National
Reconciliation and National Development in Ethiopia
Ghelawdewos
Araia, PhD.
October 22,
2010
This essay intends to reach out the Ethiopian
government and the opposition by way of suggesting to both parties so that
they can and should make efforts to iron out their differences and create
a political climate, conducive enough, to enable the two blocs to sit in a
round table for dialogue and for the peaceful and smooth development and
transformation of Ethiopia. Sometimes, we have to have the courage to say
a spade a spade and realistically approach reality and accordingly foster
interests that can benefit the larger society and not the political
groupings only. We must recognize that reality and perception do not
always correspond, and as a matter of fact objective conditions do not
necessarily manifest subjective wishes and entertainments. Above all,
reconciliation, negotiation, and dialogue are designed to bring together
opposing or opposite forces and not birds of the same feather that flock
together. It is in this spirit, thus, that I like to write this essay and
invite Ethiopians to seriously consider the agenda of national
reconciliation if indeed they are genuinely concerned about the national
development of their country.
For the sake of convenience and simplification, I
will classify the Ethiopian political forces into four categories: 1)
Diaspora Enclave Opposition; 2) Diaspora and Home Patriotic Opposition; 3)
Non-Committed Diaspora Ethiopia; and 4) The EPRDF-led Ethiopian
Government.
Diaspora Enclave Opposition: these opposition
groupings are scattered throughout the Diaspora and they are haphazardly
organized under ethnic affiliations and not under national Ethiopian
agenda, although a significant number of them uphold the name
�Ethiopian� as their banner. Most of these groups are organized in
enclave-cum-neighborhood type organizations that claim to be political but
in effect they are civic or social organizations that have degenerated
into sub-regions in the making of their associations and even their
membership in the churches. Ethiopians who come from the same nationality,
speak the same language, and profess same religion have chosen to
congregate in separate churches on Sundays. This group has extreme hatred
to the EPRDF government, and more specifically to the �Woyane� regime
as per their routine cajoling, to the extent of absurdity, if not outright
insanity. This group is imbued with narrow ethnic agenda that is inimical
to national development, and quite obviously it could not make a positive
input in the unity of Ethiopia and/or the progress Ethiopia ought to make
in the 21st century. This group is led and mobilized by flag
waving upscale charlatans, as I have defined them in my previous writings,
and its own organization and constitution has already undermined the unity
of Ethiopians abroad.
It stands to reason that a national unity of Ethiopia
can be attained only when Diaspora Ethiopians, irrespective of their
ethnic differences, work together as Ethiopians. What we have now are
artificially superimposed ethnic enclaves of Diaspora Ethiopians that have
seriously jeopardized and undermined their unity. As indicated above, if
Diaspora Ethiopians who belong to the same Ethiopian Orthodox Tewhado
Church pray in separate churches, how is it possible that these
congregations revitalize Ethiopian unity and contribute for the
development of their country? It is insanity par excellence to have two St
Mary�s and two St. Gabriel�s churches of Diaspora Ethiopians in the
same district and same city, as is now the case in North America.
Apparently these churches are meant to accommodate same ethnic groups, and
the proliferation of ethnic associations, civic organizations, radio
networks, and churches are reminiscent of a primordial primate culture
that clings together and despise others that are perceived as different
from them. And unless these
Diaspora Ethiopians transcend their present state of mind and liberate
themselves from their comfort zones (enclaves), they have no hope
whatsoever to make a difference in Ethiopia�s progress.
The Diaspora Enclave Opposition lacks uniformity in
outlook although it is rallied around the anti-Woyane front. Within this
group, there are innocent Ethiopians (mostly youth) who do not really
understand the complexity of the politics in Ethiopia; there are elderly
men and women who could careless of who governs what, but by virtue of
their ethnic identity they stick with their artificially fashioned
community; there are sensible professionals and intellectuals
(insignificant in number) who advocate an inclusive Ethiopian agenda but
would not want to be ostracized by their extreme enclave comrades; and
finally, there are elements who are morally retarded and psychically
equipped with appalling ignorance and arrogance.
