PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
Geography
Area: 1.1 million sq. km (472,000 sq. mi.);
about the size of Texas, Oklahoma, and New
Mexico combined.
Cities: Capital--Addis
Ababa (pop. 5 million). Other
cities--Dire Dawa (237,000), Nazret
(189,000), Gondar (163,000), Dessie (142,000),
Mekelle (141,000), Bahir Dar (140,000), Jimma
(132,000), Awassa (104,000).
Terrain: High plateau, mountains, dry lowland
plains.
Climate: Temperate in the highlands; hot in the
lowlands.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Ethiopian(s).
Population (2005): 77 million.
Annual growth rate: 2.7%.
Ethnic groups (est.): Oromo 40%, Amhara 25%,
Tigre 7%, Somali 6%, Sidama 9%, Gurage 2%,
Wolaita 4%, Afar 4%, other nationalities 3%.
Religions (est.): Ethiopian Orthodox Christian
40%, Sunni Muslim 45-50%, Protestant 5%,
remainder indigenous beliefs.
Languages: Amharic (official), Tigrinya, Arabic,
Guaragigna, Oromigna, English, Somali.
Education: Years
compulsory--none. Attendance (elementary)
57%. Literacy--43%.
Health: Infant
mortality rate--93/1,000 live births.
Work force: Agriculture--80%. Industry
and commerce--20%.
Government
Type: Federal Republic.
Constitution: Ratified 1994.
Branches: Executive--president,
Council of State, Council of Ministers.
Executive power resides with the prime minister. Legislative--bicameral
parliament. Judicial--divided
into Federal and Regional Courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 9 regions and 2
special city administrations: Addis Ababa and
Dire Dawa.
Political parties: Ethiopian People's
Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), the
Coalition for Unity and Democracy Party (CUDP),
the United Ethiopian Democratic Forces (UEDF),
Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement (OFDM), and
other small parties.
Suffrage: Universal starting at age 18.
Central government budget (2006 est.): $3.4
billion.
Defense: $348 million (5.6% of GDP FY 2003).
National holiday: May 28.
Economy
Real GDP (2006 est.): $13.3 billion.
Annual growth rate (2006 est.): 9.6%.
Per capita income (2006 est.): $130.
Average inflation rate (2006 est.): 13%.
Natural resources: Potash, salt, gold, copper,
platinum, natural gas (unexploited).
Agriculture (47% of GDP): Products--coffee,
cereals, pulses, oilseeds, khat, meat, hides and
skins. Cultivated
land--17%.
Industry (12% of GDP): Types--textiles,
processed foods, construction, cement, and
hydroelectric power.
Trade (2006 est.): Exports--$1.1
billion. Imports--$4.1
billion; plus remittances--official est. $400
million; unofficial est. $400 million.
Fiscal year: July 8-July 7.
View Larger Map
GEOGRAPHY
Ethiopia is located in the Horn of Africa and is
bordered on the north and northeast by Eritrea,
on the east by Djibouti and Somalia, on the
south by Kenya, and on the west and southwest by
Sudan. The country has a high central plateau
that varies from 1,800 to 3,000 meters (6,000
ft.-10,000 ft.) above sea level, with some
mountains reaching 4,620 meters (15,158 ft.).
Elevation is generally highest just before the
point of descent to the Great Rift Valley, which
splits the plateau diagonally. A number of
rivers cross the plateau--notably the Blue Nile
flowing from Lake Tana. The plateau gradually
slopes to the lowlands of the Sudan on the west
and the Somali-inhabited plains to the
southeast.
The climate is temperate on the plateau and hot
in the lowlands. At Addis Ababa, which ranges
from 2,200 to 2,600 meters (7,000 ft.-8,500
ft.), maximum temperature is 26o C
(80o F)
and minimum 4o C
(40o F).
The weather is usually sunny and dry with the
short (belg) rains occurring February-April and
the big (meher) rains beginning in mid-June and
ending in mid-September.
PEOPLE
Ethiopia's population is highly diverse. Most of
its people speak a Semitic or Cushitic language.
The Oromo, Amhara, and Tigreans make up more
than three-fourths of the population, but there
are more than 77 different ethnic groups with
their own distinct languages within Ethiopia.
Some of these have as few as 10,000 members. In
general, most of the Christians live in the
highlands, while Muslims and adherents of
traditional African religions tend to inhabit
lowland regions. English is the most widely
spoken foreign language and is taught in all
secondary schools. Amharic is the official
language and was the language of primary school
instruction but has been replaced in many areas
by local languages such as Oromifa and Tigrinya.
