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Press
Release No. 11
By the Network of
Ethiopian Scholars (NES) - Scandinavian Chapter
August
9, 2005
From
Hard Choices to One Choice: Here goes the NEBE again � |
�The question of
sharing power through negotiation will not be acceptable, as EPRDF
had won the election democratically.� (EPRDF, Ethiopian News
Agency, 9 August 2005)
�Emancipate
yourselves from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our
minds�. None can stop the time� Bob Marley
The
national election board of Ethiopia announced today that EPDRF could
form a government as it has won majority seats in the house of
people�s representatives. Let us take how the parties fared in
NEBE�s first announcement. On June 6,2005, the NEBE announced that
EPRDF won 268 seats, CUD alone won 115 seats, and UEDF also won 57
seats. After CUD and UEDF mainly complained about the unfairness and
irregularities in the election, NEBE claimed to have undertaken an
investigation that brought the following numbers. On August 9, 2005,
EPDRF won 296 seats that are up 28 seats, CUD 109 seats, reduced 8
seats and UEDF 52 seats, reduced 5 seats. In other words it means
after their complaints CUD lost 8 seats, UEDF lost 5 seats, and
EPDRF increased 28 seats. Given that CUD and UEDF are the major
parties that complained of voting irregularities, the NEBE seems to
have gone for punishing the complainers and the complaint by
decreasing even the seats NEBE acknowledged to them in the first
place, and increasing the seats for EPDRF, its chief ally. CUD
and UEDF complained not to lose the seats they won, but to recover
the loss they were certain to reclaim. The NEBE seems to have gone
for total acceptance of anything asked by EPDRF and total rejection
of anything related to irregularities presented by the opposition
parties. It does not make intuitive sense that in all the areas that
the opposition parties complained they lost, including even in the
areas where they secured victories, as duly acknowledged by NEBE by
its June 6,2005 announcement. It is the best demonstration to
show that the NEBE�s investigation is thoroughly soiled by
partisanship and subservience to the power perpetuating need of the
current incumbents in Ethiopia.
There is
no need to audit the statistics, much as it embarrasses us, we have
to admit that the NEBE is a national disgrace. We do not even
have to think of justice will be redressed in relation to this gross
robbery of the votes and voices of the Ethiopian people, because any
attempt to go through court and legal route is likely to confront
the chairman of the election board, who is president of the Supreme
Court and also president of the Constitutional Inquiry Commission.
Meles thrust all these multiple powers upon one person. Under
the circumstances, it would be easier to get a lump of meat from the
jaws of a lion than to get electoral justice through such a tampered
legal process, as it has been recommended time and time again by
foreign observers who take the role of advising the opposition
parties to accept such injustice employing double standard on the
way they treat regime and opposition.
We find
NEBE a complete embarrassment and we are clear now that the
Ethiopian people and their aspiration to democracy have been cruelly
abused. Even though we know all along that NEBE and the EPDRF work
closely, we did not want to believe that together they will descend
to this depth of depraved robbery, completely oblivious to the
long-term harm that their childish game will impart to Ethiopia�s
aspiration to create, a free, democratic and open society.
The
politics of blackmail and diktat so characteristic of Meles & Co
has always had exclusive and non-reconciliatory consequences. This
has been clear from 1975 when they formed the nucleus that
eventually managed to come to power in 1991. They fought the TLF
who had a similar idea and who also was fighting the same enemy they
were fighting. They fought the EDU and the EPRP, who were fighting
the same forces they were fighting. They fought the EPLF even when
they had a strategic alliance with them by fighting with EPLF to
make Eritrea a separate state. They also fought with EPLF to remove
the ELF, its competitor in Eritrea. In 1991 they dismissed all those
elements and groups they invited to form a transitional Government
that did not fully obey their line, (e.g., the OLF, the Southern
Unity Coalition led by Dr. Beyene Petros, and various individuals�
representing different groups.) They have now split the TPLF and
nearly half of the leadership is either in jail, in exile or living
in the country without any substantial public role. Related to the
split in the TPLF, they dismissed the former president and a number
of other regional leaders. So if one traces the short political
history of Meles & Co, one sees that they are �democracy-talking
but authoritarian- practising� liars, while at the same time
remaining arrogant, inhumane, full of devious intrigues,
unscrupulous, immoral, intolerant, anti-democratic and a violent. It
is difficult to imagine they will change, even though almost all who
wish the country to put behind the violent past wish them to change
and join and share the national thirst for imbuing the country with
democratic imagination.
