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Zmeselo
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Tigray leader says region losing gold without benefit

Post by Zmeselo » 01 Jan 2025, 16:03



Africa
Tigray leader says region losing gold without benefit

December 31, 2024

By Gebre Gebremedhin

https://www.voanews.com/a/tigray-leader ... um=twitter


FILE - Getachew Reda, representative of the Tigray People's Liberation Front, looks on during a news conference at the Department of International Relations and Cooperation offices in Pretoria, South Africa, on Nov. 2, 2022.

Ethiopia’s prime minister recently touted the country’s mining resources and said the industry could achieve a historic milestone by generating up to $2 billion in gold revenue this year. He made the comment while inaugurating a gold exploration and mining factory in the Gambella Region.

On Dec. 10, Abiy Ahmed reported that Ethiopia’s economy is
one of the fastest-growing economies in Africa and a beacon of opportunity on the continent.
Among its many thriving sectors, the gold mining industry stands out as a significant driver of growth, presenting immense potential for both local and international investment,
he said on social media.

But officials in Tigray, one of the richest gold mining regions in Ethiopia, say they are losing resources without benefit for their region at a time when Tigray is trying to recover from two years of brutal war between local rebels and the federal government.

The interim president of Tigray, Getachew Reda, speaking on Nov 15 said during the three and half months prior (August, September and October)
28.25 quintals of Gold entered into the Federal Government.
The government has not received a single penny,
he said.

Ethiopia’s Commercial Bank, through its branch in Shire Inda Selasse, the hub of the gold in Tigray, recently bought $132 million worth of gold in just three months, according to branch manager Tekie Giday. The Tigray region’s entire budget for this year is nearly $100 million.

Officials in Tigray said the region is struggling with budget shortfalls as it attempts to bring back services discontinued or destroyed during the war.

Environmental fears

In addition to lack of economic benefits, officials in Tigray reported that gold mining has exposed some of the region’s residents to dangerous chemicals like mercury and cyanide, which are used for extracting gold.

Residents living close to the mining fields say the chemicals have been harmful to humans and livestock, with reports of deformed skin on cows and degraded farmland, witnesses and officials said.

Some residents in Tigray’s Northwest region have gone to the courts seeking justice, to get judges to act against goldminers, who they accuse of polluting the environment and causing ill health to their children.

The president of the High Court of the Northwest, Judge Mengistu Teklay, told VOA that chemicals used by miners are becoming the source of health, security and stability concerns.
Utilizations of natural resources must be governed by law and order. It shouldn’t benefit the few individuals,
Mengistu said.
Those individuals who benefit from these resources should not be allowed to bring safety concerns, existential threats, and health concerns to the unbenefited public.
Cyanide and mercury have both been used during the mining process in Tigray, according to multiple interviews conducted by VOA’s Horn of Africa Service. The World Health Organization identifies mercury as one of the top 10 chemicals or chemical groups posing public health concerns.

Alarmed by the use of the chemicals, Ethiopia’s Bureau of Innovation and Technology, a government body tasked with overseeing the country’s science and technological development, asked Tigrayan regional government institutions to take action to prevent unsafe use of the chemicals.

Gizachew Weldetsadik Beyene is director of the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Department in Tigray’s Bureau of Innovation and Technology. He said a team from the bureau posing as traditional miners traveled to the mining areas and saw what he called a "sad" situation.
It is so scary,
Gizachew said, sharing a video of a cow affected by the chemicals, and pictures of women washing the soil using chemicals in search of gold without safety protocols and with their bare hands.
We’ve seen the damage to animals, to the land, the soil, to people who use running water and suffer, with their skin damaged, the animals which are drinking that water and exposed to dangerous diseases,
Gizachew said.

Action taken

The Tigray region’s Cabinet this week called for a halt to goldmining. The announcement was made by the deputy president of Tigray’s interim administration, Lieutenant General Tsadkan Gebretinsae. He did not elaborate about when the suspension will start and how the measure will be implemented.

Prior to that, the Tigray Communication Affairs Bureau said in a statement that action was taken against people who were using illegal dangerous chemicals to process gold in Tahtay Koraro district near a dam that is a source of potable water for the city of Shire Inda Selasse.

No details were given about the actions and the type of chemicals used.

A security source who requested anonymity as he is not authorized to speak to the media alleged that foreign companies are working with Ezana Mining Development, a local mining company.

The head of Ezana company, Tesfatsion Desta, did not initially respond to VOA calls.

After a VOA Tigrigna Service radio report aired, Ezana put out a statement saying it was not asked to comment on the story, which it called "distorted."

In the statement, Ezana said it worked with foreign companies before the Tigray war. The statement continued that because of insecurity and instability, however, these companies did not come back after the war.

