The former ruling party in Ethiopia, Tigrean People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), has elected a replacement for its deceased leader Meles Zenawi. The new chairman is Tigray Region president Abay Wolde, and the vice-chairman is radio jammer Debretsion Gebremichael.
The sudden death of dictator Meles Zenawi has created an unexpected opportunity for the ruling junta, EPRDF, to reverse course and make peace with the people of Ethiopia whom it had been terrorizing and brutalizing for the past 21 years.
Let’s be clear about the fact that Meles had never intended for Hailemariam to become a prime minister. Neither did he intend for TPLF to lose the leadership of both the ruling junta and the prime minister’s office. Hailemariam’s premiership is the unintended consequence of Meles’s grand design to build a personal dynasty parallel to the Greater Tigray Manifesto. In order to realize his megalomaniac dream without any challenge, he gutted TPLF to the core by removing Tigrean nationalists and those with strong leadership skills and replacing them with corrupted individuals. In the event that his grand design fails, Meles was preparing to implement the sinister Article 39 of the constitution and create a new country called ‘Greater Tigray.’ His plan fell apart when he unexpectedly died without preparing any one to take over. His hand-picked patriarch followed him to hell a few days later.
What is next?
I have been told by some individuals who have known Hailemariam Desalegn personally since childhood that he, unlike dictator Meles Zenawi, is a humble, decent human being. Also, unlike Meles, he doesn’t hate Ethiopia. I have heard from others that, even though they do not deny Hailemariam is a decent person, they think that the primary reason Meles appointed him as his deputy was because he is a weak leader who was not a threat to him.
I am more optimistic about Hailemariam than many of my friends. I believe what has occurred over the past few months in Ethiopia is the work of God. I believe that Ethiopians have been given an opportunity by God to make things better for our country. I therefore wish to see that Hailemariam he is a civilized leader. I wish he will bring peace and reconciliation to Ethiopia. I wish to see that he is NOT a blood thirsty tyrant like his predecessor, and that he will respect the civil rights of all Ethiopians. He can demonstrate all that by immediately taking the following measures:
Release of all political prisoners.
Stop the genocidal war in Ogaden against fellow Ethiopians and allow humanitarian organizations to provide aid to the war ravaged population.
Rescind the press and terrorism laws that were passed by Meles to eliminate opposition to his dictatorship.
Invite all opposition groups for a dialogue.
In the spirit of what I stated above, for the next few months, instead of criticizing the Hailemariam administration, I will try to cooperate with him in transitioning Ethiopia to genuine democracy, if that is his intention. I also call on all patriotic Ethiopians to give Hailemariam some time to prove himself, while closely monitoring every move he and all members of his new administration will be making.
A friend recently sent me a video presenting Sebhat Nega’s defense of the TPLF constitution. My friend was rightly amazed at the dismissive and arrogant nature of the defense. My reaction wandered a bit in the direction of assessing the origin of the defense: I could not help but ask what torturous path led a Tigrean to a defense erasing the shared legacy of a very long history. Let me first briefly summarize the content of Sebhat’s discourse.
Sebhat refers to a hypothetical situation where opponents intent on dismissing the TPLF constitution succeed in seizing power. Sebhat emphatically predicts the inevitable disintegration of Ethiopia and the outbreak of war. According to him, the TPLF constitution is the foundation of Ethiopian unity. It originated from a consensus of all the peoples of Ethiopia and remains the sole guarantee of equality. Since equality is the basis of unity, any change altering its main principles inexorably entails the collapse of unity. In his assumption, this almost happened in 2005 when forces inimical to the constitution scored important electoral gains. If the movement had not been violently crushed, it would have certainly resulted in war and disintegration.
By way of illustration, Sebhat takes the case of the United States. The foundation of the American federation is the Constitution, which, if changed, will entail the disintegration of the country. For Sebhat, what Ethiopians have in common with Americans is precisely that for both of them constitutional consensus is the source of nationalism. Just as American nationalism is tied to a constitutional document, so too Ethiopian nationalism derives from the TPLF constitution.
