Firew Altaye Gebremedhin or ፍሬው አልታዬ ገብረመድህን was born on 2 August 1966. He was an Ethiopian politician and second chief administrator of Wolayita Zone, from 2002 to 2004 and he was succeeded by Amanuel Otoro. He served as member of Ethiopian parliament from 2001 to 2002.[1]

Firew Altaye
ፍሬው አልታዬ
Altaaye Firiya
Firew Altaye at Meeting
Member of Parliament
In office
2000–2002
Chief Administrator of Wolayita Zone
In office
2002–2004
Preceded byMamo Godebo
Succeeded byAmanuel Otoro
Personal details
Born
Firew Altaye Gebremedhin

(1966-08-02)2 August 1966[1]
Boloso Sore, Ethiopia
Died17 March 2004(2004-03-17) (aged 37)
Wolaita Sodo, Ethiopia
Cause of deathNatural death
NationalityEthiopia Ethiopian
Alma materAddis Ababa University University of Amsterdam

Early life

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Firew Altaye was born in Boloso Sore in Wolaita, Ethiopia, and he completed his primary education in Hembecho Saint Michael Missionary School. He also completed his secondary education in wolaita Sodo comprehensive high school. After completing his secondary education, he attended in Addis Ababa University and got first degree in 1990. He got MA degree from University of Amsterdam in International law and until his death he ruled Wolaita zone.[2]

Political career

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Frew Altaye, who was the chief administrator of Wolayita Zone for a short period of time and designer of everything for the development of the nation. To this end, on February 21, 2011, the then Chief administrator, Dagato Kumbe, laid the foundation stone for a monument in his name in Wolaita Sodo.[3] He fought against ethnic chuavinisim which is so called Wogagoda. This event led to widespread protests by all social strata of the Wolaita population in 1998 that eventually resulted in Wolaytta having a zonal status and the recognition of its distinct language in November 2000.[4] Firew fought corruption, Sincere and diligent, courageous and determined development man, developmentalist who put the public interest before his own. Firew Altaye mobilized Wolayita people and built the beautiful and attractive Wolayita Gutara meeting and entertainment hall.[5]

Firew served as officer of Wolayita Zone Justice Department, Chairman of Damot Weyde Woreda Teachers Association, Chairman of the North Omo Zone Teachers Association and as well vice-chairman of the Ethiopian Teachers Association.[citation needed] He also served as member of the EPRDF and SEPDM Central Committee, a diplomat at the FDRE Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Wolayita Zone chief Administrator.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Members of parliament in the year 2002" (PDF). aepicab.org.
  2. ^ Geshera, Wondimu Tegegne(PhD) B.; Ba, Ousmane. "Pan African Heritage Magazine II". www.academia.edu.
  3. ^ "በወላይታ ሶዶ ከተማ ለሦስት ታዋቂ ግለሰቦች መታሰቢያ ኃውልት ሊቆም ነው". www.ena.et (in Amharic).
  4. ^ Barata, Data Dea (2012). "Minority Rights, Culture, and Ethiopia's "Third Way" to Governance". African Studies Review. 55 (3): 61–80. doi:10.1017/S0002020600007204. JSTOR 43904848. S2CID 145487771.
  5. ^ "Wolaita Gutara". mapio.net.
  6. ^ "ከ1993 ዓ/ም ጀምሮ የወላይታን ዞን ሲያስተዳድሯት የነበሩ የዞኑ ዋና አስተዳዳሪዎች". www.snnprswolaitazone.gov.et. Archived from the original on 13 April 2022. Retrieved 8 February 2022.