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Subject: Request to Strip Abiy Ahmed Ali of the Nobel Peace Prize
I am writing to respectfully request the Norwegian Nobel Committee to strip Abiy Ahmed Ali of the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize for the genocide and crimes against humanity that have been committed against Ethiopians in different parts of Ethiopia on his watch.
Ethiopia has turned into a living hell for millions of Ethiopians since Abiy Ahmed ascended to power three years ago. Thousands of innocent civilians, including children, women, elderlies, and men have been persecuted, kidnapped, brutally massacred, mutilated, dragged, and dumped into mass graves in different parts of the country merely because of their ethnic identities (Amharas, Guraghes, Gamos, Wolaytas, Gedos, etc.) and/or their affiliation to the Orthodox Christian Religion. Furthermore, millions have been evicted from their ancestral lands, cities, towns, and villages and their churches, cities, towns, and properties have bee
5 Kenyan Journalists Who Have Been Left Stranded Abroad
6 May 2021 - 3:51 pm
Left to right: former NTV journalist Yassin Juma, Citizen TV s Jamila Mohammed and Jeff Koinange.
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In course of their jobs, journalists go through numerous challenges including running in with authorities and in some instances, they might find themselves stranded under difficult circumstances.
From being held hostage to getting locked in hotels, some journalists have found themselves in tricky situations while in foreign countries and unable to fly back home.
Here are five Kenyan journalists who have ever been stranded in foreign countries.
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Citizen TV anchor Jeff Koinange career has previously been dotted with hurdles including an instance in which he was abducted in Niger Delta.
Aid in Danger Bi-Weekly News Brief, 24 March - 06 April 2021 - World reliefweb.int - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from reliefweb.int Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Share: An Ethiopian refugee, who fled the Tigray conflict, walks in the Tenedba camp in Mafaza, eastern Sudan, on January 8, 2021, after being transported from the reception center. Photo: by Ashraf Shazly/AFP via Getty Images
A civil war in the northern region of Tigray broke out in November. Denial within the international community has prevented much-needed humanitarian aid.
At terrifying speed, a humanitarian disaster of is unfolding in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia. Amidst an ongoing civil war that broke out in November, the Tigrayan people are starving en masse. Occupying soldiers are killing, raping, and ransacking, mercilessly and systematically. The personable, reformist prime minister Abiy Ahmed Ali who little more than a year ago was basking in the glow of a Nobel Peace prize is driving his country into the abyss. There are indications that he wishes it wasn’t so, but every sign points to the fact that the forces he has unleashed
WFP Ethiopia Country Brief, December 2020
Format
USD 706,011 m cash-based transfers made
USD 222 m (February 2020 - July 2021) net funding requirements
1.6 million people assisted in December 2020
Operational Updates
In December, WFP assisted 1.6 million people, including drought and flood-affected people, internally displaced persons (IDPs), refugees, and malnourished children and women.
Refugees
WFP assisted 691,200 refugees through in-kind food and cash transfers in 24 refugee camps and eight sites. Despite insecurity in Tigray, WFP delivered food sufficient for one-month to 25,100 refugees in Adi Harush and Mai Aini refugee camps. The other two camps remained, Hitsats and Shimelba remained inaccessible. WFP prepositioned food items at forward bases in Gonder to dispatch food as soon as roads became accessible.