Sunday, October 12, 2025
Home Blog Page 3008

Djibouti on track to become a one-stop-shop in the logistics arena

0

Djibouti Ports and Free Zones Authority (DPFZA) has launched the construction of the Djibouti ship repair yard project as part the vision to make East Africa a massive logistics hub.
The project commencement was officially kicked off by the President Ismail Omar Guelleh at Damerjog on Thursday November 26.
Aboubaker Omar Hadi, Chairperson of DPFZA, said that the ship yard project is another milestone that will drive forward Djibouti’s vision to become a global trade and logistics hub.
“Today’s ship repair yard supplements this model, ensuring that we are a one-stop-shop, offering integrated maritime services for ocean going vessels, and that we harness the blue economy to drive forward Djibouti’s socio-economic development,” he said.

(Photo: Anteneh Aklilu)

“In line with the vision of President Ismail Omar Guelleh, we initiated in 2013 the aim to turn Djibouti into an international maritime centre. Following several milestones, we are now launching the construction of another key element of that vision,” Aboubaker added.
DPFZA recently launched the regeneration of the historical Port of Djibouti into a business centre and the construction of a liquid bulk port in Djibouti Damerjog Industrial Park, representing the final steps in the implementation of the Port-Park-City concept.
According to DPFZA ,the ship repair yard supplements this model, ensuring the concept of a one-stop-shop, offering integrated maritime services for ocean going vessels, and that harness the blue economy to drive forward Djibouti’s socio-economic development.
The ship repair yard will provide propeller, shaft, rudder, painting; small repair works overhauls (pumps, valves, navigation systems, engines, and cranes) and is equipped to service panamax vessels. The facility will be delivered in 2 years.
Damen Shipyard will be providing trainings on ship repair skills for engineers. Once completed the project will generate over 300 jobs directly and 1500 indirectly.
Djibouti, the major outlet for Ethiopian cargo, is undertaking massive projects in the logistics sector to make the country the most favorable destination on the logistics sector not only in the region but in the continent.
Recently the country had enabled to make operational three ports including the salt Port of Goubet. DPFZA recently made effective the first shipping lines with one vessel to address the regional ports on cargo that come to Djibouti from different corners of the world.

Former Ethiopian Ambassador to Morocco awarded Alawite Wissam of Order of Grand Officer

0

The Embassy of Morocco to Ethiopia has awarded Yeshi Tamrat former Ethiopian Ambassador to Morocco the Alawite Wissam of the Order of Grand officer for her successful delegation in Rabat on Thursday November 26, 2020.
Granted to her by King Mohammed VI at the end of her mission in the Kingdom of Morocco the award was presented by Ambassador Nezha Alaoui M.Hammid, ambassador of Morocco to Ethiopia and Djibouti.

(Photo: Anteneh Aklilu)

The ceremony was held in Addis Ababa on Thursday in the presence of officials, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee in Parliament and members of the diplomatic corps.
Nezha Alaoui M’Hammdi underlined that this royal decoration, one of the most prestigious of the Kingdom awarded to top foreign personalities, is recognition of the distinguished and significant contribution of Yeshi Tamrat Bitew to the strengthening of relations between Morocco and Ethiopia.
Ambassador Yeshi remarked that she was very pleased to receive the award adding that the relation between Morocco and Ethiopia has been showing significant progress from time to time, including the strong cooperation in the agricultural sector.
She mentioned the increasing Moroccan investment in Ethiopia for the past two years including investments by Anwar Invest Group and Holmarcom Group, the country’s top investors.
According to her, the agreement signed between the two countries has helped to improve the tie in the economic sector.
Ethiopia mostly imports fertilizer from Morocco, while the latter has huge market for coffee and oil seeds, which constitute the major export items of Ethiopia.
According to her, preparation to export these items to Morocco including facilitating transport and other facilities is being undertaken.
“Ethiopia has a lot to learn from morocco including its industrialization and modern farming,” Yeshi said as she expressed how Morocco has had a positive acceptance to the current political reform of Ethiopia.

(Photo: Anteneh Aklilu)

Ambassador Yeshi was recalled from Morocco on March, this year.
The Alawite Wissam of the Order of Grand officer is a military decoration of Morocco which is bestowed by the King of Morocco to those civilians and military officers who have displayed heroism in combat or have contributed meritorious service to the Moroccan state, granted to her by King Mohammed VI at the end of her mission in the Kingdom.

Total

0

Total, totally wiping road catastrophes in its initiative
On its motto to safety first Total Ethiopia celebrated its three best drivers of the month by their daily commitment on the road for safety.

(Photo: Anteneh Aklilu)

Total Ethiopia is working to minimize road accident in the country. Total has installed the dual on board camera computer on trucks to more than 75 percent of its trucks; which total to about 600 trucks.

