During a high-level meeting at Ethiopiaโs foreign ministry in July, officials were shocked by social media reports that their prime minister was visiting Eritrea.
No one in the room had been informed of Abiy Ahmedโs trip, his second since clinching a peace deal last year that ended two decades of hostility between the two neighbours.
โThe foreign office was not in the loop,โ said a senior official who was present. โWe learned of it from the Eritrean media, on Facebook and Twitter.โ
The surprise visit is typical of Abiy, who both fans and critics say often relies on bold personal initiatives and charisma to drive change instead of working through government institutions.
Nebiat Getachew, the foreign ministry spokesman, said policy was well co-ordinated but he did not confirm that Abiy had made the July trip without informing the ministry.
The deal with Eritrea won Abiy international plaudits. He is the bookmakersโ favourite to win a Nobel Peace Prize on Friday after climate activist Greta Thunberg.
But Abiyโs unpredictable style annoys some Ethiopians.
It is unclear how much of the fractious ruling coalition โ some form of which has been in power since 1991 โ backs his reforms, or how durable those reforms would be without his leadership. He has already survived one assassination attempt: a grenade thrown at a rally last year.
Lasting change cannot be built through a โcult of personalityโ, said Comfort Ero, Africa programme director at the International Crisis Group think tank.
โNone of Abiyโs promised transformational reforms are going to have any solid foundations unless he works through the institutions,โ she said.
Ethiopia has been among Africaโs fastest growing economies for more than a decade. But uncertainty over Abiyโs ability to carry out all his reforms worries both citizens and the foreign investors he has been courting to develop the countryโs antiquated telecoms and banking sectors.
PERSONAL STYLE OR CANNY STRATEGY?
Some observers say Abiy, a former military officer specialising in cyber intelligence, will sometimes bypass ministries because his reforms must maintain their breakneck momentum or become mired in bureaucracy.
Those reforms – including unbanning political parties, releasing imprisoned journalists and prosecuting officials accused of torture – have drawn ecstatic crowds at rallies.
โAbiy seems to have relied on his charismatic rule,โ said Dereje Feyissa, a professor at Addis Ababa University. โThe question is whether this is sustainable. Euphoria is subsiding.โ
Other observers say Abiyโs rapid changes are a deliberate attempt to wrong-foot opponents from the previous administration, which was dominated by Tigrayans, a small but powerful ethnic group.
Abiy, 43, is from the Oromo group, the nationโs largest, which spearheaded the protests that forced his predecessor to resign. Since taking office in April 2018, Abiyโs government has arrested or fired many senior officials – mainly Tigrayans – for corruption or rights abuses.
โIn the first six or seven months, he undercut the institutions … The institutions were either not working or working against his agenda,โ said Jawar Mohammed, an Oromo activist and informal adviser to the prime minister.
โI donโt think he could have travelled this far without doing that.โ
FOREIGN POLICY
One of Abiyโs biggest victories was the peace deal, signed in July last year, which ended a nearly 20-year military stalemate with Eritrea following their 1998-2000 border war.
Asle Sveen, a historian who has written several books about the Nobel Peace Prize, told Reuters the deal made Abiy exactly the kind of candidate Alfred Nobel had envisaged for the prize.
โThe peace deal has ended a long conflict with Eritrea, and he is very popular for having done this, and he is doing democratic reforms internally,โ Sveen said.
But some benefits of the peace were short-lived. Land borders opened in July but closed in December with no official explanation.
Will Davison, an Ethiopia analyst at Crisis Group, said that might be because Eritreaโs president had hoped Abiy would crack down harder on the old Tigray-dominated administration, which had fought the war and refused to accept international arbitration over their disputed border.
Nebiat, the foreign ministry spokesman, said Eritrea and Ethiopia had restored diplomatic relations, air links and phone connections. โOther engagements are well underway to further institutionalize relations,โ he said.
PERSONAL INITIATIVES
Abiyโs diplomatic forays – like his surprise trip – tend to be bold personal initiatives, analysts and diplomats said.
The foreign ministry has been โcompletely sidelined,โ said the senior ministry official, adding that โour interests abroad may be jeopardizedโ.
He said Abiy had engaged with Eritrea, Somalia and wealthy Gulf states on major policy issues without building consensus within his government.
Nebiat disputed that.
โThere is always a well coordinated foreign policy and diplomacy implementation within the Ethiopian government,โ he said. โAny other claims are simply baseless.โ
Some nations are pleased by Abiyโs personal touch.
After Sudanese police killed more than 100 protesters in June, Abiy flew to Khartoum to convince Sudanโs new military rulers and the opposition to restart talks, and persuaded Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to back his mediation. The talks led to a power-sharing accord in August.
โAbiy played a key role,โ said Amjad Farid, a senior representative of the civilian group that led talks with the military.
REFORMS AT HOME
Abiy has pushed through reforms at home and abroad. His public renunciation of past abuses drew a line between his administration and that of his predecessor.
He appointed former dissidents to senior roles. Daniel Bekele, a former political prisoner and Africa director at New York-based Human Rights Watch, now heads the governmentโs human rights commission. Birtukan Mideksa, who founded an opposition party and was jailed after a disputed 2005 election, now heads the electoral commission.
But ethnically tinged violence flares frequently, and systemic attempts to address past injustices have been slow. A reconciliation commission set up in December has an unclear mandate, lacks expertise and has only met twice, said Laetitia Bader, an Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch.
โThe jury is still out on whether the move will be more than mere window dressing,โ Bader said.