March 28, 2016
(Excerpted
English version of speech given at the “Conference on the Future of Ethiopia:
Transition, Democracy, and National Unity” organized by Vision Ethiopia on
March 27, 2016 at the Marriott Georgetown.)
…I want to
thank Vision Ethiopia and the organizers of the “Conference on the Future of
Ethiopia: Transition, Democracy, and National Unity”.
When Prof.
Getachew Begashaw called me months ago to invite me to attend and participate at
this conference, I was impressed by the idea of a forum for broad engagement,
dialogue and debate on issues facing Ethiopia. I hope others will follow the
vision of Vision Ethiopia and organize more forums.
I would like
to express my appreciation and gratitude to Prof. Getachew and all of the
organizers in Vision Ethiopia for their wonderful efforts in putting together
this conference. Thank you all for caring so much about Ethiopia and the people
of Ethiopia in organizing this conference. Change cannot come without caring.
I also want
to thank Ethiopian Satellite Television for covering this conference. It
was in May 2010, six years ago that ESAT literally burst on the Ethiopian
scene from space to provide alternative news, information, analysis and entertainment
to Ethiopians wilting under T-TPLF propaganda.
I served as
the first chairperson of the ESAT advisory committee. It was wonderful working
with Ethiopians from diverse professional backgrounds.
I know the
forces of the Dark Side who draw their power from fear, anger, hatred, revenge
and aggression continue their efforts to block ESAT transmissions, but ESAT
with its light saber relentlessly continues to slash through the curtain of darkness
hanging over the people of Ethiopia.
The best
weapon of dictators is secrecy.
The best
weapon against dictators is free media.
The best
battle plan against dictators is to be armed to the teeth with the truth and
use the media to shine the blinding light of accountability on oppressors
clinging nakedly to power.
Thank you
ESAT for shining your blinding light on visionless oppressors. Thank you ESAT
for all you have done to inform and enlighten the people of Ethiopia.
I want to
thank all of the presenters at this conference for their thoughtful and
provocative presentations. I have learned much from their insights and
diversity of views and opinions.
I thank all
of you who attended this conference this weekend. Thank you for your
penetrating questions and insightful comments. Your participation has vastly
improved the quality of this conference.
As many of
you are aware, I got into the human rights struggle in Ethiopia after the late
Meles Zenawi ordered the massacre of unarmed protesters following the 2005
election. We all know that 193 men, women and children were shot down in
the streets and over 30 thousand persons imprisoned throughout the country.
There are 237 policemen who committed those atrocities who are walking the
streets free today.
That
massacre continues today. The mass arrests and persecutions continue today.
In the past
few weeks, over 270 Ethiopians have been massacred in Oromia region by the
Thugtatorship of the Tigrean Peoples Liberation Front (T-TPLF).
Thousands
have been jailed in T-TPLF secret and official jails. No one but the T-TPLF
knows the real figures about how many they have killed and jailed. They are not
talking. They are just killin’ and jailin’.
The absence
of massive outrage and visible support for the struggle in Oromia against the
T-TPLF is itself an outrage and a moral abomination. When Ethiopians in Oromia
bleed, when they are jailed and disappear, why do we remain silent? Why?
Before I
offer my remarks, I ask you all to join me in remembering the 193 men, women
and children killed in the Meles Massacres in 2005, the thousands of others the
T-TPLF has massacred but whose deaths were not recorded by any inquiry
commissions since or before that election, the 270 documented victims of T-TPLF
wanton violence recently and the thousands of political prisoners languishing
in T-TPLF prisons today.
I want to
take a moment to remember our Ethiopian heroes unjustly imprisoned by the
T-TPLF. There are so many of them. It is impossible to list them all.
We remember
Eskinder Nega, Andualem Aragie, Bekele Gerba, Ahmed Jebel, Abebe Qesto,
Emawayesh Alemu, Woubshet Taye, Temesgen Desalegn and so many others.
“Quo vadis,
Ethiopia?”
I have come
across three time zones to answer this question with questions, more accurately
to interrogate the question itself.
What does
the question “Where is Ethiopia going?” even mean?
I am sure
for many people it is a straightforward question for which there is a
straightforward answer. For me it is a mind-bogglingly complex question for
which there could be an infinite set of answers.
The modern
usage of the phrase “quo vadis” originates from a question allegedly asked of
Saint Peter the Apostle as he fled likely crucifixion by Emperor Nero Augustus
Caesar in Rome. It is said that Peter met the risen Jesus on the outskirts of
Rome where Peter asked Jesus “Quo vadis?”. Jesus allegedly replied, “Romam eo
iterum crucifigi” (“I am going to Rome to be crucified again”).
Inspired by
the response, Peter is said to have returned to Rome to continue his work
eventually crucified upside-down.
Happy Easter
to all who celebrate that holiday today.
I first came
across that Latin phrase when I was in high school in Addis Ababa in the late
1960s.
Well over
four decades ago, I published an article, an op-ed of sorts, in a popular
English monthly(?) magazine in Addis Ababa (circa 1968-69), the name of which I
cannot remember, with same Latin phrase questioning, if my memory serves me
right, what I believed the unconventional life styles of some of my youthful
contemporaries. I was a geek of sorts then and was questioning where the youth
were going.
