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Zmeselo
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Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Zmeselo » 31 May 2025, 21:39





Society
Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

By Addis Getachew

https://www.thereporterethiopia.com/45335/

May 31, 2025

Mothers, children, and a city overwhelmed as a new face of hardship emerges



On an overcast afternoon in late May, with rain clouds gathering overhead, a woman in her 50s sat quietly on a curb near Women’s Square, a recently refurbished boulevard graced by a statue of a woman holding scales aloft, gazing into the distance. She was flanked by two of her children — a toddler asleep in her lap, swaddled in a thin cotton cloth, and a preteen absently shuffling pebbles at her feet.

The woman, a widow and mother of four, spoke softly as she asked passersby for spare change.
We are bothering you because we are in real trouble,
she told each person who paused, her voice barely above a whisper.

Few stopped. Most hurried by without a glance.

She does not fit the image many might expect of someone in dire need. Her clothes are clean, her children appear healthy, and her family looks as though they could belong to any working-class household in the city.
Their father was a truck driver, mostly on the road to Jigjiga. He died in an accident, and we have nothing left,
she explained, her eyes downcast.

She hesitated when asked for a photograph.
I don’t want my babies on TikTok,
she said, warning that her older children would see it as an indignity.

With reluctance, she allowed a quick picture to be taken, on the condition it not be shared for entertainment.

Her story is one of quiet desperation. After her husband’s death, she and her family were evicted when their landlord lost his home to the government’s City Corridor Development Project. Now, they rely on the goodwill of another family who has let them stay in a cramped, box-like room — a fragile arrangement that could unravel at any moment.

Across town, in Bole Medhanealem, a teenager — barely older than a child herself — stands by the roadside, an infant latched to her breast. She asks for money with a practiced, almost casual smile, her cheerful demeanor masking a grimmer reality. The baby, blissfully unaware, feeds in her arms.

At a nearby traffic light, a middle-aged man approaches drivers with a folder in hand, pressing a well-worn medical prescription against the window. He claims to need funds for expensive medication to treat a rare condition.

And near Shola Market, an eight-year-old girl in a crisp school uniform trails alongside her mother, quietly asking strangers for spare coins.

These snapshots capture a growing crisis in Addis Ababa: the visible rise of a new, precarious class of destitute people in Ethiopia’s capital. Once the domain of those facing generational poverty, the streets now hold families who never imagined they would be here — pushed out by rising costs, displacement, and economic uncertainty. Their faces — a reflection of a country in flux, where the line between stability and desperation grows thinner by the day.

Firehun Gebreyohannes, the Ethiopia Country Representative for Siddartha, a Belgian charity, says the growing presence of children on the streets is becoming the “new normal.”
Just a few years ago, it was rare to see very young boys and girls begging alone on the streets,
he said.
Now, it’s common. There’s no way a seven- or eight-year-old child ends up on the street by choice. There are push factors, for sure.
Among those factors, Firehun points to armed conflicts — from large-scale clashes to local skirmishes — that have triggered waves of displacement across the country. Poverty and family breakdowns compound the crisis.
Addis Ababa has become a magnet for people fleeing violence and hardship,
he says.
From all corners of Ethiopia, families arrive here hoping for a better life. It might be wise for the city to establish safe shelters at key entry points, where new arrivals could receive care, and basic assistance.
Though comprehensive data is scarce, Firehun says small-scale surveys and observations show a clear trend: homelessness is rising at a troubling pace.
The most widely cited studies are outdated — three or four years old,
he says.
UN agencies and civil society groups estimated the homeless population at around 600,000 back then, while the government’s figures were far lower, around 150,000. But neither of those numbers reflects the current reality. We need accurate, up-to-date data. You can’t hide a problem this visible, and without a shared understanding of the scale, it’s impossible to design effective interventions.
Firehun also challenges the assumption that only the visibly destitute engage in street begging.
Virtually everyone who is homeless in Addis Ababa,
he said.

Indeed, recent studies confirm that begging has become a prominent feature of Addis Ababa’s urban landscape. A growing number of individuals — including physically healthy adults — can be seen soliciting help on the city’s streets, reflecting the deepening crises of poverty, unemployment, and inadequate social services.

