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The Long Taxi to Take‑Off: Ethiopia’s Reform Agenda Meets American Caution

The spectacle unfolded with predictable diplomatic grace. Ahmed Shide, flanked by technocrats bearing reform credentials, presented Ethiopia’s latest infrastructural dream to Christopher Landau: a New International Airport that would, we are told, cement our nation’s place as the aviation crossroads of Africa. The pitch was delivered with the earnest confidence of a government that believes it has finally learned to speak the language of international finance. One wonders whether Washington was listening or merely being polite

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When the Sanctuary Empties Quietly: Ethiopia’s Orthodox Church and the Human Rights Crisis No One Wants to Name

Much has been written about violence, persecution, and instability in the country, and rightly so. Blood has been spilled, churches attacked, civilians displaced. But violence, for all its horror, is rarely the final stage. It is usually the blunt instrument that accompanies something more methodical: the slow dismantling of institutions that once stood between power and the individual. In Ethiopia, the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, one of the world’s oldest continuous Christian institutions, is beginning to look less like a protected faith community and more like a structure being patiently taken apart, beam by beam.

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Trump’s Nile Gambit Exposes Abiy’s Isolation as Egypt Tightens Regional Noose

Egypt’s strategy of regional isolation, whilst strategically sound, may actually deepen this dynamic by reinforcing Abiy’s siege mentality and conviction that compromise represents surrender. The encirclement with Somalia and Eritrea creates multiple pressure points but also eliminates potential diplomatic off-ramps by making any Ethiopian concession appear as capitulation to coordinated external coercion.

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