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| Ethiopia's torn Orthodox church reunites after 27 years |
Addis Ababa (AFP) - Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has overseen the reunification of two feuding wings of the one of the world's oldest Christian churches, his top aide said Friday.
The
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church split in 1991 over the naming of a new
patriarch after the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF)
removed the Derg military junta from power.
Dissidents
founded a breakaway church based in the United States under the exiled former
patriarch, after leading church officials claimed that ousting him violated
rules that say the role is held for life.
Talks
between the two synods have been going on for years. Abiy, a reformist new
premier, is credited with speeding up the peace process, which culminated on
Thursday in his maiden visit to the United States.
Abiy
oversaw a reunification ceremony in Washington, attended by priests in flowing
black and red robes, state media reported.
"After
significant mediation efforts, PM Abiy witnessed in DC the reunification of the
2 Synods of the #Ethiopian Orthodox Church. The 2 Synods are reunited into one
Holy Synod after 27 years," his chief of staff Fitsum Arega wrote on
Twitter.
Further
details of the reunification and how it would work in practice were not
immediately available.
Tracing its
roots back to the fourth century, the Orthodox church is Ethiopia's largest,
gathering 38 million people, according to the World Council of Churches.
The country
is also home to a Muslim minority and a growing protestant population that
includes the prime minister.
"Prime
Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed said it is impossible to think of Ethiopia without
taking note of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, which he said, is both
great and sacred," the state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting Corporate said.
"While
noting that the reconciliation event marks a historic jump, the Prime Minister
emphasised that this has been something overdue," the broadcaster said.
It added:
"The unification and reconciliation committee extended its deepest
gratitude to Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed for his significant efforts during
the reconciliation process."
Since
taking office in April, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has prioritised reconciliation
between dissidents and the EPRDF, which has held power unopposed for 27 years.
He has
released numerous jailed dissidents from Ethiopian jails, and sometimes met
them personally upon their release.
Earlier
this week, he called for "multi-party democracy," a stunning shift
for the EPRDF which has been in power continuously since 1991 and holds every
seat in parliament together with its allies.
He has also
opened the doors to historic reconciliation with neighbouring Eritrea
The visit
to the US is set to be something of a charm offensive for Abiy.
After his
arrival in Washington, Reuben E. Brigety II, a former American ambassador to
the African Union headquarters in Ethiopia, tweeted a photo showing the prime
minister smiling and holding hands with a lone protester who greeted him
outside the Ethiopian embassy.
He is also
visiting diaspora communities in Los Angeles and the state of Minnesota in a
visit the Ethiopian government has titled "Tear down barriers, and build
bridges!"
Hundreds of
thousands of Ethiopians live in the US, among them numerous journalists and
politicians who have fallen out with the EPRDF.

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