I leave out Sebhat’s illusion that the TPLF constitution originated from a consensus of all the peoples of Ethiopia when we know too well that said consensus was imposed on powerless peoples by the victorious Tigrean and Eritrean guerrilla armies. However, the illusion metamorphoses into arrogance when Sebhat compares the TPLF constitution with the American Constitution. The latter promotes individual rights while the TPLF constitution gives primacy to group rights, that is, to ethnic belonging, the consequence of which is that it works against national integration by isolating and nurturing ethnic states. States in Ethiopia are not administrative units that decentralize power and empower local communities but ethnic enclaves that create national borders within the nation and grant them with the right to secede.
What is most appalling and utterly false is Sebhat’s declaration that the fundamental act of being Ethiopian is an outcome of the TPLF constitution. How could it be so when what we all know so far is that the Ethiopian state and society have their origin in the distant history of the Aksumite kingdom and that their cultural features and history testify to a long and uninterrupted legacy that equally involved Tigreans and Amharas? Even our recent history defines Yohannes, not as the emperor of Tigray, but as the emperor of Ethiopia. The unequivocal reality is thus that Ethiopian nationhood is defined by history, and not by the acceptance of the 1994 constitution. Here we can extend to Ethiopia Margaret Thatcher’s famous statement, to wit, “Europe was created by History; America by Philosophy.” Rather than the constitution begetting Ethiopian nationhood, it presupposes it as the object of its rectification. This reversal of the correct order is typical of the thinking of the TPLF and is reflected in the first statement of the preamble in the form of “We, the Nations, Nationalities and Peoples of Ethiopia.”
Let me ask a question: when the guerrilla army of the TPLF marched into Amhara territory and finally into Addis Ababa and seized state power, were we supposed to assume that Ethiopia did not exist yet? But then, there is nothing that prevents us from qualifying the march as an invasion of foreign troops, nay, as a colonial conquest. Since I am sure that Sebhat will contest such a characterization, then why does he keep defining Ethiopianness by a constitution when the country existed for a long time prior to the writing of the constitution?
What Sebhat is in reality revealing is the conditional nature of his Ethiopianism. He is Ethiopian so long as the constitution, imposed by the TPLF and conducive to its hegemony over Ethiopia, is the supreme law of the land. What this means if not that Tigray will not agree to remain within Ethiopia if the TPLF loses its hegemonic position. I cannot speak for all Tigreans, among whom many are dedicated Ethiopians, but Sebhat’s position shows that the leadership of the TPLF has been and still is appropriated by individuals who have always posed the issue of Ethiopian unity in conditional terms.
This conditionality explains why many pro-Ethiopian activists and intellectuals consider Sebhat and his likes as nothing more than stooges of the EPLF. Yet, their support for Eritrean independence is just a logical conclusion of their conditional Ethiopianness. One cannot be conditionally Ethiopian while being a resolute defender of the territorial integrity of Ethiopia. Moreover, the hegemonic goal of the TPLF could hardly accommodate a rival organization like the EPLF. Both ideological consistency and interest dictated the TPLF’s determined effort to oust Eritrea from Ethiopia.
Obviously, the perceived fragility of the system subsequent to the demise of Meles Zenawi now drives TPLF people to blackmail Ethiopians. If the TPLF does not rule, Sebhat promises the deluge. Is this not to admit that two decades of forceful enforcement of the constitution were not enough to generate even a semblance of consensus? What a brilliant achievement! Sebhat sounds like those children who agree to play with other children provided they always win.
Within the past few months alone, I have heard about 4 Ethiopian women who have killed themselves — one in Virginia, another one in Dallas, then two weeks ago a girl I know very well in Atlanta (I am still in shock), and just 6 days ago a mother of four beautiful young children in Reverside, California. There may be many others whom I have not heard about.
The girl who killed herself in Atlanta is a very good friend of my sister and I also met her several times. She is an outgoing person who appeared to be full of life. She is the last person I would suspect to kill herself.
In the middle east, Ethiopian women committing suicide has become so common that the media is not even reporting about it any more. Their situation can be explained by the fact that they live an unbearable life under abusive employers. But from all their outward appearances, the Ethiopian women here in the U.S. who have committed suicide seemed to have led a happy, comfortable life. What is going on? Shouldn’t we as a community try to find out what is going on and seek solutions?