• ከሳዑዲ አረቢያ የተባረሩ ኢትዮጵያውያን በእስር ላይ በነበሩ ወቅት በደል
    እንደደረሰባቸው ተናገሩ። አዲስ አበባ በአውሮፕላን ማረፊያ ውስጥ አሶሴትድ
    ፕሬስ ያነጋገራቸው ኢትዮጵውያን እንደሚሉት፤ ተደብድበዋል። ተዘርፈዋልም።
    «የሳዑዲ አረቢያ ፖሊሶች ንብረቶቻችንን ዘርፈው ተከፋፍለውታል» ሲሉም
    ወንጅለዋል። ከፖሊስ ከበባ ለማምለጥ የሞከሩ ኢትዮጵውያን በጥይት
    ተመትተው፣ መቁስላቸውን አይተናል ሲሉ እማኝነታቸውን ሰጥተዋል። ተመላሾቹ
    በሳዑዲ በቆሸሹ የእስር ክፍሎች እንዲቆዩ መደረጋቸውንም ተናግረዋል። ወደ
    400 ሺህ ገደማ ኢትዮጵያውያን በሳዑዲ አረቢያ እንደሚኖሩ የሚገመት ሲሆን
    ካለፈው ህዳር ወር ጀምሮ 14 ሺህ ያህሉ መባረራቸውን የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት
    አስታውቋል። ሰባ ሺህ ያህሉ ደግሞ በፍቃደኝነት ተመልሰዋል ብለዋል።
    ዓለምአቀፉ የፍልሰተኞች ድርጅት (IOM) ሳዑዲ አረቢያ የሰጠችው የምህረት
    ጊዜ ካበቃ ካለፈው ሰኔ ወር ወዲህ ወደሀገራቸው በውዴታም ሆነ በግዴታ
    የተመለሱ ኢትዮጵያውያን ቁጥር 96 ሺህ ደርሷል ብሏል። የተመላሾቹ ቁጥር
    በቀጣይ ሳምንታት ሊጨምር እንደሚችልም ገልጿል።
    ከሳዑዲ አረቢያ የተባረሩ ኢትዮጵያውያን በእስር ላይ በነበሩ ወቅት በደል እንደደረሰባቸው ተናገሩ። አዲስ አበባ በአውሮፕላን ማረፊያ ውስጥ አሶሴትድ ፕሬስ ያነጋገራቸው ኢትዮጵውያን እንደሚሉት፤ ተደብድበዋል። ተዘርፈዋልም። «የሳዑዲ አረቢያ ፖሊሶች ንብረቶቻችንን ዘርፈው ተከፋፍለውታል» ሲሉም ወንጅለዋል። ከፖሊስ ከበባ ለማምለጥ የሞከሩ ኢትዮጵውያን በጥይት ተመትተው፣ መቁስላቸውን አይተናል ሲሉ እማኝነታቸውን ሰጥተዋል። ተመላሾቹ በሳዑዲ በቆሸሹ የእስር ክፍሎች እንዲቆዩ መደረጋቸውንም ተናግረዋል። ወደ 400 ሺህ ገደማ ኢትዮጵያውያን በሳዑዲ አረቢያ እንደሚኖሩ የሚገመት ሲሆን ካለፈው ህዳር ወር ጀምሮ 14 ሺህ ያህሉ መባረራቸውን የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት አስታውቋል። ሰባ ሺህ ያህሉ ደግሞ በፍቃደኝነት ተመልሰዋል ብለዋል። ዓለምአቀፉ የፍልሰተኞች ድርጅት (IOM) ሳዑዲ አረቢያ የሰጠችው የምህረት ጊዜ ካበቃ ካለፈው ሰኔ ወር ወዲህ ወደሀገራቸው በውዴታም ሆነ በግዴታ የተመለሱ ኢትዮጵያውያን ቁጥር 96 ሺህ ደርሷል ብሏል። የተመላሾቹ ቁጥር በቀጣይ ሳምንታት ሊጨምር እንደሚችልም ገልጿል።
    0 Comments 0 Shares
  • Ethiopia : በአስመጭ ነጋዴዎች ላይ የተጣለው ደንብ! - # DaguPress
    - የዜጎች ሰብዓዊና ዴሞክራሲያዊ መብቶች እንዲከበሩ...
    - ፈውስን ፍለጋ ከህንድ እስከ ታይላንድ...
    http://www.tube.enntelevision.com/watch.php?vid=fe
    2eaee2f
    Ethiopia : በአስመጭ ነጋዴዎች ላይ የተጣለው ደንብ! - # DaguPress - የዜጎች ሰብዓዊና ዴሞክራሲያዊ መብቶች እንዲከበሩ... - ፈውስን ፍለጋ ከህንድ እስከ ታይላንድ... http://www.tube.enntelevision.com/watch.php?vid=fe 2eaee2f
    WWW.TUBE.ENNTELEVISION.COM
    ENN TELEVISION VIDEO TUBE
    ENN PLC produces TV programs for ENN TV from its State-of-the-art Production House in Addis Ababa. ENN PLC established in March 2015 under the legal registration number of 14/673/555878/08. Its core objective is to provide alternative news and entertainment programs for Ethiopian audience.
    0 Comments 0 Shares
  • Like and Share our page for more.
    #ZiniQ
    Like and Share our page for more. #ZiniQ
    Like
    2
    0 Comments 1 Shares
  • 0 Comments 0 Shares
  • 0 Comments 0 Shares
  • AN IRISH priest who helps some of Ethiopia's most vulnerable children says they are often seen as a "curse".

