Girma Wolde-Giorgis (born December 1924/25, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia—died December 15, 2018, Addis Ababa) was an Ethiopian political leader who served as president of Ethiopia (2001–13).
Girma graduated from the Genet Military School in Holeta, Ethiopia, as a sublieutenant in 1944. As a trainee in the Ethiopian air force (1946–47), he studied air-traffic management and control in Sweden and Canada and became an instructor in air navigation and flight control in Ethiopia in 1948. He was appointed head of civil aviation in the federated government of Eritrea in 1955 and director-general of Ethiopian civil aviation in 1958.
In 1958–59 Girma was director-general of Ethiopia’s Ministry of Trade, Industry, and Planning. Elected to the lower house of the Ethiopian parliament in 1961, he served as its president for three consecutive years. In 1977, after the collapse of the imperial government of Haile Selassie I and amid a nationalist revolt by the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF), he was a member of a peace commission created by Ethiopia’s provisional military government to address Eritrean land and sovereignty disputes.
Throughout his career Girma held a number of nongovernmental positions, including board member of the Ethiopian Chamber of Commerce and president of the Eritrean branch of the Ethiopian Red Cross. In 1991 he founded an environmental organization called Lem Ethiopia.
In 2000 he returned to public service when he was again elected to the Ethiopian parliament. In October 2001 Girma was unanimously elected by the parliament to the largely ceremonial post of president. He was reelected in October 2007. Barred by the constitution from serving more than two terms, he was succeeded by Dr. Mulatu Teshome Wirtu in October 2013.