Review of African Political Economy
ISSN: (Print) (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/crea20
Evaluating the Pretoria Agreement: the limitations
of presentist analysis of conflicts in Ethiopia
Jon Abbink
To cite this article: Jon Abbink (2023) Evaluating the Pretoria Agreement: the limitations of
presentist analysis of conflicts in Ethiopia, Review of African Political Economy, 50:176, 234-242,
DOI: 10.1080/03056244.2023.2270871
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/03056244.2023.2270871
Published online: 03 Nov 2023.
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REVIEW OF AFRICAN POLITICAL ECONOMY
2023, VOL. 50, NO. 176, 234–242
https://doi.org/10.1080/03056244.2023.2270871
DEBATE
Evaluating the Pretoria Agreement: the limitations of
presentist analysis of conflicts in Ethiopia
Jon Abbink
African Studies Centre Leiden, Leiden University, Leiden, Netherlands
SUMMARY
KEYWORDS
This debate piece contains an assessment of the debate on the
‘Pretoria Agreement’ (or Cessation of Hostilities Agreement)
concluded on 2 November 2022 regarding the armed conflict in
Ethiopia. On the basis of a critical discussion of a paper by
F. Gebresenbet and Y. Tariku (2023) published in the Spring issue
of the Review of African Political Economy (ROAPE), the author
here contests the short-term analysis of the authors, who miss
essential points of the wider context of political conflict in
Ethiopia and also scholastically misrepresent some other authors
in the debate.
African politics; Ethiopia;
armed conflict; ethnopolitical tensions
Most people welcomed the proclamation on 2 November 2022 of a ‘Cessation of Hostilities Agreement’ (CoHA) in Ethiopia, after weeks of negotiations behind closed doors
(AU 2022). Concluded under the auspices of the African Union (AU) and with big
pressure from the USA, it stopped the fighting and opened venues for a negotiated resolution of the conflict that ravaged the north of the country. The Review of African Political Economy (ROAPE), on 25 April 2023, published online an article by two academics
on the prospects of this CoHA and on post-peace agreement conditions in Ethiopia
(Gebresenbet and Tariku 2023). While the agreement was barely six months old, the
authors already claimed to know what its historical importance was and gave
confident predictions on Ethiopia’s future after this devastating conflict.
Although it has an appropriate question mark in the title, the paper is unsatisfactory,
due to its short-term and selective focus, its superficial and incomplete treatment of the
conflict situation(s) in the country, and its lack of documentation of assertions made. It
comes out in favour of the view that the CoHA heralds ‘a new era’ (pp. 97, 103). In the
paper’s second part, on ‘experts in the era of infodemic/mis- and disinformation’ (sic),
there is unnecessary and ranting text expressing the authors’ apparent need to misrepresent and disqualify academic colleagues (p. 100). The paper overall does not ‘elucidate the
implications of ending the war … for the Ethiopian state and society’ (p. 96), except in the
most provisional way. While I agree with one, quite evident, point of the paper (as noted
below), I think that their text made no substantive contribution to fundamentally understanding the import of this CoHA. The text lacks academic clarity, context appraisal and
fairness to fellow academics. Such a piece should rather have gone to a blog site1 or an
CONTACT Jon Abbink
© 2023 ROAPE Publications Ltd
g.j.abbink@asc.leidenuniv.nl
REVIEW OF AFRICAN POLITICAL ECONOMY
235
Internet magazine. Their paper is a quick, presentist-oriented product that is not enlightening. There are no other ‘academic’ papers discussing the CoHA and its ‘historic’ role:
other commentators were wise enough to make no big claims and publish their (very provisional) assessments in more suitable forums like online news magazines and blogs (for
example, Rahman 2022; Matfess and Lauder 2023).
As one of the academics ‘addressed’ in their piece, let me briefly discuss some of the
points raised above. A full refutation of their paper would need a lengthier article.
