Travel information on Security & Safety for visitors in Ethiopia

Category Archives: Ethiopian News

Merry Christmas & Happy New (Ferenji) Year

Nativity scene in Ethiopia Iconographic styleWe wish all our friends, customers and our team members across the country a happy Christmas time – Melkam Gena (Happy Christmas know as Gena or Lidet in Ethiopia). As across the Orthodox world it is celebrated a few weeks later than in the west.

But this year (2016 which started on 12 Sept), is different. Last year in the Ethiopian calendar was a leap year, and so until the leap day in the western calendar in February, all dates are knocked back. Because there was an extra day added to the tail-end of last year making the 5 day pagumenical (13th) month into a 6 day version so each Ethiopian date starting with the 1st day of this year – Meskerem 1, falls a day later in the western calendar. So, for example, the big Gabriel holiday (Kulubi Gabriel) which falls on Tahsas 19 this year is on 29 December not the usual 28th as in other years. But Gena is different!

gena in Lalibela

Gena ceremony in Lalibela

Gena is celebrated on Tahsas 29 (the monthly day that celebrates the birth of Christ) which usually falls on 7 January. However as the miraculous conception of Jesus in Mary was in the preceding year Megabit 29 (7 April), most of Ethiopia celebrate Gena on Tahsas 28 this year … which is still on the 7th…. but in Lalibela it will be on the 8th!  Understanding Ethiopia is always that bit more complex!

Many Orthodox Christians are currently fasting for advent, a fast that began on 25 November, and means most a vegan diet for 6 weeks.

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Boya Guesthouse is repaired

Boya Community Guesthouse

Boya Community Guesthouse

Olivia Chapman visits Boya – one of the Tesfa Community owned Guesthouses near Lalibela (all photos taken by Olivia)

“I had the pleasure of visiting Tesfa Tour’s community owned guesthouse in Boya at the end of February this year and despite the structural destruction there is still a sort of magic about the place. The guesthouse was badly impacted by the conflict, with the Tigrayan army using the guesthouse as a base. Once the army left, they attempted to burn the remaining structures and took many materials with them. The community, managed to put out the fires before it was completely destroyed. Since then the community have been unable to make any money of the guesthouse, with tourism at an all time low and inadequate

Damaged kitchen/dining tukul

Damaged kitchen/dining tukul 

structures to hold the few tourist who visited.

However, the community have since received funding from a small and local NGO; Zegoch le Zegoch (ZlZ) who have focused on a new approach to aid in areas that have been affected by conflict. ZlZ’s irsho approach places communities at the centre of the emergency response, seeing them as capable of drive their own development. In line with this, ZlZ have granted the community in Boya 130,000 ETB (around $2,450USD) for reconstruction. The community have already started to fix the site and prepare for tourists to

Children in Boya home

Children in their home 

come again, estimating to be ready within a month or so. With the news that tourists were returning back to Ethiopia and business was picking up, the community members faces brightened.

The community invited us into their houses and offered us so much even though they have so little. This group is the perfect example of resilience, demonstrated by the continued loving approach despite the devastating impact the war had on them and

Raw honey & ambasha bread

Ethiopian hospitality -Raw honey & ambasha bread

their families. They are excited and ready to meet you with the warmest hospitality, as soon as the site is ready and up and running. Get ready to experience the real Ethiopia.”

We since received a call from the community to tell us that all is fixed and they are eagerly waiting for guests.

 

Farmer shaping wood for the doors and windows

Farmer shaping wood for the doors and windows

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Ras Dashen – Ethiopia’s highest mountain – is open

Ras Dashen Peak © AWF Abezash Tamerat 2017

While the core area of the Simien Mountain National Park has been open for visitors for the last year now, Ras Dashen and Eastern edge of the park was closed. It is now open again and for those keen to climb Ethiopia’s highest mountain (variously measured at 4,533m and 4,543m and some times known as Ras Dejen) we can now organise treks in the park to include this peak. We can also include several of the other high peaks – including Kidus Yared 4,453 and its ridge that runs to Abba Yared (4,409)  and Silki (4,420).

