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By Gwynne Dyer

Author, columnist, documentary film maker and lecture


New, serious war brews in Ethiopia

The government of the Tigray region of Ethiopia accused Abiy of needless delay, and when he refused to change his mind they went ahead and held the election in Tigray anyway.


The United States, a country with a complex and decrepit voting system, has just held a national election despite about a quarter-million Covid-19 deaths.

President Donald Trump is finding it hard to process his defeat, but the system itself worked fine despite the pandemic.

Ethiopia, another federal country with one third of America’s population but less than one-hundredth of the US Covid death rate, should have held its scheduled election too, but Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed postponed it “because of Covid”.

That was a serious mistake.

The government of the Tigray region of Ethiopia accused Abiy of needless delay, and when he refused to change his mind they went ahead and held the election in Tigray anyway.

Abiy said the newly elected government of Tigray (same as the old government) was illegal because he had postponed the elections.

Tigray said the federal government was illegal because it had unilaterally extended its mandate instead of holding the elections, and they went to war.

In only a week they’ve worked their way up from local clashes to air strikes.

This is so stupid that it makes American politics look positively demure by comparison.

To be fair, though, Ethiopia has only recently emerged from 45 years of revolution, white and red terror, renewed tyranny, more revolution, and practically non-stop civil and international war. Ethiopia is a really hard place to govern.

When Abiy was appointed prime minister two years ago by the ruling coalition, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), he was the first Oromo ever to govern the country.

He was the son of a Christian-Muslim marriage, useful in a country that is two-thirds Christian, one-third Muslim. And Abiy’s intentions were good: he set about to dismantle the stranglehold on power of the various ethnic militias that had fought and won the long war against the Derg, the Communist dictatorship.

The most powerful of those militias is the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).

Tigray has only six million people, a mere 5% of Ethiopia’s population, but Tigrayan soldiers and politicians have dominated the EPRDF coalition and government for most of the last thirty years.

The Tigrayan political elite’s privilege was widely resented, and it was time for it to end. Last year Abiy tried to do that by merging all the ethnic militia-based parties into a single Prosperity Party, but the TPLF leadership wouldn’t play.

Abiy, despite a background in intelligence work that should have given him good political skills, is inflexible and confrontational. The cascade of threats between him and the TPLF leadership is now culminating in what amounts to a Tigrayan war of secession.

It could be a long war, because Tigrayans are over-represented in the armed forces and much of the army’s heavy weapons, which were based in Tigray because of the border war with Eritrea, has fallen into the TPLF’s hands.

Ethiopia is Africa’s second-biggest country, very poor but with a fast-growing economy. The very last thing it needs is yet another civil war.

They gave Abiy the Nobel Peace Prize last year for bringing Ethiopia’s 22-year border war with Eritrea to a formal end, but that award has been going downhill ever since Henry Kissinger got one. They even gave one to Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who now goes around condoning genocide.

Maybe we also need a Nobel Booby Prize.

Gwynne Dyer.

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