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Wednesday
Mar092005
Wednesday, March 9, 2005 at 05:36AM
After 23 years of living abroad,
Tadiwos Belete left Boston five years ago to return to his native
Ethiopia. He hoped to cash in on what he sees as an untapped market
here: one-stop, full-service beauty salons and day spas. The venture
might seem risky considering that most Ethiopians earn less than $2 a
day, nearly a sixth of its population teeters on the edge of hunger,
and the country is consistently ranked among the world's poorest. But
Belete and others see promise in this Horn of Africa nation, which is
experiencing a boom of sorts, with its economy for the past two years
expanding faster than China's. ''I'm not here doing charity work. I'm a
businessman," Belete, 40, said recently, his voice rising above the
hectic sparkle of his hair salon as he straightened a woman's black
locks between his fingers to snip off the ends. ''Ethiopia is growing,
and I want to be part of its development." The road to wealth rarely
leads back to Africa. But even as millions of Africans line up at
foreign embassies for visas to the West, another trend is developing:
Thousands of Africans and those with African roots in the United
States, Europe, and the Caribbean are returning each year to their
ancestral homeland. Not since the early 1960s, as one African nation
after another gained its independence from European nations, has there
been such a fervent interest among expatriate Africans in returning
home. Government officials in Ghana and Ethiopia, apparently the two
countries most attractive to returnees, have estimated the number of
returning Africans to be in the thousands. Business leaders in Ghana
and Ethiopia have launched their own ''back to Africa" campaigns to
retrieve the more successful among their diaspora and attract black
urban professionals from the United States and Europe. [more]