September 30, 2021
By Ayenat Mersie
NAIROBI (Reuters) – Ethiopians in three regions where elections had been delayed finished voting for their representatives in a peaceful exercise on Thursday, officials said, and one area also voted on whether to form its own regional state.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed will form the next government regardless of the results from late voting. His party had already won 410 of the 547 seats in Ethiopia’s parliament, 436 of which were contested in a June vote.
Abiy praised the vote in a statement posted on Twitter.
“Those fellow citizens have voted today … made our democracy complete,” he said.
The vote comes as Abiy is under increasing international pressure over the war in the northern region of Tigray. Conflict broke out in November 2020, pitting federal and allied regional forces against forces aligned with the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which clawed back control of Tigray in June after months of bloody battles. The United Nations says parts of Tigray are experiencing famine.
Thursday’s vote was in the Somali region, where registration irregularities delayed voting; Harar, where registration issues and a legal dispute caused delays; and in the southwestern Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region (SNNPR), where ballot and security issues delayed polls.
Voters in part of SNNPR also cast ballots in a referendum on whether to break away and form their own regional state, which would make it Ethiopia’s 11th. Residents hope statehood could gain the region more autonomy and federal funding.
Ethiopia’s 1995 constitution enshrines the concept of ethnic federalism, which allows ethnic groups to seek autonomy. Such votes have only been allowed since Abiy came into office in 2018.
Disputes over regional versus federal powers, ethnic groups, and land frequently trigger violence in Ethiopia, a country of 110 million with more than 80 different ethnic groups.
Abiy is due to form his new government on Oct. 4.
Forty-seven seats were being contested on Thursday. It is unclear when the delayed elections for the remaining seats, some of which are in Tigray, will take place.
(Reporting by Ayenat Mersie; Editing by Katharine Houreld, Grant McCool and Steve Orlofsky)
Source Link Ethiopians in three regions vote in delayed election