Fri Jan 9
                                  ADDIS ABABA (AFP) – The United States, Ethiopia's main donor, warned Friday that a new law   adopted by Addis Ababa restricting foreign-funded aid groups may curtail its assistance.
                                  Under the new law, any group that draws more than 10 percent of its funding   from abroad will be classified as foreign, and thus banned from working on   issues related to ethnicity, gender, children's rights and conflict resolution.   "We recognise the importance of effective oversight of civil   society organisations... However we are concerned this law may restrict   US government assistance to Ethiopia," a State Department statement said.
                                  Despite criticism, Ethiopia's parliament on Tuesday overwhelmingly passed the   bill, which the government argues is solely to safeguard citizens' rights.
                                  Georgette Gagnon, the Africa director for the New York-based Human   Rights Watch, said the law is a "repression, not regulation."
                                  "If enforced, this law will make Ethiopia one of the most inhospitable places   in the world for both Ethiopian and international human rights groups," she said in a   statement.
                                  The Horn of Africa nation, a   key ally in Washington's "War   on Terror" against Islamist extremists, received more than 900 million dollars in aid from the US in   2008.
                                  Ethiopia, a poverty-stricken country of 77 million, is among the world's   chief aid recipients.