Ethiopian
Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn has appointed two new deputy
premiers – one Oromo and one Tigray – in an attempt to create a more
ethnically inclusive government leadership.
Below is an article published by Bloomberg:
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam
Desalegn appointed two new deputy premiers to share the leadership of
the government between the four ethnic-based parties of the Horn of
Africa nation’s ruling coalition.
The second and third deputies are Muktar
Kedir, a former adviser to the prime minister and leading member of the
Oromo People’s Democratic Organization, and Information Technology
Minister Debretsion Gebremichael, who is also deputy chairman of the
Tigray People’s Liberation Front, Hailemariam told lawmakers today [29
November 2012] in the capital, Addis Ababa. Demeke Mekonnen, the
education minister and leader of the Amhara National Democratic
Movement, was appointed as a deputy prime minister in September [2012].
The appointments reflect a balancing act
within the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front,
said Jason Mosley, associate fellow of the Africa program at
London-based Chatham House. “They’ve now got all four parties
represented within the prime minister and deputy prime minister slots.”
Hailemariam leads a multi-ethnic bloc
from southern Ethiopia in the ruling party. He was appointed prime
minister in September [2012] following the death of former Premier Meles
Zenawi on Aug. 20 [2012].
Ethiopia, the continent’s second-most
populous nation, is a key U.S. ally in its battle against al-Qaeda in
the region. Ethiopian troops in December invaded Somalia for the second
time in four years to join the battle against al-Shabaab, al-Qaeda’s
Somalia affiliate.
Meles, an ethnic Tigray who ruled
Ethiopia for 21 years after leading a victorious rebel movement and who
oversaw one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, died from an
infection contracted while he was recovering from an undisclosed
illness.
Today’s changes confirm that the EPRDF
is in an “awkward phase” as it tries to “rule by committee” and replace a
leadership dominated by revolutionary fighters, Mosley said in an
e-mailed response to questions today.
“Hailemariam is not in a position to centralise power, whatever his personal inclinations might be,” he said.
Among other changes, Tedros Adhanom, the
former health minister and a member of the TPLF’s politburo, was
appointed foreign minister, Hailemariam said.
Debretsion, whose ministry oversees the
state-owned Ethio Telecom monopoly and who is also chairman of the board
of Ethiopia Electric Power Corp., will coordinate the economy as a
deputy prime minister, Hailemariam said.
Muktar’s portfolio as deputy will be
governance and he also will become civil service minister, replacing
Junedin Sado, whose wife is being tried on terrorism charges.
Tedros is succeeded at the Health
Ministry by former state minister Kesete Birhan, Hailemariam said.
Tedros was given the 2011 Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Humanitarian Award
for his leadership of
Ethiopia’s health program. His
strategies helped to reduce the mortality rate for under-5s by 28
percent in the past five years, according to the U.S. Agency for
International Development.
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