A Walia Ibex beside Ginat Lobelia, from the slopes of Mnt Buahit looking across Chenek

We will also climb Buahit to the west at 4,430m.

The Simien Mountains is the best place to see Gelada Baboons up close, and the only place to see the Walia Ibex.

Gelada baboons, staring back…

You also have a good chance to see the Ethiopian Wolf and many birds of prey including the Lammergeyer.

So why not ask Tesfa Tours to put a trip together in this remarkable landscape – a world heritage site?

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Smoke in the City

Smoke in Addis - Hedar Mikael

Smoke in Addis – Hedar Mikael

Melkam Mikael – today is a special St. Michaels Day – Hedar Mikael, and today in Addis, looking out to the invisible mountains – shrouded in a smoke from thousands of bonfires you might have thought you were in Lahore or Delhi. Today is the day when householders burn their compound rubbish and with the smoke it is believed that disease and sickness is taken away.

This also marks the harvest time. Across much of the highlands grass is cut in meadows and the harvest of the wheat, barley and teff will be well underway. There are also a number of festivals in different churches: Hanna Mariam was yesterday, and the very important Tsion Mariam comes in just over a weeks

Fasting selection with Ethiopian beer

time.

With harvesting going on in the country this is a wonderful time to visit Ethiopia, and see the countryside. Why not book up a trek staying at the Tesfa community owned guesthouses?

A major fasting season will start this week on Thursday – the Advent fast – Gena Tsom, which will last for 44 days until Ethiopian Christmas on 7 January. Great news for those who love the fasting (vegan food).

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Salam Ethiopia -ሰላም

Yesterday evening (Wed 2 Nov), after two years of conflict and 10 days of peace talks, the Federal Government of Ethiopia and the TPLF agreed on a “permanent cessation of hostilities”, and a raft of measures which include an agreement to demobilise Tigrayan forces and bring food and essential services to the people of Tigray.  There is a lot still to be ironed out, and implementation and monitoring to be agreed, but silencing of the guns was the crucial first step.

We all wish for peace – Selam/ሰላም – for Ethiopia.

 

In other news the Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI) issued a new COVID directive on Friday which effectively ends almost all Covid 19 measures in the country, just leaving an obligation to test if symptomatic and to wear a mask or isolate. It still encourages people in critical service areas to get vaccinated, but no obligation.

For those flying into Ethiopia there is now no requirement show either vaccination certificate or test result. Ethiopian Airlines website has the details for travelers. [click on ‘Ethiopia Entry Requirement’- top right in the info box]

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Lalibela & Gondar get the green light  in UK Travel Advice

UK travel advise for Ethiopia

UK travel advise for Ethiopia

The UK government have changed the travel advise for Ethiopia’s key tourist sites – Lalibela and Gondar – home to stunning rock hewn churches, and romantic castles. The UK had been advising against travel to these places and to the roads that connect them but this negative advise has now been lifted. 

Along with Bahir Dar and Lake Tana this now means much of the northern historical circuit is in the UK’s ‘green zone’.

Giyorgis church in Lalibela

What does this mean for you? If you are travelling in these areas, your normal travel insurance will cover you. 

We have been arguing for months that the Travel Advice should be relaxed. As I mentioned in previous posts I have visited Lalibela 3 times since January and  felt completely safe and welcome each time. I also visited Gondar once (going on to the Simien Mountains) and also felt safe throughout my visit. This change in travel advice reinforces this view.

We are also really happy that this change means that the community tourism guesthouses in Meket and along the roads that approach Lalibela from the south are now also out of the red. We look forward to more trekkers enjoying this marvelous scenery as hosts of the local farmers.

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Lalibela: an ancient and holy town, waiting for visitors

Deacons at Giyorgis festival Lalibela

Deacons at Giyorgis festival Lalibela

Is Lalibela safe and ready for tourists?

Many people are asking me about Lalibela, and the predominant question is: “is it safe?”  The answer for me it’s very easy: “yes!“.

