Ethiopian strongman and Western ally, Meles, dies

ADDIS ABABA,  (Reuters) – Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, regarded by the West as a bulwark against Islamic militancy, died while being treated abroad for an undisclosed illness, the government said today.

Speculation that Meles, 57, an ally of Washington who twice sent troops into neighbouring Somalia to help crush rebellions, was seriously ill had grown after he failed to attend an African Union summit in Addis Ababa last month.

“After attending medical services abroad, the prime minister passed away around midnight. It’s time for his remains to come back in Ethiopia,” government spokesman and Meles’ right-hand-man, Bereket Simon, told reporters in the capital.

He said Meles had been recuperating well before being suddenly rushed to intensive care but did not say where he was being treated, highlighting the secretive tendencies of the tightly-controlled state.

Meles seized power in 1991 from Mengistu Haile Mariam’s military junta and went on to become a towering political figure on the continent. He was considered a leader the West could count on in its fight against al Qaeda-linked groups.

He was also widely credited for steering one of the world’s poorest countries to sustained high economic growth but he cracked down hard on dissent and his image abroad was tainted after he jailed opposition leaders following the disputed 2005 election.

State media said Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn would be sworn in as acting prime minister by parliament. National television 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.

Some opposition media have said he died in July.

LARGER-THAN-LIFE STATESMAN

Bereket, who declared a time of national mourning until Meles’ body was returned, was quick to assure citizens of Africa’s second most populous the country was stable and would continue on the path charted by Meles.

The ruling party will meet to select a permanent successor, although a date has not yet been set.

“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,” David Shinn, former U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia, told Reuters 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 arch-foe with whom it fought a decade-long border war.

Meles presided over a seven-year run of double digit economic growth, advocating a mix of heavy state spending and private investment.

He was widely applauded for ploughing money into infrastructure but criticised by some for selling off swathes of land to foreigners. Many Ethiopians complain that while he has forged closer business ties with China, that did not translate into more jobs for Ethiopians.

“While life remains a struggle for many Ethiopians, millions of others have been lifted out of abject misery in just a generation,” Africa expert, J. Peter Pham of the Atlantic Council think-tank, said.

“Anyone who has visited the country more than once notes the transformation taking place constantly as infrastructure is built out and will remark on the dynamism of the people.”