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  • During President Barack Obama’s 2015 trip to East Africa, he praised Ethiopia as a symbol

  • of political stability and economic prosperity in Africa.

  • However in the time since, the country has seen dramatic changes.

  • Economic growth has slowed, a ongoing drought has threatened food security, and clashes

  • between citizens and government forces have left hundreds dead.

  • The United Nations, the US government, human rights organizations and most recently, an

  • Ethiopian athlete at the 2016 Summer Games have all spoken out against the violence.

  • So why is Ethiopia falling apart?

  • Well, much of Ethiopia’s domestic dissent is aimed at its ruling party - the Ethiopian

  • People’s  Revolutionary Democratic Front, or EPRDF.

  • Soon after they took power in 1991, the EPRDF divided Ethiopia along ethnic lines - literally.

  • The country is made up of nine regions, each of which is named after the ethnicity of its

  • inhabitants.

  • The EPRDF strongly favors the interests of Tigrayans, who populate the Tigray region.

  • Although ethnic Tigrayans only make up roughly 6 percent of the population, their representatives

  • have seized 100 percent of seats in parliament.

  • Unsurprisingly, the EPRDF is largely viewed as corrupt, and the party as a whole allegedly

  • wields unchecked authority on the press, the military, the lawmaking process and the economy.

  • In November 2015, this existing geopolitical tension erupted into protests, which were

  • concentrated in the region belonging to Ethiopia’s largest ethnic population - the Oromos.

  • This region is mostly mostly made up of farmland, and in 2008, the state began leasing large

  • portions of it to foreign governments.

  • This intensified the Oromosexisting frustration over the state’s so-calledmaster plan

  • to expand the country’s capital city into their land.

  • The government later nixed the plan out ofhuge respectfor the Oromos people.

  • However, it wasn’t enough to appease the people, and in July 2016, protests spread

  • to a second region, which is home to the second largest ethnic group, the Amharas.

  • Instead of leaving regional police to mitigate the protests, the government has sent in the

  • military and the infamous anti-terrorism task force, which has allegedly fired live rounds

  • into groups of protesters.

  • These actions are tacitly permitted under Ethiopia’s controversial Anti-terrorism

  • law, which gives the state sweeping powers to mitigate the threat of extremist ideologies.

  • Since the law came into force in 2009, it has been used to justify the kidnappings,

  • torture and arbitrary detention of anyone who vocally opposes the government.

  • This is all happening as Ethiopia suffers from its worst drought in half-a-century,

  • primarily affecting the country’s rural population.

  • El Nino-induced rain shortages have killed up to 90 percent of crops in some areas, reportedly

  • leaving as many as 10 million people in need of food aid.

  • Of course, the Ethiopian government did not induce the drought.

  • However it has intensified much of the populationsill-feelings toward the state, as public officials

  • reportedly ignored early warning signs of an environmental crisis, in an attempt to

  • preserve the narrative of economic success and prosperity.

  • With this delayed response, the country is far from obtaining its appeal for $1.4 billion

  • dollars in international aid.

  • Ethiopia’s environmental and political problems show no sign of slowing down.

  • Making matters worse, the government has effectively closed off the country from the media.

  • Foreign correspondents encounter excessive hurdles in obtaining press visas, and local

  • journalists are reportedly harassed or jailed for reporting on the unrest or providing information

  • to human rights groups.

  • With little international coverage and seemingly no end to the government’s violent reign,

  • the country will likely remain

  • in turmoil.

During President Barack Obama’s 2015 trip to East Africa, he praised Ethiopia as a symbol

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エチオピアは崩壊の危機に瀕している。ここに理由があります (Ethiopia Is On The Brink Of Collapse. Here's Why)

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    BH に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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