The Minister of Finance, Mr. Berhane Abrehe, the Minister of Agriculture, Mr. Arefaine Berhe, and the Head of Economic Affairs at the PFDJ, Mr. Hagos Gebrehiewet, respectively pointed out that the philosophy and policy of the Eritrean government and the
In accordance with the agreement reached between Eritrea and the Islamic Republic of Iran to strengthen bilateral relations, four documents were signed yesterday in the presence of Presidents Isaias Afwerki and Ahmedi Nejad.
Eritrean nationals residing in Belgium and Switzerland reaffirmed their readiness to back up the ongoing development drive in the Homeland and safeguard the nation's sovereignty.
Reporters Without Borders today released a report on the career of Naizghi Kiflu, an adviser to the president of one of the world's most repressive countries and currently its local government minister, who as information minister supervised the round-ups of
Ten Somali men who were jailed for seven years each after being found guilty of piracy, have been ordered to file a proper appeal before their case can be heard.
Standard Chartered Bank's pre-tax profit for the first three months of the year rose 30 per cent to Sh1.3 billion. This was against Sh1 billion recorded over the same period in 2007.
WARID Telecom has launched its operations in Lira and Apac. The general manager, Zul Javaid, said the company had already put up four masts on Gulu road.
Mortgage giant, Housing Finance, has announced plans to finance large-scale housing projects through its building subsidiary, Kenya Building Society, to increase housing supply in the market.
Millers sent a tough message yesterday that there would be no respite to the food crisis, at least in the short term, with the price of maize flour set to rise by 20 per cent before August.
The board of East African Portland Cement Company (EAPCC) has picked a new managing director, ending uncertainty over the tenure of the managing director, Mr Ndegwa Kaggio, who has remained in an acting capacity for close to two years.
The Ministry of Labour has stepped in to avert a looming strike by Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) employees. The planned strike threatens to disrupt operations at the Port of Mombasa, which is struggling to recover from the congestion crisis experienced
MOMBASA port is already feeling the impact of last week's collapse of rail culverts at Jinja, Uganda, which the Rift Valley Railways (RVR) says will take two months to repair.
Shippers have to dig deeper into their pockets after the main shipping lines operating in Mombasa and the East Africa region raised the bunker surcharge to 54.56 per cent, which is double the rate charged two years ago.