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Eight years ago Ethiopia's Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu decided to sell cool colourful shoes made of recycled materials, including car tyres.
The company which she started, SoleRebels, would soon become the planet's first fair trade green footwear firm - certified by the World Fair Trade Organization (WFTO) - and is now one of Ethiopia's most thriving businesses.At the moment it sells its products in 55 countries, mostly through individual retailers, and its biggest markets are in Austria, Canada, Japan, Switzerland and the United States. The shoes are also sold online.
Ababa where she was born.
"My mum and my father have been working hard. I grew up watching them," she told the BBC series African Dream.
"My father is an electrician and my mother works in a hospital. They have really been building us to work with whatever we have. So I watched my parents; they're a model for me to follow in their steps."
Having trained as an accountant, she decided to venture into the shoemaking business when she realised that many talented artisans in her neighbourhood were unemployed.
"They had skills but they didn't have any opportunities to work," she said.
She also knew that there was an appetite abroad for eco-sustainable products.
"The idea of making things by hand was here, and using local materials by local people. Therefore, the platform for SoleRebels is to build our own brand from here and sell outside. That's the model that we follow," she explained.
Rebel footwear She started the company with an investment of less than $10,000 (£6,400), put together by her immediate family.
She also complained that sometimes foreign companies try to get their products at unfair prices.
"Since we are a fair trade organisation people want to buy fair trade shoes from us but they want to buy at cheap prices. That I don't understand.