The point on which one can agree with the authors is that the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) and its ambitions have received a major blow. But that the era of
TPLF hegemony over Ethiopia is finished for good cannot be asserted with such certainty. The insurgents aimed to restore that by means of the war they started on 4
November 2020 but after which they were decisively defeated, although at a huge cost
to both sides. But does the paper ultimately contribute to a better understanding of
the context and nature of the conflict? Hardly. It is belabouring the obvious to say
that the federal government (supported by the large majority of Ethiopians) came out
on top and the insurgent TPLF suffered a major, crippling defeat. Easy to see and no
need for academics to point that out. What would be more enlightening is to analyse
why: it was due to the TPLF’s miscalculation and inevitable defeat in a reactionary war
it started, and due to the deep resentment its war practices and massive abuse of civilians
evoked among the mass of the Ethiopian population. What should be analysed is why
‘donor countries’ like the USA and those of the EU kept supporting the TPLF until
the very end – in the name of a biased, selective human rights agenda – and did
hardly anything to support the federal government to defend the sovereignty of the
country in very challenging circumstances. What should also be analysed is why the
mainstream global media and activist human right groups like Amnesty International
and Human Rights Watch often went along with an ill-checked, TPLF-orchestrated propaganda narrative2 that in the post-war period since November 2022 has been shown to
be biased and false, and why these players showed a remarkable condescension towards
an African country trying to defend its sovereignty and agency.
Secondly, the main claim of the paper that the CoHA marks the solidification of the
Ethiopian state (and federal army) and the demise of ethno-nationalist challenges to it is
entirely premature and not at all decided (see below). Such longer-term predictions of the
meaning and impact of the Pretoria Agreement cannot really be given yet. They will
largely depend on the policies of the federal government (and that of international
parties that have so much interfered in this war), the responses of the general population,
and a recovery of the economy. Here the paper fails to place its interpretations in the
wider context of Ethiopian (geo)politics and domestic politics. For instance, we have
seen that the political system that generated the conflict is still in place, operating on
the same constitutional and ideological premises, and not performing well in the past
10 months, with major governance issues preventing rapid progress.
In more detail, to assess whether a new era was achieved by the CoHA (p. 103)
requires a point-by-point evaluation of the agreement. If the authors had done so,
they would have seen that a range of issues were not solved: the TPLF was not totally disarmed; it did not vacate all occupied lands (as reported in Borkena 2023); and it is trying
to reestablish its problematic hegemonism over Tigray’s population (as the movement
was allowed under the terms of the CoHA to stay alive as a political group). Stability
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J. ABBINK
in the north and a lasting peace were by a considerable distance not achieved; the connection of TPLF subversion with other armed insurgencies (e.g. the ‘Oromo Liberation
Army’, whom they supported) is still there; and while, since 3 January 2023, there is a
Ministry of Justice Green Paper on a ‘transitional justice’ process (as foreseen in the
CoHA, articles 1.6–1.7 and 10.3), no results are visible after more than nine months.
Neither was the rehabilitation of the victimised citizens in Afar, Amhara and Tigray
(hundreds of thousands of internally displaced persons) decisively tackled. Nor has the
national economy recovered from the major hits it has received,3 and foreign investors
are not lining up to reinvest in the country. The point is to assess whether Ethiopia, allegedly ‘entering a new era’, is connected to much more than only the Pretoria Agreement
and the halt of the fighting in and around Tigray. So, the authors do not sufficiently
address that wider context, and as a result their assessment of the situation based on
the ‘impact’ of that agreement is unsatisfactory.
In the second section of the paper (pp. 99–100), the authors discuss (TPLF) elite
cohesion and fracture. To sing the praises of the TPLF as the cohesive party that
held Tigray together in the time of war and before is misleading. This party hegemony
was enforced and imposed on its ‘own’ people, who had little choice; dissent was punished. That the TPLF lost popularity is sure, but that the CoHA would have shattered
the grip of the Front is by no means clear. The ordinary Tigray population has voiced
its discontent since November 2022 with the way the TPLF ruled and conducted the
war, but that has not prevented this party from trying to regain regional power. It
should be noted that the TPLF presently forms 50% of the members of the transitional
regional council and interim government and is busy rebuilding its networks across
the region and on the federal level with the dominant part of the ruling Prosperity
Party.
And in contrast to what the authors claim, the sovereignty and territorial integrity of
Ethiopia was not in doubt, as the large majority of the population and the federal army
always embodied these notions (and the CoHA did not need to cement that). In addition,
how they, in the light of their remarks on precarious state sovereignty and territorial
identity, can claim that ‘arguments about the likelihood of the imminent dismemberment
of the state can no longer be taken seriously’ really beats me – assuming that the authors
were correct in saying that any TPLF victory would have led to that dismemberment.