I have been in Lalibela three times this year: in late January to witness the beautiful Giyorgis (St George) festival and again at the end of May to discuss with our guides and local government how to get several of the community tourism guesthouses back into operation (some have already been hosting hikers); then lastly in mid June. Each time I was well looked after: a very comfortable bed, a working shower with hot water,  good food… and cold beer.  The last time was with my son and a group of clients to see the special Mikael and St Lalibela celebrations and do some exciting cycling on the mountain above the town (totally awesome)!

Restaurant in Lalibela

Eating out in Lalibela

What happened in Lalibela?

However, all would-be guests will probably know Lalibela was overrun by the TPLF in the fighting that embroiled much of northern Ethiopia recently. It was a shock to us all when, in August 2021, the TPLF came across the mountains from the road that leads between Mekele and Dessie, through the small mountain village of Muja, catching everyone by surprise. At first nobody wanted to believe it. But in Lalibela it was very real. Most of the guides I know fled down into the lowlands and up onto the plateau heading towards Bahir Dar, and for 3 months the people who remained struggled under occupation with precious little food.

Child peers through Tukul window

Kids looks through window at Senay Mikael celebrations

At the start of December 2021 government & Amhara forces retook Lalibela, following a government counter-offensive led by PM Abiy in late November. It seemed inevitable that the Tigrayan forces would be pushed back further north. But 11 days later they regrouped and again took Lalibela and some nearby towns. It seems they wanted to secure a line of retreat back to Tigray. In keeping with this, the TPLF retreated out of Lalibela a few days afterwards.

What has Changed now?

So why do I believe it safe to visit Lalibela again now?  At the point when Lalibela was taken initially TPLF forces were on the march south into Amhara Region, and it seems they intended reaching to Addis. Now there has been a truce which has stood since March and no real fighting since late December when the Ethiopian forces stated that they wouldn’t advance into Tigray. In addition aid trucks are delivering humanitarian assistance to Tigray in increasingly more significant quantities, which was one of the demands of the TPLF and their stated reason for advancing towards Addis. It doesn’t seem that either side wants to resume full scale fighting and although it is slow, diplomacy is inching forward. It’s widely assumed that if fighting did resume, it would be over the disputed territory to the west of the Tekeze bordering Sudan. This area is north and west the Simien mountains and a very long way from Lalibela.

Tesfa team at Lalibela Airport

Tesfa team at Lalibela A/P

I don’t see any risk to be in Lalibela as a tourist at this time. There is a functional airport with regular flights linking the town to Addis Ababa, as well as a good road to connect to Bahir Dar and places further south. That many western governments still have Lalibela painted red on their travel advice is an anathema to me! It defies logic.  Especially since many ambassadors (including the US ambassador) visited Lalibela in May this year and pronounced it safe!

Lalibela Needs Tourists to visit

On top of the inaccuracy, it is stopping people visiting Lalibela, when the town is crying out for assistance. Lalibela derives most of its income from tourism, and without tourists visiting, thousands of people are struggling to make ends meet. It is not just the hotel staff and the guides, there are drivers, musicians, shop owners, carpenters, mechanics, you name it – all are struggling.

Many hotel owners are keeping their hotels operating in Lalibela in the hope that tourists come. They have bought

Tabots come out at Senay Mikael in Lalibela

Tabots paraded at Senay Mikael Festival

generators so that they can provide guests with power to heat water for showers and recharge phones. Keeping their hotels open is actually costing them money. The guides are so eager to show their guests around the extraordinary 800 year old churches that are carved out of the bedrock with a labyrinth of tunnels connecting them. In fact everyone in the town is welcoming and happy to see the few foreigners who have made it to visit Lalibela, and people are doing their best to make those that come feel welcome.

Lalibela is truly an incredible place.

In recent years it was becoming overrun by the volume of tourists visiting. Now you can visit in peace, with just the rhythmic chanting from the priests, to the deep beat of the big Kebero drums, and a tinkle of the sistrum an ancient rattle that dates back to pharaonic Egypt.

Deacon using sistrum in Lalibela

Deacon using sistrum in Lalibela

On a festival you may see the holy Tabots wrapped in brocaded cloth and carried under an umbrella, paraded out of the church. Or just spend a few hours in contemplation in once of the ancient churches, observing the spiritual life of the church.

