formed, would have four times China’s population and 2½ times India’s in 2100. It might have approached those much richer countries in terms of total GDP, while remaining much poorer per capita. That would suggest that the 22nd Century might well belong to such a federation, if it came into existence. But consider the difficulties that have been faced by the European Union.
As it is obvious, most of those African states share a common history and culture, if not language. It seems very unlikely that Africa’s 54 countries will be able to form themselves into a federation tight enough to act as one superpower. It is of course possible that a subgroup of those countries may do so. However it would probably still lag China and India in terms of GDP, even if not in population.
Martin Hutchinson stated that, in any case, if there is to be another geopolitical transition taking place after 2100, it will be for China and India to worry about, not for us inhabitants of what will then be second-class powers. In general, we can anticipate a transition to Chinese/Indian hegemony philosophically, if not without regret. The main difficulty will be that of having two hegemons whose emergence will not be simultaneous.
China is emerging already, whereas India requires another 20-30 years before its economic clout is sufficient to bring top-level geopolitical power with it. This staggered emergence clearly has the potential for conflict. With today’s technology, that could greatly damage the rest of us, even if we stayed out of it directly.
Transition between hegemons does not have to result in war. Britain handed over peacefully to the United States, for example. But it brings risks higher than in periods of hegemonic stability. Politically, both China and India are at present reasonably benign, much more so than the 20th Century Soviet Union. We should also remember that China has a history of global hegemony and one which does not look much like European hegemons.