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Search Results for: Ethiopia

10 results out of 174 results found for 'Ethiopia'.

WHO SMOKING STATISTICS



BY KEITH NUTHALL
WANT to sell cigarettes? Go east, young man. That might be the advice that tobacco companies could glean from the latest set of World Health Organisation (WHO) smoking figures. Using 2003 or latest available data, the WHO has collated percentage rate proportions of smoking adults (18 and over), compared with total populations of all but 56 countries: the overwhelming majority of nations.…

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ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE



BY KEITH NUTHALL
IT could be the most underestimated commercial crime in the world, the illegal trade in wildlife and their products. Some estimates put its value at US$5 billion-a-year, but governments do not really seem to care. Keith Nuthall reports.…

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AFRICA PLAN



BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN EXTENSION of private ownership has been proposed in an African Productive Capacity Initiative, approved by the African Union Summit, in Ethiopia this summer. Privatisation was recommended for the food processing, textile and clothing, minerals, metals, wood, auto, pharmaceutical and building material sectors.…

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CAMEL MILK PRODUCTION



STORIES BY KEITH NUTHALL

CAMEL milk could provide economic salvation to millions of Sahara nomads, who are roaming the deserts with a potentially valuable and untapped commodity. So says the UN’s Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO), which points to mushrooming camel milk bars in Chad’s capital N’Djamena, informal exports from Ethiopia to Djibouti, the development of camel cheese in Mauritania and plans to make chocolate with Arabian peninsular camel milk.…

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GUINEA WORM



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE WORLD Health Organisation (WHO) claims it is near to making guinea-worm disease the first parasitic illness to be eradicated globally. Only 35,000 sufferers remain in west Africa, the Sudan, Ethiopia and Uganda. The worm grows inside the abdomen and emerges through painful blisters on lower limbs.…

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ETHIOPIA MALARIA



BY KEITH NUTHALL
ETHIOPIA is to receive US$1.2 million’s worth of medicines from the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) to fight high rates of malaria infections in the country’s Amhara, Oromia, Tigray and ‘Southern Nations, Nationalities and People Regional’ states. This worst outbreak since 1998 is being compounded by serious malnutrition following a drought.…

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ETHIOPIA GOLD



BY RICHARD HURST
THE ETHIOPIAN government has announced it is taking action to reduce the flood of gold being smuggled from the country, after revealing that US$30-million worth of the precious metal, weighing approximately three million grams, is smuggled annually out through neighbouring countries.…

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MILLENNIUM EDUCATION GOALS



BY KEITH NUTHALL
AS with many projects inspired by the start of the next 997 years and the last three, the framing of the United Nations’ (UN) Millennium Development Goals was an ambitious enterprise.

Imposing statistically measurable targets for international organisations and national governments in making improvements in global poverty, education, gender equality, health, the environment and education, they have proved tough to attain.…

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WATER WARS



BY MARK ROWE
WARS are usually fought over coveted resources, such as oil, diamonds or fertile land. Now water, the most indispensable of mankind’s needs, is seen as the resource which may spark the armed conflicts of the 21st century.

Indeed, United Nations (UN) cultural and scientific organisation UNESCO is stepping up efforts to calm tension in some of the world’s most water-stressed areas.…

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DJIBOUTI SPILL



BY MARK ROWE
A HUGE cleanup operation has been launched in Djibouti after a spillage at the port’s dockside of 10 containers full of toxic pesticides en route from the United Kingdom to Ethiopia. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) is overseeing a Pounds 70,000 emergency fund to tackle the contamination which occurred almost four weeks ago but details of which have only just emerged.…

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