P.M Dr Abiy Ahmed unexpected decision

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For 25 absurd years, African heads of state and government have consistently established principles that make it easier to deal with their own problems. They aim to strengthen law and order through fair competition, to protect fundamental freedoms and to advance through financial participation and mutual peacekeeping. The African Union, a free partnership of nations on the continent, has even set up a cycle of friendship surveys to hold government officials accountable for their new standards.

 

 

 

This effort fosters guesswork. An Afrobarometer poll in 34 countries found that 68% of Africans believe the majority government is the best government. Polls show that 74% are against one-party rule and 72% are against military guidelines. However, it is still uncertain whether to test the majority of the government from the newspapers. The same year the poll was published, in 2019, the Economist intelligence service found that nearly 50% of Africa's 54 countries had become less free.

 

 

 

Currently, the barriers to change due to voting are no more clear or visible in Africa than in Ethiopia. The country's young Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed took the reins for three years before pledging to transform the country from a tense ethnic organization to a more coherent multi-ethnic people's government. His presentation ended 27 years of rule by a small minority in the Tigrei region which made significant financial progress but still undermined all public and political rights.

 

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