Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who led the Horn of Africa country for more than two decades, died of an infection while being treated abroad for an undisclosed illness, state-run TV said yesterday.
Speculation that Meles, 57, was seriously ill grew after he failed to attend an African Union summit in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, last month.
“Prime Minister Zenawi suddenly passed away last night. Meles was recovering in a hospital overseas for the past two months, but died of a sudden infection at 11:40 [on Monday night],” state TV said.
Photo: AFP
Meles seized power in 1991 from former Ethiopian leader Mengistu Haile Mariam’s military junta. As president and then prime minister, he turned Ethiopia into a key player in regional security affairs.
His forces, widely regarded as among the strongest on the continent, have entered Somalia twice to battle Islamist militants, winning him accolades from the West for supporting its fight against al-Qaeda-linked groups.
State media said Ethiopian Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn would be the acting prime minister. TV broadcast footage of Meles against a backdrop of solemn, instrumental music.
Ethiopia’s government said last month that Meles was taking a break to recover from an unspecified condition. Diplomats in Addis Ababa had said Meles was being treated in Brussels for an undisclosed illness, while others said he was in Germany.
During his time in office, Meles was credited with steering Ethiopia toward economic growth and also helped mediate in several regional disputes, including rifts between Sudan and South Sudan.
“I believe that any successor to Meles will focus first on domestic issues and for the most part leave the regional and international engagement to other countries, at least until the new leader is firmly established in office,” former US ambassador to Ethiopia David Shinn said recently.
“For internal security reasons, there will be a continuing focus on Somalia and I do not foresee any significant change towards Eritrea,” he said, referring to Ethiopia’s archfoe, with whom it fought a decade-long border war.
However, Ethiopia would be less willing to devote a lot of time and resources to problems further afield, Shinn said.
International rights groups say Meles was intolerant of dissent. Several opposition figures and journalists have been arrested under a 2009 anti-terrorism law. State TV said details of his funeral would be announced soon, the Horn of Africa country’s first state burial in modern times.
Emperor Haile Selassie was laid to rest in 2000, 26 years after he was deposed. His body was found decades later beneath a palace lavatory in what forensic experts said were signs he had been murdered.
Mengistu lives in exile in Zimbabwe.
Born on May 8, 1955, Meles abandoned his medical studies before he turned 20 to join the rebel Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) to fight Mengistu.
After taking over the TPLF’s leadership he forged a broader coalition with other regional movements to make up the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), now the country’s ruling party.
With US backing, the rebellion toppled Mengistu’s bloody dictatorship in 1991, a year after Meles abandoned Marxism.
The diminutive Meles, with his characteristic goatee and arched eyebrows, was one of the most recognizable figures on the African scene.
In the final decade of his life, Meles challenged the world’s powerful and spearheaded an African push for more fairness in key climate change talks.
While he was regularly singled out by rights groups as one of the continent’s worst human rights predators, some Western observers took the pragmatic view that Ethiopia and the region needed Meles where he was.
Former US president Bill Clinton once called him a “renaissance leader,” while a leaked 2009 US diplomatic cable described him as “quiet, deliberative and certainly not a ‘man about town,’” adding he was a “voracious reader and very introspective.”
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