The key
relationship that fosters a democratic energy is the development of
state-society relations. When it comes to the way the state relates,
under the Meles & Co dictatorship, to society, one sees nothing
but the imposition of crude power and knee-jerk reaction of quick
�shoot to kill� citizens without giving any chance to the right
to dissent. Over 3,500 people have been killed as part of the
violation of human rights in the last ten years according to human
right reports on Ethiopia. This figure does not include the
displaced or the death toll related to the recent Ethiopian-Eritrean
war.
For the
first time May 15,2005 looked as if that Meles & Co may be
changing the paradigm, habit and routine of violent engagement with
an electoral and democratic alternative. The pre-election debates
and the peaceful demonstrations, despite reports in the countryside
of various abuses, looked on the whole that there was a flicker of
hope, that something different has emerged in the way politics
unfolds in Ethiopia. Alas this was to be rudely aborted by the way
Meles & Co�s usual habit and reflex of violence took over
reason and the window of opportunity to see a democratic possibility
in the country. They announced immediately that they had won before
the counting is finalised. They took a number of measures through
the military, militia, media and the NEBE to change the opposition�s
claim of victory into defeat. Eventually they set in motion a
process that will have secured them a majority that will kill any
sense of a embedding an intelligent and vibrant democratic public
culture and debate in the country. They chose to pursue an
illegitimate route to �legitimise� their own exclusive electoral
ascendancy.
We have
now reached a moment when the EPDRF has finally declared a
Government. It has been given the green light by the NEBE to form a
Government. It seems to us that they will have no incentive to enter
into any arrangement that will bring about national reconciliation
for a long-term reversal of the politics that can enable Ethiopia to
move out of the vicious circle of poverty and conflict. For myopic
rulers, poverty and conflict remain fertile grounds for keeping
themselves in power by exploiting real and imagined differences, in
some cases even manufacturing and exaggerating those differences
like in the case of playing up the Rwanda genocide to silence
dissent in Ethiopia.
Is
it to Govern or to Misgovern: That is the Question
It is
clear that in Ethiopia that people will not believe that the regime
had won in an honest, fair and just election. There will be millions
of Ethiopians across the nation and the world, who now justifiably
feel not only is the Meles & Co cabal a prisoner of its violent
history, but also it is now a wholly lying, and cheating group that
can go any length to stay in power. The people have lost trust and
confidence. They feel doubly cheated, and ask why did they accept in
the first place an election to go this far and cheat when the people
threaten through voting to reject their rule? The people now believe
the election was not carried out to make them decide on who should
govern them. It was made by Meles & Co. because of the
particular policy of this group to allow the extraordinary flow of
foreign aid, and grant into the economy. The donors have insisted
that regimes that would like to scale up the share of foreign
assistance have to also accept multiparty election. So in order to
appear that they are doing what donors wanted, they have to go
through the motion of undertaking election that they do not believe
in and are not part of their style or way of their usual
politicking. This brings to mind what Addisu Legesse asked in a
donor conference. He said Ethiopia needs 122 billion dollars over a
decade to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. If they can ask
so much, and they get a lot as it is, though poverty is not growing
less, they have to accept the �good governance� conditionality.
