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Ethiopia PM Abiy Ahmed eyes Red Sea port, inflaming tensions

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By Alex de Waal
Africa analyst
Wednesday November 8, 2023.

Ethiopia is abuzz with rumours of a new war – which would be Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s fourth in five years.

As well as importing weapons and mobilising his army, Mr Abiy – who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for his rapprochement with Eritrea – has been saying that access to the sea is an existential question.

Ethiopia’s most obvious target is the Eritrean Red Sea port of Assab, which was part of Ethiopia until Eritrean independence more than 30 years ago.

Since the 1998 Ethiopian-Eritrean war and the closure of the border between the two countries, the Assab docks have been rusting away, while Ethiopia’s trade has been channelled through neighbouring Djibouti.

The logistics and economics of Djibouti are perfectly workable, but it is not Ethiopian territory.

Many Ethiopians – and their neighbours – read between the lines and think the prime minister is threatening to use force.

But Mr Abiy publicly denies that he intends to invade Eritrea, telling soldiers recently on armed forces day: “Ethiopia has never invaded any country and will not do so in the future.”

He has also called for dialogue via an emergency summit of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (Igad), a bloc of eight north-east African states.

Yet Ethiopia’s aggressive posture and new arms race have consequences.

In July, Mr Abiy publicly raised the question of Ethiopia’s access to the sea.

He made the point that Ethiopia is the world’s most-populous landlocked country – it has 125 million people – and that access to the sea was a top priority for Ethiopian emperors, notably Haile Selassie who ruled from 1930 until 1974.

Quoting a famous 19th Century general, Ras Alula, Mr Abiy said that the Red Sea was Ethiopia’s natural boundary.

He reportedly told a meeting of businessmen that “we want to get a port by peaceful means. But if that fails we will use force”.

Some saw this as a gambit to win political support at home.

It appealed to an influential elite from the Amhara ethnic group who advocate for a greater Ethiopia.

Mr Abiy alienated this group when he made peace with the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in northern Ethiopia a year ago, following a bloody civil war.

He further antagonised them by launching a military operation in April to disarm Amhara militia, who sided with him in the conflict in the Tigray region.

Many Ethiopians also believe, falsely, that international law entitles a large country to a seaport.

Another interpretation is that Mr Abiy is obsessed with his legacy, and sees acquiring a port, by force if it cannot be done by negotiation, as his contribution to Ethiopia’s greatness.

For decades, Ethiopia’s foreign policy was predictable. It wanted to stabilise the Horn of Africa under its own leadership.

Part of this was partnering with the United Nations and African Union on peace efforts in Sudan and Somalia. Ethiopia became Africa’s biggest contributor to UN and African Union peacekeeping missions.

Another part was ambitious cross-border infrastructure projects, including transport corridors and power lines.

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on the Nile was designed to generate enough electricity that it could export to neighbouring countries. The idea was to bind the Horn of Africa together as a single economic bloc.

Today, Mr Abiy has gained a reputation for unpredictability. That’s the case for both domestic and foreign affairs.

In a remarkable reversal, Eritrea, once widely shunned for destabilising the Horn of Africa, is positioning itself as the responsible, status quo power.

In response to Mr Abiy, its statements have been terse and acerbic, pointedly refusing to join the “discourses” of its former ally on a matter that had “perplexed all concerned observers”.

Ethiopia’s other neighbours have been rattled too, and Djibouti, the self-declared Republic of Somaliland, Somalia and Kenya are joining Eritrea in an informal bloc to contain Ethiopia – issuing statements echoing one another’s concerns.

Middle Eastern actors face dilemmas. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is Mr Abiy’s principal patron – most conspicuously, it is financing his lavish palace, as well as providing drones.

Emirati aircraft have been observed unloading supplies in Ethiopian airbases in recent days.

Abu Dhabi also supports Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) group led by General Mohamed Hamdan Dagolo, known as “Hemeti”, who controls much of Sudan including most of its capital, Khartoum, and may soon be able to form a government.

For the UAE, Mr Abiy’s adventurism is both an opportunity and a risk: Ethiopia could become an important Red Sea power – and an Emirati client state; or a new war in the Horn could jeopardise their gains in Sudan.

Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, is sponsoring ceasefire talks in Sudan jointly with the US and is reportedly disturbed by how Mr Abiy’s Ethiopia is acting.

If Mr Abiy overreaches, Saudi Arabia may feel obliged to overcome its wariness over the Eritrean President Isaias Afewerki, and support him.

If he is serious about a new war, Mr Abiy faces two major challenges. One is who will fight.

The Ethiopian army has been depleted by the last three wars. The first was against the Oromo Liberation Army, and is still unfinished.

The second war, against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), was fought in alliance with Eritrea, and ended with a cessation of hostilities a year ago. The Ethiopian army lost, by its own calculation, between 260,000 and 520,000 soldiers killed or missing in action, plus 374,000 wounded.