HISTORY
Ethiopia is credited with being the origin of
mankind. Bones discovered in eastern Ethiopia
date back 3.2 million years. Ethiopia is the
oldest independent country in Africa and one of
the oldest in the world. Herodotus, the Greek
historian of the fifth century B.C. describes
ancient Ethiopia in his writings. The Old
Testament of the Bible records the Queen of
Sheba's visit to Jerusalem. According to legend,
Menelik I, the son of King Solomon and the Queen
of Sheba, founded the Ethiopian Empire.
Missionaries from Egypt and Syria introduced
Christianity in the fourth century A.D.
Following the rise of Islam in the seventh
century, Ethiopia was gradually cut off from
European Christendom. The Portuguese established
contact with Ethiopia in 1493, primarily to
strengthen their influence over the Indian Ocean
and to convert Ethiopia to Roman Catholicism.
There followed a century of conflict between
pro- and anti-Catholic factions, resulting in
the expulsion of all foreign missionaries in the
1630s. This period of bitter religious conflict
contributed to hostility toward foreign
Christians and Europeans, which persisted into
the 20th century and was a factor in Ethiopia's
isolation until the mid-19th century.
Under the Emperors Theodore II (1855-68),
Johannes IV (1872-89), and Menelik II
(1889-1913), the kingdom was consolidated and
began to emerge from its medieval isolation.
When Menelik II died, his grandson, Lij Iyassu,
succeeded to the throne but soon lost support
because of his Muslim ties. The Christian
nobility deposed him in 1916, and Menelik's
daughter, Zewditu, was made empress. Her cousin,
Ras Tafari Makonnen (1892-1975), was made regent
and successor to the throne. In 1930, after the
empress died, the regent, adopting the throne
name Haile Selassie, was crowned emperor. His
reign was interrupted in 1936 when Italian
Fascist forces invaded and occupied Ethiopia.
The emperor was forced into exile in England
despite his plea to the League of Nations for
intervention. Five years later, British and
Ethiopian forces defeated the Italians, and the
emperor returned to the throne.
After a period of civil unrest, which began in
February 1974, the aging Haile Selassie I was
deposed on September 12, 1974, and a provisional
administrative council of soldiers, known as the
Derg ("committee") seized power from the emperor
and installed a government, which was socialist
in name and military in style. The Derg
summarily executed 59 members of the royal
family and ministers and generals of the
emperor's government; Emperor Haile Selassie was
strangled in the basement of his palace on
August 22, 1975.
Lt. Col. Mengistu Haile Mariam assumed power as
head of state and Derg chairman, after having
his two predecessors killed. Mengistu's years in
office were marked by a totalitarian-style
government and the country's massive
militarization, financed by the Soviet Union and
the Eastern Bloc, and assisted by Cuba. From
1977 through early 1978 thousands of suspected
enemies of the Derg were tortured and/or killed
in a purge called the "red terror." Communism
was officially adopted during the late 1970s and
early 1980s with the promulgation of a
Soviet-style constitution, Politburo, and the
creation of the Workers' Party of Ethiopia (WPE).
In December 1976, an Ethiopian delegation in
Moscow signed a military assistance agreement
with the Soviet Union. The following April,
Ethiopia abrogated its military assistance
agreement with the United States and expelled
the American military missions. In July 1977,
sensing the disarray in Ethiopia, Somalia
attacked across the Ogaden Desert in pursuit of
its irredentist claims to the ethnic Somali
areas of Ethiopia. Ethiopian forces were driven
back deep inside their own frontier but, with
the assistance of a massive Soviet airlift of
arms and Cuban combat forces, they stemmed the
attack. The major Somali regular units were
forced out of the Ogaden in March 1978. Twenty
years later, development in the Somali region of
Ethiopia lagged.
The Derg's collapse was hastened by droughts and
famine, as well as by insurrections,
particularly in the northern regions of Tigray
and Eritrea. In 1989, the Tigrayan People's
Liberation Front (TPLF) merged with other
ethnically based opposition movements to form
the Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic
Front (EPRDF). In May 1991, EPRDF forces
advanced on Addis Ababa. Mengistu fled the
country for asylum in Zimbabwe, where he still
resides.
In July 1991, the EPRDF, the Oromo Liberation
Front (OLF), and others established the
Transitional Government of Ethiopia (TGE) which
was comprised of an 87-member Council of
Representatives and guided by a national charter
that functioned as a transitional constitution.
In June 1992 the OLF withdrew from the
government; in March 1993, members of the
Southern Ethiopia Peoples' Democratic Coalition
left the government.
