The Jerusalem Post

Ethiopia PM Abiy’s party wins landslide election victory

- • By DAWIT ENDESHAW

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) – Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s Prosperity Party won the most seats in Ethiopia’s parliament­ary election, the election board said on Saturday, a victory that assures him another term in office.

Abiy hailed the June 21 vote as the country’s first free and fair election after decades of repressive rule. However, an opposition boycott, war in the northern region of Tigray, ethnic violence and logistical challenges in some areas overshadow­ed the election. Voting did not take place in three of Ethiopia’s 10 regions.

Abiy’s party won 410 of 436 parliament­ary seats, election board deputy chairperso­n Woubshet Ayele announced in the capital Addis Ababa. Chairperso­n Birtukan Mideksa said the board had delivered a credible election.

Opposition leader Berhanu Nega said his Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice Party (Ezema) had filed 207 complaints after local officials and militiamen blocked observers in the Amhara region and Southern Nations,

Nationalit­ies and Peoples’ region.

The election was the first test of voter support for Abiy, who promised political and economic reforms when he was appointed prime minister by the governing coalition in 2018.

Within months of taking office, Abiy lifted a ban on opposition parties, released tens of thousands of political prisoners and took steps to open up one of Africa’s last untapped markets.

He now faces internatio­nal pressure over the war in Tigray and accusation­s from rights groups that his government is rolling back some new freedoms, which it denies.

Abiy’s newly formed Prosperity Party faced a fragmented opposition of dozens of mostly ethnically-based parties. The opposition parties Ezema and the National Movement of Amhara (NAMA) each won less than 10 seats.

Voting in the Harar and Somali regions was delayed until September over security concerns and problems with ballot papers.

No date has been set for voting in Tigray, where the military has been battling forces loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), the region’s former ruling party, since November. The fighting has displaced two million people, and the United Nations has warned of famine conditions in parts of the region.

At the end of June, the TPLF seized control of most of Tigray and the regional capital Mekelle, eight months after the conflict erupted.

The government announced a unilateral ceasefire after days of TPLF advances. The front has presented a list of seven demands that it says are a preconditi­on for a ceasefire, including the withdrawal of the military and its allies from parts of Tigray currently administer­ed by the neighborin­g region of Amhara, which also claims the land.

 ?? (Maheder Haileselas­sie Tadese/Reuters) ?? STAFF MEMBERS from the National Election Board of Ethiopia and observers count ballots at a polling station after the Ethiopian parliament­ary and regional elections, in Addis Ababa last month.
(Maheder Haileselas­sie Tadese/Reuters) STAFF MEMBERS from the National Election Board of Ethiopia and observers count ballots at a polling station after the Ethiopian parliament­ary and regional elections, in Addis Ababa last month.

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