Ethiopia: Leader’s Swearing in Delayed for Funeral and  acting prime minister Hailemariam Desalegn will run the country until an election in 2015, showing that the ruling party is determined to ensure a swift and smooth transfer of power following the death of Meles Zenawi.

Meles, 57, died late on Monday in a Brussels hospital after a long illness, leaving a gaping hole in Ethiopian politics and depriving Western powers of a trusty ally in the fight against Islamist militants in the Horn of Africa.

“He (Hailemariam) will be the prime minister until 2015. He is to be sworn in and he is to finish the five-year term of government and that is indisputable,” government spokesman Bereket Simon told media.

Parliament would be summoned within the next two days and Hailemariam would be sworn in as prime minister, Bereket said yestarday .but Ethiopian has postponed the emergency session of parliament to swear in a new prime minister.
Crowds of mourners, many holding candles, gathered to witness Meles’ casket arriving in the capital, Addis Ababa, late on Tuesday. His body is now lying in his private residence as preparations are made for a state funeral.

Bereket said that the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) party, a coalition of region-based parties, would hold a party congress at an undisclosed date to nominate a leader but said there was no scenario under which Hailemariam would not remain as premier.
Acting Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn was to be sworn in Thursday following the death on Monday of longtime leader Meles Zenawi.

The body of Meles Zenawi arrives at the Addis Ababa International Airport, Ethiopia Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2012. Meles, Ethiopia’s long-time ruler and a major U.S. counter-terrorism ally who is credited with economic gains but blamed for human rights abuses, died of an undisclosed illness after not being seen in his East African country for weeks, Ethiopian authorities said Tuesday. He was 57. A European Union spokesman said that Meles died in Brussels.

Officials in Ethiopia didn’t immediately announce the reason for the delay, but most government leaders — including Hailemariam — attended the Thursday funeral of Abune Paulos, the head of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.
The funeral for Meles, who ruled Ethiopia for 21 years, has not yet been set. Leaders from around the world are expected to attend.

After taking power in 1991 from Mengistu Haile Mariam’s military junta, guerilla fighter Meles became one of the central political figures on the continent and drove domestic economic growth into double figures.

An astute economist, Meles advocated a blend of heavy state spending and foreign private investment, focusing lately on energy and infrastructure projects, although Ethiopia remains one of the world’s biggest recipients of aid and average incomes are roughly a third of those elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa.

Many Ethiopians complain that while he forged closer business ties with global powerhouses such as China, that did not translate into more jobs for Ethiopians and that despite a burgeoning middle class in urban areas, some three quarters of the country’s population still live on less than $2 a day.

Speculation had been rife that a potentially divisive race for the top post would follow Meles’ death. Asked whether all coalition members of the party had approved Hailemariam’s selection, Bereket said: “They have no problem with this.”

Analysts said Meles’ succession appeared a done deal but said there might still be horse-trading going on behind the scenes that might flare up and destabilize the party.
Hailemariam is a relatively young figure on Ethiopia’s political scene and it’s not clear if old guard leaders will allow him to hold onto the prime minister’s seat until 2015 elections.

“COMPETENCE VACUUM”

A somber mood hung over Addis Ababa under leaden skies.

Flags flew at half mast across the sprawling capital of Africa’s second most populous country, and residents crammed around stalls in the rain to read newspaper headlines that hailed the late leader.

Privately owned Daily Monitor ran the banner: “Grief Across Nation” while state-run Ethiopian Herald proclaimed “Visionary Leader of Monumental Legacy: We salute, we celebrate you.”

Talk of Meles’ succession filled Addis Ababa’s cafes as the country looked ahead to an era without an austere politician who ruled firm-handed for more than two decades.

The EPRDF has scrambled to assure citizens and foreign allies the policies of the former bush-fighter-turned-economic-reformer would be continued.

“Meles’ death won’t have an impact. The government has laid the foundations for a peaceful transition through the constitution,” said Mikael Demiss, an accountant at one cafe.

While Meles’ supporters mourned him as the savior of a long-suffering nation, opponents hailed the death of an autocrat one group described as a “genocidal tyrant”.

Rights groups criticized him for cracking down hard on dissent but the West generally turned a blind eye to the repression, reluctant to pick a fight with a partner in the fight against al Qaeda-linked groups in Africa.

More than 150 opposition politicians and their supporters have been detained since lawmakers approved in 2009 new anti-terrorism legislation. Journalists have also been targeted.

Mehari Tedla Maru of the Institute for Security Studies think-tank in Addis Ababa said Meles’ death was unlikely to trigger a power struggle within the EPRDF.

But he said Meles’ hold on power was so complete any successor would be unable to match his abilities and reputation as a towering political figure.

“While a power vacuum is less likely, the competence vacuum will be severe,” Mehari said.

Across the street, Elias Maereg swept the floor of a boutique selling men’s clothes.

“I only hope that all that has been achieved in the country during the past 20 years can be maintained,” he said.

 

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