THE WORLD AFRICA
In Ethiopia, a pharaonic palace for Abiy Ahmed, taken by delusions of grandeur
Artificial lakes, zoo, luxury villas… The building impulses of the Ethiopian leader are disproportionate. The Chaka Project, on the heights of Addis Ababa, will have a footprint of 503 hectares in the Yeka forest.
By Noé Hochet-Bodin (Nairobi, correspondence)
https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/ ... _3212.html
February 06, 2023
LETTER FROM ADDIS ABABA
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed during a parliamentary session in Addis Ababa on November 15, 2022. AMANUEL SILESHI/AFP
Federal soldiers stand guard along the freshly paved road that crosses, for about thirty kilometers, the forest of Yeka, on the outskirts of Addis Ababa. In these woods overlooking the Ethiopian capital, a pharaonic construction site is emerging. The Prime Minister,
Abiy Ahmed, has decided to build there, in all discretion, a gigantic complex. We can make out the foundations behind the blue prefabs of a Chinese construction company that stand in the mud, on a hillside usually frequented by long-distance runners during the day and by hyenas at night.
The Chaka Project reflects the ambitions of the head of the Ethiopian government: disproportionate. On an area of 503 hectares, it should include a palace supposed to house the Prime Minister, but also three artificial lakes, a zoo, a waterfall and a real estate project of luxury villas. Abiy Ahmed acknowledged this himself before Parliament on November 15, 2022:
We hear in town that the Prime Minister is building a palace for the sum of 49 billion birrs [approximately 850 million euros], while 'Truly it will be around 400 billion or 500 billion birr.
By way of comparison, the construction of the "
palace of a thousand rooms", inaugurated in 2014 by the Turkish president,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in Ankara,had cost 491 million euros.
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Colossal price
But the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize does not intend to curb its building momentum.
I did not come to Parliament with the intention of asking you for money to build it,
he told MPs.
Funding for the project will depend on private funds. According to several Addis Ababa City Hall officials speaking on condition of anonymity, the total cost of the Chaka Project could reach around 800 billion birr (13.8 billion euros), a sum roughly equivalent to the annual Ethiopian budget. According to these same sources, the United Arab Emirates, close allies of Abiy Ahmed, would finance a large part of the palace. The Ethiopian leader's entourage is also counting on the economic spin-offs of the various real estate projects to ensure their viability.
This is not the first time that the Prime Minister has circumvented Parliament in this way. For his previous infrastructure projects, he has several times appealed to wealthy Ethiopians from his circle or from the diaspora, raising billions of birrs at gala dinners called “
Dine for Ethiopia”. Since 2018, the strong man of Addis Ababa has undertaken, at great expense, a series of flashy projects intended to embellish the capital: modernization of the central Meskel square, conversion of the palace of Emperor
Haile Selassie into a museum, creation many parks, libraries and museums…
Today, the new palace has become "
his main concern", confides an executive of the Prosperity Party, the formation of the Prime Minister. Abiy Ahmed frequently visits the premises, located less than 5 kilometers from his current office. But the sumptuous palace under construction is not to everyone's taste. In addition to its colossal price, the site leads to the deforestation of part of the Yeka site and the expropriation of thousands of households living on the heights of the capital.
The town hall has already razed several homes of people who could not prove their title deed. Since receiving an unexpected visit from city officials, a mother who wishes to remain anonymous says she has been living in fear of eviction.
When we asked them specifically why we had to leave our land, they urged us to accept government orders, refusing to give us details of the site under construction,
she complains in front of her three children.
Economy on the brink of collapse
One of his neighbors was taken into custody for protesting the new guidelines a bit too loudly.
They accused me of being a criminal because I oppose a government project,
he says.
The sole purpose of this project is to please the Prime Minister, who wants to establish around him an image similar to that of the Ethiopian emperors despite all the problems the country is going through.
Praised for his liberal reforms when he came to power in 2018, Abiy Ahmed must now deal with an economy on the verge of collapse. The country emerged bloodless from the war which opposed, from 2020 to 2022,
https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/ ... _3212.html the federal forces and their allies to the rebels of Tigray, in the north, causing more than 600,000 victims, according to the African Union. Galloping inflation, driven by the increase in food prices, exceeded 30% on annual average in 2022. The
Fitch Ratings agency revised Ethiopia's long-term rating downwards in early January because of of a
significant risk of default of the debt.
The authorities estimate the cost of reconstruction in the north of the country at 20 billion dollars (18.6 billion euros).
In a scenario without civil war and without a coronavirus pandemic, such a project could have convinced the most skeptical. But as things stand, the prime minister's narcissistic ambitions are not acceptable,
an Ethiopian scholar said on condition of anonymity.
[Abiy Ahmed] believes he can change Ethiopia through building modern monuments. He thinks that you can change the mentality of a population by changing its physical environment. In truth, living in Addis Ababa has become more expensive because of its plans.