Addis Ababa - Ethiopia's parliament on
Thursday swore in the country's first female supreme court
president, building on efforts by reformist Prime Minister Abiy
Ahmed to achieve gender parity in government.
The appointment of Meaza Ashenafi comes two weeks after Abiy
named 10 female ministers to make Ethiopia the third country in
Africa - after Rwanda and Seychelles - to have its cabinet split
equally between men and women.
A prominent rights campaigner, Meaza recently served as an
adviser on women's rights at the Addis Ababa-based United
Nations Economic Commission for Africa.
Naming her as his pick to head the Supreme Court, Abiy told
lawmakers the court system needed improved capacities "to
successfully implement demands made with regards to justice,
democracy and change in our country.
"I have made the nomination with the firm belief that she
has the capacity required, with her vast international
experience in mind."
Parliament unanimously approved Abiy's choice.
Under Ethiopia's constitution, the court system operates
independent of government.
Last week the Horn of Africa country named Sahle-Work Zewde
as president, also the first woman to hold that post.
Since his appointment in April, Abiy has presided over a
series of reforms that have included the pardoning of dissidents
long outlawed by the government and diplomatic overtures to
long-term enemy Eritrea.
But they have so far failed to curtail unrest with over two
million people displaced this year due to clashes - many pitting
different ethnic groups against each other - in several parts of
the country.