Ethiopian PM Abiy Ahmed Joins Combat Against Tigray ForcesPrime Minister Abiy Ahmed

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Wednesday announced the appointment of the former head of war-hit Tigray’s interim administration as defence minister, one of several shake-ups in his new government’s 22-member cabinet.

Africa Today News, New York reports that Abiy, who just got sworn into office for a second term on Monday, also tapped a new head of the peace ministry, which has often served as the public face of humanitarian operations in northern Ethiopia, where the UN estimates the conflict has driven hundreds of thousands of people into famine-like conditions.

The cabinet was okayed by a majority vote in the lower house of parliament, with just two votes against and 12 abstentions.

Abiy came to power in 2018 on the back of several years of anti-government protests.

He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019, but last year long-running tensions between Abiy and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which dominated national politics before Abiy took office, erupted into open conflict.

Read Also: Over 7,000 Schools Have Been Damaged In Tigray War – Minister

After driving the TPLF from Tigray’s towns last November, Abiy struggled to establish a federally-appointed interim administration in the northern region.

In a stunning about-turn, the TPLF recaptured most of Tigray including the regional capital Mekele by late June, and federal forces largely withdrew, but the conflict has spread to neighbouring regions.

Abraham Belay, a Tigray native who had led the interim administration since early May, was named defence minister.

He previously served with Abiy at the cyber-espionage Information Network Security Agency and as minister of innovation and technology, a cabinet position Abiy also once held.

Other key portfolios including the finance and foreign ministries did not change hands — a sign Abiy is likely to continue with economic reforms such as revamping the telecoms industry and with a foreign policy that has coincided with worsening relations with Western powers.

 

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK