FORTUNE+ VIDEO SPONSORED CONTENTS ADVERTORIALS FORTUNE AUDIO Fortune Careers TRADE AFRICA Election 2026 New TIME REMAINING UNTIL ETHIOPIA’S NATIONAL ELECTION 0Days 0Hours 0Minutes 0Seconds



Federal Prosecutors Accuse Public Officials, Contractors of Corruption, Alleged Illicit Fund Transfers


Federal Prosecutors Accuse Public Officials, Contractors of Corruption, Alleged Illicit Fund Transfers

Federal prosecutors have filed corruption and money laundering charges against 11 defendants, including Nigstu Bogale, Coordinator of the Development Project for Response to the Impact of Refugees in the Horn of Africa at the Ministry of Agriculture, Biniyam Fantaye and Taye Habte, senior irrigation engineers involved in the Development Response to Displacement Impacts Project (DRDIP-II), as well as private individuals and construction company representatives. The case alleges losses and illicit gains exceeding 733.8 million Br linked to a World Bank-financed irrigation project under the Ministry. Prosecutors say the accused manipulated the procurement process for the Damale Bore flood irrigation construction project, enabling an unqualified contractor, Dawud Hamolo Gedo General Construction, to secure a contract worth more than 616.6 million Br. An additional 117 million Br in variation payments was also allegedly approved unlawfully. According to the prosecution, the three senior officials abused their authority by influencing technical evaluations, excluding competing bidders, and authorizing payments beyond World Bank procurement limits. Court documents further allege that several defendants laundered proceeds from the scheme by moving funds through personal and corporate accounts and acquiring property to conceal their origin. The defendants face three counts of charges, including abuse of power, corruption, and money laundering.

[ssba-buttons]

Radar

Addis Abeba Housing Bureau Warns Landlords against Illegal Rent Hikes, Threatens Legal Action

The Addis Abeba Housing Development and Administration Bureau has issued a warning to landlords attempting to impose unauthorised rent increases or carry out unlawful evictions as the residential leasing cycle nears its statutory June 30 deadline. The warning follows reports of landlords pressuring tenants to vacate properties under claims of personal use or sale, alongside demands for steep rent hikes, according to comments made to state media. Mekdes W. Giorgis, Head of the Bureau, said...


Radar

Development Bank Turns Corner as Profit Hits Eight Billion Br

The Development Bank of Ethiopia (DBE) posted a gross profit of eight billion Br in the first nine months of the fiscal year while repaying 15.6 billion Br in outstanding debt. Total income reached 17.3 billion Br, exceeding its target by 12pc. Presenting its performance to the House of Peoples' Representatives Standing Committee for Government Development Organizations, the bank highlighted progress from ongoing reforms, including reducing its non-performing loan ratio to 13.4pc, below the Nati...


Radar

City Audit Uncovers 188 Million Br in Financial Irregularities

The Addis Abeba Finance Bureau has implemented corrective measures on 187.7 million Br in financial irregularities identified across 75 public institutions, as the city grapples with a 350-billion-Br financing gap for infrastructure and public services. The Bureau exceeded its annual audit target by 171pc, expanding oversight to 3,242 entities and improving audit report quality to 85pc. The performance comes after an international assessment ranked Addis Abeba first among six African cities f...