Ethiopia for Ethiopians, NOT for King Abdullah and co. 
 
 * 
 Anticipating the heroic struggle of the Egyptian people and youth of these days, 
 may be the Egyptian President was forecasting his downfall and preparing his Asylum 
 in the lands he planned to grab in Ethiopia as the newest Wikileaks document has disclosed 
 today. 
 
 Four decades ago there used to be a tale that, it was so ridiculous that Ethiopia 
 suffers from famine, though it could be a bread basket of the whole Arab world, let 
 alone suffer from hunger and famine! 
 But alas, true the Elite of the Arab world under the leadership of King Abdullah 
 have taken hold of their basket bread, but with Ethiopia condemned for good to famine, 
 poverty and the slavery of the novel neocolonialism made in Saudi Arabian. 
 And for good I am also beginning, at the latest now, to believe that we really have a mercenary 
administration in Ethiopia never witnessed in such a manner in our history. 
 
 Let us just hope and work for the spirit of "Tunisia" to blow over us! 
ETHIOPIA NOT FOR SALE!
 *********
Viewing cable 10ADDISABABA247, FOREIGN INVESTORS GRAB UP MORE LAND IN ETHIOPIA
* 
 RR RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHGI RUEHJO RUEHMA RUEHMR RUEHPA RUEHRN RUEHTRO 
 DE RUEHDS #0247/01 0390620 
 ZNR UUUUU ZZH 
 R 080620Z FEB 10 
 FM AMEMBASSY ADDIS ABABA 
 TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 7672 
 INFO RUEHZO/AFRICAN UNION COLLECTIVE 
 RUEPADJ/CJTF HOA 
 RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC 
 RUEKDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC 
 RUEWMFD/HQ USAFRICOM STUTTGART GE 
 RUEKJCS/JOINT STAFF WASHINGTON DC 
 RUEHLMC/MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORP 
 RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC 
 RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 ADDIS ABABA 000247 
 
 SENSITIVE 
 SIPDIS 
 
 DEPARTMENT FOR AF/E JWIEGERT; AF/EPS - ABREITER AND GMALLORY; EEB/IFD/OMA - JWINKLER AND EEB/CBA - DWINSTEAD; EEB/TPP/BTA DEPARTMENT PASS TO USTR FOR PATRICK COLEMAN, BARBARA GRYNIEWWICZ 
 DEPT OF COMMERCE FOR ITA MARIA RIVERO 
 DEPT OF TREASURY FOR REBECCA KLEIN 
 USAID FOR AFR/EA - HELLYER, DALTON, AFR/SD - CURTIS; EGAT - JHESTER, 
 JYASMAN AND GMYERS 
 
 E.O. 12958: N/A 
 TAGS: EAGR EINV ETRD ECON EFIN BEXP AF ET 
 SUBJECT: FOREIGN INVESTORS GRAB UP MORE LAND IN ETHIOPIA 
 
 REF: 09 ADDIS ABABA 2900 
 
 ADDIS ABAB 00000247 001.2 OF 002 
 
 
 SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. NOT FOR INTERNET DISTRIBUTION. 
 
 ¶1. (SBU) SUMMARY: The Government of Ethiopia's (GoE) recent high 
 profile land deals and shift in agricultural policy (reftel) have 
 attracted additional foreign investors to the agricultural and 
 tourism sectors. In January, Egyptian Prime Minster Dr. Ahmed Nazif 
 led a large delegation to Ethiopia to announce the National Bank of 
 Egypt's lease of 49,400 acres of land to grow cereals. Press 
 reports indicated that these cereals are headed for export to Egypt. 
 Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and Djiboutian 
 President Ismael Omar Guelleh separately leased land plots to build 
 hotels outside of Addis Ababa, while Guelleh already leases a 7,400 
 acre farm that started exporting wheat back to Djibouti last year. 
 Finally, the South African private equity investment fund Agri-Vie 
 invested USD 3.5 million in a company that is growing and processing 
 various fruits to manufacture juice products. These juice products 
 will primarily target the European and the Middle Eastern markets as 
 reported by the company to Econoff. Despite the benefits of 
 increased foreign investment, political opposition members and 
 international critics remain skeptical about the GoE's motives and 
 the land policy's affect on poor, rural Ethiopians. End Summary. 
 
