News about the Ethiopian Millinium!!! Hmmmmmm

Romimj

New member
I got this article from THIS site
Better late than never. Addis Ababa finally gets the millennium bug


Party time arrives where the calendar is 7 years behind. But it comes at a hefty price

Xan Rice in Addis Ababa
Tuesday September 11, 2007
The Guardian

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Cleaning the streets of Addis Ababa in readiness for the third millennium. Photograph: Jose Cendon/AFP/Getty

A huge celebration has been planned. In the capital, Addis Ababa, the streets have been lit up with strings of lights shining red, yellow and green, and searchlights carve swords of silver in the sky. A brand-new £5m convention hall has been built near the airport by a billionaire construction magnate. There, in front of 20,000 people, US hip-hop stars The Black Eyed Peas will headline a concert that will be broadcast on giant screens across the country, kicking off a year of celebrations.
Organisers hope that the festivities will help project a new image of Ethiopia abroad, replacing the stereotypical view of a country plagued by hunger, conflict and poverty. For Ethiopians themselves, it is an opportunity to forget their worries and look to a better future, according to Seyoum Bereded, the head of the millennium organising committee.

"This is like a birthday," said Mr Bereded, who until last year worked with IT in London. "And on your birthday you don't talk about the appendix operation you had a few months ago."

Although many Ethiopians, particularly those in the cities, are equally comfortable using the western dateline, there is little doubting their pride in maintaining their own calendar. Alongside Ethiopia's status as the cradle of humankind and its record as the only African country successfully to resist colonisation, the faith-based calendar reinforces the feeling that, while they are African, they are also unique.

"There are more than 200 countries in the world, and we are the only ones to celebrate the millennium at this time," said Fanthun Bogale, an IT technician, having a drink at Cordial Pastry, a coffee shop in the student district.

It was not just a celebration but a spiritual occasion, said Samuel Demissie. He, like many people in what is a deeply religious society, half Christian and half Muslim, planned to spend the night in church rather than bopping to pop music. Desahegn Getaneh said he would be in church too, but part of him wished he could attend the concert. However, the price - more than £80 for the cheapest ticket - made that impossible.

He is not the only one complaining. The anticipated influx of hordes of tourists and tens of thousands of people from the diaspora and has sent prices spiralling. Indeed, so great has been the increase in the cost of hot peppers, an essential ingredient in any Ethiopian meal, that some have dubbed this "the pepperless milliennium".

Organisers stress that the costs of staging the event are being borne by Sheik Mohammed al-Amoudi, the Ethiopian-born tycoon and one of the 100 richest men in the world. The Sheraton Hotel he owns, one of the most luxurious in Africa, will be responsible for the huge fireworks display at midnight.

Nor will the celebrations stop there. Beyonce, the US pop diva, is scheduled to perform in October as part of the year-long festival. There are plans to plant several hundred million trees in an attempt to help reverse centuries of deforestation, and to make advances in access to education and health.

Still, the official theme, "A prosperous Ethiopia with a politically strong and economically dynamic society", hints at the main reason why some are uncomfortable. They view the event as a government project. And in Addis Ababa, prime minister Meles Zenawi's regime is deeply unpopular.

This has already caused hitches. The Great Ethiopian Run, organised by Haile Gebreselassie, has been postponed for security reasons, and events scheduled for Meskel Square, a plaza in the heart of the city, were likewise called off. In the recent past, large gatherings in the capital have seen youths pelt the police with bottles and stones.

"In all the urban areas people are worried about the political situation and what will come next," said Daniel Mono, a 26-year-old development worker. "The millennium is a change of numbers and is not going to solve the problems no matter what the authorities say."

The heavy police and army presence on the streets also reflects concerns about mischief from any of the government's numerous enemies outside the capital, from the rebels currently facing a crackdown in the eastern Ogaden region to Islamists in Somalia and Eritrean forces across the border.

But, as some people have pointed out, the government is at least free from one major worry associated with the millennium - namely Y2K bug.

Well, The Celebration is A year Long celebration :mf_w00t2: ...Michael might go there maybe nxt year????? :blink: since its a year long.... I can Only hope... :unsure:
 

Romimj

New member
Happy new year: Ethiopia celebrates the Millennium, seven years late
By Steve Bloomfield in Addis Ababa
Published: 11 September 2007
In the Millennium Bazaar, a series of market stalls just behind Meskel Square in the centre of Addis Ababa, everything is stamped "2000". From plastic bowls and key rings to packets of crisps and vases of plastic flowers, all are marketed as millennium specials.

Elsewhere in the world today it is 11 September 2007. But in Ethiopia, which runs on a unique Coptic calendar more than seven years behind the Gregorian calendar, it is a far more auspicious day: New Year's Eve, 1999.

Government officials hoped the opportunity to celebrate the dawn of a new millennium for a second time would persuade hundreds of thousands of tourists to descend. Tourism chiefs planned for up to 300,000 visitors, and encouraged those returning from Ethiopia's vast diaspora to stay with family so that the hotels could fit in all the visitors.

A massive concert in a brand new venue in Addis Ababa was planned for Millennium Eve with Beyoncé, Janet Jackson and even Michael Jackson all rumoured at one stage to be playing. A 10-day fair showcasing Ethiopian food was set to be held in Meskel Square, while Ethiopia's greatest long distance runner, Haile Gabriselasie, would lead off the runners at a special Great Ethiopian Run through the capital.

The government hoped that the celebrations would help throw off the image of a country with a poor human rights record and increasingly authoritarian rule.

But as the big day approached, things have not gone to plan. Just 25,000 tourists, less than a tenth of those expected, are now thought to have made the trip. It was still possible yesterday morning to book a room at one of Addis Ababa's main hotels. The run and the food fair have both been cancelled due to unspecified terrorist threats — a reminder of the volatile nature of the Horn of Africa region and of Ethiopia's poor relations with its neighbour Eritrea.

The main concert, now to be headlined by the Black Eyed Peas, has been criticised by locals for being too expensive. The cheapest tickets cost 1,500 birr (£85), or roughly twice the monthly salary of a civil servant.

Despite the problems, many are preparing to celebrate. At BK Style, a women's clothes shop on Africa Avenue, shoppers search for the perfect millennium outfit. According to Mehbuba Kedir, 19, a shop assistant, the past few days have been good for business. "Everyone wants to have something nice to wear," she says.

A short bus ride away, at a crowded coffee shop, Yohannes Yimer, a 26-year-old accountant, is not so convinced. "It is just a day as usual, a simple day," he says, sipping his latte. "If the millennium helps the country to grow it will be nice, but so far the people are not benefiting from it."

The government, Mr Yimes says, is keen to project a new image of Ethiopia. "But our image will only be changed if we change our culture. If after the millennium we have these problems, will that change the image of the country? I don't think so."

here is the link Click Here
 

whisperAdmin

Administrator
Staff member
Thanks for posting. I'm not sure if he's going to be there, though. Has anything been confirmed by Raymone Bain yet?
 
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