That is hardly likely, because starting the war was an effort to again take over the
federal state.
The authors also draw a wrong conclusion in saying (pp. 96–97) that the events
marked ‘the beginning of the end of ethno-nationalism’s hegemonic centrality to
national politics’. Many observers of today’s Ethiopian politics would disagree and
point to the fact that another ethno-nationalist group may take over from the TPLF
and self-declare as hegemonic. While the ‘Prosperity Party’ of the prime minister is formally in charge nationwide, the ruling elite is changing in composition and the regional
states get stronger, at the expense of the federal order and its implementing institutions.
The CoHA is therefore in no way ‘the birth of a new epoch of redefining political discourse and practice’ (p. 97). Ethnic-based violence is not gone, the same old authoritarian
tropes and ethno-nationalist identity politics are reemerging (i.e. overriding Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s cooperation or Meddemer discourse), institutional reforms have yet
to yield results, and top-down political practice is unchanged.
REVIEW OF AFRICAN POLITICAL ECONOMY
237
Hence, a proper assessment of the CoHA today should have addressed the entire political context of Ethiopia’s fractious politics, and also looked at all the key clauses of the
agreement and assessed the feasibility and progress made so far on each of them. Further
evidence that the ‘peace agreement’ certainly did not herald a new era in Ethiopia can be
seen in the following: the terms of the agreement regarding full disarmament of the
insurgents were not fully kept;4 there was ambivalence about the implications of the
12 November 2022 follow-up ‘Kenya Agreement’ regarding TPLF disarmament;5 no
serious prosecution of the war abuses has yet been initiated (with many perpetrators
going scot-free), no substantial rehabilitation of the victimised populations has been
started; and new violent campaigns have been seen, especially in the Amhara Region
(still not fully vacated either by TPLF forces in early 2023). Violence in other parts of
Ethiopia, notably by the so-called ‘Oromo Liberation Army’ (OLA), allied to the
TPLF, continues (Anna 2021). This group, the majority of which is recruited from unemployed youths, is frequently reported to be terrorising ‘non-Oromo’ people and has no
positive programme for Ethiopia. It is accused of carrying out mass killings and
‘ethnic cleansing’ (AP News 2022) of such people of non-Oromo origins that resided
for several generations in the Oromia Region. OLA was strongly connected to the
TPLF insurgency and is still not under control of the federal government (Al-Arabiya
News 2023) – and there are growing doubts whether the federal Prosperity Party-dominated government event wants to control it. These conflict dynamics were not mentioned
in the Gebresenbet and Tariku paper. While some Horn of Africa dynamics were superficially discussed in section four of the paper (‘Realignment of security and power
dynamics in the Horn of Africa’, pp. 102–103), the wider international dimensions of
the northern war were not reflected upon, although the disturbing pressure (if not
financial blackmail) and misperceptions of notably the USA and the EU (as ‘donors’)
were influential factors to be reckoned with from the start. Also, the role of the UN
and its agencies (the United Nations Development Programme, the UN Human
Rights Council) in the war was quite problematic and needs attention.6
In assessing the prospects of the CoHA, it also is problematic to omit mention of the
burning issue of Wolqait: a contested territory between the Tigray and Amhara regions
with a mixed population but historically belonging more to the Gondar-Begemdir region.
In 1991 it was detached from Gondar Administrative Region and quickly annexed to
Tigray by the TPLF authorities (and labelled ‘Western Tigray’) after their military
victory against the Derg regime.7 On 9–10 November 2020 Wolqait was blighted by
one of the worst ‘ethnic cleansing’ massacres in the war at Mai Kadra town, whereby
TPLF-affiliated forces murdered more than 1200 Amhara civilians. The memory of
this deed weighs heavily upon the prospects of any agreement (compare Adugna and Aleminew 2022) and it has also generated new ethno-nationalist sentiments. A just solution
to the status of Wolqait will have to take the massacre’s aftermath into account. A satisfactory solution will to a large extent determine the stability of northern Ethiopia and of
the CoHA. It remains to be seen if the federal government can successfully achieve this
kind of solution.8
The third section of the paper is reserved for a string of condescending remarks on
writers/academics on Ethiopia. Gebresenbet and Tariku try to delegitimise them, as
‘mere activists’ or as arrogant foreign scholars. This pushing away of academic
authors/colleagues comes at a time when is it apparently ‘safe’ for them to do so.
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J. ABBINK
During the entire two-year period of this appalling and abjectly cruel war, Gebresenbet
and Tariku emitted not a sound on the conflict and kept their mouths safely shut. No
commitment to their country was expressed, no criticism of the violent insurgent
party TPLF or of federal army transgressions, not a sign of concern about the tens of
thousands of civilians displaced, robbed, or killed (mostly taxpayers who contributed
to supporting the university system in Ethiopia where they work). No word in public
debate on the need and constitutional duty of Ethiopia’s federal government to defend
the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the country. Their argument in this section
of the paper (p. 101) that truth did not matter in the ‘activist’ debates on the war is
entirely misconceived. That the authors do not address sources and materials and
their contents to assess the truth and lies produced is not acceptable. The reports and
publications available on these matters must be used and compared to improve the
interpretation of events. The assessments of the truth of various statements and media
utterances (invisible in their account) have, on the contrary, been very important and
they must be discussed. Just two examples: the lie that Ethiopia used phosphorus
bombs on Tigrayan civilians, reported by the British newspaper:9 totally untrue.
Another: that the Ethiopian federal army ‘drone-bombed’ a university campus in
Tigray: no proof found.10 The dismissal of sincere and committed scholarship by
others is further attested in Gebresenbet and Tariku’s denigration of scholars like
Clapham and Markakis. These people have not claimed dominance or authority above
others in ‘framing the situation in Ethiopia’. Their contributions were debated and
argued with from the start, and they have – with scores of others Gebresenbet and
Tariku forget to mention – done a tremendous job to put Ethiopian studies on the
map and inspired countless scholars both in Ethiopia and abroad.
The two camps of ‘activists’ they identify (p. 101) are presented as mirroring each
other, but that is entirely misplaced. From the start of the conflict on the night of 3–4
November 202011 the pro-TPLF supporters did not care much about the truth and
waged harsh digital warfare. They did not shun lies and explicit disinformation.12 The
so-called other camp – certainly the four people mentioned there13 – were bent on correcting the balance, criticising the amazingly biased global mainstream press that had
hardly any people on the ground in Ethiopia, but relied on TPLF propaganda-machine
informants. The style of argument of Gebresenbet and Tariku here shows that they
were very selective in their reading on the conflict as it unfolded, and equally so in
what they cited. Nor do they reference the work of the so-called pro-government
people to back up their accusations. Presumably they saw some tweets from the
people they criticise that expressed opinions and personal assessments. Apart from the
fact that many such tweets were backed up by the facts, posting them is the right of
every concerned citizen and they cannot be used to judge the academic merits of people.
Among the academics/authors that they accuse of being ‘pro-government’ there has
certainly been a strongly expressed but also well-documented commitment of (conditional) sympathy with the Ethiopian people, the nation, and at times with the
federal government that defended their rights against an aggressive insurgent force.
If a proper assessment of the facts of this war coincided with the views or approach
of the federal government, so be it. The contributions of the authors criticising TPLF
statements were usually informative and to the point, correcting much of the illresearched propaganda going around, even in the Guardian, the Daily Telegraph,
REVIEW OF AFRICAN POLITICAL ECONOMY
239
the Washington Post, CNN, and others. For instance, Professor Ann Fitz-Gerald published an excellent piece in April 2022 on the views of TPLF war captives who told her
about the abuse and forced recruitment they were subjected to by the TPLF (FitzGerald 2022). Her information in that paper, contradicting strange reporting in the
New York Times or the Guardian or the ICG statements, was corroborated time
and again by others after the CoHA was concluded. Bronwyn Bruton’s comments
and articles (e.g., in Foreign Policy) are characterised not by ‘mere activism’ but by
sharp analysis and acute observations that were also confirmed by events in the
past couple of years. Author and journalist Jeff Pearce has been indefatigable in correcting the gross errors and wilful misunderstandings produced in the global media,
the UN and human rights groups, and has refuted recurring pro-TPLF propaganda
myths on factual grounds. To brush such people aside, probably on the perusal of
some of their Twitter messages, as ‘mere activists’ or as ‘in the government camp’
is not proper at all. Such labels substitute for what Gebresenbet and Tariku should
have done: analysing the well-argued and double-checked analyses of these authors
on the Ethiopia conflict and related issues. Neither was my own work cited by Gebresenbet and Tariku, so as to make it easy for them not to have to deal with matters of
content.14 Next to surprise about the repetition of patent lies about the conflict in
global media and policy discourse, my commitment in writing on the conflict was
also motivated by information that civilians from my fieldwork area in northern
Ethiopia (South Wollo) had been killed by the insurgent TPLF force. I think it is
not strange that we as researchers publicly plead for protection of the lives of our
respondents victimised by an unprovoked and unjust war.