    Irish Vincentian Priest, Fr Stephen Monaghan from Co Dublin, told Independent.ie that children who are deaf in Ethiopia are treated as "cursed" and are shunned by society.

    Fr Stephen, who previously served as a Chaplain at St Patrick's College and worked with the deaf community in Ireland for years, started a school for the deaf in the rural village of Ambo, Ethiopia.

    "We started with a kindergarten school in Ambo and soon I saw a need for a school for deaf children. There was one young boy named Wandamagen who was deaf and he had no opportunity for an education in the area.

    “Deaf students have many problems when it comes to education. Parents associate being deaf as a negative thing. They have the attitude sometimes that a deaf child is a cursed child and they hide the child away. This means that the child isn’t included in society and doesn’t get an education," Fr Stephen told Independent.ie.

    Along with the parish priest in the area, Fr Asfaw Felek, Fr Stephen is responsible for the running of the school, which now has 62 students.
    AN IRISH priest who helps some of Ethiopia's most vulnerable children says they are often seen as a "curse". Irish Vincentian Priest, Fr Stephen Monaghan from Co Dublin, told Independent.ie that children who are deaf in Ethiopia are treated as "cursed" and are shunned by society. Fr Stephen, who previously served as a Chaplain at St Patrick's College and worked with the deaf community in Ireland for years, started a school for the deaf in the rural village of Ambo, Ethiopia. "We started with a kindergarten school in Ambo and soon I saw a need for a school for deaf children. There was one young boy named Wandamagen who was deaf and he had no opportunity for an education in the area. “Deaf students have many problems when it comes to education. Parents associate being deaf as a negative thing. They have the attitude sometimes that a deaf child is a cursed child and they hide the child away. This means that the child isn’t included in society and doesn’t get an education," Fr Stephen told Independent.ie. Along with the parish priest in the area, Fr Asfaw Felek, Fr Stephen is responsible for the running of the school, which now has 62 students.
    WWW.INDEPENDENT.IE
    'We do it for our own country too' - Irish priest helping hundreds of 'cursed' children - Independent.ie
    AN IRISH priest who helps some of Ethiopia's most vulnerable children says they are often seen as a
    Like
    1
    0 Comments 0 Shares
  • An Irish priest who helps some of Ethiopia's most vulnerable children says they are often seen as a curse.

    Vincentian priest Fr Stephen Monaghan, from Co Dublin, told the Irish Independent that deaf children in Ethiopia are treated as "cursed" and are shunned by society.

    Fr Stephen, who previously served as a chaplain at St Patrick's College and worked with the deaf community in Ireland for years, started a school for the deaf in the rural village of Ambo.

    "We started with a kindergarten school in Ambo and soon I saw a need for a school for deaf children," Fr Stephen said. "There was one young boy named Wandamagen who was deaf and he had no opportunity for an education in the area.

    "Deaf students have many problems when it comes to education. Parents associate being deaf as a negative thing. They have the attitude sometimes that a deaf child is a cursed child and they hide the child away. This means that the child isn't included in society and doesn't get an education."

    Along with the parish priest in the area, Fr Asfaw Felek, Fr Stephen is responsible for the running of the deaf school, which now has 62 students.
    An Irish priest who helps some of Ethiopia's most vulnerable children says they are often seen as a curse. Vincentian priest Fr Stephen Monaghan, from Co Dublin, told the Irish Independent that deaf children in Ethiopia are treated as "cursed" and are shunned by society. Fr Stephen, who previously served as a chaplain at St Patrick's College and worked with the deaf community in Ireland for years, started a school for the deaf in the rural village of Ambo. "We started with a kindergarten school in Ambo and soon I saw a need for a school for deaf children," Fr Stephen said. "There was one young boy named Wandamagen who was deaf and he had no opportunity for an education in the area. "Deaf students have many problems when it comes to education. Parents associate being deaf as a negative thing. They have the attitude sometimes that a deaf child is a cursed child and they hide the child away. This means that the child isn't included in society and doesn't get an education." Along with the parish priest in the area, Fr Asfaw Felek, Fr Stephen is responsible for the running of the deaf school, which now has 62 students.
    WWW.INDEPENDENT.IE
    'The hardest thing is turning deaf children away because we don't have enough funds' - Independent.ie
    An Irish priest who helps some of Ethiopia's most vulnerable children says they are often seen as a curse.
    Like
    1
    0 Comments 0 Shares
  • WWW.INDEPENDENT.IE
    Egypt urges World Bank to intervene in dispute over Nile River dam - Independent.ie
    Egypt has said the World Bank should be brought in to resolve tensions with Ethiopia over a massive dam on the Nile River that Egypt says threatens its water security.
    0 Comments 0 Shares