The company said the gold factory located in Northwest Tigray’s Asgede district, in the Tabia Lemat area, is free from pollution, waste and environmental distraction.

Without naming a specific country, Tigray President Getachew told the region’s diaspora community in a Zoom meeting that he believes more gold than reported is smuggled out of Ethiopia.

Getachew said what is happening in Tigray is becoming "a crime."
It is a very serious problem. It is not just robbery. People are losing their animals because of the dangerous chemical used by the miners. There are people who are known to participate in this network from top to bottom among government and security officials.
VOA’s repeated attempts to get comment from the Tigray Bureau of Land and Mining and the Mining Ministry, as well as the National Bank of Ethiopia, were unsuccessful.

Agazi General
Member
Posts: 2013
Joined: 19 Aug 2018, 13:14

Re: Tigray leader says region losing gold without benefit

Post by Agazi General » 01 Jan 2025, 16:08

ZE FOOLISH LOOTING WEYANE IS SEEKING 2 BLAME ERITREA 4 ZE.GOLD SMUGGLERS SEEKING TO JUSTIFY ANY FUTURE WARS OR ATTACK. 2

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 36965
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Tigray leader says region losing gold without benefit

Post by Zmeselo » 01 Jan 2025, 16:23




Newly trained Al Shabab fighters perform military drills in the Lafofe area, 18km south of Mogadishu, Somalia. AP

News | MENA
Egypt sending troops by air and sea for new African Union force in Somalia

UN approval for troops to fight Al Shabab lends international legitimacy to Cairo's military presence in Horn of Africa nation

Hamza Hendawi / Cairo

https://www.thenationalnews.com/news/me ... n-somalia/

December 31, 2024

Egypt is beefing up its military presence in Somalia https://www.thenationalnews.com/news/me ... raine-war/ to take part in a new African Union mission to fight the terrorist group Al Shabab, ferrying troops there by sea and air in what sources and analysts say is a significant step in Cairo's efforts to broaden its footprint in the strategic Horn of Africa region.

The move, they said, is also a milestone in Egypt's decade-long tussle with Somalia's neighbour Ethiopia https://www.thenationalnews.com/news/me ... ions-sour/ over a large Nile dam that Addis Ababa is building and which Cairo views as an existential threat to its water security.

At Somalia's request, the Egyptian troops are replacing the Ethiopian contingent in an AU mission that is being replaced, giving Cairo a significant military presence across the border from Ethiopia that could potentially pressure Addis Ababa to show flexibility over the water dispute.

Egypt and Somalia signed a military co-operation agreement this year. Under that accord, Egypt deployed https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/egypt/ several thousand troops who are serving as military advisers to Somalia's security forces and providing security for the country's top leaders, their families and key state facilities.

The new AU mission was agreed by the UN Security Council on Friday in a resolution adopted by 14 of its 15 member states. The United States abstained due to reservations about funding.

The foreign ministers of Egypt and Somalia confirmed Egypt's role in the mission during talks in Cairo last week, according to the Egyptian Foreign Ministry.


Cairo views a large Nile dam that Ethiopia is building as a threat to its water security. EPA
The participation of Egypt is a reflection of its genuine interest in African issues and its desire to maintain a positive presence in the continent's trouble spots,
said Amany Al Taweel, an Egyptian expert on African affairs.
We succeeded in this extremely important step at a time when everyone else is rushing to gain a foothold in Africa. That Ethiopia will not take part in the mission is another good aspect of the deployment because Addis Ababa has been a part of tensions in Somalia and because it failed to contain Al Shabab,
she said.

The new force – formally called the African Union Support and Stabilisation Mission in Somalia (Aussom) https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/somalia/ – will replace the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia (Atmis), whose mandate ended on Tuesday. Aussom is scheduled to be deployed in January.

Ethiopia, whose relations with Somalia have been tense, is a member of Atmis. Somalia wants it excluded from Aussom on the grounds that its contingent has not effectively reduced the threat posed by Al Shabab.

The exact size of Aussom and the Egyptian contingent are yet to be formally announced, although Somali officials say 11,000 men have already been pledged. The sources told The National that the Egyptian contingent would make up about a 25 per cent of Aussom.

It is not clear whether the Egyptian troops already in Somalia will be part of the new mission or will operate separately while those being sent by Cairo at present will alone serve in the AU mission.

The sources said last week's UN Security Council resolution was received with relief in Cairo, ending a period of concern that Turkey's announcement of a mediation bid between Somalia and Ethiopia in December would change Mogadishu's mind about replacing the Ethiopians with the Egyptians.

Tensions between Somalia and landlocked Ethiopia flared nearly a year ago after Addis Ababa signed a maritime deal with the breakaway region of Somaliland to gain access to the Red Sea.

