Related Posts

The Election of the Wheat Sheaf
By OT Editorial Posted onAs Ethiopia approaches the 2026 election, questions increasingly shift from who will win to whether meaningful electoral conditions exist at all. With large territories remaining outside normal voting conditions, state machinery openly intertwined with campaigning, and outcomes widely presumed in advance, the election raises deeper questions about democratic legitimacy and political ritual. In what some critics describe as the modern election of the wheat sheaf, the central issue is no longer competition among alternatives, but whether the process serves genuine choice, predetermined confirmation, or merely the optics of electoral continuity.

When Diplomatic Language Meets Contested Histories: A Gentle Note to the UN Secretary-General
By OT Editorial Posted onUN Secretary-General António Guterres’ recent remarks in Finfinnee (Addis Ababa) praising Ethiopia as an “old civilization” and celebrating its preserved independence were welcomed by many. Yet for historically marginalized nations and nationalities within Ethiopia, such diplomatic language may unintentionally reinforce contested state narratives. This article offers a respectful reflection on historical plurality, collective memory, and the responsibility of international institutions when speaking about complex multinational states.

W. Hundee Hurrisoo (1944–2026)
By OROMIA TODAY Posted onThe Oromo people have lost another elder. With the passing of W. Hundee Hurrisoo on 14 May 2026, we bid farewell to a man whose life journey mirrored many chapters of modern Oromo history itself: shepherd boy, teacher, student activist, journalist, prisoner of conscience, political leader, exile, mediator, author, and elder. He belonged to that...

Regression Preference Syndrome: Debunking the Regressive Tendency in Ethiopian Politics
By Roobaa Hawaas (MA, Psychology) Posted onRegression Preference Syndrome is proposed as a political-psychological framework explaining Ethiopia's recurring tendency to favor historical rollback over incremental democratic progress. Using contemporary examples from autocratic rule, internal wars, unresolved national questions, maritime access discourse, and hard-power politics, the article argues that regression often appears psychologically easier than reform. It calls for Ethiopia to reject destructive coercive approaches, embrace soft power and negotiated settlements, and pursue gradual democratic progress instead of disruptive retrogressive steps that risk repeating historical cycles.

What Does the Demand “Remove Article 39” Really Mean?
By OT Editorial Posted onArticle 39 of the Ethiopian Constitution is often portrayed as a threat to national unity, but its deeper purpose is widely misunderstood. Far from encouraging separation, Article 39 functions as a constitutional safety valve that guarantees coexistence by consent rather than coercion. This article explores why the demand to remove Article 39 alarms many nations and peoples, the political psychology behind self-determination, and how abolishing constitutional guarantees could unintentionally weaken the very unity its opponents claim to defend.
In Memory of a Dear Friend, Obbo Zegeye Asfaw Abdii
By M. Mossissa Posted onIt is heartbreaking to hear of the unexpected and sudden death of Obbo Zegeye Asfaw Abdi. Losing such an elder brother and friend, whose advice was always invaluable, is difficult to bear. Before I personally met him in 1976, I had already heard about his role as a key leading figure whose name resonated far...






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