By Reality Check
team
Thanks for reading. Follow the page and Share it.
What has Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy
Ahmed achieved for him to be awarded this year's Nobel Peace Prize?
The Nobel committee said he had been chosen
for his role in resolving the border conflict with Eritrea, and promoting peace
and reconciliation both in his own country and in the wider East African
region.
Mr Abiy's supporters hail his achievements
as a triumph, but he does also have strident critics who point to the current
situation in his own country, beset by ethnic tensions.
We look at his record.
A huge challenge
In 2018 Mr Abiy inherited a country with
unresolved conflict across its northern border, in a region where instability
had drastically held back economic development.
Within a few months, he had signed a peace
deal with Eritrea.
To achieve this Mr Abiy promised to hand
over fiercely contested border territories, in particular the town of Badme,
the focus of heavy fighting from 1998-2000, in which tens of thousands had lost
their lives.
Mr Abiy has also been praised for bringing
important democratic reforms to Ethiopia and for his conflict resolution
efforts elsewhere in the region.
But let's start with the outcome of his
peace deal with Eritrea.
Has the peace with Eritrea lasted?
At first, border towns opened up and goods
and people were able to move relatively freely across the border which had
previously remained closed and militarised.
However, following widespread euphoria in
the country at reaching an agreement, there have been frustrations about the
progress of the peace deal on the ground.
The town of Badme effectively remains under
Ethiopian control, as the two governments tease out details of the agreement,
and all the borders posts which were initially opened are now shut. Some
businesses in the border towns, which initially prospered, are now struggling.
Flights between the two capital cities,
Addis Ababa and Asmara, have resumed.
Some Tigrayans, the ethnic group in the
north-east region that borders Eritrea, had protested at the opening of the
border posts.
The dominant political group in the
north-east region, the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), was against the
process and has terse relations with Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki.
When the peace deal was signed, Mr Isaias
was highly critical of the TPLF - his nemesis when the countries were
officially at war.
When the Ethiopian government attempted to
remove military equipment from the border, it was blocked by residents of
Tigray who feared future conflict with their neighbour.
Some analysts also blame the slow progress
towards peace on Eritrea's President Isaias.
He has resisted opening up his country,
considered to be one of the most oppressive on the continent, so he is not
pushed into making reforms at home, his critics say.
Have there been democratic improvements?
When Mr Abiy came to power, he freed
thousands of political prisoners, ended a state of emergency and unbanned
numerous political parties.
He appointed the country's first female
president, gave half the seats in his cabinet to women, and committed the
country to full multi-party elections in 2020.
These are all measurable democratic gains,
but his critics say his leadership style has relied on a cult of personality,
while he has sidelined important government ministries from the decision-making
process.
Have Ethiopia's internal ethnic tensions got worse?
Tensions between Ethiopia's numerous ethnic
communities have always been a matter of serious contention but the
authoritarian state had kept a lid on the issue.
When Mr Abiy came to power in April 2018,
he introduced wider political freedoms.
In some areas, this has led to open
conflict and led some 2.5 millions people to flee their homes in these unstable
regions.
A report by Refugees International in
November last year criticised the government for encouraging premature returns
to regions not yet safe and for not doing enough to protect civilians.
What is Abiy's role as a regional peace mediator?
In his short time in office, Mr Abiy has
also played a significant mediation role in other regional hot spots.
He was instrumental in bringing the
military regime in Sudan to the negotiating table with the opposition following
widespread protests in Khartoum and elsewhere.
The talk led to the formation of a
transitional power-sharing government.
In addition, he has tried to help normalise
diplomatic relations between Eritrea and Djibouti after years of political
hostility.
Mr Abiy has also sought to mediate between
Kenya and Somalia in a protracted conflict over the maritime border between the
two countries.
And he has been actively involved in peace
talks between South Sudan's President Salva Kiir and the rebel leader Riek
Machar.
He facilitated a meeting between the two
leaders in June last year in Addis Ababa although a peace deal signed last
August has yet to be fully implemented.
Thanks for reading. Follow the page and Share it.
No comments:
Post a Comment