Unfortunately for them, the May 15,2005 election just went beyond
their plan and expectation. They expected to be returned. But the
people wanted to intern them into oblivion. They made their coup
against the will of the people, and NEBE helped to do so being the
chief instrument to carry out the work that deflated the moral and
trust of the people. This election has been mismanaged. The
consequence of this management remains costly. There is now a crises
of confidence, crises of credibility, loss of trust, crises of
perception, crises of impression that can easily create a situation
where those who have forced themselves over the people thwarting
their will may not be able to govern, and those in the opposition
who refuse to acknowledge the legitimacy of the NEBE manipulated
result may not have the capability to control the anger of the
people� such a development creates the classic situation of a
crises of the old cannot continue in the old way and the new is
having many barriers to be born and assert its new democratic
objectives. It will come as no surprise, therefore, if the people
refuse to be governed by the old rulers.
Something
critically important has taken place in Ethiopia. A people that have
been cheated will not forget or forgive such injustice. To govern
with misgovernment will not be easy. To govern a people who trust
the governors will be easy. The Ethiopian people know in their heart
that this Government has cheated them of the priceless belief they
must have in government. This makes the years to come very difficult
under the rule of Meles and his friends. The regime can attract
donor money, but it will not solve the poverty question in the
country simply because the people have no trust in those who govern
them. This difficult situation could have been avoided had there
been honesty and integrity and a sense of responsibility to people,
country and nation. We do not know how the people may respond. What
we know is that the response will not submit or surrender to the
current regime. The regime probably would resort, true to form, to
the use of illegitimate force and violence to impose its diktat.
This will not help to create trust. It will deepen the mistrust.
Under such conditions, the governance will be self-serving rather
than public serving. All the donor money too will not be helpful but
hurtful to the people and the country by ending up possibly in the
web of corruption and equally possibly also in financing the regimes�
weapons of repressions.
It is
extraordinary to witness how leaders of the opposition parties
behaved with statesmen like vision and how Meles misbehaved as a
small-minded village tyrant. He is reported to give the opposition
the ultimatum, saying you must decide whether you are in or out.�
In�-means to surrender to his whim. �Out�- means to oppose his
whim. The opposition has been in the process, and it is Meles &
Co by killing students, declaring state of emergency and all other
misdoings that can disqualify them, by having chosen to be out of
the democratic process preferring authoritarian methods to deal with
the people and the opposition parties. But to use such childish
tactics- such as are you �in� or �out�- for a supposed
leader of a country is simply incredible. Supposing they applied the
same to him and say to him are you in the democratic process, do you
respect the democratic process, why do you tamper with the
democratic process? Why fail to undertake investigation properly?
Why use our legitimate complaint into an opportunity to return your
cadres by killing and intimidating our witnesses and using the NEBE
for such jobs including some of their members serving openly
partisan interests? All these actions suggest that the claim by the
EPDRF that it is in the democratic process is tenuous. It may have
been until May 15, 2005 just, but after that its actions belie any
submission to democratic authority.
It is not
only you are in or out, but also you cannot be in and out, that
Meles has chosen to dictate to the opposition as well. In addition
he has been reported to retort that the opposition if they do not
accept what Meles and others have incubated have a few other
options. Meles spelt out the options as follows: They can remain
inside the country bowing to the rulers all the time, they can go
into exile, and they can try armed struggle, they can be like the
OLF and go to the political wilderness and so on. How anyone can
wish Ethiopia that has gone through armed hell for so many years,
yet another bout of armed struggle is beyond comprehension! Meles
speaking with such childish and simple-minded notions is simply a
curse and not a blessing for our country. He is completely reckless
and cruel in the way he is so casual and superficial in providing as
an option another cycle of armed violence for the country. Knowing
what Ethiopia has been through, it is condemnable and criminal to
recommend armed struggle as an option.
Given the
context of Meles�s response described above, we commend highly the
way the opposition showed patience and vision to avoid any harm to
the people of Ethiopia. . We in the NES appreciate the opposition
representatives attempt to present the case for restoring public
trust with civility, humility and far-sighted vision and a sense of
great historical responsibility. The fact that they invited the
EPDRF to conceptualise its relations with other parties, the people,
society and the country with national reconciliation has been indeed
noble. That the ruling group declined their invitation shows more
the myopia of Meles & Co than anything else. Unfortunately the
choices of re-run of a national re-election or a national
reconciliation conception of governance do not seem to be accepted
by the regime. The regime has declared victory and called the
outcome �democratic and legitimate.� Where force and fraud were
involved, it is not credible to declare the election is �democratic
and legitimate� and expect the people to believe it. It can
believe its own lies, but it must not force those lies on the
people, nor should it expect the people to believe it.
