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Ethiopian Civil Service University

From Wikipedia
Ethiopian Civil Service University
university
Year dem found am1995, 1993 Edit
Motto textBuilding Capacities in the Public Service Edit
CountryEthiopia Edit
Edey de administrative territorial entity insydAddis Ababa Edit
Coordinate location9°1′20″N 38°50′4″E Edit
Member ofConsortium of Ethiopian Academic and Research Libraries, Association of African Universities Edit
Dema official websitehttp://www.ecsc.edu.et/ Edit
Map
Ethiopian Civil Service University
Type Public
Establish 1993
Presido Prof. Fikre Dessalegn
Students 7,000–7,999
Postgraduates 1,531
Location
Addis Ababa
,

9°01′23″N 38°49′56″E / 9.02306°N 38.83222°E / 9.02306; 38.83222
Language Amharic
Website www.ecsu.edu.et

De Ethiopian Civil Service University (ECSU) be public varsity insyd Ethiopia. Ein purpose be capacity building forde public sector insyd. Edey locate insyd de capital city of Addis Ababa wey dem found am insyd 1993.[1]

Notable alumni

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  • Alemayehu Atomsa - politician den presido of de Oromia Region[2]
  • Demitu Hambisa Bonsa - Ethiopian government minister.[3]
  • Birtukan Ayano Dadi - judge den diplomat[4]
  • Muktar Kedir - former presido of de Oromia Region
  • Ambachew Mekonnen - presido of de Amhara Region[5]
  • Muktar Kedir - former presido of de Oromia Region
  • Ahmed Shide - Minister of Finance of Ethiopia[6]

References

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  1. "Ethiopian Civil Service University | Ranking & Review". www.4icu.org. Retrieved 2021-03-29.
  2. "Alemayehu Atomsa dies at age 45 after battle with "typhoid fever"". Awramba Times. 6 March 2014. Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  3. "Emerging evidence on 'invisible' adolescent girls: tackling exploitation and promoting resilience". odi.org. Retrieved 2021-03-29.
  4. "A woman with a double success story: Ambassador Birtukan Ayano – Tuck Magazine". 2018-11-23. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
  5. "Gedu Andargachew Resigns; Ambachew Mekonnen Elected Chief Administrator of Amhara Region". Ezega. 8 March 2019. Retrieved 2021-05-31.
  6. "Ahmed Shide Minister of Finance, Ethiopia". Retrieved 2021-05-31.
[edit | edit source]