Africa

MEDIATION

Ethiopian peace talks in SA will continue into Monday

Ethiopian peace talks in SA will continue into Monday
Members of the Tigrayan Community in South Africa gather outside the United States embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, 12 October 2022 calling for the end to their claimed genocide of the Tigray communities in Ethiopia. (Photo: EPA-EFE / Kim Ludbrook)

The organisers have been maintaining almost complete radio silence about the talks, making it very difficult to assess progress.

The  Ethiopian peace talks in South Africa — which had been widely expected to end on Sunday — will continue into Monday, sources said.  

“They’re not going to conclude tonight,” one observer said on Sunday evening. An official familiar with the arrangements confirmed this. 

It was not clear how well the discussions between the warring parties, the Ethiopian federal government and the Tigray government were progressing. 

“Only time will tell,” an official close to the negotiations replied when asked if the talks had made any progress. Another source said the two sides “might agree to a sort of ‘light’ cessation of hostilities or ‘days of tranquillity’. However, just rumours, and impossible to verify.” 

The organisers have been maintaining almost complete radio silence about the talks, making it very difficult to assess progress.

The substantive talks began in Pretoria on Wednesday after an opening ceremony on Tuesday. The mediation team is led by African Union special envoy Olusegun Obasanjo. The former Nigerian president is supported by former Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta and former South African deputy president Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka.


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The mediators of the talks had expressed the hope at the start that the two opposing sides could at least agree to a cessation of hostilities at this first round of formal talks. With the fighting frozen, they could then, either now or at a later second round of talks, begin to discuss the terms of a more formal ceasefire and then discuss the myriad of other issues between them.

These include the virtual siege that the federal government has placed on the province of Tigray and Tigrayan demands for the withdrawal of forces of neighbouring Eritrea which have been fighting against them,  alongside the Ethiopian federal troops. 

Further down the road, the two sides seem likely to have to discuss the entire constitutional framework of the state. It was Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s decision in 2018 to begin centralising power and dismantling the ethno-regional structure of Ethiopia, which prompted his fallout with the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). The TPLF — along with other parties representing Ethiopia’s ethnic regions — had been a major component of the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front which had governed the federal state since 1991. DM

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