You will be reminded of the how ancient is Lalibela and it’s orthodox church. Its history has fingers that go deep back into a past shrouded in mystery, way deeper than any western church. And the rural life of the farmers, who have now ploughing their land with teams of oxen, and are sowing the seeds by hand, for a crop that they can harvest in November and December, is also a very ancient way of life. The Tesfa Community treks in the surrounding mountains are the best way to see and experience this way of life.

I urge any of you with a desire to come and explore, to travel to Ethiopia soon. You will be greeted with big smiles and a hospitality that leaves you humbled.

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Mysterious monasteries as Ethiopia travel gets easier

Mysterious hidden Monastery

Bethlehem church Roof stone and timber

Bethlehem church – timber & stone roof

The mysterious Bethlehem monastery is gearing up to welcome the first tourists. This monastery was reportedly built in the fourth century following the construction of Mariam Sion church in Axum. It is built in the ancient way with blocks of stone for the floor and walls and then a wooden roof, but what makes this church even more intriguing is that it is hidden by typical round wall with a corrugated roof, and so from outside looks like most other churches, although it is anything but!

Bethlehem church -Flagstone marking entrance to basement chambers

Flagstone marking entrance to basement chambers

Even more mysterious is that the monks claim that the Ark of Covenant is kept
beneath the church. They recount the tale of an Italian version of Indiana Jones who some 80 years ago determined to explore the chambers beneath the church. Apparently he came up having experienced an explosion he assumed to be volcanic, left the church and died within a day. The priests sealed the access stone and no one has been back down since.
This monastery is one of the key learning places – a church university for priests who want to study the scriptures and music of St. Yared, and there is a residential compound attached to the church.
We are now able to arrange for guests to stay at Bethlehem, either in a guesthouse or in tents, which will fit perfectly onto a trip between the Tesfa community guesthouses in neighbouring Meket (just south of Lalibela), and Gondar or Bahir Dar.

Travel to Ethiopia gets easier

Bole Airport Addis Ababa

Bole Airport in Addis

With Omicron replacing the Delta variant across the world the threat of COVID 19 has diminished. Although cases may have increased and transmission is rapid, immunity and much lower mortality and hospitalisation seem to follow. Official statistics for Ethiopia show that deaths of people with COVID and active cases have all but disappeared now. In Addis Ababa, where previous spikes in mortality were visible as funeral tents went up along the roads, life has settled down to something approaching normal.
In terms of travel, the Ethiopian Public Health Institute has now revised the directive with the result that travellers do not need to have a negative PCR test if they are vaccinated against COVID (all the mainstream western and Chinese vaccines – all double doses – except J&J, valid two weeks after vaccination) and can provide evidence (one presumes a certificate with the correct stamp on it).
This means the end for most travellers of expensive PCR tests and the worry about having travel plans cancelled due to a positive test.

E-Visas being processed

E-Visa page

Add to this that the online visa applications are being processed speedily now – but do use the correct government website .  Make sure you are using the one ending .gov.et.   You will need the address of your first night in a hotel, and a digital passport photo less than 2MB best as JPEG format. And same size/ format for a copy of the info page of your passport.  If you do not hear back from them in 72 hours please contact us – they may need a nudge to get it done.

Simien Mnt Lodge - High altitude accommodation

Simien Mnt Lodge

National Park Re-opened

The Simien National Park, which was closed during the conflict, is now open for business and Simien Mountain Lodge, which recently was renovated, is serving clients again. Through most of the last 24 months they have kept their staff on the payroll and remain a beacon of light for tourism in the area. Too many tourism professionals have suffered, while others have looked for alternative income streams that have taken them away from the sector. That this lodge remained open has given some of these people hope that tourism will return.

World class attractions

Sebreatsemu Giyorgis in Lalibela - tabots return to the church

Giyorgis church – Rock-hewn in Lalibela

Now that fighting across the region has stopped, the State of Emergency ended, and flight services resumed, the first trickle of visitors is returning to some of the attractions in the region: Lake Tana with its secluded monasteries; Lalibela with its labyrinth of rock-hewn churches connected by passageways and tunnels; Gondar with its romantic castles, baths and an extra ordinary church, and the Simien Mountain National Park with its high mountains, vertical escarpments and unique flora and fauna. Three of these are UNESCO World Heritage sites, and the fourth, Lake Tana, is a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and all are amazing places to visit.

