Cape Times

Disaffecte­d youth key for new Ethiopian party

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ADDIS ABABA: The leader of Ethiopia’s newest opposition party hopes discontent among urban youth will win him support in a weekend election that could otherwise be a clean sweep for the ruling party in Africa’s most populous nation after Nigeria.

Over 36 million people have registered for the May 24 polls, the country’s first election since long-serving leader Meles Zenawi died in 2012.

His Ethiopian People’s Revolution­ary Democratic Front has been in power for almost a quarter of a century and faces no reasonable prospect of defeat – the current 547-seat parliament has just one opposition member.

Yilekal Getinet, chairman of the three-year old Blue Party, or Semayawi in Amharic, says it originally put forward 400 candidates, but electoral authoritie­s cut the list to 139.

Semayawi expects to win seats in the urban areas in spite of such obstacles.

Semayawi, which wants less government involvemen­t in the economy, sees itself as offering change in Ethiopian politics, with the vast majority of its members younger than 35.

Some 57 opposition parties are taking part in the polls, but analysts say they present no real threat.

The opposition won an unpreceden­ted 147 seats in an election 10 years ago, but most of them did not join parliament, alleging the ballot had been rigged.

Many spent two years behind bars on charges of inciting violence.

Yilekal’s name will not be on the ballot after he was disqualifi­ed by the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia, which ran a draw to pick candidates for 52 parties that had never taken part in an election.

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