Some elements in this group are slick and have played
double standards in their dealings with the seating government in
Ethiopia. On the one hand, they have ostentatiously exhibited themselves
in public squares, along with the innocent multitude of their brethren, in
the condemnation of the �Woyane�; on the other, they go to Ethiopia
�for a visit� and buy land, houses, and also open up businesses. Yet,
some of this group has surprised their own comrades for being renegades
and for joining the rank and file of the EPRDF. These hypocrites are loud
enough in drumming their comrades-in-arms in the Diaspora that
�Ethiopian wealth has been and continue to be transferred to Tigray at
the expense of Ethiopians� although deep down in their hearts they know
that Bahir Dar, Awassa, and Nazreth equally, if not more, have flourished
and have shown economic transformation in recent years. Even if we believe
their perception to be true, what these blindfolded politicians seem to
have forgotten is that Tigray is also a quintessentially Ethiopian state
that must, as a matter of course, share the dividends of the Ethiopian
wealth.
Diaspora and Home Patriotic Opposition: A
significant number of Ethiopians who organized themselves in the form of
civic organizations in the Diaspora and political parties at home in
Ethiopia, and who relentlessly and without flinching defended the unity
and sovereignty of Ethiopia; struggled for the establishment of broader
democracy in their country; and who made sacrifices of the Ethiopian
people belong to the Diaspora and Home Patriotic Opposition. This
Ethiopians are the torchbearers of freedom and heirs to the fallen heroes
whose bones have littered the four corners of Ethiopia.
This group includes well-meaning Ethiopians including
scholars and professionals, civic organization leaders, Ethiopian
community leaders, advocacy groups and activists, political parties and
coalition organizations that are not allowed to operate in Ethiopia. Of
these groups, however, the oppositions that played a crucial role in
Ethiopian politics are the Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD) during
the 2005 election and the Federal Ethiopian Democratic Forum, popularly
known as Medrek (forum in Amharic), in the 2010 election. Both
organizations have enjoyed substantial support from Ethiopians at Home and
the Diaspora, and although following the 2005 election CUD leaders were
arrested, released, and then encountered fragmentation, they still had a
good following. One solid group that carried the banner of CUD is Andinet,
a formidable group that ultimately joined Medrek.
Following the 2010 election, the eight-party
coalition Medrek has merged into a single party and vis-�-vis the current
politics of Ethiopia, this was a very important move but it could have
been more effective had the Coalition done it before the election. In any
event, the current merger would still enable Medrek to garner more support
from the Ethiopian people in the future because it would mobilize its
forces as one party and not as eight splinter groupings.
The Patriotic opposition, both at home and the
Diaspora, is relatively strong compared to the enclave group, but the Home
opposition has countenanced major shortcomings due to lack of funding,
lack of media access, and its inability to organize conferences and/or
rallies due to government contravention of rules that permitted Ethiopians
to organize and assemble freely. The shortcomings of the Diaspora
Patriotic that belong to this group, on the other hand, are manifested in
many ways. Unlike the Home front, this group enjoys broad democratic
rights including staging demonstrations, freedom of speech, access to
media, access to congressmen/women in the US and member of parliaments in
Europe, and also its ability to raise funds easily. Despite these distinct
advantages, however, this group was not able to forge a united Ethiopian
organization. It is splintered into plethora of political entities, and
despite repeated efforts made by some elements within this group to bring
about its many organizations under one overarching organization or under
one coalition party, some of the coalition in fact suffered faction
degeneration and amoeba-like fission politics. On top of this debilitating
problem, the intellectuals, scholars, and professionals who belong to this
group were reactive for the most part and not proactive with respect to
Ethiopian politics. They are unable to fashion an organic political
program for Ethiopia, as other parties have done during the heyday of the
Ethiopian revolution in the 1970s and 1980s.
Moreover, the Diaspora and Home Patriotic Opposition
did not exhibit acumen in politics especially in its dealings with the
ruling party. Instead of employing the art of politics in promoting its
interests, its overall performance was tainted by principle at best and
ideology at worst. Ideology indeed is a guide to action and principles
cement the infrastructure of a patriotic movement, but if the opposition
depends on programmatic principles only and does not include some
Machiavellian astuteness in its operations and is confronted by a cunning
countervailing force(s), it can crumble like a house of cards. It is
because of this ideology-cum-principle yardstick that the patriotic group
was unable to employ politics in all its dimensions and broad range
attributes, including initiating dialogue with the ruling party, the
Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF).
