The morning air in the Horn of Africa often carries the scent of roasted coffee and ancient dust, but in recent times, it has been thick with the quiet, electric hum of change. For years, the people of Ethiopia and Eritrea have lived in the shadow of authoritarianism, their dreams tethered by the weight of restrictive regimes. However, the path to a new dawn is being paved not by sudden violence, but by a methodical, multi-layered orchestration of civil resistance, grassroots organization, and the slow erosion of institutional fear.
The transition, as envisioned by those yearning for democratic stability, follows a deliberate and peaceful sequence.

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