Ethiopia
has now moved from hard choice to one choice only to show to the
regime that the people do not have to accept any stealing of their
voice and their votes by anyone. They must not be bullied to
surrender to accept a broad day light robbery of their votes. They
have a right to show peacefully their protest against this injustice
by using all peaceful, popular and democratic expressions and
avenues open to them. There is a need for a worldwide peaceful
movement to respect voice and vote. This movement must be developed
both inside and outside the country. All those who stand genuinely
for human rights, democracy and democratic governance, the rule of
law, and those who oppose all forms of officially sanctioned abuse
must support it. The international community that claims to stand
for human rights and democracy should support it. Any attempt to
suppress this popular movement by the regime must be recognized that
it will have the sole responsibility for any harm done to people who
resist injustice. Any use of extra- judicial killing, harassment of
the millions of people that supported and voted for the opposition
parties, and did not vote for the ruling group must be protected.
The attempt to abuse them that has started apparently by denying
them fertilizers and other agricultural inputs must be resisted.
Concluding
Remark
In a
series of press releases, we have tried to strive, seek and discover
a way that will bring the best possible climate to facilitate the
production of a future that rehabilitates rather than a future of
violence and poverty that kill in our ancient country. We have shown
an unyielding determination to the argument that, what the people
achieved must not be stolen or lost. We have tried to unmask the
abuse of power and dismissed the arrogance of the high office
holders as wholly unbefitting to the challenges of building a free
and open society in Ethiopia.
Having
said that, we in the NES would like to make it clear that our
involvement in the current struggle is driven by the highest ethical
imagination to see good done to the much abused Ethiopian people,
the country and the nation. We may not say all that needs saying in
temperate or acceptable expressions. Our language may bite, but our
paramount desire is to see good prevail in one of the three oldest
nations on this earth, that has unfortunately not made it yet to the
promise land. We think and feel that Ethiopians can learn to unite,
organise and develop, and thus finally convert the country�s
current disadvantage into an advantage. It is this optimism that
fires our imagination and fuels our engagement. We are fired by the
burning desire to see that our country achieves an irreversible
civilisation-transition, to make it the civilisation-nation that it
ought to be, given its old history, by mounting and engineering a
paradigm shift through the sharpening of our collective handiwork,
and the reinvigoration of our collective national self-esteem�a
national self-esteem that has been dented and even battered by those
who have chosen to express their solidarity only after making sure
that they have taken much in terms of a particularly an uncongenial
casting of the country as the premier symbol of hopelessness and
tragedy in the world. We believe a country that has disadvantages
can turn that disadvantage into an advantage. Equally important, a
country that has advantages may not realise the fullness of what it
has. Whether it has advantages or disadvantages, the ultimate
yardstick resides in the ability and capability of that nation to
turn advantage or disadvantage into freedom as development.
We have
read politically that May 15,2005 is a clarion call to make an
irreversible change and move away from the earlier rule by monarchy
deriving legitimacy from the transcendental mysteries of divine
election and providence, and any of the varieties of authoritarian
autocracy and dictatorship that came afterwards such as that of the
military, the current ethnic entrepreneurial minority rule, and the
agitation to whip up regressive racial, vernacular, and narrow
ideological species and dominations. We would like to see a
recrudescence in, to and of democratic governance,
that is derived and legitimated by the free voices and votes of free
Ethiopian citizens achieved vibrantly with full of interest,
freshness, industry, and vitality. We would like to see civic
expression, civic identity and civic engagement across the land. We
would like the people to be answerable only to the authority that
emanates from their own conscience, choices, preferences, moral
ideas and fellowship to their fellow human beings, and in addition
also, from their sense of dedication, commitment, responsibility to
people, nation and country.