Dawn at Mescha community guesthouse Wof Washa

Mescha guesthouse, Wof Washa forest

Community Tourism

Tesfa Community Treks are also getting going again, as a steady stream of hikers has made their way to the guesthouses in Wof Washa Forest (near Ankober) and to the mountains around Lalibela to explore these stunning areas and experience the lives of the local farmers. Here the local host communities, after two years with virtually no guests, are thrilled to receive visitors again.  Treks can be from 2 nights upwards, and we can do several nights at one guesthouse for those wanting more time with the communities. More details on our website.

Book your trip soon!

I urge you to look at visiting Ethiopia soon. These remarkable places are quiet and peaceful. You can enjoy them without the crowds that were coming in 2019, and in the process help the guides, and other tourism professionals and service givers who are really struggling.  Contact us here or email us on info@tesfatours.com

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UK Travel advise showing most of Ethiopia as Green

UK Govt travel advise for Ethiopia 4 Feb 22

UK Govt safety zones for travel in Ethiopia

The UK government updated their travel advise for Ethiopia as of 4 February 22, to include large areas of Amhara regions (North Shoa & Gojam) as green, as well a a large part of Afar region. The inclusion of N.Shoa means that the community trekking in Wof Washa forest will now be in the ‘green zone’. In addition we at Ride the Rift, are staging a charity bike ride on 4-6 March in the Ankober area of North Shoa- now in the Green zone!  Visits to Bahir Dar with the Blue Nile Falls and the monasteries on Lake Tana are now also Green. For now Lalibela and Gondar are in the ‘amber zone’, but we really hope the UK government recognise that they are also safe in the coming weeks. Both Lalibela and Gondar saw a large number of diaspora and other visitors over the January holidays of Gena

Sebtretsemu Giyorgis festival Lalibela

Giyorgis church for festival in Lalibela

(Ethiopian Christmas) and Timkat, and I myself went to Lalibela and experienced a special festival of St.George in Lalibela
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Lalibela on 26 January and can attest to the fact that it is calm and secure, and looking forward to receiving overseas visitors again.

With the Ethiopian government announcing last week that the cabinet has agreed to lift the State of Emergency that was declared across Ethiopia in November, the situation in the country is becoming calmer, and we are already seeing that people are looking to travel after 2 years of Covid and conflict has limited any opportunity to explore this incredible country. This is great news for the guides, hoteliers and others who have lost so much in the last 2 years.

 

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Melkam Timkat

Worshippers holding tapers on Jan Meda for Timkat

Worshippers on Jan Meda for Timkat

 

 

Huge overhead flag on Addis Ababa street

Flags decorate the roads that the Tabots will be processed along

Timkat is one of the most important festivals in the Ethiopian Orthodox church, celebrating the baptism of Jesus in the Rive Jordan. On the days leading up to Timkat, Addis Ababa is decked out with colourful flags and other decorations to make the routes that the sacred Tabots will travel on as beautiful as possible.  Roads are swept and drains cleared. Today (Tuesday) the eve of Timkat the tabots are processed out of the churches across the country to the special grounds where the baptismal ceremony will be staged on the day.
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Replica on St Georges church from Lalibela in Addis for Timkat

A replica on Bete Giyorgis church of Lalibela on a roundabout in Addis

This year I have seen remarkable edifices erected – such as the replica of Bete Giyorgis – the famous rockhewn church of Lalibela on roundabouts where the Tabots will pass.

Church music & flags for Timkat on Jan Meda

Church music & flags for Timkat on Jan Meda

But most moving is the many thousands of people that go to the special Timkat grounds across the capital and indeed across the country. Holding ‘twafs’ (tapers) they pray and hold vigil near the tabots. There is a serenity and beauty the I really love in these places and even the presence of a foreigner like me with his bike was welcomed by all.
I and the team at Tesfa Tours, wish everyone a wonderful Timkat holiday – Enkwanaderasachu!

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