In contrast, no such words of concern about the war and its impact on Ethiopian civilians were heard from the authors of the paper under discussion; they safely kept quiet in
Addis Ababa, and only now, after the end of the war, they come out, cheaply criticising
authors/researchers who stuck their necks out for a country and people they have
affection for. Gebresenbet and Tariku also have no idea of the harassment and lies
these authors have received from the pro-TPLF club. The latter group – with many representatives in academia as well, for example, in Belgium, Germany and the USA – has
done incomparably more damage to a truthful public debate on the conflict than the
ones they accuse.
Certainly, Gebresenbet and Tariku are right that in this conflict the modes of reasoning and responding have shown polarised and uncompromising attitudes, notably in
cyberspace. But it is disappointing to see in their paper that they themselves seamlessly
fit into this mode of accusing people that has characterised political discourse in Ethiopia
(and in Ethiopian overseas communities). To suggest that ‘we’ to a large extent are
‘willing to defend [our] side’s actions’ (p. 101) is incorrect: we tried to compare and
examine actions and allegations from the warring parties against the known facts, and
these have substantially refuted the narrative concoctions of the TPLF and its dogmatic
supporters. Their labelling of others shows the authors have little interest in decent dialogue or reaching some agreement on contents and truth. Such quick accusation, labelling, and antagonistic talk inhibits proper attention to the relevant facts and to context,
and this may even perpetuate conflict discourse in the country.
As we see now in Ethiopia, fighting is continuing in many areas15 and a hardening of
political exchanges inhibits the finding of durable solutions for the country’s political
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conundrum. It is as if new ‘enemy discourses’ are being created and Ethiopia is entering a
new phase in the ‘securitisation’ of national politics. Gebresenbet and Tariku, in their
short-term view on the CoHA, underestimate this, and have not produced a helpful or
constructive paper. Apart from slighting other scholars, whom they only label and
make big claims about but whose work they do not refer to or discuss properly, their presentist ‘analysis’ makes us neither much wiser about the future of the CoHA and the contending parties nor about ‘the path to peace’ in Ethiopia.
Notes
1. Like the excellent piece by Fitz-Gerald and Segal (2023).
2. Already widely known since 2021: see www.worldmedias.net/horn-of-africa-tplfsympathizers-use-infiltrators-for-its-destabilizing-propaganda-action/. Examples are the
systematic TPLF statements on ‘food aid blockade’ and ‘man-made famine’ in Tigray
(disproved by the World Food Programme Ethiopia (see Omamo 2022); and the
‘Tigray genocide’ meme (disproved by UN-Equality and Human Rights Commission
research) and post-war reporting. See also Sheba and Pearce (2022). All this does not
mean that Tigray’s population did not gravely suffer in the war (like those of Afar and
Amhara regions).
3. And the federal government in 2020 seems to have other priorities, like building huge new
government palaces; compare Hochet-Bodin 2023. In fact, the economy is in dire straits: see
www.africaintelligence.com/eastern-africa-and-the-horn/2023/04/11/abiy-ahmed-s-loyalallies-tasked-with-keeping-the-money-coming,109933716-eve?cxt=PUB&utm_source=AIA
&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=AUTO_EDIT_SOM&did=1747468.
4. Still in March 2023, a faction of the TPLF led by top cadres/military leaders like Migbe Haile,
Getachew Aseffa, Abraha Tesfay and others was holding out and is in a state of armed vigilance (see https://twitter.com/jbirru/status/1635480052186873857). Other TPLF leaders,
some of them now in the ‘interim government’ in Tigray, prevaricate on the Pretoria
Agreement.
