By Dawit Endeshaw, ADDIS ABABA Ethiopia
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed was sworn in for a new five-year term on Monday, telling a crowd of thousands he would protect the country from foreign interference, amid global criticism over the war in the northern region of Tigray.
His party
scored a landslide victory in June's election, cementing his power domestically
despite international concern over his government's handling of the conflict.
After
parliament confirmed his appointment, between 30,000 and 40,000 people attended
a public ceremony - unusual in Ethiopia - in the capital Addis Ababa.
Abiy spoke
from a dais covered in yellow carpet in the newly refurbished Meskel Square,
where brand new lights and stadium-style benches sit next to a crumbling museum
dedicated to the murder and torture victims of a previous regime.
In his speech,
Abiy denounced the leadership in the northern region of Tigray, where
rebellious forces are battling the central government and where the United
Nations says hundreds of thousands of people are experiencing famine due to a
government blockade of aid. The government denies it is preventing aid
deliveries.
Abiy's speech
offered little hint as to whether he would pursue an offensive to claw back
territory taken by Tigrayan forces. "In order to narrow our differences,
we will have a national dialogue," he said, while also promising "a
capable security and intelligence force will be built".
Abiy also
repeated warnings that Ethiopia would not accept foreign interference in its
internal affairs.
Conflict broke
out in Tigray 11 months ago between federal troops and forces loyal to the
Tigrayan People's Liberation Front (TPLF), the political party that controls
Tigray. Thousands have died and more than 2 million people have been forced to
flee their homes.
On Thursday, Ethiopia announced it was expelling seven senior U.N. officials, accusing them of diverting aid and communication equipment to the TPLF, failing to demand the return of aid trucks deployed to Tigray, violating security arrangements and spreading misinformation.
The United
Nations said on Monday that it stands by the neutrality and professionalism of
its staffand again reiterated that it does not accept Ethiopia's declaration
that the officials are personae non gratae.
However, U.N.
spokesman Farhan Haq said the U.N. officials had "been moved from the
country to ensure their safety."
The United
States has condemned the expulsions and threatened unilateral sanctions against
those who obstructed humanitarian efforts.
"It is
critical that these individuals be allowed to return to Ethiopia in order to
carry out their important life-saving work and duties," State Department
spokesman Ned Price said of the U.N. officials on Monday.
Abiy was
appointed prime minister by the then-governing coalition in 2018 and promised
political and economic reforms.
Within months
of taking office, he lifted a ban on opposition parties, released tens of
thousands of political prisoners and took steps to open up one of Africa's last
untapped markets. But rights groups say those freedoms are now being rolled
back.
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