Can Ethiopia’s New Leader, a Political Insider, Change His Country from the Inside Out?

LOS ANGELES — (nytimes)—On the morning of his first day of school, when he was 7, Abiy Ahmed heard his mother whispering into his ears.
“‘You’re unique, my son,’” he recalled her saying. “You will end up in the palace. So when you go to school, bear in mind that one day you’ll be someone which will serve the nation.”
With that preposterous prophesy for a boy growing up in a house without electricity in a tiny Ethiopian village, she kissed him on his head and sent him on his way.
Mr. Abiy, now 42, not only ended up in the prime minister’s palace. He has also become the most closely watched leader in Africa: a man who says he wants to to change his country from the inside out — and fast.
After taking office in March, he officially ended two decades of hostilitieswith Ethiopia’s longtime rival and neighbor, Eritrea. Beyond that, he started loosening a tightly controlled state-run economy, pledged multiparty elections in a country long known for jailing dissidents, and began wooing the government’s most strident critics: members of the Ethiopian diaspora, who have long organized insurgencies from afar. Leaders of a previously outlawed opposition group returned to the capital on Saturday.
The task is enormous. Ethiopia is Africa’s second most populous nation, with more than 100 million people, in a part of the continent where world powers are scrambling for influence.

So are the risks: millions of disaffected youth, widespread poverty, a violent struggle over resources among Ethiopia’s competing ethnic groups, and a range of detractors from inside and outside the government who are either threatened by too much change — or angry that it’s not enough.
Mr. Abiy’s changes are a major departure for Ethiopia, which has long relied on a government model that resembles China’s, emphasizing state-led economic growth and a suppression of political dissent.
But Mr. Abiy knows his country is overwhelmingly young, with a median age of 18 and a thirst for economic and political freedom.
“Closing the door is the worst approach,” he told The New York Times in Los Angeles in between bridge-building meetings with Ethiopians living in the United States.
Many of Mr. Abiy’s promises remain just that. He has yet to lift restrictions on civil society, and it’s unclear how multiparty elections can be held, as he has promised, in a country where the governing coalition and its allies have sweeping control over almost all institutions — and hold every seat in Parliament.
Representative Karen Bass, a California Democrat, who met with Mr. Abiy in late August, lauded his changes but warned of the risks of soaring demands.

“He has delivered, but if life doesn’t change for everyone, people get impatient,” she said. “People have unrealistic expectations.”
More than just changing the way Ethiopia is run, Mr. Abiy says he wants to change the way Ethiopians see themselves.
“Build bridges, break down walls,” is a constant refrain in his speeches, urging Ethiopians to step across religious and ethnic fault lines to view one another as compatriots, instead of rivals.
“We just blame each other,” he said in the interview, barely concealing his distress. “We just hate each other.” He calls it “group thinking.”
The difficulty is on stark display. Interethnic violence, mostly over land, has left nearly a million people displaced from their homes.
Dr. Abiy Ahmed Ali is the visionary leader who loves Ethiopians of all ethnic groups. He grown up a christian with high moral and ethics. He is trying to unify the country and promote the economy. He wants equity and equality of sharing the country`s wealth among the population. he is highly concerned about the youngsters educated with out employment.
All Ethiopians irrespective of their ethnic group must support him so that we succeed as a nation.He is the ideal person to be elected democratically in the coming election.
The returned other competitive parties like Ginbot 7, OLF and others must work to calm the population instead of fueling inter ethnic group problems of Woyane style politics which brought down our Country to the current unmanageable level.
Let us get out of the idea of selling the country`s culture,natural resources,land and
destroying all the belongings which our gentle and non educated fathers left for this generation to promote.
By making sabotage to gain wealth , from our own country we have to show foreigners our own secrets and belongings? What does it mean to give china 80% of the gain from Ogaden petroleum? This is Woyanes sabotage to share Ethiopian wealth with China,the outsider.
Let us return our Country`s pride to its original place. For that though, we have to honestly stand with Dr. Abiy Ahmed Ali, Our hero.
May GOD bless Ethiopia my Motherland and its people.
May GOD protect and be all the time with our Prime minister,
the Son,Brother,Cousin,husband, Father and everything of Ethiopian people, who deserves his international leadership.
Dr. Abiy Ahmed has a clear vision to bring back the former pride of his country and to build justful democracy. Opposition groups must support him so that we succeed as a nation. Stop agly Woyane style interethnic fueling and firing.
Dr. Abiy must be elected as a leader in the coming election which will be democratically.
May GOD bless Ethiopia and its people.
may GOD bless Dr. Abiy Ahmed ,his family and his vision for Ethiopia.