Marin Independent Journal

Ethiopian leader called war ‘epitome of hell’ but he’s back at it

- By Cara Anna

NAIROBI, KENYA >> Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is already a veteran at surprising the world in just three years in power. He’s done it again this week by announcing that, after a year of waging war, he will lead it from the battlefron­t.

Abiy’s rule has been short in the vast sweep of Ethiopian history, but he has spent almost all his life preparing for it. Told as a child by his mother that she believed he would lead Ethiopia, he now speaks of martyrdom, if needed, to hold the nation together.

Abiy rocketed to office out of seemingly nowhere in 2018 with vows of dramatic reforms to a long-repressive national government. He also announced he would make peace with neighborin­g Eritrea after years of bitter conflict. For that, the youthful prime minister was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Then, less than a year later, Abiy announced his military was at war with the leaders of Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, who had dominated the previous national government but quickly found friction with the prime minister. Political difference­s turned to gunfire in November 2020.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed since then, and close to half a million people inside Tigray now face the world’s worst famine crisis in a decade, one that the United States has called “entirely man-made.”

The 45-year-old Abiy has now plunged into the fight, arriving at the battlefron­t on Tuesday, a government spokesman said.

The prime minister is no stranger to war. As a teenager, he joined fighters who eventually overthrew the

country’s Marxist Derg regime, then signed up for the new government’s military. He took part in Ethiopia’s war against Eritrea as a radio operator, serving at the border in Tigray, and later became a lieutenant colonel.

Now roles are dramatical­ly reversed. The Tigray fighters Abiy once called friends are now the enemy, and the Eritrean soldiers he once fought have been allowed to join the war as Ethiopia’s allies.

Years after his career turned from the military to politics, Abiy faces a battlefiel­d challenge he has never faced before: Commanding an army.

But the prime minister is known as a man with a sense of destiny.

He “clearly has a personal sense of his right to be ruler of Ethiopia and take on the responsibi­lity it entails,” said Christophe­r Clapham, a retired professor associated with the University of Cambridge.

Overseeing the fracture of Ethiopia, a nation with a 3,000-year history, would be a “massive blow” to Abiy, Clapham said, and by heading to the battlefron­t he is following the tradition of emperors.

But emperors can fall, and government­s, too. The rival Tigray forces, whose advance on Ethiopia’s capital in recent weeks prompted a national state of emergency, want to see Abiy gone, by force if needed.

The deeply religious prime minister came to office preaching national unity, and representi­ng it as well. The son of a Christian and Muslim and of mixed ethnic heritage, he shocked Africa’s second-most populous country by apologizin­g for the past government’s abuses. Tigrayans have recalled cheering him on, at first.

 ?? MULUGETA AYENE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, right, and first lady Zinash Tayachew, left, in the capital Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
MULUGETA AYENE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, right, and first lady Zinash Tayachew, left, in the capital Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

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