Four questions about the Ethiopian PM’s resignation

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Ethiopian Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn,

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn resigned unexpectedly on Thursday, the first leader to do so in the country’s recent history.

As Africa’s second most-populous country enters uncharted political territory, here are four questions about what happened — and what comes next.

– Why did he resign? –

Rumours that Hailemariam would go have been circulating in the capital Addis Ababa for months, but his announcement came as a surprise.

Guesses abound as to why he left when he did, but analysts say among the key drivers are the country’s spiral into crisis, and the divisions within Hailemariam’s party that have kept him from responding decisively.

“We know that he’s not a real decision-maker in Ethiopia,” said one Ethiopia analyst, who requested anonymity.

Hailemariam’s resignation followed a week that began with two days of strikes and road closures across Ethiopia’s most-populous region Oromia, and a mass prisoner release that saw some of the country’s most-prominent dissidents leave jail.

Hailemariam had announced the prisoner release last month amid growing disenchantment with his government.

Anger with the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition exploded in December 2015 when the country’s largest ethnicity, the Oromo, began mass protests. Months later the next-largest ethnicity, the Amhara, rose up too.

A 10-month state of emergency declared in October 2016 quelled the worst of the violence, but only after hundreds of deaths and tens of thousands of arrests that were condemned by rights groups.

Still, anti-government protests continue to occur, and a separate spate of clashes between the Oromo and Somali ethnicities displaced a million people late last year.

“The situation is getting out of control right now, so he might have decided to resign by himself,” the analyst said, pointing to his decision to leave both the premiership and his own party.

The EPRDF has engaged in a bout of self-flagellation since the protests, promising it would reform itself to address the population’s grievances.

Hailemariam cited that goal in his resignation, saying he intended “to become part of the solution”.

– What happens next? –

Hailemariam’s resignation has been accepted by the executive committees of both the EPRDF and his own party within the coalition, the Southern Ethiopian People’s Democratic Movement (SEPDM).

He will remain in office until parliament and the full EPRDF coalition confirm his request to leave.

Local media has reported that they may be considering another state of emergency as a way to calm the protests and ethnic clashes.

 

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