In a bold, almost theatrical display of democratic aspiration, Ethiopia has flung open its polling stations, inviting its citizens to participate in the grand ritual of self-governance. But hold your applause, dear reader, for the stage manager has locked the dressing rooms, misplaced the voting rolls, and perhaps buried the ballot boxes under a small mountain of bureaucratic ennui. Millions, it seems, have been disenfranchised in what can only be described as a spectacular own goal in the world's most fragile political theatre.
One might think that an election is a simple affair: people queue, mark a paper, and democracy happens. But in Ethiopia, the process has been elevated to an art form, like a fever dream where the paint has been replaced by ink the colour of blood, and the canvas is a nation on the brink. The government, in its infinite wisdom, has managed to exclude entire regions, ethnic groups, and anyone who didn't receive the memo that democracy is a team sport, not a game of musical chairs.
The irony is thick enough to spread on toast. A country that has spent decades fighting for stability and self-determination now finds itself in the absurd position of holding an election that, by many accounts, isn't really an election at all. It's a charade, a puppet show where the puppeteers have forgotten their lines and the audience is trapped in a locked auditorium.
Let us not forget the backdrop: a war in Tigray that has left thousands dead and millions displaced. A region where the very idea of a ballot might be as laughable as a gin and tonic in a dry county. Yet, the show must go on, because nothing says 'we are a democracy' quite like holding an election while the country burns and the people queuing for votes are told they're not on the list.
I spoke to a man in Addis Ababa who summed up the situation with a weary sigh. 'We have a choice,' he said, 'the candidate we don't like, the candidate we hate, and the candidate we've never heard of, but he's wearing a nice suit.' This is democracy's greatest illusion: that choice is freedom. But when millions are disenfranchised, the choice becomes just another empty promise, a hollow echo in a chamber of political noise.
The international community, of course, will wring its collective hands, issue statements of concern, and then get back to the serious business of geopolitical tea-sipping. Because that's the beauty of our global order: we can all agree that democracy is a farce, as long as it's someone else's democracy failing.
In the end, Ethiopia's election is a mirror to our own political absurdities. Every disenfranchised voter is a reminder that the system is rigged, the game is fixed, and the only true democracy is the one we create for ourselves in the bottom of a gin glass. So raise a toast, readers, to the great democratic tradition of hope and disappointment. And remember: in the theatre of the absurd, the audience is always the one being played.