In May 1991, the Eritrean People's Liberation
Front (EPLF), led by Isaias Afwerki, assumed
control of Eritrea and established a provisional
government. This provisional government
independently administered Eritrea until April
23-25, 1993, when Eritreans voted overwhelmingly
for independence in a UN-monitored free and fair
referendum. Eritrea was with Ethiopia’s consent
declared independent on April 27, and the United
States recognized its independence on April 28,
1993.
In Ethiopia, President Meles Zenawi and members
of the TGE pledged to oversee the formation of a
multi-party democracy. The election for a
547-member constituent assembly was held in June
1994, and this assembly adopted the constitution
of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
in December 1994. The elections for Ethiopia's
first popularly chosen national parliament and
regional legislatures were held in May and June
1995. Most opposition parties chose to boycott
these elections, ensuring a landslide victory
for the EPRDF. International and
non-governmental observers concluded that
opposition parties would have been able to
participate had they chosen to do so. The
Government of the Federal Democratic Republic of
Ethiopia was installed in August 1995.
In May 1998, Eritrean forces attacked part of
the Ethiopia-Eritrea border region, seizing some
Ethiopian-controlled territory. The strike
spurred a two-year war between the neighboring
states that cost over 100,000 lives. Ethiopian
and Eritrean leaders signed an Agreement on
Cessation of Hostilities on June 18, 2000 and a
peace agreement, known as the Algiers Agreement,
on December 12, 2000. The agreements called for
an end to the hostilities, a 25-kilometer-wide
Temporary Security Zone along the
Ethiopia-Eritrea border, the establishment of a
United Nations peacekeeping force to monitor
compliance, and the establishment of the Eritrea
Ethiopia Boundary Commission (EEBC) to act as a
neutral body to assess colonial treaties and
applicable international law in order to render
final and binding border delimitation and
demarcation determinations. The United Nations
Mission to Eritrea and Ethiopia (UNMEE) was
established in September 2000. The EEBC
presented its border delimitation decision on
April 13, 2002. To date, neither Ethiopia nor
Eritrea has taken the steps necessary to
demarcate the border.
Opposition candidates won 12 seats in national
parliamentary elections in 2001. Ethiopia held
the most free and fair national campaign period
in the country’s history prior to May 15, 2005
elections. Unfortunately, electoral
irregularities and tense campaign rhetoric
resulted in a protracted election complaints
review process. Public protests turned violent
in June 2005. The National Electoral Board
released final results in September 2005, with
the opposition taking over 170 of the 547
parliamentary seats and 137 of the 138 seats for
the Addis Ababa municipal council. Opposition
parties called for a boycott of parliament and
civil disobedience to protest the election
results. In early November 2005, Ethiopian
security forces responded to public protests by
arresting scores of opposition leaders, as well
as journalists and human rights advocates, and
detaining tens of thousands of civilians in
rural detention camps for up to three months. In
December 2005, the government charged 131
opposition, media, and civil society leaders
with capital offenses including "outrages
against the constitution." Key opposition
leaders and almost all of the 131 were pardoned
and released from prison in the summer of 2007.
Approximately 150 of the elected opposition
members of parliament have taken their seats.
Ruling and opposition parties have engaged in
little dialogue since the opposition leaders
were freed. Government harassment and
intimidation prompted the major opposition
parties to withdraw from the April 2008
elections for local officials and 39 seats in
parliament. As a result, the ruling party won
over 95% of all the positions, including all but
one of the 138 seats of the Addis Ababa city
council (a complete reversal of the 2005
results).
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Ethiopia is a federal republic under
the 1994 constitution. The executive branch
includes a president, Council of State, and
Council of Ministers. Executive power resides
with the prime minister. There is a bicameral
parliament; national legislative elections were
held in 2005. The judicial branch comprises
federal and regional courts.
Political parties include the Ethiopian People's
Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), the
Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD), the
United Ethiopian Democratic Forces (UEDF), and
other small parties. Suffrage is universal at
age 18.
The EPRDF-led government of Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi has promoted a policy of ethnic
federalism, devolving significant powers to
regional, ethnically based authorities. Ethiopia
today has 9 semi-autonomous administrative
regions and two special city administrations
(Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa), which have the
power to raise their own revenues. Under the
present government, Ethiopians enjoy wider,
albeit circumscribed, political freedom than
ever before in Ethiopia’s history.
Principal Government Officials
President--Girma Wolde-Giorgis
Prime Minister--Meles Zenawi
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Rural
Development and Agriculture--Addisu Legesse
Minister of National Defense--Kuma Demeksa
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Seyoum Mesfin
Ethiopia maintains an embassy in
the U.S. at 3506 International Drive, NW,
Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-364-1200) headed
by Ambassador Samuel Assefa. It also maintains a
UN mission in New York and consulates in Los
Angeles, Seattle (honorary), and Houston
(honorary).
