The Ethiopian electoral commission suspended voting in dozens of polling stations today after security forces clashed with armed groups in the Amhara region, raising fears that civil unrest and a drought-driven food crisis could spiral into a catastrophe. The decision follows reports of gunfire in Bahir Dar and other towns, where officials halted the process indefinitely. The UK government, through its Foreign Office, issued a stark warning: the Horn of Africa is on the brink of a humanitarian emergency.
With seven million people already in need of food aid and the election chaos disrupting supply routes, the cost of staple grains is expected to soar. This is a crisis that hits the kitchen table: families already spending 70% of income on food face even deeper cuts. The Ethiopian government blames 'enemies of peace' for the violence, but observers point to long-simmering ethnic tensions and a flawed voter registration process.
For the working people of the region, this means another day of uncertainty, another queue for water, another skipped meal. The UK's International Development Secretary said today that unless a ceasefire holds and aid corridors reopen, we will see deaths on a scale not seen since the 1980s famine. The 'Real Economy' of the Horn of Africa is one where a bag of teff flour costs more than a day's wage.
Strikes and protests in Addis Ababa last week already forced the government to back down on a fuel tax hike. Now, with the election suspended, the immediate fear is not of a disputed result but of empty shelves and broken bodies.







