Ethiopia faces new prime minister in bid to calm protests
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — Ethiopia on Wednesday was poised to welcome a young, outspoken new prime minister as many in Africa’s second most populous nation hoped for an end to the most severe anti-government protests in a quarter-century.
The East African nation’s ruling coalition late Tuesday named a new chairman, 42-year-old Abiy Ahmed, and a vote to install him as prime minster is expected in the coming days in parliament, where the coalition and its regional affiliates hold all of the seats.
The announcement follows months of protests that left hundreds dead and the surprise decision by outgoing Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn early this year to release prominent politicians, journalists and others from prison to free up political space.
But tensions continued and Hailemariam later announced his intention to resign, and a new state of emergency, the second in less than two years, was imposed in one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies. Earlier this week, a number of recently freed politicians and journalists were re-arrested and accused of gathering without authorities’ prior knowledge.