Troubles pile up ahead of Ethiopia's first polls under Abiy

Ethiopia is set to hold elections in a month, but with war in the north, ethnic violence elsewhere and major logistical hurdles, the path to credible polls is littered with obstacles.
When Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed
came to power three years ago, he promised to break from Ethiopia's
authoritarian past and hold the most democratic elections the country has ever
seen.
But the Nobel Peace Prize laureate
is fighting crises on multiple fronts as the nation of 110 million people
prepares to choose national and regional parliamentarians on June 5.
The MPs elect the prime minister,
who is head of government, as well as the president -- a largely ceremonial
role.
A six-month-old war in Ethiopia's
northern Tigray region is the most high-profile of several security crises that
will make voting impossible in large swathes of the country.
Meanwhile voter registration is
hampered by logistical issues and prominent opposition parties are planning to
boycott, complaining their candidates have been arrested and their offices
vandalised.
"There is a broad acknowledgement that these
elections won't be perfect, to say the least -- that there will be
shortcomings, there will be grounds for criticism and for a lot of improvement,"
a Western diplomat said.
The ruling coalition that preceded
Abiy claimed staggering majorities in the two previous elections, which
observers said fell far short of international standards for fairness.
A more open contest in 2005 saw
big gains for the opposition but led to a lethal crackdown on protests over
contested results.
- Democratic 'resurrection' -
In his Orthodox Easter message
over the weekend, Abiy insisted this year's elections would be "one of the
chapters of Ethiopia's resurrection."
After an era of "darkness and
turmoil, thorns and thistles, pain and death... we have reached the top of the
mountain where the light is shining, carrying the hope of democracy for our
country," he said.
Some in the opposition, like the
leader of the Ezema party Berhanu Nega, believe Abiy understands "there is
no peace to be had when a government is in power without any popular legitimacy".
However he told AFP that "in
countries such as ours, there is no guarantee that it will not be the same as
the past."
Critics like opposition leader
Merera Gudina, whose Oromo Federalist Congress is boycotting the vote, have dismissed
it as a farce.
"In many ways we are probably heading for a very
serious rupture in this country's politics," said Merera.
- Sign-up snags -
Ethiopia's election was planned
for last August, but delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Even in the best of times,
organising smooth elections is a tall order in the vast nation, hobbled by poor
infrastructure.
Diplomats closely following the
process also say the electoral board is sorely missing logistical support
usually provided by the military, which is largely tied up in Tigray battling
forces aligned with the region's former rulers, the Tigray People's Liberation
Front (TPLF).
In mid-April, electoral board
chair Birtukan Mideksa announced that only around half the country's 50,000
polling stations were operational, and that two regions -- Afar and Somali --
had no functional stations at all.
She also sounded the alarm about
lagging voter registration, saying a mere 200,000 people had signed up in Addis
Ababa, a city of five million.
In recent weeks Abiy has tried to
get preparations back on track, holding meetings with election officials and
leaders from Ethiopia's 10 semi-autonomous regions while publicly urging
Ethiopians to register.
On the streets of Addis Ababa,
though, there have been few signs of campaigning beyond sporadic rallies and
scattered banners for Abiy's Prosperity Party, featuring a lightbulb
symbolising a brighter future.
- 'Ethiopia decides' -
The Prosperity Party's other main
image is a pair of hands holding up three leaping figures -- one blue, one
yellow, one red -- radiating waves of light.
It is meant to represent harmony
among Ethiopia's diverse population.
But it belies the violence that
has roiled Ethiopia under Abiy, threatening to imperil balloting.
Beyond Tigray, the electoral board
chair Birtukan has highlighted hotspots of ethnic killings that have forced the
election body to suspend activities, including in the country's most populous
regions, Oromia and Amhara.
Hundreds have been killed since
March in attacks in Amhara, sparking protests in many of the region's cities.
The European Union said this week
it would not send observers to the polls, citing a failure to reach an agreement
with the government on basic issues like communications and the observers'
independence.
Abiy's government nonetheless
seems determined to forge ahead.
"On June 5, #Ethiopia decides," Abiy's
press secretary Billene Seyoum wrote last week on Twitter.
"As imperfect as it may seem,
the country's path of democratization can only be defined (and) determined by
its people."