Ethiopia: Shifting Power Centres Drive Ethiopia Into Endless Wars

Essentially, the Ethiopian political crises stems from its old and shifting power structures, which has seen each new power centre imposing its will on others. Ironically, the majority Oromo never came to power until April 2, 2018 when incumbent Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Ali assumed office.

Ethiopia is today bleeding. It bled yesterday. The day before, it bled. The challenge is how to stop its bleeding, stabilise, and hopefully, stop her from bleeding tomorrow. In the last four decades, it has been engaged in five quite bloody wars; two with Eritrea, one with Somalia over the Ogaden region, and two civil wars. The Eritrean War of Independence alone went on for thirty years – from September 1, 1961 to May 24, 1991.

Historically, culturally and in terms of traditions and religious practices, no African country is greater than Ethiopia. The country is also one of the two sources of the great Nile River, and an origin of human civilisation. It is the only country in Africa that was never a colony, and it has hosted the headquarters of the Organisation of African Union/African Union since its birth on May 25, 1963. Ethiopia, known in ancient times as Abyssinia, provided refuge to the earliest Muslims when they faced annihilation in the Arab Peninsula. Prophet Muhammad (SAW) told Muslims: “If you were to go to Abyssinia (it would be better for you), for the king will not tolerate injustice and it is a friendly country, until such time as Allah shall relieve you from your distress.”

So in 615 AD, the first group of Muslims fled to the Christian Kingdom of Axum (part of modern Ethiopia) and were given shelter by King Ashama ibn Abjar. As such, Ethiopia was the first country in Africa in where Islam took root. This was how Harar, in Eastern Ethiopia, came to be regarded as the fourth holy city of Islam after Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem.

The story of the Ethiopian Queen Makeda of Sheba features in the sacred scripts of Judaism and Christianity, in which she was reported as visiting King Solomon. Menelik, which means “Son of a Wise Man”, who founded the Ethiopian Empire in the 10th Century BC, is claimed to be the product of the King Solomon and Queen of Sheba relationship.

Also, the encounter between Evangelist Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch featured in the Acts of the Apostles (8: 26-39), when the former famously asked: “Do you understand what you are reading?” The Ethiopian Bible, which is about 800 years older than the King James Version, is accepted as the oldest in human history.

The Ethiopian structure was such that the majority Oromo were suppressed; the Amhara (Amara), who are about half the Oromo population, were the ruling class who also imposed their language as the lingua franca; the Tigrayans, who are some six per cent of the population, were the soldiers; the Eritreans were the colonised; while other nationalities tried to find their level.

Ethiopia was never colonised mainly because its military, led on the battlefield by Queen Etege Tayitu Bitul, wife of Emperor Menelik II in March, 1896, defeated the 20,000 Italian army led by General Baratieri at the famous Battle of Adwa. Although Italy, under Benito Mussolini invaded Ethiopia from 1936-1941, it could neither conquer nor colonise the country.

Despite such a rich and heroic past, Ethiopia easily slides into bloody and avoidable wars partly because those who hold the reins of power at any given time, refuse to run a federal system, which is most suitable for a multinational country like it, with eighty different ethnic groups. Secondly, its attempt to colonise and annex Eritrea led to a long conflict. Thirdly, the country was run as a monarchy for centuries, without allowing for democratic rights.

Fourthly, the military regimes that ran the country after Emperor Haile Selassie’s overthrow in 1974 were even more autocratic than the monarchs before. Fifth, Meles Zenawi, who led the coalition of guerrilla movements that removed the military, also had an iron grip on power, which his successor, Hailemariam Desalegn, could not sustain partly because he was from a minority region and had no control over the quite influential army.

Essentially, the Ethiopian political crises stems from its old and shifting power structures, which has seen each new power centre imposing its will on others. Ironically, the majority Oromo never came to power until April 2, 2018 when incumbent Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Ali assumed office. The Ethiopian structure was such that the majority Oromo were suppressed; the Amhara (Amara), who are about half the Oromo population, were the ruling class who also imposed their language as the lingua franca; the Tigrayans, who are some six per cent of the population, were the soldiers; the Eritreans were the colonised; while other nationalities tried to find their level.

Eritrea was colonised by the Italians in the 19th Century. During the Second World War in 1941, Britain seized the territory from the Italians. On December 2, 1950, the United Nations removed British control and handed Eritrea over to Ethiopia in a trusteeship. Two year later, it passed Resolution 390 making Eritrea a self-governing entity within Ethiopia. The latter simply annexed the territory, which led to the 30-year war of Eritrean Independence. In 1974, a number of rebel Ethiopian groups, including the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), and the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), joined the insurgency.

What happens next in Ethiopia will depend on how the central government wants to handle its victory in Tigray. Will it be magnanimous in victory and pursue reconciliation or vengeance? What is clear to me is that every emergent power majority creates its own power minorities. The best option for Ethiopia is to run a federal system…

After sixteen years and 1.4 million people dead, the rebels defeated the Ethiopian military. Despite this victory, Eritrea refused to remain a part of Ethiopia, opting for independence. That left the minority TPLF as the strongest power in the country. With that, power in Ethiopia shifted from the Amhara ruling class to tiny Tigray. But this was not sustainable, as the majority Oromos insisted on free elections and popular democracy, which they were sure would take them to power. The Tigrayan hold on power began to loosen after Meles Zenawi died on August 20, 2012.

The rise of Abiy led to a power shift to the majority Oromo. However, the TPLF continued to believe it had enough military strength to check the central government. In September it defiantly held parliamentary elections, which the central government had postponed nationwide due to the COVID-19 pandemic. For inexplicable reasons, the TPLF, in November, attacked a federal military formation in the region. The Abiy government sent in federal troops, which on November 28 overran the Tigrayan capital, Mekelle. Symbolically, that was where the Ethiopians defeated the Italian military 124 years ago.

What happens next in Ethiopia will depend on how the central government wants to handle its victory in Tigray. Will it be magnanimous in victory and pursue reconciliation or vengeance? What is clear to me is that every emergent power majority creates its own power minorities. The best option for Ethiopia is to run a federal system in which all nationalities, no matter how big or small, will have the right to their individual cultures, histories, languages and a sense of belonging to a collective federation where all are born free with equal opportunities and rights. One of the best examples in this regard was the defunct Soviet Union, where a person like Josef Stanlin, from tiny Georgia, had the right to lead that huge federation.

I wish the leaders of restive countries like Ethiopia and Nigeria will spare time off their very busy schedules to read Stanlin on the National Question.

Owei Lakemfa, a former secretary general of African workers, is a human rights activist, journalist and author.

Source:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *