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Occupied Enemy Territory Administration (Ethiopia)

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British WWII military occupation administration
Occupied Enemy Territory Administration in Ethiopia
1941–1944
Flag of Occupied Enemy Territory Administration (Ethiopia) Flag
GovernmentMilitary administration
Chief Political Officer 
• 1941–1942 Phillip Mitchell
History 
• Invasion of Italian Ethiopia 20 January 1941
• Full occupation 27 November 1941
• 1st Anglo-Ethiopian Agreement 31 January 1942
• 2nd Anglo-Ethiopian Agreement 19 December 1944
CurrencyEast African shilling
Preceded by Succeeded by
Italian East Africa
Ethiopian Empire
Military Administration in Ogaden

The Occupied Enemy Territory Administration in Ethiopia was a British military occupation administration in Ethiopia during East African Campaign of World War II. It expanded from early 1941 to the final Italian defeat in November and ended in January 1942 with the signing of the Anglo-Ethiopian Agreement. In Ethiopia, Emperor Haile Selassie was allowed to return and to claim his throne, but the OETA authorities ruled the country for some time before full sovereignty was restored to Ethiopia in 1944. However, some regions remained under British control for more years.

References

  1. Shinn, David H.; Ofcansky, Thomas P. (11 April 2013). Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia. Scarecrow Press. pp. 309–. ISBN 978-0-8108-7457-2.
  2. Harold G. Marcus. Haile Selassie and Italians, 1941–1943. Northeast African Studies, Vol. 10, No. 3 (New Series) 2003, pp. 19–25. (Online version of the article) Archived 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine.

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