5. In this agreement between the ‘senior commanders’ of both the federal army and the TPLF
armed forces, it seemed that TPLF disarmament was conditioned on withdrawal of ‘nonENDF’ forces from the war areas – highly contested.
6. A new scandal erupted in June 2023, when it was revealed the massive quantities of humanitarian aid in Tigray were stolen or disappeared – allegedly under TPLF auspices. The
entire WFP leadership resigned (https://abren.org/ethiopia-wfp-controversy-leads-toresignations/). This continued a pattern of food aid theft and diversion by TPLF during
the 2020–2022 war (www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Elelx4QLHQ; www.youtube.com/
watch?v=n9SjilttgYk&t=3s).
7. For the complexity of the issue, see www.hornafricainsight.org/post/welkait-ethiopia-geostrategic-importance-and-the-consequential-annexation-by-tplf. See also the researchbased heavy indictments in Geta Asrade et al. (2022).
8. The CoHA in Art. 10.4 announces to resolve this ‘in accordance with the Constitution of the
Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia’ (see AU 2022), but that will not be smooth
because this TPLF-made and imposed constitution of 1994 (adopted three years after the
TPLF’s unilateral annexation of the Wolqait area) did not have majority support and is
in itself highly contested. A ‘constitutional solution’ without assessing the historical facts
and the interventionist TPLF policies of the last three to four decades (including demographic engineering) in this region will not bring stability.
9. ‘Exclusive: Ethiopians Suffer Horrific Burns in Suspected White Phosphorus Attacks’, in the
Daily Telegraph, 23 May 2021.
10. See https://twitter.com/Eyob_Belachew33/status/1569760736515088384. Examples of lies
could be multiplied. Countering them matters.
REVIEW OF AFRICAN POLITICAL ECONOMY
241
11. With the massive attack on sleeping, unarmed (non-Tigrayan) soldiers of the federal army
in camps in Tigray. See the shocking eyewitness-survivor account of Gashaye T’enaw
(2022).
12. Remarkable is, for instance, the start of a digital media campaign by pro-TPLF activists
entitled ‘Tigray genocide’ – on the first day of the conflict – even before the federal army
had counter-attacked (see Abren.org, https://abren.org/premeditated-tigray-genocidecyber-warfare-in-the-age-of-social-media/). The ‘genocide’ lie was perpetuated throughout
the conflict but was later demonstrated to be entirely false.
13. There were many more, doing great damage, but they are conveniently not mentioned by
Fana and Yonas.
14. For instance, www.ascleiden.nl/sites/default/files/j.abbink_working_paper_152_18-10https://www.e-ir.info/2021/11/21/the-ethiopia-conflict-in-international2021_final.pdf;
relations-and-global-media-discourse/); https://theglobalobservatory.org/2021/01/tigrayconflict-ethiopia-ramifications-international-response/); or https://canopyforum.org/2022/
10/26/has-religion-been-fueling-the-politics-of-conflict-in-ethiopia-a-cautionary-tale/.
15. According to data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED) project,
armed conflict overall has declined since November 2022 but has also shifted from the
Tigray area to Amhara and Oromia Regions: see https://epo.acleddata.com/2023/05/06/
epo-april-2023-monthly-volatility-in-amhara-region-while-the-rest-of-the-country-stabiliz
es/; https://epo.acleddata.com/2023/04/05/epo-march-2023-monthly-political-violence-tre
nds-decline-amid-opportunities-for-peace/; and https://epo.acleddata.com/2023/06/01/
epo-weekly-20-26-may-2023/. Since May 2023 the federal army has engaged in a onesided and politically ill-advised ‘disarmament’ campaign in the Amhara Region, which
has provoked massive popular resistance.
Disclosure statement
The author declares no conflict of interest.
Notes on contributor
Jon Abbink is a political anthropologist/historian and professor in political anthropology (focus on
politics and governance) of Africa at the African Studies Centre, Leiden University, the Netherlands. He has carried out research on the history, politics and cultures of Northeast Africa, in particular Ethiopia, and published regularly on these subjects in international journals and books. A
recent paper on Ethiopian history and history writing appeared in 2022 in Cahiers d’Études
Africaines.
ORCID
Jon Abbink
http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1383-7849
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