After leading a congressional fact-finding trip to Ethiopia, U.S. Rep. Christopher Smith said he’s convinced the Horn of Africa country is making rapid progress toward democracy, thanks to new leadership.
“Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is the right man at the right time and is therefore deserving our support,” said Smith, a Republican from New Jersey who chairs the House subcommittee on Africa, global health, global human rights and international organizations.
Smith shared that observation during a hearing Wednesday on Capitol Hill, at which he and U.S. Rep. Karen Bass, a California Democrat, discussed their late August trip. They were part of a five-person delegation meeting with Ahmed and other Ethiopian officials, lawmakers, political and religious leaders, human rights activists and victims of detention and torture.
The congressman is the architect of H.R. 128, legislation condemning human rights abuses in Ethiopia and outlining a number of reforms that the country must take to promote peace and democracy. The resolution passed in the House of Representatives earlier this year.

Smith praised Abiy, a former intelligence official who, since assuming office, “has released thousands of political prisoners,” lifted a months-long state of emergency and “initiated an historic peace deal between Ethiopia and Eritrea this past July.”
Expectations have been raised, he added, “and the reforms that have begun must continue.”
Smith said he and Bass met with a group of former prisoners and torture victims in the capital, Addis Ababa, “and what they described as having been done to them was horrific.” They demand justice, he added.
Smith and Bass also met with young people. Youth-led protests began in late 2015 and forced out Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn in February after six years in office. Smith said the economy needs to grow to provide jobs for young people, including those who were active in protests and civil disobedience.
Abiy has begun opening up Ethiopia’s business sector, selling stakes in state-owned businesses such as telecommunications and airlines. Smith said he hopes to see additional economic reforms.
