The Abiy Project: God, Power and War in the New Ethiopia

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Hurst Publishers, 2024 M06 27 - 268 pages

In 2018, Ethiopia and the world were in the throes of 'Abiymania', a fervour of popular support for the divided country's young, charismatic new prime minister. Arriving as if from nowhere, Abiy Ahmed, a Pentecostal Christian, promised democratic salvation and national unity. For his role brokering a historic peace with neighbouring Eritrea, he received the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize. Hailed at home as a prophet and abroad as a liberal reformer, Abiy was all things to all men.

But his democratic revolution wasn't quite what it seemed. Within two years, Ethiopia had lurched into a devastating civil war, threatening state collapse. By 2023, genocidal fighting had killed hundreds of thousands in the northern Tigray region; famine stalked the land; and Ethiopia's once-promising economy lay in tatters. But Abiy had never looked stronger.

Based on hundreds of interviews with Ethiopians of all persuasions, and extensive reporting across the country, this book traces the fading hope of Ethiopia's transition, unravelling the paradoxes of an enigmatic world leader. Despite everything, Abiy remains in power, embodying the new Ethiopia in all its contradiction, triumph and tragedy. But his attempt to remould the country in his image almost broke it--and may break it still.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
The Long Struggle Over History
The Early Life of Abiy Ahmed
Ethiopias Pentecostal Turn
Inside the Surveillance State
The Addis Ababa Question and the Rise of Oromo Nationalism
Oromara and Abiys Ascent to the
Wollega and the Oromo Liberation Army
Addis Ababa and the Prosperity Party
Assassinating the Transition
The Road to War in Tigray
Ethnic Cleansing and the Wolkait Question
Eritrea on the March
From Operation Alula to NoMore
The Road to Pretoria

The Honeymoon Whirlwind
Ethiopia Eritrea and the Tripartite Alliance
The Federal State Unravels
The Somali Region and the Empires Edges
Asaminew Tsige and Amhara Nationalism
Epilogue
Chronology
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2024)


Tom Gardner moved to Addis Ababa in 2016 as The Economist's Horn of Africa correspondent. He covered Ethiopia during its most tumultuous years in decades, travelling to all corners of the country before his expulsion by the Abiy Ahmed government at the height of the Tigray war in 2022.

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