Abiye Ahmed. He has been elected as Ethiopia's Prime Minister by the ruling coalition EPDRF. PHOTO | FILE
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia’s ruling
coalition voted in Abiye Ahmed as new prime minister on Tuesday
following the resignation of Hailemariam Desalegn last month, the
state-run Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation said.
The
state-run channel said the 180-member council of the Ethiopian People’s
Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) chose Abiye to succeed
Hailemariam as the chairperson of the coalition, meaning he
automatically became premier.
“In today’s session, the council held a vote and elected Abiye
Ahmed as chairperson,” said the EBC presenter, without giving further
details.
State-affiliated outlets said Abiye won over 60 per cent of all votes in the council.
Abiye, who hails from the Oromo ethnic group, will take over the government of Africa’s second most populous country.
The
ruling coalition has struggled to contain persistent and violent unrest
since 2015, the biggest challenge to its hold on power since 1991.
Hailemariam
cast his resignation last month as a bid to smooth the way for reforms.
It came after strikes and demonstrations near the capital successfully
demanding the release of opposition members.
The
anti-government protests began in 2015 over land rights before
broadening into demonstrations over political and human rights.
The
government has twice imposed emergency rule, most recently after
Hailemariam’s resignation, to contain unrest mainly in Oromiya province,
the country’s most populous region.
Hundreds killed
Rights groups have said that amid the violence, security forces have killed hundreds of people.
Abiye
faces the challenge of implementing democratic reforms that have been
pledged by the government. He must also bridge differences that have
erupted within the ruling coalition.
When a vote to
validate the second state of emergency after Hailemariam’s resignation
came before parliament earlier this month, almost 90 legislators voted
against the bill despite being members of the same coalition, exposing
widening rifts.
“He
faces the tasks of widening political space and reaching out to the
opposition. He will also have to respond to popular demands,” said
Asnake Kefale, an assistant professor of political science at Addis
Ababa University.
Legislative elections have been scheduled for 2020.
Analysts have said that the appointment of an Oromo to the most powerful political office in the country could ease tensions.
Oromos comprise 34 per cent of Ethiopia’s 100 million people but have not held power in the country’s modern history.
Street protests
Along
with the other largest ethnic group in the country, the Amharas, they
have led street protests against the government since 2015.
Abiye
is the chairperson of the Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organisation, one
of the four ethnic-based parties in the EPRDF coalition.
He
speaks three Ethiopian languages, holds a doctorate in peace and
security from Addis Ababa University and served in the military. He also
briefly served as science and technology minister in Hailemariam’s
cabinet.
Some analysts and opposition politicians have
blamed rising ethnic tensions in the diverse country on Ethiopia’s
federal system, which redrew the borders of provinces largely along
ethnic lines in 1991.
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