In a twist that has unsettled observers and ordinary Ethiopians alike, voting in the country’s general election has been suspended across scores of constituencies, citing a security crisis that has seen ballot boxes seized and electoral staff threatened. The news broke this morning as the UK Foreign Office issued an uncharacteristically sharp statement, urging “all parties to recommit to democratic stability” while privately fearing the worst.
For those of us watching the intricate dance of power in the Horn of Africa, this suspension feels less like a procedural hiccup and more like a tremor before a quake. The Ethiopian Election Board, in a strained press conference, confirmed that voting in at least 40% of polling stations had been postponed indefinitely, with security forces unable to guarantee safe passage in regions like Oromia and Amhara.
The human cost is immediate. On the streets of Addis Ababa, I spoke with a fruit seller named Lemma who had queued for hours only to be turned away. “They told us the voting was finished, but the box was empty,” he said, his hands still dusted with flour from his nearby stall. “How can we trust this? How can we go home and tell our children their future is safe?” It is this erosion of trust, not the logistical failures, that will leave the deepest scar.
The cultural shift is palpable. In a nation where elections have long been fraught with ethnic tensions, the suspension has sharpened the fault lines. Tigrayan taxi drivers in the capital now refuse to cross certain neighbourhoods. Amhara shopkeepers have pulled down their metal shutters early. The democratic experiment, so celebrated after the 2018 reforms, now feels like a luxury few can afford.
Class dynamics are also at play. Wealthy elites, with access to satellite phones and foreign contacts, are already making contingency plans. But for the millions of subsistence farmers and urban poor, the suspension is not an abstract political crisis: it is a lost day of wages, a postponed hope for representation, a deepening of the chasm between ruler and ruled.
UK ministers, careful not to criticise directly, have nonetheless made their anxiety clear. “The path to peace runs through the ballot box,” said a Foreign Office spokesperson, but the path is now blocked. What remains is a fragile truce between armed factions and a population that has been promised so much and delivered so little.
As a columnist, I have often written about the theatre of politics: the staged handshakes, the hollow speeches. But this is no theatre. This is a nation holding its breath, waiting to see whether the suspension becomes a lifeline or a death knell. The British government’s call for restraint is wise, but it may already be too late. The question now is not when voting will resume, but whether the social fabric can survive the delay.