ECONOMY
The current government has embarked on a
cautious program of economic reform, including
privatization of state enterprises and
rationalization of government regulation. While
the process is still ongoing, so far the reforms
have attracted only meager foreign investment,
and the government remains heavily involved in
the economy.
The Ethiopian economy is based on agriculture,
which contributes 47% to GNP and more than 80%
of exports, and employs 85% of the population.
The major agricultural export crop is coffee,
providing 35% of Ethiopia's foreign exchange
earnings, down from 65% a decade ago because of
the slump in coffee prices since the mid-1990s.
Other traditional major agricultural exports are
hides and skins, pulses, oilseeds, and the
traditional "khat," a leafy shrub that has
psychotropic qualities when chewed. Sugar and
gold production has also become important in
recent years.
Ethiopia's agriculture is plagued by periodic
drought, soil degradation caused by
inappropriate agricultural practices and
overgrazing, deforestation, high population
density, undeveloped water resources, and poor
transport infrastructure, making it difficult
and expensive to get goods to market. Yet
agriculture is the country's most promising
resource. Potential exists for self-sufficiency
in grains and for export development in
livestock, flowers, grains, oilseeds, sugar,
vegetables, and fruits.
Gold, marble, limestone, and small amounts of
tantalum are mined in Ethiopia. Other resources
with potential for commercial development
include large potash deposits, natural gas, iron
ore, and possibly oil and geothermal energy.
Although Ethiopia has good hydroelectric
resources, which power most of its manufacturing
sector, it is totally dependent on imports for
its oil. A landlocked country, Ethiopia has
relied on the port of Djibouti since the
1998-2000 border war with Eritrea. Ethiopia is
connected with the port of Djibouti by road and
rail for international trade. Of the 23,812
kilometers of all-weather roads in Ethiopia, 15%
are asphalt. Mountainous terrain and the lack of
good roads and sufficient vehicles make land
transportation difficult and expensive. However,
the government-owned airline’s reputation is
excellent. Ethiopian Airlines serves 38 domestic
airfields and has 42 international destinations.
Dependent on a few vulnerable crops for its
foreign exchange earnings and reliant on
imported oil, Ethiopia lacks sufficient foreign
exchange earnings. The financially conservative
government has taken measures to solve this
problem, including stringent import controls and
sharply reduced subsidies on retail gasoline
prices. Nevertheless, the largely subsistence
economy is incapable of meeting the budget
requirements for drought relief, an ambitious
development plan, and indispensable imports such
as oil. The gap has largely been covered through
foreign assistance inflows.
DEFENSE
The Ethiopian National Defense Forces (ENDF)
numbers about 200,000 personnel, which makes it
one of the largest militaries in Africa. During
the 1998-2000 border war with Eritrea, the ENDF
mobilized strength reached approximately
350,000. Since the end of the war, some 150,000
soldiers have been demobilized. The ENDF
continues a transition from its roots as a
guerrilla army to an all-volunteer professional
military organization with the aid of the U.S.
and other countries. Training in peacekeeping
operations, professional military education,
military training management, counter-terrorism
operations, and military medicine are among the
major programs sponsored by the United States.
Ethiopia now has one peacekeeping contingent in
Liberia.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Ethiopia was relatively isolated from major
movements of world politics until Italian
invasions in 1895 and 1935. Since World War II,
it has played an active role in world and
African affairs. Ethiopia was a charter member
of the United Nations and took part in UN
operations in Korea in 1951 and the Congo in
1960. Former Emperor Haile Selassie was a
founder of the Organization of African Unity (OAU),
now known as the African Union (AU). Addis Ababa
also hosts the UN Economic Commission for
Africa. Ethiopia is also a member of the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development, a
Horn of Africa regional grouping.
Although nominally a member of the Non-Aligned
Movement, after the 1974 revolution, Ethiopia
moved into a close relationship with the Soviet
Union and its allies and supported their
international policies and positions until the
change of government in 1991. Today, Ethiopia
has very good relations with the United States
and the West, especially in responding to
regional instability and supporting war on
terrorism and, increasingly, through economic
involvement.
Ethiopia's relations with Eritrea remained tense
and unresolved. Following a brutal 1998-2000
border war in which tens of thousands died on
both sides, the two countries signed a peace
agreement in December 2000. A five-member
independent international commission--the
Eritrea Ethiopia Boundary Commission (EEBC)--issued
a decision in April 2002 delimiting the border.
