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December 3, 2024

Knowledgeable mayors drive change in Ethiopia’s cities

Knowledgeable mayors drive change in Ethiopia’s cities
Knowledgeable mayors drive change in Ethiopia’s cities

A three-day multi-stakeholder capacity development meeting to support the building of effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels of the Ethiopian urban governance system is held in Addis Ababa.

“There is an urgent need for knowledgeable and skilled mayors to bridge the gap between reality and the vision of Ethiopia’s cities,” said Ethiopia’s Urban Development and Construction State Minister, Tazer Gebre-Egziabh, in an opening speech read on his behalf. The meeting opened on Wednesday is themed Transformational Leadership for Sustainable Urban Development.



“One of our important pillars in the ministry is developing and creating urban transformational leaders. We have 10 additional pillars but the foundation for all is leadership capability. Our success and failure depends on their performance,” he said.

“We must work to have empowered, democratic and self-transformed mayors who must be change agents. This change must be transformational. Currently there is a huge gap between our cities reality and vision. To shorten this gap we must transform ourselves and our followers beyond self-interest,” he said.

The Minister added that mayors should aim for collective and not individual goals.

“Only selfless and mindful mayors can transform our cities. We must understand the challenge to manage change versus sustainability,” he said.

The workshop, he said, will also allow the participants to learn more about the sustainable development goals and share experience in implementing them, adding his ministry will continue to work with the UN to strengthen the urban leaders’ experience.

For her part, Alessandra Casazza, representing the UN, said the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development provides an unprecedented and unique opportunity to deliver a more prosperous, just and greener world to everyone.

“We are, therefore, very pleased that the SDGs are at the core of this training workshop this week, because most of the investments to promote sustainable development will be made at the local level and will be led by cities, municipalities and local governments,” she said.

In fact, she said, 65 per cent of the 169 SDGs targets will not be reached without the engagement of local and regional governments.

“As Ethiopia urbanizes, local leaders and their administrations are in a privileged position to identify populations that are excluded, marginalized and discriminated against, and take concrete actions to address structural problems that sustain their condition of exclusion,” said Ms. Casazza.

She said the UN is committed to continue working closely with the Metropolitan University of Addis Ababa and the Ethiopian Cities Association to strengthen the capacity of local governments to deliver on the 2030 Agenda.



Metropolitan University President, Berehanemeskel Tena, said the workshop was meant to support Ethiopia’s institutional implementation capacity towards the achievement of SDGs.

“I am confident that participants will take directions and strategies to inform their leaders at all institutional levels in the Ethiopian urban governance system to be effective, accountable, and inclusive,” he said.

The workshop aims to prepare city officials to contribute towards the building of democratic good urban-governance and promoting active engagement of the urban population.

It is also meant to support them to gain the skills they need to promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development and provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels towards Goal 16 of the sustainable development goals.

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