Mohammed said that the Ethiopian public, anxious for stability after the death of a longtime ruler, had already been “given the impression that (Hailemariam) was groomed to replace Meles in 2015,” when general elections are due in Ethiopia. He added that it would have been almost impossible for the ruling party to find “an alternative replacement that is acceptable to the four coalition members and the various factions within them.”
Meles, who died Aug. 20 of an undisclosed illness in a Belgian hospital, ruled Ethiopia with an iron fist since 1991. Some praised him for lifting many Ethiopians out of abject poverty, but others saw him as a tyrant who restricted certain freedoms, including free speech.
The International Crisis Group said after the death of Meles that Hailemariam was not likely to be as pivotal and decisive a figure as the man he replaced.
“Given the opacity of the inner workings of the government and army, it is impossible to say exactly what it will look like and who will end up in charge. Nonetheless, any likely outcome suggests a much weaker government, a more influential security apparatus and endangered internal stability,” the group’s report said.
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