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Speaker of Ethiopia's Upper House Resigns After Polls Postponed
FINFINNEE
— Ethiopia's upper house speaker resigned on Monday in apparent protest at the
postponement of planned elections in the Horn of Africa country over the
coronavirus, a sign of growing tension between her party and the government.
The
speaker Keria Ibrahim is also a top official in Tigray People's Liberation
Front (TPLF), one of the country's major political parties and which has
opposed the poll postponement.
The
parliamentary and regional elections had been planned for August ahead of the
end of incumbent Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's term in September. No new date has
yet been set.
In a televised speech,
Keria accused Abiy's government of taking away Ethiopians' sovereign rights,
without elaborating.
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She was
widely understood to refer to the government's decision to postpone the
elections which effectively allowed Abiy to continue ruling beyond the expiry
of his term.
"I
can't be an accomplice when the constitution is being violated and a
dictatorial government is being formed," she said. "I have resigned
not to be collaborator (with) such a historical mistake."
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Last
month TPLF, which is also the governing party for the country's Tigray region,
threatened to organise polls for the area in defiance of the postponement,
potentially setting the region on a collision course with the federal
government.
Keria's
resignation underscored the deteriorating relationship between Abiy and his
ruling Prosperity Party and the TPLF, said Kjetil Tronvoll, professor of peace
and conflict studies at Bjørknes University in Oslo.
"If
the process is left unabated, it may lead to an open confrontation," he
said.
Abiy took power in
Africa’s second most populous country in 2018 and went on to roll out a series
of reforms allowing greater freedoms in what had long been one of the
continent's most repressive states.
But the reforms have made it possible for long-held grievances
against the government’s decades of harsh rule to resurface, and emboldened
regional power-brokers such as the TPLF to seek more power for their ethnic
groups.