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Terara Network is an Ethiopian media company based in Addis Ababa.The company's main journalist who is the owner of the company is Tamerat Negera.The company was established on 26 September 2020, by Tamerat Negera through the charity funds raised by his friend Tariku Geleta.
Tamerat Negera was in jail from 10 December 2021 [7] until 6 April 2022 for charges relating to his work on Terara Network, [8] an Ethiopian media on YouTube he co-founded and managed. The court granted him bail for 50,000 Ethiopian Birr on 5 April, and he was released from prison on 6 April, after 118 days in prison. [9]
Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party: Efoytā [1] Addis Ababa: 1997 Fānā démokrāsi Amharic Ethiopian Herald [1] Addis Ababa: 1943 Ethiopian Press Agency (government) English Ethiopian Gazette [3] Toronto: 2018 AMG Brands Network English ethiopiangazette.com: Feteh: 2008–2012 [4] closed; chief editor Temesgen Desalegn arrested [5] The ...
Ethiopia plans to organise a referendum to determine the status of territory disputed by the country's Tigray and Amhara regions, the defence minister said on Tuesday. The government also vowed to ...
Tamrat Layne was born in 1955 and raised by a single mother in Addis Ababa. [2] [3] He led the Ethiopian People's Democratic Movement during the 1980s, fighting against Mengistu Haile Mariam in the Ethiopian Civil War.
Tamrat Desta was born in Tiqur Wuha near Shashamane, Ethiopia in 1978. [1] He was the second of three children, all boys. After some years in Tiqur Wuha, his family moved to Shashamene and later went to Hawassa, where Tamrat completed high school. In 1998, Tamrat moved to Dire Dawa to live with his guardian; while there, he began to perform as ...
ESAT was established on April 24, 2010 by a group of leading exiled journalists, most of whom were jailed, tortured or forced into exile, to provide accurate, objective and balanced news, analysis and information, perspective as well as entertainment, talk shows, documentaries, sports and cultural programming pertaining to Ethiopia and the rest of the world.
A government-run news agency, now called the Ethiopian News Agency, ran from 1942 to 1947, and then was relaunched in 1954. Early twenty-first century Ethiopian newspapers can be broadly divided into two categories, Ethiopia based and diaspora based, with the majority of the diaspora-based ones being digital-only newspapers.