Somalia and Egypt, both members of the Cairo-based Arab League, began forging closer relations in the wake of that deal, which Mogadishu saw as a breach of its sovereignty.

No concrete steps are known to have been taken to resolve the Somali-Ethiopian dispute https://www.thenationalnews.com/news/me ... -ethiopia/ since the Turkish mediation was announced, according to the sources.
There is a silent rivalry between Egypt and Turkey in the Horn of Africa and elsewhere in Africa,
said one of the sources.
That rivalry is separate from the two nations' co-operation in other fields,
added the source, alluding to the recent thaw between Cairo and Ankara after a decade of tension.

The announcement of Turkey's mediation prompted Cairo to hold urgent consultations with the Mogadishu government, seeking clarifications on the agreement, said the sources. A visit by the Somali Foreign Minister to Cairo in December was part of these talks, they added.


Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan meets Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El Sisi on the sidelines of D-8 summit in Cairo on December 19. Reuters

In another example of the Cairo-Ankara rivalry in the region, Nato member Turkey has offered to mediate between Sudan's army and a rival paramilitary to end their 20-month-old war in the Afro-Arab nation.

Sudanese army chief Gen Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, who has enjoyed Cairo's support in his war against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, said he welcomed Ankara's mediation.

Egypt and Turkey also back opposing sides in Libya, Egypt's western neighbour rocked by violence and divisions for more than a decade.

However, the Egyptian deployment in Somalia places Cairo at a clear advantage and bolsters its growing presence in the Horn of Africa, according to the sources.
The Ethiopian troops must respect Somalia's wish or risk becoming an occupation force,
said Salah Halimah, a former career diplomat from Egypt who is the new deputy chairman of the Egyptian Council for African Affairs, a Cairo-based think tank.
Ethiopia must change its approach to its neighbours and improve ties to Somalia. That [the deployment of the new mission], in turn, could result in a change in its attitude towards Nile downstream nations Egypt and Sudan regarding their national water security,
he said.

Egypt already has military bases in Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti and has in recent years struck military co-operation accords with, besides Somalia, Nile basin states Kenya, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Its military presence in Somalia, which now enjoys international legitimacy following Friday's UN Security Council resolution, comes as foreign powers are vying to gain a foothold along Africa's Red Sea coast with tension flaring in the region, caused by Sudan's civil war, terrorism, tribal unrest in Ethiopia and the impact of climate change on economies there.

One of the world's driest nations, Egypt depends on the Nile for nearly all its freshwater needs. It has repeatedly stated that its share of the Nile water is a national security issue and that Ethiopia's dam constitutes an existential threat to its 107 million people.

More than a decade of negotiations with Ethiopia have failed to produce an agreement. Cairo wants a legally binding deal on running and filling the dam. Ethiopia contends that the dam does not pose a threat to the water security of Egypt and insists it is vital to its development.
The River Nile, specifically, is an issue that's associated with the life and survival of Egyptians,
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El Sisi recently said.
It's the chief source of life in our nation. Egypt is the gift of the glorious river.
Updated: January 01, 2025

Fiyameta
Senior Member
Posts: 19936
Joined: 02 Aug 2018, 22:59

Re: Tigray leader says region losing gold without benefit

Post by Fiyameta » 01 Jan 2025, 18:22

I think one of the best things that ever happened to our region is the deployment of Egyptian peacekeeping forces to Somalia to protect and defend the nation from aid-fed mercenaries.

Temt
Member+
Posts: 5431
Joined: 04 Jun 2013, 22:23

Re: Tigray leader says region losing gold without benefit

Post by Temt » 01 Jan 2025, 23:16

Fiyameta wrote:
01 Jan 2025, 18:22
I think one of the best things that ever happened to our region is the deployment of Egyptian peacekeeping forces to Somalia to protect and defend the nation from aid-fed mercenaries.
I am not sure about the veracity of the news, but reportedly, President-elect Trump is planning to withdraw all American troops stationed in Somalia.

Fiyameta
Senior Member
Posts: 19936
Joined: 02 Aug 2018, 22:59

Re: Tigray leader says region losing gold without benefit

Post by Fiyameta » 02 Jan 2025, 00:00

Temt wrote:
01 Jan 2025, 23:16
Fiyameta wrote:
01 Jan 2025, 18:22
I think one of the best things that ever happened to our region is the deployment of Egyptian peacekeeping forces to Somalia to protect and defend the nation from aid-fed mercenaries.
I am not sure about the veracity of the news, but reportedly, President-elect Trump is planning to withdraw all American troops stationed in Somalia.
I didn't even know US troops were still stationed in Somalia after the "Black Hawk Down" incident.

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