The third war, against Amhara militia, began in April and is bogging down a large proportion of the army in what increasingly looks like a quagmire – with reports that Eritrea is arming the Amhara militia, known as Fano.

If Addis Ababa is to go to war, it will probably need the active involvement of Tigray, strategically positioned adjoining Eritrea.

But Tigray’s economy and services were destroyed in the two-year war that ended last year, and its people are exhausted.

Few have an appetite for new fighting. But there is deep and widespread anger at the atrocities committed by the Eritrean army.

Moreover, if the federal army were to start a war with Eritrea, Tigray would certainly be dragged in.

Some Tigrayans, fearing that a new war is inevitable, argue that Tigray should set out its conditions first, such as a return of western Tigray – seized by the neighbouring Amhara region three years ago – and control over some national military assets such as aircraft.

A second challenge is paying for the war. The Ethiopian economy is in a tailspin, and desperately needs a bailout from western donors along with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank.

Mr Abiy may hope that the UAE will compensate for any lost funds, but while UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed al-Nahyan may provide cash-in-hand for the prime minister, his money cannot compensate for the massive economic losses that a war would entail.

Whether or not Ethiopia actually launches an invasion, Mr Abiy has made the war thinkable.

Beating the drums of war creates a dangerous atmosphere. The region’s arms race is quickening. Ethiopia is buying more weapons. Eritrea and Djibouti will likely follow suit. Tigray’s proposed demobilisation is frozen. The conflicts in Somalia may be exacerbated. Eritrea could pour arms to the Amhara militia to intensify that war.

There is a danger that any small incident could get out of hand.

The last thing that the Horn of Africa needs is a new war. But the risks are now alarmingly high.

Alex de Waal is the executive director of the World Peace Foundation at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in the US.

{DAAWO MUIQAALKA} Nin Magaaladii uu sanado badan soo maamulayay mar qura ka mid noqday dadka ugu Saboolsan.

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Arbaco Nofembar 08, 2023 {HMC} Nin Magaaladii uu sanado badan soo maamulayay mar qura ka mid noqday dadka ugu Saboolsan.

HOOS KA DAAWO MUQAALKA WARBIXINTA

{DAAWO MUIQAALKA} Ciidamada deegaanka Hiiraan iyo ciyaar xiiso badan

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Arbaco Nofembar 08, 2023 {HMC} Ciidamada deegaanka Hiiraan iyo ciyaar xiiso badan

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{DAAWO MUIQAALKA} Gabar Soomaaliyeed oo noqotay haweeneydii ugu horreysay ee loo doortay duqa Magaalada oo kutaalo..

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Arbaco Nofembar 08, 2023 {HMC} Gabar Soomaaliyeed oo noqotay haweeneydii ugu horreysay ee loo doortay duqa Magaalada oo kutaalo..

HOOS KA DAAWO MUQAALKA WARBIXINTA

{DAAWO MUIQAALKA} Wararka ugu waa weyn Soomaaliya iyo caalamka ee Hiiraanweyn

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{DAAWO MUIQAALKA} Odayasha dhaqanka deeganka Biyo Cadde ayaa u balan qaaday saraakiisha Ciidan Amaanka in ay la shaqay

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{DAAWO MUIQAALKA} Macawisleyda Afarta tuulo ee gobolka Shabeellada dhexe oo laga wacyi galinayo inaysan ka qeyb noqon

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Arbaco Nofembar 08, 2023 {HMC} Macawisleyda Afarta tuulo ee gobolka Shabeellada dhexe oo laga wacyi galinayo inaysan ka qeyb noqon

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{DHAGEYSO} Warka Duhurnimo ee Radio Hiiraanweyn{ 8/11/2023}

Talaado Nofembar 08, 2023 {HMC} Dhageystayaal halkan waxa aan idiin kugu soo gudbi neynaa Warka Duhurnimo ee Warbaahinta Hiiraanweyn

Warka waxaa soo jeedinaya:abdi semed  iyo Abdi yare

Farsamadii :Yaasiin ali ahmed

HOOS KA DHAGEYSO WARKA DUHURNIMO

 

{DAAWO SAWIRADA} Dadkii ugu badnaa oo ka barakacay Baladweyne iyo Xaalad adag oo soo Wajahday

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Boqolaal qoys ayaa sadaxdii Maalin ee ugu dambeeyay iskaga Barakacay Xaafadaha Magaalada Baladweyne, Cabsi ay ka qabaan fatahaad uu sameeyo Wabiga shabeelle Darteed, kadib markii uu aad u buuxsamay Wabiga .

Dadka waxa ay ka cabsi qabaan in wadooyinka ay ka xirmaan, madaama digniino Culus ay bixiyeen Hay’adaha iyo Maamulka Magaalada Baladweyne. Qoysaskan intooda badan waxaa ay ka barakaceeyn iyaga oo aanan wali magaalada biyaha soo galin. Waxaana intooda badan ay dageeyn Deegaanka Ceeljaalle ee Duleedka Bari ee Magaalada Baladweyne kaga began qiyaastii 5 ilaa 6kmt .