 
 Egyptians Eye Investment Opportunities 
 -------------------------------------- 
 
 ¶2. (U) The Egyptian Prime Minister, Dr. Ahmed Nazif, led the latest 
 charge of foreign agricultural investment during a January visit to 
 Ethiopia. Nazif, alongside his delegation of several cabinet 
 ministers and 26 agricultural companies, announced that the 
 state-owned National Bank of Egypt plans to invest USD 40 million in 
 the lease of 49,400 acres of land in the Afar region to grow 
 cereals. Press reports stated that these cereals would be exported 
 to Egypt despite the GoE's 2007 "temporary" export ban on all 
 cereals that has never been formally lifted. (Note: It appears 
 Saudi, Djiboutian, and now Egyptian investors have somehow bypassed this ban,
while other investors informed Econoff that they have not been allowed to export
cereal grains (reftel). End Note.) The bank is also poised to open an office in
Ethiopia to serve existing and 
 new Egyptian projects and plans to offer credit of USD 14.6 million 
 to six Ethiopian banks according to local press reports. (Note: the 
 domestic banking sector is closed to foreign banks; however, other 
 foreign banks such as Germany's Commerzbank do have offices in 
 Ethiopia to facilitate relations with Ethiopian banks. It is 
 unclear how the National Bank of Egypt could offer credit in 
 Ethiopia in evident violation of banking and financial regulations. 
 End Note.) Beyond the focus on agriculture, Nazif signed a 
 memorandum of understanding with GoE Prime Minister Meles Zenawi to 
form an Ethio-Egypt Council of Commerce. Meles said during the 
 signing ceremony that relations between Ethiopia and Egypt had 
 evolved from distrust towards friendly cooperation. Other areas of 
 Egyptian business interest included livestock, drug manufacturing, 
 and hydroelectric power. 
 
 Former Nigerian President and Djiboutian President Also Invest 
 --------------------------------------------- ------ 
 
 ¶3. (U) Another foreign VIP seen around town and looking for land was 
 the former president of Nigeria, Olusegun Obasanjo. Obasanjo 
 recently leased about five acres of land near Debrezeit, Oromia 
 region (about 50 kilometers east of Addis Ababa) to develop a hotel 
 and tourist destination. In addition, current Djiboutian President 
 Ismael Omar Guelleh recently acquired the right to develop about 2.5 
 acres of lakeside land in Debrezeit to build a hotel. This 
 acquisition added to the 7,400 acres of farmland Guelleh leased last 
 year in Bale, Oromia region. According to post's conversations with 
 local agricultural business investors and press reports, this farm 
 has already harvested wheat and other cereals for export to 
 Djibouti. 
 
 Private Equity Fund Invests in Fruit Juice Farm 
 --------------------------------------------- -- 
 
 
 ADDIS ABAB 00000247 002.2 OF 002 
 
 
 ¶4. (U) South African private equity fund Agri-Vie has also chosen to 
 invest in Ethiopia's agricultural sector. The fund invested USD 3.5 
 million in africaJUICE, a company already in the process of 
 establishing fruit production and processing operations when Econoff 
 visited its 3,000 acre operation last year. The Dutch and British 
 company representatives reported to Econoff that it plans to target 
 the juice markets in Europe and the Middle East. The company 
 purchased this farm (not the land) from the GoE and converted it to 
 produce yellow passion fruit, mango, and papaya. 
 
 Critics Concerned About Rural Population 
 ---------------------------------------- 
 
 ¶5. (U) As more reports of foreign land leases in Ethiopia surface, 
 the GoE continues to insist local farmers will not be adversely 
 affected by its land deals. Regarding agricultural investment, the 
 GoE views foreign investor involvement as key to the country's move 
 from subsistence to commercial farming (reftel). On top of any 
 potential damage to local farmers, international and political 
 opposition party critics cite concerns over exporting food from a 
 country that relies so heavily on imported food aid and the 
 perceived low wages that foreign investors pay its employees. 
 Merara Gudina, Chairman of the Ethiopian Federal Democratic Unity 
 Forum (a coalition of political opposition parties), accused the GoE 
 of using its land "giveaway" policy to hold on to power and to buy 
 diplomatic support. U.S.-based GoE opposition movement Ginbot 7 
 stated in a January editorial that the GoE needs to change its 
 communist land policy and empower local farmers, who have the 
 potential to produce a marketable surplus. The editorial further 
 noted that any land deal that has not been agreed to by the 
 Ethiopian people will not be honored by future elected governments. 
 
 
 Comment 
 ------- 
 
 ¶6. (SBU) The GoE clearly needed to shift its agricultural policy in 
 order to make effective use of its vast amounts of fertile land, and 
 the agricultural policy mix being implemented is viewed by most 
 experts as a step in the right direction. However, that evolving 
 policy is a long way from proving its worth as a vehicle for 
 achieving the GoE's stated goals of modernizing the sector, 
 generating foreign exchange reserves, and increasing the domestic 
 food supply. End Comment. 
 
 YATES
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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