In November 2007 the EEBC issued a decision that
the border was demarcated based on map
coordinates (usual demarcation based on pillars
on the ground had not yet occurred due to
disagreement between Ethiopia and Eritrea) and
disbanded. Ethiopia does not consider the border
to be demarcated, though Eritrea does. In March
2008 the United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and
Eritrea (UNMEE) peacekeeping mission began
withdrawing from Eritrea because Eritrea refused
to allow UNMEE to secure fuel supplies for its
operations. Both countries have stationed
approximately 100,000 troops along the border,
which has become more dangerous due to the
pending departure of UNMEE. Both countries
insist they will not instigate fighting, but
both also remain prepared for any eventuality.
Regarding its neighbor Somalia, the weakness of
the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and
factional fighting in Somalia contributes to
tensions along the boundaries of the two
countries. Ethiopia has recently entered into a
loose tripartite (nonmilitary) cooperation with
Sudan and Yemen.
The irredentist claims of the
extremist-controlled Council of Islamic Courts (CIC)
in Somalia in 2006 posed a legitimate security
threat to Ethiopia and to the TFG of Somalia. In
December 2006, the TFG requested the assistance
of the Ethiopian military to respond to the
CIC's aggression. Within a few weeks, the joint
Ethiopian-TFG forces routed the CIC from
Somalia. Since then Ethiopia has stationed
troops in Somalia (largely around Mogadishu),
awaiting full deployment of the African Union's
Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). Uganda and Burundi
together have sent some 2,400 peacekeepers to
Somalia--roughly one-third of AMISOM's planned
deployment of 8,000 soldiers.
U.S.-ETHIOPIA RELATIONS
U.S.-Ethiopian relations were established in
1903 and were good throughout the period prior
to the Italian occupation in 1935. After World
War II, these ties strengthened on the basis of
a September 1951 treaty of amity and economic
relations. In 1953, two agreements were signed:
a mutual defense assistance agreement, under
which the United States agreed to furnish
military equipment and training, and an accord
regularizing the operations of a U.S.
communication facility at Asmara. Through fiscal
year 1978, the United States provided Ethiopia
with $282 million in military assistance and
$366 million in economic assistance in
agriculture, education, public health, and
transportation. A Peace Corps program emphasized
education, and U.S. Information Service
educational and cultural exchanges were
numerous.
After Ethiopia's revolution, the bilateral
relationship began to cool due to the Derg's
linking with international communism and U.S.
revulsion at the Derg's human rights abuses. The
United States rebuffed Ethiopia's request for
increased military assistance to intensify its
fight against the Eritrean secessionist movement
and to repel the Somali invasion. The
International Security and Development Act of
1985 prohibited all U.S. economic assistance to
Ethiopia with the exception of humanitarian
disaster and emergency relief. In July 1980, the
U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia was recalled at the
request of the Ethiopian Government, and the
U.S. Embassy in Ethiopia and the Ethiopian
Embassy in the United States were headed by
Charges d'Affaires.
With the downfall of the Mengistu regime,
U.S.-Ethiopian relations improved dramatically.
Legislative restrictions on assistance to
Ethiopia other than humanitarian assistance were
lifted. Diplomatic relations were upgraded to
the ambassadorial level in 1992. Total U.S.
Government assistance, including food aid,
between 1991 and 2003 was $2.3 billion. The U.S.
Government provided $474 million in assistance
in FY 2007, $264 million of it for combating
HIV/AIDS.
Today, Ethiopia is a strategic partner of the
United States in the Global War on Terrorism. U.S.
development assistance to
Ethiopia is focused on reducing famine
vulnerability, hunger, and poverty and
emphasizes economic, governance, and social
sector policy reforms. Some military training
funds, including training in such issues as the
laws of war and observance of human rights, also
are provided.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Donald
Y. Yamamoto
Deputy Chief of Mission--Deborah Malac
Chiefs of Sections
Management--Kay Crawford
Consular--Paul Cantrell
Political/Economic--Michael Gonzales
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)--Glenn
Anders
Defense Attaché Officer--Col. Brad Anderson
Public Affairs--Michael McClellan
The address and telephone/fax numbers for the U.S.
Embassy in
Ethiopia are P.O. Box 1014, Entoto Street, Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia (tel: 251/11/517-40-00; fax:
251/11/517-40-01). The U.S. Embassy's Washington
address is: 2030 Addis Ababa Place, Washington,
DC, 20521-2030. Embassy website: http://ethiopia.usembassy.gov/.