Ethiopia's National Dialogue Commission process, designed to foster post-conflict reconciliation, is experiencing deepening divisions among participating stakeholder groups rather than the intended convergence.
Multiple participant groups have expressed frustration with the dialogue mechanism, according to AllAfrica Ethiopia reporting on the process.
The National Dialogue was established to address reconciliation following years of conflict across multiple regions. The commission was tasked with facilitating discussions among diverse political, ethnic, and civil society representatives.
Stakeholder groups cite procedural disagreements and fundamental differences over the dialogue's scope and methodology. The process has struggled to build consensus on key reconciliation frameworks.
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Participants report concerns about representation, decision-making processes, and the commission's mandate. Some groups question whether the current structure can deliver meaningful outcomes.
Ethiopia launched the National Dialogue Commission in 2022 as part of broader efforts to address ethnic tensions and political divisions that have contributed to widespread conflict since 2018. Similar national dialogue processes in other post-conflict African contexts have faced comparable challenges in bridging deep political and ethnic divisions.




