Bangkok Post

Blinken in Ethiopia to push peace

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US Secretary of State Antony Blinken yesterday urged Ethiopia to “deepen the peace” in the wartorn north as he moved cautiously to repair relations shaken by the brutal two-way conflict.

The top US diplomat was paying his first visit to the longstandi­ng ally since the war in Tigray, which claimed some 500,000 lives according to US estimates and led Washington to sever trade preference­s with Africa’s second most populous nation.

Opening a day of talks that was to include a meeting with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, Mr Blinken sipped Ethiopia’s celebrated coffee at the foreign ministry and said he hoped for better relations.

“It is a very important moment, a moment of hope given the peace in the north that has taken hold,” he said.

“There is a lot to be done. Probably the most important thing is to deepen the peace that has taken hold in the north.”

Mr Blinken said he hoped to restore cooperatio­n “with the goal of strengthen­ing the relationsh­ip” with Ethiopia, home of the African Union, amid a push by President Joe Biden to deepen relations with Africa.

Foreign Minister Demeke Mekonnen, receiving Mr Blinken, said: “We have longstandi­ng relations and it is time to revitalise them and move forward.”

Following the meeting with Mr Demeke, Mr Blinken arrived at the Prime Minister’s Office for talks with Mr Abiy, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, who was once seen as at the vanguard of a new generation of forward-looking African leaders, but whose reputation later took a beating in Washington over the war.

The violence erupted when the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which once dominated Ethiopian politics, attacked military installati­ons, prompting a major offensive by Mr Abiy’s government with backing from neighbouri­ng Eritrea.

The TPLF briefly came close to marching on the capital but, beaten back by pro-Abiy forces, agreed to disarm under a Nov 2 accord negotiated in South Africa by the African Union with US participat­ion.

Molly Phee, the top US diplomat for Africa, told reporters before Mr Blinken’s departure that his visit would aim to “help consolidat­e” the peace in the north but that the relationsh­ip was not ready to go “back to normal”.

A key wish of Ethiopia is a return to the African Growth and Opportunit­y Act, which gave it duty-free access for most products to the world’s largest economy, but the United States has made no commitment­s.

Mr Abiy has pledged to restore basic services in war-wracked Tigray, though it is impossible to assess the situation on the ground due to restrictio­ns on media access.

 ?? AFP ?? US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, arrives for an official visit to Ethiopia, at the Bole Internatio­nal Airport in Addis Ababa, on Tuesday.
AFP US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, left, arrives for an official visit to Ethiopia, at the Bole Internatio­nal Airport in Addis Ababa, on Tuesday.

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