Ethiopia’s ruling Prosperity Party has secured a landslide victory in parliamentary elections, a result widely expected but denounced by opposition groups as neither free nor fair. The vote, held under a state of emergency in several regions, has intensified fears that the fragile peace following the two-year Tigray war may be unravelling as political repression deepens.
The National Electoral Board of Ethiopia reported that the Prosperity Party won over 90 per cent of contested seats, though turnout figures were suppressed in areas where security forces clashed with protesters. International observers were restricted from monitoring in Amhara and Oromia, where anti-government sentiment runs high. The United States and European Union have expressed concern over reports of voter intimidation and arrests of opposition candidates.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who came to power in 2018 on a reformist agenda, has pivoted sharply towards authoritarian rule. His government has jailed prominent opposition figures and journalists, and the military has been accused of extrajudicial killings in Amhara, where a regional militia continues to resist federal integration. The election result hands the Prosperity Party near-absolute control of parliament, enabling constitutional changes without meaningful debate.
For a country still reeling from the Tigray conflict which killed an estimated 600,000 people, the electoral crackdown signals that national reconciliation has been abandoned. The Ethiopian Human Rights Commission has documented forced disappearances of opposition activists. In Oromia, the Oromo Liberation Army continues its insurgency, while the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, though weakened, remains a political force.
The international community faces a dilemma: continued engagement risks legitimising a flawed process, but disengagement could embolden further violence. The African Union has yet to comment on the election irregularities. Meanwhile, drought and economic collapse are compounding the crisis: inflation is above 30 per cent and foreign reserves are critically low.
Physically, the climate in the Horn of Africa is shifting. The long rains have failed for four consecutive seasons, and the next harvest is uncertain. In pastoralist regions, food insecurity is acute. The government’s response has been inadequate, focusing military resources on internal suppression rather than disaster relief.
From a scientific perspective, the intersection of political instability and environmental stress creates a feedback loop. When states fracture, adaptive capacity erodes. Data from the Famine Early Warning Systems Network indicates that the number of Ethiopians facing catastrophic hunger has doubled in the past year. The coming months will test whether the international community can separate humanitarian aid from political endorsement.
The ruling party frames its victory as a mandate for development. But without legitimate checks on executive power, the prospects for peace are dim. Ethiopia’s ethnic federal structure, once a compromise, now fuels centrifugal forces. The election result may be a catalyst not for unity but for the next phase of conflict.
As a climate scientist, I see the parallels with other states where resource scarcity and governance failures compound. The physical reality is that a warming world multiplies the stresses on fragile institutions. Ethiopia is a bellwether. The data show that when diplomacy fails, the human cost is measurable in crop failures, displacement and mortality. We are watching a country on the precipice, and the signal is urgent.