(Photo: Anteneh Aklilu)

Total trucks have passed 1025 days with “Zero Death Accident”, which in brief means that for the stated period trucks of Total were not involved in death to a human life.
Total values safety and life, as a market leader and a reference energy company it works in close collaboration with its customers and partners to create value through improved product quality and safe operations in Ethiopia. Quality and safety matters are given due attention in Total Ethiopia. As a world class energy company, the Group has issued very strict regulations regarding its activities on the road.

Largest clinical trial in Africa to treat COVID-19 cases before they become severe

0

Will test a number of promising treatments in urgently needed focus on mild and moderate cases

Thirteen African countries including Ethiopia and an international network of research institutions have joined forces to launch the largest COVID-19 clinical trial in mild-to -moderate outpatients in Africa. The ANTICOV clinical trial aims to respond to the urgent need to identify treatments that can be used to treat mild and moderate cases of COVID-19 early and prevent spikes in hospitalization that could overwhelm fragile and already overburdened health systems in Africa.
The clinical trial will be carried out at 19 sites in 13 countries by the ANTICOV consortium, which includes 26 prominent African and global research and development (R&D) organizations, coordinated by the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), an international non-profit drug research and development (R&D) group with extensive partnerships in Africa.
“There is a need for large clinical trials in Africa for COVID-19 to answer research questions that are specific to an African context,” said Dr John Nkengasong, Director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. “African countries have mounted an impressive response so far to COVID-19 and now is the time to prepare for future waves of the disease. We welcome the ANTICOV trial led by African doctors because it will help answer one of our most pressing questions: With limited intensive care facilities in Africa, can we treat people for COVID-19 earlier and stop our hospitals from being overwhelmed?”
ANTICOV is an open-label, randomised, comparative, ‘adaptive platform trial’ that will test the safety and efficacy of treatments in 2,000 to 3,000 mild-to -moderate COVID-19 patients in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Sudan, and Uganda.
ANTICOV aims to identify early treatments that can prevent progression of COVID-19 to severe disease and potentially limit transmission. “It is heartening to see so many African countries collaborate to get much-needed answers about our unique COVID-19 patient needs,” said Dr Borna Nyaoke-Anoke, Senior Clinical Project Manager at DNDi, which is also the sponsor for clinical trials in the DRC, Kenya, and Sudan. “Africa has for the most part avoided the large-scale mortality seen in other countries, but with lockdowns ending and borders opening, we need to be prepared. We need research here in Africa that will inform policies and test-and-treat strategies, so that as clinicians we can give the best options to people with COVID-19.”ANTICOV is an adaptive platform trial, an innovative type of clinical trial pioneered for cancer drugs that allows for several treatments to be simultaneously tested. Adaptive platform trials enable rapid decisions to be made, including adding, continuing, or stopping treatment arms based on an ongoing analysis of results.
New treatments will be added to the trial as evidence of their potential for mild-to -moderate cases emerges. ANTICOV researchers are actively looking to select the most promising treatments from ongoing global scientific efforts with proof of efficacy, in collaboration with the Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator (ACT-A) Therapeutics Partnership, co-convened by Unitaid and Wellcome on behalf of the COVID-19 Therapeutics Accelerator. Among the potential therapeutic options being explored by ANTICOV are medicines currently used to treat malaria, HIV, hepatitis C, parasitic infections, and certain cancers. The goal is to include additional treatment arms in the ANTICOV trial within weeks.
Initially, ANTICOV will focus on drugs where large-scale randomized clinical trials could provide missing efficacy data in mild-to -moderate patients. The trial will begin testing, against a control arm, the HIV antiretroviral combination lopinavir/ritonavir and the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine, which remains the standard of care for COVID-19 today in numerous African countries. “The ANTICOV consortium is a broad partnership bringing African scientific leaders and global R&D organizations together to respond to an urgent unmet medical need. Collaboration is the only way to provide robust scientific responses to these research questions,” said Dr Nathalie Strub-Wourgaft, Director of COVID-19 Response for DNDi. “The trial was designed in a way that enables rapid and flexible decisions as we gather knowledge.”
All clinical trial data generated by ANTICOV will be integrated and shared openly and transparently to inform public health policy. Every effort will be made to work with all relevant partners to ensure that treatments that prove safe and effective will be affordable, available, and accessible for all.
The trial was reviewed with support from the African Vaccine Regulatory Forum (AVAREF), a platform established by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2006, which was recently mandated to expedite clinical trial reviews for COVID-19. Made up of representatives from countries’ ethical and regulatory review bodies, AVAREF simplifies and helps accelerate country-level approvals.
ANTICOV is aligned with the WHO R&D Blueprint, which aims to improve coordination between scientists and global health professionals, accelerate the research and development process, and develop new norms and standards to learn from and improve upon the global COVID-19 response.
The ANTICOV consortium is mobilizing a wide network of diverse partners with recognised experience in clinical research including Bahir Dar University and University of Gondar.