Experts in public policy and urban development agree that long-term solutions require addressing the root causes of poverty: boosting economic growth, expanding job opportunities, and improving access to social services — all areas where Addis Ababa continues to fall short.

Economists point to international financial pressures, particularly IMF-driven austerity measures, as a key driver of the crisis. Reforms requiring Ethiopia to sharply devalue its currency have pushed up the cost of living, eroding real incomes and deepening hardship for ordinary citizens.

Firehun argues that tackling homelessness will also require a shift in how communities and the government mobilize resources. He believes that people should stop throwing a few birr here and there out of pity.
We need to create structured fundraising systems — through community associations like Edirs, for instance — to raise funds and direct them towards concrete projects that address homelessness. There’s enormous potential for domestic resource mobilization, but it remains untapped. We can’t keep relying on foreign aid or single-source funding. That’s a dangerous dependency. We’ve already seen the consequences when, for example, USAID cuts its support — not just for individual organizations, but for the government itself.
Biniam Belete, founder of Mekedonia Homes — the largest charitable organization in Ethiopia caring for the elderly and people with mental disabilities — shares a similar perspective.
Ethiopians are charitable by nature,
Biniam told The Reporter in a recent interview.
The challenge is not a lack of generosity, but organizing those funds and ensuring they are used for their intended purpose.
Mekedonia, with its vast network of homes across the country, stands as a testament to what coordinated community action can achieve. Yet, Biniam’s optimism is tempered by the scale of the challenge.

A 2018 government-commissioned study, which underpins the Urban Safety Net Program (USNP), aimed to support more than 4.7 million urban poor across 972 cities and towns. The program — partly funded by the World Bank — set an initial target of reaching 604,000 beneficiaries, including 22,000 “urban destitute” who had previously fallen outside population statistics in 11 major cities.

But the situation on the ground has shifted dramatically since then.
Homelessness is rising fast,
Firehun said.

The data is years old, and it does not capture the current scale of the problem.

Indeed, the last official estimate, from 2018, put the homeless population in Addis Ababa at around 24,000. Even then, the figure was controversial, with experts arguing it significantly underestimated the true extent of destitution.

Today, in the absence of updated studies, Firehun believes the real numbers have “risen meteorically.”

Yet without fresh data, it’s impossible to say how many people are now living on the streets — or how many have been pushed into a cycle of homelessness by factors beyond their control: conflict, economic collapse, and the rising cost of living.




________________





Fed_Up
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Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Fed_Up » 01 Jun 2025, 01:37

Where is the Hotus አይኑ የተኳለው?
ይህ አዛውንት እሚኖርባት parallel universe ያለች ኢትዮጵያ ትሆን ይሆን ወይስ Demented ነው ሰውየው?

Fiyameta
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Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Fiyameta » 01 Jun 2025, 02:07

If Ethiopia is lucky to survive UAE's botched Arab neocolonialism experiment, the next government in Ethiopia will face insurmountable challenges that may make disintegration seem like the best option to end its misery.

Fiyameta
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Joined: 02 Aug 2018, 22:59

Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Fiyameta » 01 Jun 2025, 02:16

Hopeless nation!
Economists point to international financial pressures, particularly IMF-driven austerity measures, as a key driver of the crisis. Reforms requiring Ethiopia to sharply devalue its currency have pushed up the cost of living, eroding real incomes and deepening hardship for ordinary citizens.




Last edited by Fiyameta on 01 Jun 2025, 02:54, edited 2 times in total.

Deqi-Arawit
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Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 01 Jun 2025, 02:33

The Skunis measure of their success is the failure of Ethiopia and neighboring countries. citizens a country where majority of its citizens survive through remittance should have the courtesy at least to shut [deleted] upp.

Zmeselo
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Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Zmeselo » 01 Jun 2025, 04:04

WHorus, will give you a cookie. Good boy!

Deqi-Arawit wrote:
01 Jun 2025, 02:33
The Skunis measure of their success is the failure of Ethiopia and neighboring countries. citizens a country where majority of its citizens survive through remittance should have the courtesy at least to shut [deleted] upp.

