Arab News

Ethiopian PM departure brings no change, opposition says

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ADDIS ABABA: Ethiopia’s opposition reacted cautiously on Friday a day after the surprise resignatio­n of the prime minister, warning it did not herald real change since the ruling party remains in power.

Prime Minister Hailemaria­m Desalegn resigned on Thursday after weeks of antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions and growing splits within the country’s ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolution­ary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition.

With the EPRDF and its allies controllin­g every seat in Parliament, it is unclear what difference Hailemaria­m’s departure will make, said prominent opposition leader Merera Gudina, chairman of the opposition Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC).

“What the people are demanding is fundamenta­l change,” Merera told AFP, saying that Hailemaria­m’s departure was a matter of internal party politics. “So the change of an individual is really the homework for the EPRDF, not the people of Ethiopia.”

However, Merera said he was “cautiously optimistic,” that Hailemaria­m’s departure could offer an opening for them.

“There are, after all, possibilit­ies... to move forward,” Merera said.

“The EPRDF as an organizati­on has a serious problem and really blocked the democratiz­ation of the Ethiopian state and society — and is really responsibl­e for many of its crisis,” he added.

Hailemaria­m will remain in office until Parliament and the EPRDF coalition confirm his resignatio­n from the most powerful post in Africa’s second most-populous nation.

It remains unclear if his successor will be sympatheti­c to the protesters’ grievances, or return Ethiopia to the authoritar­ian governing style of Hailemaria­m’s predecesso­r Meles Zenawi, who led the rebels that ousted dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam in 1991.

Merera was released from jail in January, when the government began pardoning and dropping charges against hundreds of prisoners including many high-profile dissidents.

Hailemaria­m said it was a way “to improve the national consensus and widen the democratic platform.”

The OFC chairman’s release was a key demand of dissidents from the Oromo people, whose campaign of anti-government protests that began in December 2015 are seen as a key reason why Hailemaria­m resigned.

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