Xaalado dhinaca nolosha ah oo ay ugu horeeyaan Biyo la’aan iyo hoy la’aan ayey wajahayaan boqolaalkii qoys ee naftooda kala baxay Gudaha magaalada. Waxaana dadka ay dageeyn meelo banaan oo taag ah.

Qoysaska qaar oo Hiiraanweyn la hadlay ayaa sheegay in ay awoodi la’yahiin helitaanka nalol maalmeedka qoysaskooda, oo mudo dhowr cisho ah ka maqan Magaalada. Dadka qaar ayaa Ceeljaale dagan 20 Cisho oo waxa ay ka barakceyn daadad Magaalada kusoo rogmaday sadax todobaad ka hor.

” waxaan lasoo barakacay Caruurta iyo hal bac oo aan watay ayaan gaari dameer kusoo qaatay, wax kale oo aan wato malaha, meeshaas banaan ah ayaan jooga. waxaan u baahanahay gurmad deg deg ah. waxaa sidaa sheegay Cabdullaahi axmed oo ah aabaha 13 Caruur ah.”

Qoysaska qaar ayaa ku haray Magaalada Baladweyne kuwaas oo sheegay in xiligan aysan barakaci karin iyaga oo wali biyaha soo galin, madaama ceeljaale ay tahay meel qorax iyo rafaad ah sida ay sheegeyn. waxaa ay intaasi ku dareeyn in ay la socdaan xaalada biyaha iyo halka ay marayaan maalin walba.

Maamulka Gobolka Hiiraan iyo kan degmada Baladweyne ayaa shalay soo saaray Digniin Culus oo ah fatahaad uu sameeyo wabiga Shabeelle, madaama uu aad u buuxsamay malmahii lasoo dhaafay.

Gudoomiyaha Gobolka Hiiraan Cabdullaahi axmed Maalin Sufuroow ayaa sheegay in in 100%70 dadkii ku noola Magaalada Baladweyne ay iskaga barakaceeyn Cabsi ay ka qabaan fatahaada Wabiga Shabeelle owgeed,

Gudoomiye Sufuroow waxaa uu intaasi ku daray in dadkii ugu badnaa ay dageeyn deegaanka Ceeljaale ee Duleedka Magaalada Baladweyne, malmaha soo socdane ay gaarsiin doonan gurmad deg deg ah.

St. Louis Park’s Nadia Mohamed becomes first Somali American elected mayor in U.S.

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By Josie Albertson-Grove Star Tribune
Wednesday November 8, 2023

Mohamed, who had already won citywide as an at-large council member and had the backing of Mayor Jake Spano, defeated retired banker Dale A. Anderson.  

St. Louis Park on Tuesday became the first city in the United States to elect a Somali American mayor.

City Council Member Nadia Mohamed, 27, won by a considerable margin against retired banker Dale A. Anderson in Tuesday’s election, becoming the nation’s first elected Somali American mayor as well as the first Black mayor of St. Louis Park.

“This is a milestone. This is not the destination,” said the mayor-elect, thanking her supporters Tuesday. “As mayor, I want to ensure people see themselves reflected in our policies.”

Supporters clamored for selfies with Mohamed after she declared victory.

Mohamed was elected to an at-large council seat in 2019 at age 23, making her the youngest person to serve on the St. Louis Park City Council.

State Rep. Deqa Dhalac of South Portland, Maine, was the first Somali American to serve as mayor of an American city in 2021, but she was selected by that city’s six-member council rather than elected by the voters.

Mohamed campaigned for investment in community policing and programs to make homeownership more affordable. She was endorsed by Mayor Jake Spano, who did not seek re-election.

“I wanted to be the last in a line of all-white mayors in the city,” Spano said Tuesday night. “She’s got a great staff around her … and a community that’s going to support her.”

Mohamed was also endorsed by Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and state Reps. Larry Kraft of St. Louis Park and Cheryl Youakim of Hopkins.

Speaking to supporters Tuesday night, Mohamed spoke about her mother’s journey to settle in St. Louis Park, giving her the confidence to enter politics at a young age.

“I have watched a courageous woman handle her business every day,” Mohamed said. “That courage comes easy to me now.”

In other west metro elections Tuesday, Roslyn Harmon was elected mayor of Golden Valley, narrowly defeating Council Member Gillian Rosenquist, an attorney. Harmon, executive director of St. Paul-based Dispute Resolution Center, will be the city’s first Black mayor.

And in Minnetonka, voters struck down a proposed charter amendment to repeal ranked-choice voting in municipal elections. Nearly 59% of voters rejected the amendment, while 41% voted to approve it.