Mengistu bob geldof biography

Bob, Band Aid and how the rebels bought their arms

Update 4 November 2010: This blog post was the subject of a complaint by the Band Aid Trust. A BBC investigation upheld the complaint. A summary of this finding is available at the bottom of the article. To read the full finding - click here.

An edition of the BBC World Service programme Assignment, alleging that money intended for famine relief in Ethiopia in the mid-1980s was used to buy weapons, has prompted an angry response from aid campaigners.

Andrew Whitehead, Editor, News and Current Affairs at the BBC World Service, explains how the story came about.

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By Andrew Whitehead

A quarter of a century ago, the BBC's Michael Buerk achieved something very rare - he not only reported the world, but changed it a little bit.

His vivid on-the-spot coverage of a famine "of biblical proportions" in Tigray in northern Ethiopia pricked the conscience of the richer part of the world.

The money came pouring in. Bob Geldof's Band Aid and Live Aid led the way in galvanising public attention, raising cash and mobilising a huge relief effort.

As a result, many thousands of lives were saved - and tens of thousands of those facing starvation received food.

In the past week, the BBC World Service has broadcast an Assignment documentary - you can listen to it here - based on the testimony of key figures on the ground in and around Tigray in the mid-1980s.

It presents evidence, compelling evidence, that some of the famine relief donations were diverted by a powerful rebel group to buy weapons.

The documentary has revealed some uncomfortable facts and provoked a strong response. This morning a British newspaper, The Independent, gives over its front page to complaints from Bob Geldof and several leading charities. They accuse the BBC of "disgracefully poor reporting".

The suggestion of aid money being to diverted to buy arms is "palpable nonsense", in the words of Phil Bloomer, director of Oxfam's campaigns

Live Aid

1985 benefit concert

For the 2005 benefit concerts, see Live 8.

Live Aid was a two-venue benefit concert and music-based fundraising initiative held on Saturday, 13 July 1985. The event was organised by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure to raise further funds for relief of the 1983–1985 famine in Ethiopia, a movement that started with the release of the successful charity single "Do They Know It's Christmas?" in December 1984. Billed as the "global jukebox", Live Aid was held simultaneously at Wembley Stadium in London and John F. Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia.

On the same day, concerts inspired by the initiative were held in other countries, such as the Soviet Union, Canada, Japan, Yugoslavia, Austria, Australia, and West Germany. It was one of the largest satellite link-ups and television broadcasts of all time. An estimated audience of 1.9 billion people in 150 nations watched the live broadcast, nearly 40 percent of the world population.

The impact of Live Aid on famine relief has been debated for years. One aid relief worker stated that following the publicity generated by the concert, "humanitarian concern is now at the centre of foreign policy" for Western governments. Geldof has said, "We took an issue that was nowhere on the political agenda and, through the lingua franca of the planet – which is not English but rock 'n' roll – we were able to address the intellectual absurdity and the moral repulsion of people dying of want in a world of surplus." In another interview he stated that Live Aid "created something permanent and self-sustaining" but also asked why Africa is getting poorer.

The organisers of Live Aid tried to run aid efforts directly, channelling millions of pounds to NGOs in Ethiopia. It has been alleged that much of this went to the Ethiopian government of Mengistu Haile Mariam – a regime the UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher opposed&

    Mengistu bob geldof biography
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    Life
    1954- [Robert Frederick Xenon Geldof; var. 1952]; b. 5 Oct. Blackrock [St Michael’s Hosp., Dun Laoghaire]; a son of Robert and Evelyn Geldof; g.s. of Zenon Geldof and Amelia [née Falk] - a Belgian master-chef who settled in Ireland, founded of Café Geldof, and supplier of Belgian goods; raised singly with his sis. Lynn by his father, a commercial traveller, following the sudden death of his mother [aetat. 41, from cerebral haemorrhage], at Merrion Ave., Co. Dublin; ed. Blackrock College;
     
    worked in England in a slaughterhouse, as a navvy, and as a pea-canner in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire; moved to Canada and worked as a music journalist on The Georgia Straight (Vancouver); briefly acted as guest-host on the CBC children’s programme Switchback; returned to Ireland, 1975; worked as journalist with New Musical Express [NME]; fndr. & lead-singer of punk-band “The Boomtown Rats”, 1975-86 - named after a gang mentioned in Woodie Guthrie’s autobiography; members incl. Pete Briquette, Johnny Fingers, Gary Roberts, Simon Crowe and Gerry Cott, all from Dun Laoghaire; group moved to London, October 1976;
     
    signed with Ensign Records; issued “Lookin’ After No. 1”, debut single, August 1977, and reached No. 11 in the charts, the first of ten subsequent singles to do so; released The Boomtown Rats, LP (Sept. 1977), appeared on ITV, Nov. 1978; released A Tonic for the Troops (Feb. 1979); knocked Olivia Newton-John off top of charts with “Rat Trap”, 1979; toured US in 1979; had a mega-hit record with “I Don’t Like Mondays”, inspired by news-story of a high-school student Brenda Spencer who shot her classmates in San Diego on 29th January 1979; banned on US radio for reasons of legal jeopardy; issued The Fine Art of Surfacing, LP (1979); toured Europe, USA, Japan and Australia, 1980;
     
    appeared on Late Late Show hosted by Gay Byrne

    Round-up: Assignment, Ethiopia and Bob Geldof

    Correction 4 November 2010: This page has been amended following a complaint by the Band Aid Trust, which was upheld by the BBC's Editorial Complaints Unit. For more information please click here.

    An Assignment documentary into the use of aid money in Ethiopia during the 1980s has provoked much debate across the world's media. We discussed the programme on this week's episode of Over To You - which you can listen to again here.

    Below is a round-up of the key coverage surrounding the story so you can have the full picture:

    • Article: Read Martin Plaut's feature about the programme on the BBC News website. [3 March]
    • Audio: Listen again to BBC World Service Africa Editor Martin Plaut's original programme, Aid for Arms in Ethiopia, or download as a podcast (mp3, 11MB). [4 March]
    • Article: The Independent newspaper (UK) carries a frontpage story in which Band Aid organiser Sir Bob Geldof says he has reported the BBC to media regulator Ofcom for "disgracefully poor reporting" which "relied on dubious sources and rumour". [6 March]
    • Blog: BBC World Service News and Current Affairs editor Andrew Whitehead, introduced by Director of Global News Peter Horrocks, writes on the BBC News Editors Blog. [6 March]
    • Video: Geldof also responds furiously to the story in an interview with the BBC's Andrew Marr. [7 March]
    • Audio:Geldof then challenges Whitehead to provide proof that the claims in the report are correct. [7 March]
    • Comment: Former BBC journalist Rageh Omaar writes about the story for the Guardian newspaper (UK), wondering "why the strong and blanket reaction without a hint of wanting to know more?". [8 March]
    • Comment: Omaar's piece prompted Geldof to write his own column in the same newspaper, asking: "Where were all the dead people then? If no one was getting food, why was nobody dying? That would have been one of the first questions I'd have asked." [9 March]
    • Article: In the Independent, Geldof
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