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  • In late 2016, the US State Department issued a travel warning for Ethiopia on the basis

  • of quoteongoing unrest that has led to hundreds of deaths, thousands of arrests,

  • as well as injuries and extensive property damage.”

  • Despite instability in the country, Ethiopia has maintained relations with the US, so what

  • exactly is the basis of their complicated relationship?

  • Well, formal relations between the US and Ethiopia stem back to 1903.

  • The US had economic interest in the region, and Ethiopian officials appreciated that America

  • did not seek to colonize parts of Africa, as other Western powers were doing at the

  • time.

  • Their alliance expanded after the second world war, with trade, amity and mutual defense

  • agreements.

  • Today, the US and Ethiopia are bound together by shared interests, one of which is security

  • in the horn of Africa.

  • Ethiopia’s neighbor, Somalia has long suffered from weak governments and widespread poverty,

  • paving the way for radical insurgencies.

  • In 2006, one terror group, al-Shabaab, was able to invade the country’s capital, Mogadishu,

  • alongside other Islamic groups.

  • This move prompted a clandestine US-Ethiopian alliance to recapture the Somali capital in

  • an attempt to wipe out the insurgency, but after three years the operation was disbanded,

  • proving to be unsuccessful at removing the insurgent group.

  • Still, the two countries have since cooperated in further efforts to bring down al-Shabaab,

  • with the US contributing drone strikes and working with Ethiopian intelligence services.

  • Additionally, Ethiopia relies on the US for trade and humanitarian assistance.

  • Since 2000, Ethiopia has received preferential trade benefits under the African Growth and

  • Opportunity Act, which broadens the access of sub-saharan African countries to US markets.

  • The US is one of Ethiopia’s top five economic partners, with bilateral trade amounting to

  • nearly $2 billion dollars in 2015.

  • The US also donates more than half a billion dollars in developmental and humanitarian

  • aid each year.

  • Most of the funds are used to mitigate widespread hunger and poverty, as Ethiopia suffers from

  • perpetual droughts and famine.

  • The remainder is used to train its military..

  • But the US-Ethiopian alliance has attracted a considerable amount of criticism, particularly

  • concerning Ethiopia’s poor record with human rights.

  • The country’s de facto one-party state has a history of cracking down on virtually all

  • forms of opposition, for instance raiding protests, rigging elections, and jailing more

  • journalists than almost any other country in Africa.

  • Many have accused US officials of turning a blind eye to Ethiopia’s repressive regime

  • as a way to protect the two countriescrucial security partnership.

  • And in fact, the US has yet to intervene or withdraw aid.

  • But US officials have publicly condemned the government’s attacks on democracy, free

  • press and human rights, and if their abuses continue, this bilateral relationship may

  • soon be in serious jeopardy.

  • Ethiopia is still struggling to improve its human rights record, while also battling institutional

  • corruption at nearly every level of society.

  • So, just how corrupt is Ethiopia?

  • Find out by watching this video.

  • Recent elections have seen party officials claiming over 99.9% of the vote, spurring

  • riots and accusations of rigged elections.

  • During a 2005 election, police fired on a crowd of protesters who were disputing election

  • results, killing 22 people.

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In late 2016, the US State Department issued a travel warning for Ethiopia on the basis

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