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| Abiy Ahmed offered an olive branch to the opposition and to rival Eritrea after he was sworn in as prime minister (AFP Photo/ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER) |
Addis Ababa (AFP) - Ethiopia's new prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, apologised to people harmed in recent political unrest and reached out both to the political opposition and longtime rival Eritrea at his swearing-in on Monday.
Abiy is the
first ethnic Oromo to be selected by the ruling Ethiopian People's
Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) as prime minister in its 27 years of
rule.
In a
parliamentary session, Abiy formally replaced Hailemariam Desalegn, whose
surprise resignation in February came after more than two years of
anti-government protests led by the Oromo.
"Ethiopians
living abroad and Ethiopians living here, we need to forgive each other from
the bottom of our hearts," Abiy said in a speech after he was sworn in.
He had
earlier exchanged a copy of the constitution and a hug with Hailemariam, who
has stepped down from all party leadership positions.
It is the
first time power has been transferred from one sitting prime minister to another
in modern Ethiopia.
"In
this peaceful transfer today, we are beginning a new chapter. This is a
historic day," Abiy said in his remarks.
The
42-year-old former minister of science and technology takes the reins of one of
Africa's fastest-growing and most-populous economies amid hopes that he will
change the EPRDF's authoritarian style of governing.
More than
1,100 people are being held without trial under a state of emergency declared
after Hailemariam's resignation.
They
include dissidents who had been freed just months earlier in a mass prisoner
amnesty ordered by Hailemariam.
'Brothers, not enemies'
While he
made no mention of the emergency decree in his speech, Abiy reached out to the
country's opposition politicians, many of whom were incarcerated during
Hailemariam's time.
"We
will not be seeing you as enemies, but be seeing you as brothers," Abiy
said.
Unrest
among the Oromos started in late 2015 over a government development plan they
decried as unfair, and soon spread to the country's second-largest ethnicity,
the Amhara.
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A two-year
war between Ethiopia and Eritrea left thousands dead -- the dispute, over
the
border demarcation, remains unresolved (file picture) (AFP Photo/MARCO LONGARI)
|
The
protests resulted in hundreds of deaths and tens of thousands of arrests and
only stopped after Ethiopia was placed under emergency rule for 10 months from
October 2016.
Referring
to people who were hurt or jailed in the protests, Abiy said "I apologise
from the bottom of my heart."
Northern
rival
He also
extended an olive branch to Ethiopia's arch-rival Eritrea, a one-time province
that declared independence in 1993.
A two-year
war broke out between the countries in 1998 over the demarcation of their
shared border that killed tens of thousands.
The dispute
remains unresolved, and Ethiopia and Eritrea accuse each other of supporting
anti-government groups.
"For
the common good of the two countries, not only for our benefit but for the two
nations which are tied by blood, we are ready to solve our differences with discussion,"
Abiy said.
"We
invite the Eritrean government to show the same sentiment."



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