Malta’s scandal-hit PM calls snap elections

Malta's Prime Minister Joseph Muscat.
Updated 03 May 2017
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Malta’s scandal-hit PM calls snap elections

VALETTA: Malta’s Prime Minister Joseph Muscat has called a snap general election for June 3, bowing to pressure over his family being embroiled in the Panama Papers scandal.
“Everybody knows about the attacks made in the past few days on me and my family. I have nothing to fear because I am clean,” Muscat told a large crowd in Valletta for the annual May 1 labor day celebrations.
Malta currently holds the rotating presidency of the EU and will do so until June 30.
Muscat has been battling fresh allegations that a third Panamanian offshore company belongs to his wife.
Having an offshore company is not illegal but it is often associated with money laundering schemes. Michelle Muscat has strongly denied the accusation and although a probe has been launched it is unlikely to conclude before the poll.
“My duty is not just to protect myself and my family but also to safeguard my country, and I will not tolerate a situation where jobs are lost because of uncertainty,” said the prime minister, calling the snap election a year before the scheduled end of his first term.
Muscat was elected with a strong majority in 2013 but his tenure has been riddled with allegations of corruption and mystery dealings with countries such as Azerbaijan.
Thousands took to the streets last week to protest against corruption after an investigation revealed hidden offshore companies of Muscat’s energy minister, Konrad Mizzi, and his chief of staff, Keith Schembri.
Muscat was subsequently criticized for failing to take decisive action against him and Schembri.
The prime minister has, however, delivered what he calls “an economic miracle,” with the first national budget surplus in 35 years, record low unemployment and steady economic growth.
Last month Malta’s left-of-center government survived a parliamentary no-confidence vote over the Panama Papers scandal.
Following that endorsement Muscat had said it “gives us the energy to continue to work hard and achieve results.”
The Panama Papers affair involved a massive data leak from the Mossack Fonseca law firm that revealed secretive offshore entities used by many of the world’s wealthy to stash assets and in some cases evade taxes and launder money.
The leaks have created problems for political figures in many countries around the world.
Spanish industry minister Jose Manuel Soria resigned last month after he was shown to have connections to offshore companies that he had initially denied.
Iceland’s prime minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson was forced to resign after it emerged he had huge amounts of cash stashed in the British Virgin Islands.


Abiy’s vision of Ethiopia includes a seaport in Eritrea. Some see a looming conflict

Updated 8 sec ago
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Abiy’s vision of Ethiopia includes a seaport in Eritrea. Some see a looming conflict

KAMPALA: To his supporters, Ethiopia’s prime minister is a renaissance man trying to reimagine the old greatness of his country.
To some others, Abiy Ahmed is a provocateur who could light a fire in the restive Horn of Africa region as he pushes for sovereign access to the sea via an unfriendly neighbor.
In a stadium in southern Ethiopia last Sunday, Abiy staged a provocative parade of Ethiopia’s special forces as they demonstrated maneuvers in a spectacle widely seen as intended for neighboring Eritrea to see. A banner proclaimed Ethiopia would not remain landlocked whether “you like it or not,” with imagery showing a soldier breaking a door while aiming for the port of Assab.
Assab has been part of Eritrea since 1993, when it broke away from Ethiopia after decades of guerrilla warfare. Most of Ethiopia’s trade goes through the port of Djibouti, incurring high fees to the tune of $1.5 billion per year, a sum until recently greater than the country’s entire foreign exchange reserves, according to the London-based Africa Practice consulting firm.
It’s one reason Abiy sought a controversial deal for sea access with Somaliland two years ago. That deal angered Somalia, which claims authority over the semiautonomous Somaliland, and raised regional tensions.
Abiy has his eye on the seaport
While the Somaliland dispute has cooled, Abiy’s stance over Assab raises genuine fears of an outbreak of war that would pit him against Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki and his allies, possibly including the rebellious leaders of the northern Ethiopian region of Tigray.
Although such “a catastrophic turn of events is by no means inevitable,” without international intervention the belligerents “could find themselves party to a new regional war that would prove difficult to contain or end,” the International Crisis Group concluded in its most recent assessment.
At the center of tensions is Abiy, who as a 41-year-old rose from relative obscurity to power in 2018 as a reform-minded pragmatist.
Ties with Eritrea had been cold since the 1990s, and his efforts to repair relations with Afwerki helped him win the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize. A year later, he confounded expectations by launching a military operation against the rebellious leaders of Tigray in what eventually became a brutal civil war.
Ethiopia’s military and its allies, including Eritrea, teamed up against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, or TPLF, the group that administers the region. That conflict, marked by sexual violence and other crimes by both sides, ended with a peace agreement in 2022.
This time, Abiy’s ambition over sovereign access to Assab has provoked a military buildup along the border with Eritrea, according to analysts.
Tigray’s rebellious leaders and Eritrea are apparently “coordinating” against Ethiopian forces, according to Kjetil Tronvoll, a professor of peace and conflict studies at Oslo New University College.
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has urged Eritrea and Ethiopia to respect the border treaty signed 25 years ago. Others in the region have called for talks.
Meantime, there is a war of words as well as sporadic clashes within Ethiopian territory.
Tigrayan officials accuse the Ethiopian federal forces of carrying out drone attacks. Ethiopia claims Eritrea is “actively preparing to wage war against it” and that its forces are in Tigray, which shares a border with Eritrea. Eritrea warns that Ethiopia has a “long-brewing war agenda” to seize Assab, an allegation that Abiy seemed to confirm with the military parade in Hawassa that was witnessed by top government and military officials.
The prime minister’s ambitious agenda
After Abiy took office, he saw himself as a philosopher of Ethiopia’s renewal. With his theory of “medemer,” an Amharic word that refers to strength in unity, the Ethiopian prime minister spoke of the “beautiful symphony of progress.”
As the leader of the ruling Prosperity Party, Abiy wanted the timely completion of the mega power dam on the Nile that is strongly opposed by Egypt over concerns about water volumes going north. He wanted to turn Addis Ababa, the federal capital, into a beautiful city, with verdant patches and stylish blocks. There are plans for a nuclear power program and 1.5 million housing units. And earlier this year, he launched the construction of what would be Africa’s largest airport, a project worth $10 billion, outside Addis Ababa.
Restoring Ethiopia’s access to the sea
But he has two big problems: Ethiopia, with more than 130 million people, is the world’s most populous landlocked nation. There is also ethnic discord, with conflicts ongoing in the regions of Amhara and Oromia, where federal troops are battling militants.
Going to war over a seaport would set back Abiy’s ambitious infrastructure goals by committing troops and resources to yet another armed conflict with Eritrea, whose officials dismiss Abiy as foolish.
They say Abiy’s public provocations mask his own internal problems and that his infrastructure projects are at odds with reports of hunger in parts of Ethiopia. Yemane Gebremeskel, the Eritrean government spokesman, routinely describes Abiy’s Prosperity Party as the “Potemkin party.”
That party “continues to spew and ramp up, at almost every public occasion, toxic and provocative vitriol against the sovereignty and territorial integrity” of neighboring nations, he charged in a statement Monday.