Fiyameta
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Joined: 02 Aug 2018, 22:59

Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Fiyameta » 01 Jun 2025, 04:26

If doctors said they cannot afford decent meals with their meager salaries, I can only imagine how the average person is surviving in Ethiopia today. Banda Abiy may try to pull wool over the Ethiopian people's eyes by paying his cadres a $1,700 salary a month to propagate his illusions, but the reality on the ground speaks for itself.

Deqi-Arawit
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Joined: 29 Mar 2009, 11:10
Location: Bujumbura Brundi

Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 01 Jun 2025, 04:27

Zmeselo wrote:
01 Jun 2025, 04:04
WHorus, will give you a cookie. Good boy!

Deqi-Arawit wrote:
01 Jun 2025, 02:33
The Skunis measure of their success is the failure of Ethiopia and neighboring countries. citizens a country where majority of its citizens survive through remittance should have the courtesy at least to shut [deleted] upp.
The diary of the Mini skunis
  • Sudan is integrating
    The Ethiopian doctors have low salaries
    America is heavily indebted to
    The west is doomed
    The west dont make enough manufacturing
    China is rising
The mini skunis are in no position to talk about the shortcoming of other countries when Eritrea is 5th world property of one dictator.

With no schools
no internet
no rule of law
no assembly
no freedom of expression
No SIM card
No supply of water

:arrow:

Deqi-Arawit
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Joined: 29 Mar 2009, 11:10
Location: Bujumbura Brundi

Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 01 Jun 2025, 04:41

mini skunis.

While you [ deleted ] and rubb your clitros because one Eritrean listro was descend and honest enough not to overcharge a foreigner customer.....This is the impression of Foreigners of the Galla lead Ethiopia......And when there are more than 40 000 Eritreans in Addis Abebe, do the mini skunis have higher moral authority to talk about the life condition of Ethiopians.....There is no shame in the mini skunis brain.







mini skunis.....The music, decay of buildings and the shape of the people, Do you see happiness here? I know the mini skunis are moral less cu@cnts....Displaying old Italian architect to impress foreigners after 34 years of independence is beneath the capacity of Eritreans.


Zmeselo
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Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Zmeselo » 01 Jun 2025, 15:26




Confirmed: UK Snubs Abiy Ahmed Over Human Rights Abuses

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer refused to meet with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed during his recent visit to London—a clear diplomatic snub rooted in mounting concerns over Ethiopia’s deteriorating human rights situation. Adding to the humiliation, the UK’s Metropolitan Police declined to guarantee Abiy’s security, leaving his team scrambling and his visit effectively sidelined.

The decision by Downing Street was not due to scheduling or parliamentary recess, as some attempted to claim, but rather a deliberate stance against Abiy’s record of state violence and repression. Starmer’s office reportedly opted out of any official engagement following pressure from human rights organizations and UK-based Ethiopian communities who have long raised alarm over Abiy’s brutal campaigns against the Amhara and Oromo populations.

This diplomatic freeze marks a significant shift in UK-Ethiopia relations. Despite the UK providing over £160 million in aid, the Starmer administration sent a clear message: international partnerships cannot ignore mass atrocities and political repression.

Abiy Ahmed, once hailed internationally, now finds himself increasingly isolated and shunned by Western democracies. The embarrassment in London is just the latest indication that the world is losing patience with his authoritarian regime.



Fed_Up
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Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Fed_Up » 02 Jun 2025, 00:05

ነገሩ ከዚህ የባሰ ነው:: የአዲስ አበባ ህዝ አህያ ባይሆን ኑሮ ... ቤተመንግስቱን ብቻ ታቅፎ የተቀመጠውን ከፋራ ክልል የመጣ ቅዥቢ ገፍትሮ በጣለው ነበር:: አብይ ለቅዘናሙ የአዲስ አበባ ህዝብ ሲያንሰው ነው... ይላጠው

Abdisa
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Re: Addis Ababa’s Unseen Crisis: Beyond the Numbers

Post by Abdisa » 02 Jun 2025, 00:29

The government thought its media promotion of the few newly renovated city blocks in the capital would create the perception of economic growth in the minds of the people, but what the government didn't anticipate was the mass migration of rural people to the capital hoping to claim a piece of the Prosperity pie that does not exist.

Crisis inadvertently created by fake news is the worst crisis because no one wants to admit that it was all a lie. :x

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