Digital Warfare Transforming Political Rhetoric: Social Media (Ab)Use and the Ethiopia War of 2020-2022

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Jon Abbink

Abstract

This article analyses key aspects of the armed conflict during the so-called “Tigray War” of 2020-2022 in northern Ethiopia, focusing on the “digital warfare” that accompanied it. I argue that the physical war was enhanced by its digital media representation, which negatively impacted (global) media reporting. Via an analysis of repeated aggressive and loaded digital memes I describe (digital) political rhetoric and its loose relation to verifiable facts on the ground. A discursive domain of misinformation and semi-fictitious appearances was created that perpetuated conflict and made open, truth-oriented fact-finding difficult: current digital media allow political rhetoric to massively go beyond the conventions of shared discursive exchange. The case study shows that beyond the analysis of digital and news media products new ways have to be found to “reality-check” or reduce these representations to themes amenable for public dialogue and eventual shared compromise.

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How to Cite
Abbink, J. (2026). Digital Warfare Transforming Political Rhetoric: Social Media (Ab)Use and the Ethiopia War of 2020-2022. Modern Africa: Politics, History and Society, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.26806/modafr.v14i1.602
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Author Biography

Jon Abbink, African Studies Centre, Leiden University

He is a political anthropologist-cum-historian and emeritus professor of the political anthropology of Africa at the African Studies Centre (ASCL), Leiden University, The Netherlands. He carried out fieldwork on agro-pastoralist and cultivator peoples in Southwest Ethiopia, socio-political change in Northeast Africa, religious culture, and on social and religious history of Northern Ethiopia. He has published on the history, politics, and cultures of Northeast Africa, in particular Ethiopia.