Given the reality of Ethiopian politics of the last
two decades and the propensity of the foreseeable future, the Patriotic
group must consider the possibility of negotiating with the EPRDF. It must
shed its cocoon of principles and liberate itself from the ideological
tenet and resume talks with the ruling party. The fear of �if we do so,
we will entrust legitimacy to the EPRDF and confuse our members and
supporters� is lame rationale compared to what the opposition could
favorably garner great strides in Ethiopian politics.
The Patriotic opposition, in fact, should learn from
the CUD debacle in the post-2005 election. In 2005, the CUD managed to win
sizable urban votes and virtually took over Addis Ababa in its entirety,
but instead of advancing its interests by entering the parliament, it
refused to do so. The CUD forgot that Ethiopian politics was Third World
politics (an not Western liberal democratic politics) and created
unnecessary gridlock in most obsidian rigid fashion, and demanded rather
an outright takeover of the government. Then, I personally wrote an
article in which I argued that the CUD must enter parliament and then
negotiate from strength with the incumbent party. It did not do it and the
result was obvious to all of us: It lost everything and its leaders ended
up in jail.
The current Patriotic opposition, thus, must not see
negotiation and dialogue with the government as a sign of weakness or as
gesture of legitimacy to the ruling party. Quite on the contrary, talking
to the government could mean strength on the part of the opposition, and
it could also, by default, promote the interest of the opposition and the
Ethiopian people in the long haul.
In negotiating with the Ethiopian government, Forum
should respect and acknowledge the achievements of the EPRDF while
criticizing the white papers and overall political performances of the
latter. It should not accept preconditions set forth by the government.
However, acknowledging the achievements of the government is a sign of
strength and not weakness, and to be sure I myself (a foremost critic of
the current regime) have, for instance, written in admiration of the
pre-election debates in my article entitled Pointers of Justice and the
Ongoing Debates in Ethiopia on April 10, 2010 (please view this link, www.africanidea.org/pointers.html).
Similarly, I have written another article in support of the completion of
the Gilgel Gibe III Dam (see Ethiopia Must Complete the Construction of
the Gilgel Gibe III Dam in www.africanidea.org/Gilgel_Gibe_111.html)
because I strongly believe that, beyond politics and above
everything else, the national development of Ethiopia must come first.
Non-Committed Diaspora Ethiopia: This group
represents the many silent Ethiopians in the Diaspora who do not involve
themselves in Ethiopian politics in any way, shape or form. They are the
quiet multitudes that seemingly enjoy the sanctuaries of college and
university campuses, the offices of international development agencies,
research and development institutions, and private businesses. This group
is not organized under civic or political organizations, but it can
broadly be divided into three groups: 1) elements, like the Enclave group,
who frequent churches and traditional festivals in spite of its aloofness;
2) apathetic elements who could careless of politics in general and the
current affairs of contemporary Ethiopia; 3) elements who gave up on
politics completely as a result of prior adverse negative encounter, but
from time to time they nonetheless entertain politics in local cafes and
Ethiopian restaurants. They are like a tree that falls in the middle of
the jungle and no body can hear the noise it makes. However, I do not have
any quarrel with or reservation on the Non-Committed Diaspora Ethiopia.
After all, politics sometimes is cruel, nasty, and disgusting, and above
all Diaspora Ethiopians must earn their living in fiercely competitive
environments. After depicting and recognizing the harsh reality of the
Ethiopian Diaspora ecology, I am in favor of leaving the non-committed
Ethiopians alone, but I am still hoping that at one point in time they too
join hands with patriotic Ethiopians in the historic uplifting of their
motherland.
The EPRDF-led Ethiopian Government: the EPRDF
has assumed state power either by pure historical accident or by dint of
political fiat; or even by carefully crafted design, or by a combination
of all of the above. Logically, thus, whether we like it or not, the
current seating government of Ethiopia is the EPRDF-led government. This
rationale, however, does not automatically suggest that Ethiopians in the
opposition must yield everything and initiate dialogue with the government
and in the latter�s favor. On the contrary, it means that the government
does not dictate the nature and outcome of the negotiation process; it
also it entails that the government must not have the upper hand in the
talking arena.
First and foremost, the principle of negotiation
demands and requires equal footing of the negotiating parties, if at all
it is going to have a genuine fruitful result. It is in this spirit that I
like to suggest to the Ethiopian government to initiate dialogue with the
opposition, especially with the Diaspora and Home Patriotic Opposition. .