We
believe the time is now to undertake the transition from rule by
providence, dictatorship and autocracy to government by the people,
for the people and of the people. We want this government to be
borne not from the barrel of the gun but from the free will of the
people who express civic political rights unhindered by any
intimidation, threat and childish bullying that has been a trademark
of the politics of the last fourteen years. We believe the
opportunity is open to make the desirable transition to democracy
possible, even as we recognise the dangers posed by the regime to
abort this noble outcome by privileging selfish sectarian concerns
over the good and accomplishment of the larger national purpose.
Regime acolytes tend cut and paste intellectually dishonest views to
justify the illegitimate as legitimate, the anti-democratic as
democratic. They remove the context of the regime�s action for
derailing the democratic process by its negative engagement through
the use and violence and provide a sanitized role to it as if it
were completely innocent.
That is
totally disingenuous and possibly such a dishonest defence is
motivated by lucrative business, personal and other benefits that
flow to the acolytes. It is very difficult for any sensible person
not to see the enormous value of undergoing genuine reconciliation
for the healthy political evolution of Ethiopia. They also play with
the widely recognised fact that the turnout of the election was
unprecedented while the election management and handling of result
has been wholly inadequate. The acolytes try to confuse by a
particularly pernicious intellectually dishonest and context-less
pick up phrases and quotes as a way of helping the regime. It shows
the regime has no serious intellectual backbone except for the
childish pinpricks of the acolyte types.
It has
been said, but time can be guilty as well, as witnessed by the
convulsions that our country experienced from May 15,2005 onwards.
Did we not observe dramatic rising of emotions where at one moment
the nation was thrown into the ecstasy of millions of people voting,
the next moment the emotions dropping with the tragedy of people
being massacred by the forces that stood to damn the democratic
resurgence that the people themselves so demonstrably created. The
rising and ebbing tides and swings of sudden emotion from happiness
to sadness is indeed a cruel irony experienced by arguably one of
the gentlest peoples on this planet. The people, the country and the
nation have been exposed to what turned out in the end to be an
expectant exuberant celebration followed quickly by the sheer
frustrations of not realising it in addition to the feeling of
sorrow not only for the sake of the people killed, arrested, beaten
and bullied, but also for the danger that the moment of democratic
transition that arrived so manifestly may be dimmed or even lost.
We think
that today in Ethiopia democracy has manifested through the
expression of voice and vote by the people. What is threatened is
the realisation and fulfillment of this democratic expression. The
significance of this massive expression of voice and vote is that
any ruler that threatens to abuse this public revolt against
dictatorship would be rudely shocked. Rulers cannot govern by
resorting to cheating and force. The people will resist in many
forms. The society will sooner or later transform into an
ungovernable situation. These myopic rulers who throw childish
tantrums will not know what will hit them when an irate population
rises and goes for them. There is a classic situation where those
who would like to govern through dictatorship cannot. The sooner
they fathom the significance of May 15, 2005, the better for all.
Power
does not concede without demand. It never has and it never will,
said Frederick Douglas. There is no freedom without striving for it.
The struggle for democracy is thus in front of us. This is a
struggle to make sure that the voice and vote of the people are
respected and not infringed by arrogant power. As the people turned
up to vote, they must be led to turn up to protest any attempt at a
theft of their votes and voice. Neither fear nor
appeasement/surrender to the regimes� relentless insistence to
accept theft must be condoned. People must resist theft. It is in
their rights to resist and not surrender to any form of abuse. The
right to resist is borne in relation to the power of abuse that they
experience. Ultimately the responsibility lies in those who did
wrong and not those who try to rectify wrong.
Professor
Mammo Muchie, Chair of NES-Scandinavian Chapter
Berhanu
G. Balcha, Vice- Chair of NES-Scandinavian Chapter
Tekola
Worku, Secretary of NES-Scandinavian Chapter
Contact
address:
Fibigerstraede
2
9220-
Aalborg East
Denmark
Tel. + 45
96 359 813 or +45 96 358 331
Fax + 45
98 153 298
Cell: +45
3112 5507
Email: [email protected]
or [email protected]
or [email protected]
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