Africa: Ethiopia’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning leader in SA to strengthen relations and engage with Ethiopia’s diaspora By Peter Fabricius
Ethiopia’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is in electioneering mode on his official visit to South Africa this weekend – the first by an Ethiopian prime minister since South Africa became a democracy in 1994.
He added that Mandela relinquishing the South African presidency after one term in office was “so rare” in Africa that it served as an example to the current crop of the continent’s leaders. Ethiopia’s ambassador to South Africa, Shiferaw Menbacho told journalists on Friday, 10 January that the main purpose of Abiy’s visit was to cement a strategic partnership between the two countries, according to the. Menbacho said Ethiopia and South Africa wanted to send a message to Africa that it must invest in peace-building.
The Ethiopian embassy has hired Johannesburg’s Wanders Stadium – which can accommodate 34,000 people – for Abiy’s “private” meeting with his compatriots on 12 January, so the embassy is clearly expecting a big crowd to meet the charismatic leader. Pretoria does not know the size of the Ethiopian community in South Africa – “because so many of them are undocumented” – but believes it recently jumped to the third largest diaspora in the world after Germany and the US.
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