The Ethiopian Cable

About The Ethiopian Cable

Launched in August 2021, the Ethiopian Cable delves into Ethiopia’s complex political and socio-economic landscape. Published every Tuesday, each edition features key stories translated from Amharic and Tigrinya, providing context-rich coverage of current events.

;
Recent Issues
Issue No. 323 New
Abiy's Probable Coronation

Six general elections in Ethiopia have been held since the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) implemented its ethnic-federal system in 1995. Each has delivered victory to the incumbent government of the day — including, most recently, the deeply discredited 2021 polls held in the shadow of the Tigray war. Once again, with Ethiopia's 7th elections — scheduled for 1 June 2026 — fast approaching, few anticipate anything other than a coronation in a country mired in raging insurgencies, state contraction, and the threat of broader inter-state conflict.


26:26 min read 17 Mar
Issue No. 322
Adwa, Empire, and the Ghosts of History

Almost exactly 130 years ago, a vast Ethiopian army led by Emperor Menelik II outmanoeuvred and overran the invading Italian army at Adwa in Tigray, bringing the first Italo-Ethiopian war to a decisive close. By midday on 1 March 1896, thousands of Italian soldiers and Eritrean 'askaris' had been killed, sparing Ethiopia from the carving up of the African continent by European colonisers.


0 min read 10 Mar
Issue No. 321
(Re)crossing the Ford of Kemalke

The first known reference to the Tekezé River is an inscription that describes the Axumite King Ezana boasting of a triumph on its banks near the "ford of Kemalke" in the 4th century AD. Emerging in the Ethiopian highlands near Mount Qachen in the Amhara region, the major rivers' tributaries flow north and west, forming part of the westernmost border between Eritrea and Ethiopia.


23:02 min read 03 Mar
Issue No. 320
Addis, Ankara and Tel Aviv

With Israeli President Isaac Herzog expected in Addis Ababa today, the steady drumbeat of war to the north continues apace. Preparations for renewed conflict are stacking up, hand over fist. Having dangled Western Tigray before both Amhara and Tigray since the end of the Tigray war in 2022, this week the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) suddenly announced that 5 zones in Western Tigray would be removed from Mekelle's jurisdiction.


22:01 min read 24 Feb
Issue No. 319
Reading Ethiopia's War Signals

In the days before the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Moscow quietly pre-positioned field blood supplies along the Ukrainian frontier. Contrary to those arguing that Russia was posturing to secure concessions from Kyiv and its allies, to military analysts, the deployment of plasma was a logistical signal that Russia was preparing for sustained combat, not bargaining. No one is tracking the movement of plasma —or lack thereof —towards Tigray in Ethiopia, but with thousands of soldiers streaming towards the northern region, it is hard not to feel an impending dread that full-scale war may soon return.


22:57 min read 17 Feb
Issue No. 318
Ethiopia and Eritrea's Endless Struggle

There are rivalries born from distance, and rivalries born from closeness. Nearly three decades of Ethiopia-Eritrea feuding —barring the brief, destructive interregnum in Tigray —is borne of the latter. The depth of the socio-cultural linkages between modern-day Ethiopia and Eritrea dates back centuries, with the shared highlands part of the sophisticated Axumite kingdom that stretched into the Arabian Peninsula.


23:03 min read 10 Feb
Issue No. 317
Tigray edges closer to war-- again

A brief resumption of fighting in Western Tigray between Tigrayan and federal troops last week has returned the fraught context of northern Ethiopia back to the precipice of full-blown conflict. Details remain murky, but for at least three days, deadly clashes flared in the contested Tselemt area between Tigrayan troops and the Ethiopian military.


24:22 min read 03 Feb
Issue No. 316
Partners in Poverty or Prosperity? The China-Ethiopia Relationship

Upholding a long-standing tradition, the first week of 2026 saw China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi begin his tour of the African Continent, opening with a meeting with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in Addis Ababa. The value of this 36-year tradition extends well beyond symbolism; as Ethiopia’s position as a marginalised state solidifies within the Horn of Africa, and at a precarious moment for its allies, China has become essential to the growth of Ethiopia.


29:42 min read 27 Jan
Issue No. 315
Trump and the Nile

Finally completed last year, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) may have started generating electricity, but it has opened the geopolitical floodgates as well. The mammoth achievement on the Blue Nile in Ethiopia's western Benishangul-Gumuz region is a towering feat of engineering, the largest hydroelectric dam on the African continent-- and a source of immense frustration for the Egyptian government.


22:19 min read 20 Jan
Price is NOT inclusive of VAT

Membership Packages

Gain unlimited access to all our Editorials
FREE
Personal

$ 0 / year

Join Personal Annual billing

Enjoy unlimited access to all bulletins, downloadable publications in PDF, the complete archive, and automatic delivery of the latest issues straight to your inbox.

Scroll