Ethiopia's
foreign ministry said Friday it will issue identification cards to
Rastafarians, granting rights to a community that has long complained of living
in limbo in their "promised land".
Rastafarians
began immigrating to Ethiopia in the 1950s after Emperor Haile Selassie, whom
they consider their messiah, set aside 500 acres (1,200 hectares) of land in
the southern city of Shashamane for descendants of African slaves seeking to
return "home".
But the
community shrank after Haile Selassie's overthrow and eventual murder in the
1970s.
These days,
the Rastafarian community in Shashamane numbers in the hundreds, but the
religion's adherents complain that they can't own property, send their children
to university or work because they're not Ethiopian citizens.
Many have
also turned their backs on their home countries by not renewing their
passports, leaving them stateless.
Foreign
ministry spokesman Meles Alem told AFP Rastafarians will now be eligible to
receive ID cards that will allow them to reside and have most legal rights in
the country.
However,
while this card allows them residency they are still not considered citizens.
"There
were questions for them to recognise their presence in the country, so that is
what the government did," Meles said.
Under the
revised guidelines, the cards will also be available to foreigners who have
contributed to the country's development and to Israelis of Ethiopian descent,
Meles said.

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