The recent dialogue and negotiation of the EPRDF-led
Ethiopian government with the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) is
not only the right track in politics; it is also a promising endeavor in
fostering peace in Ethiopia. By the same token, the release of Birtukuan
Medeksa from prison and the accommodation of Eritrean students at Addis
Ababa University (as my good friend Professor Tecola Hagos has observed)
are good gestures for reconciliation. And as my other good friend,
Professor Teodros Kiros, noted in his new book, Philosophical Essays,
and to which I had the honor to write a blurb, a good constitution can be
mobilized �in service of humanity and produce a good moral condition of
citizens.� The ultimate objective of national reconciliation and
national development must be to produce good Ethiopian citizens, and not
simply to foster technical development devoid of morality and justice.
If the EPRDF-led government can enter dialogue with
the ONLF, it can do so with Forum or Medrek especially if it transcends
selective and preferential politics. The politics of both parties could be
at variance or situated at extreme sides of the continuum, but both must
understand that divergent perspectives enriches a society in transition
and brings meaningful and enduring transformation.
On the other hand, mono-directionality of flow of
ideas, or in its worse form, �my way or the highway� attitude could be
bad politics. This kind of politics could be detrimental to the very
existence of a nation because the two sides could go to great lengths in
destroying each other. The 2005 election, for instance, despite its
manifest democratic process, exhibited mutual exclusion (if not
destruction) of the EPRDF and the CUD. And it is not surprising, thus,
that the ruling party and regime were haunted by paranoia long after the
2010 election ended. So, ultimately reconciliation would not only heal
wounds and aggravations on both sides, but it will also preserve the
sanity of the contending parties, and by default contributes to
Ethiopia�s positive national development.
If the EPRDF-led government is ready to initiate
dialogue and negotiation with the opposition, it must first recognize the
potential input to development that the opposition could make. Secondly,
the Meles government must tolerate and engage strong rivals rather than
systematically avoid or isolate them. Thirdly, the government of Ethiopia
must seriously rethink its ethnic politics in the administration of
Ethiopia if the developmental state indeed is going to be successful.
Political fragmentation in contradistinction to national development
emasculates the latter�s objectives, and the EPRDF ought to transcend
the current kilil (regional) politics and foster a pan-Ethiopian
development without undermining the relative autonomy of the regional
states. There is nothing wrong for the latter to ran their own affairs and
flourish their respective cultures and languages, but it would be
counterproductive for the people of one regional state (e.g. Tigrayans)
not to invest in other regional states (e.g. Oromia). The EPRDF government
could not bring about meaningful transformation in Ethiopia unless it
first corrects the technically narrow kilil agenda.
On the other hand, if the EPRDF initiates a more
inclusive politics, iron out its differences with the opposition,
especially with the opposition that is eager to contribute to Ethiopia�s
development, the newly restructured Ethiopian politics will dialectically
reveal new opportunities and it may even deliver unexpected but promising
vistas for future generations of Ethiopians.
The government, more than the opposition, has the
wherewithal to change the political environment in Ethiopia, and if it is
willing to do so it must invite the well-meaning patriotic Ethiopians who
are willing to join hands for a better Ethiopia and for the welfare of the
Ethiopian people. This kind of gesture on the part of the government, in
turn, will create a positive political ambience that would have a great
density of interaction, great effervescence of ideas, and a favorable
atmosphere that can altogether bolster Cultural Revolution as precondition
to economic development. The government must preside over a national
reconciliation forum not simply with the intention of permitting
democratic rights, or sharing power, but also in enabling the opposition
to participate in national development at all levels. Politics and
development are gregarious, and that is the bottom line that I am implying
to when I call upon the opposition and the government to make a historic
national reconciliation. Without the participation of the Ethiopian
people, development would become ideal chimera of economic salvation, and
without reconciling differences of all groups, the Ethiopian nation could
not move forward. Both the opposition and the government must carefully
gauge the present globalization where regional cooperation has now become
a necessary ingredient to respective national developments; the recent
revival of East African Common Market is one good example of paving the
road to development beyond national politics. The opposition and the
government also must have the decency to treat each other as opposites of
the same coin in politics and as partners in the development of Ethiopia,
and not as enemies.
Good luck to Ethiopia and Ethiopians!
All Rights Reserved. Copyright � IDEA Inc. 2010. Dr.
Ghelawdewos Araia can be contacted for constructive and educational
feedback via [email protected]
|