Almost
one-half half century later, I am asking the same question. “Quo vadis,
Ethiopia?” Where are you going Ethiopia? I should like to add, “or not going?”.
Life can be
strange and funny sometimes.
It is
strangely funny to me to ask the same question I asked of my contemporaries so
long ago of the young people today.
Over 70
percent of the population of Ethiopia is said to be under 35.
So the first
question about the question is, “Should the question be reframed more precisely
as “Quo vadis, Ethiopia’s youth?”
I am not
trying to sideline my Hippo Generation, just stating the hard facts.
As I ask the
youth where they are going, I am compelled to share with the Cheetah Generation
a cautionary but wise African saying about going places: “If you don’t know
where you are going, any road will take you there.”
So it is
important for Ethiopia’s youth to have a road map to navigate to their chosen
destination(s).
Others say,
“All roads lead to (from) Rome.”
The Roman
Empire was large and political power radiated out of Rome to the rest of its
imperial possessions.
(Just in
passing I will mention that “Il Duce” Benito Mussolini found a road to Ethiopia
in 1935 to begin the “new Roman empire” and sent his troops over to
declare, “I came, I saw, I conquered.” His predecessors tried the same
thing in 1896.
Twice Rome
found out from the Ethiopians, “You came, you saw and here is a boot to your
rear end to help you get back to Rome pronto.)
But the
question to Ethiopia’s youth is, “Do all roads lead to (from) Ethiopia?
The
question, “Quo vadis Ethiopia?” has its corollary, “Where are you going
T-TPLF?”
The T-TPLF
master builders of the empire of corruption have the same attitude about
Ethiopia as did Mussolini. They came out of the bush and declared, “We came. We
saw. We conquered.”
Ethiopians
should deliver the same message to the T-TPLF. “You came. You massacred. You
stole. Here is a boot to get you back to the bush in a hurry.”
Follow the
youth
To find out
where Ethiopia is going, I say follow the youth.
So the
question, rephrased again is this, “Are Ethiopia’s youth looking to find
Ethiopia?”
Albert
Einstein once observed that “If I had an hour to solve a problem I’d spend 55
minutes thinking about the problem and 5 minutes thinking about solutions.”
Einstein
also said, “Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is
limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the
entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.”
Phrased more
poetically, George Bernard Shaw said, “You see things; and you say, ‘Why?’ But
I dream things that never were; and I say, ‘Why not?’” That is the kind of
imagination I am talking about.
I have been
given 20 minutes to solve all of Ethiopia’s problems, so I have decided to use
17 minutes to think about the problems out loud with you.
I will use
the remaining 3 minutes to think about the solutions.
I shall try
to weave together four themes — the African proverb, the twin Einsteinian
notions of thinking critically and thinking imaginatively and creatively
and the notion that all roads lead to Rome.
The
organizing question for the conference is, “Ethiopia, where are you going?”
It is an
important question because it is on the minds of every Ethiopian.
I have
wrestled with the question for quite a while.
In January
2011, I wrote a commentary weekly
column entitled, “After the Fall of African Dictatorships”.
I have
written many other commentaries on the
question, the latest one this past December entitled, “The ‘End of the Story’
for the T-TPLF in Ethiopia?”.
Why it is on
the minds of all Ethiopians is open to question. There are a thousand different
reasons to ask that one question.
Is the
question raised because we could see the twilight of the T-TPLF?
Could it be
because things are changing so fast in Ethiopia that some see an enveloping
darkness of deepening repression over the horizon and others blinding light of
liberation from T-TPLF rule at the end of the tunnel?
To me the
five words in the question resonate differently.
I hear those
words asking me, not one but endless questions:
Ethiopia,
where are you going with the T-TPLF? (Ethiopia is at a dead end with the
T-TPLF.)
Ethiopia,
where are you going after the T-TPLF is gone?
Ethiopia,
who will take over after the T-TPLF is over?
Ethiopia,
are you going to be an undiscovered country after the T-TPLF is gone?
Ethiopia,
are you going backwards into tyranny and authoritarianism as you have over the
past one hundred years?
Ethiopia,
will you walk over the minefields the T-TPLF has set for you over the past 25
years and implode?
Ethiopia,
are you heading towards civil war?
Ethiopia,
are you finally getting back on the long walk to freedom in the same sense as
Nelson Mandela?
Ethiopia,
are you walking in the direction of truth and reconciliation?
Ethiopia,
are you ready to walk out of the kilil walls built around you and into a land
free of the shackles of ethnic politics, sectarianism and thug rule?
No one I
know wants to answer or begin to answer these questions.
I certainly
don’t want to answer them.
These are
very difficult questions. They are scary questions. They are complex questions.
They are mind-boggling questions. They are questions that seem intractable and
insurmountable. They are questions that trigger depression in the most
optimistic and good-willed Ethiopian.
Answering
these questions demands extraordinary creativity; extraordinary imagination and
extraordinary commitment and sacrifice.
I know how
the T-TPLF’s answers these questions.
The T-TPLF
will tell you that without their guidance and leadership Ethiopia will go the
way of the way of Syria and Libya. (That’s their fervent wish. If they can’t
have Ethiopia for their playground, let it be destroyed. Apre moi, le deluge.
(After me (us), the flood.) Or as the Ethiopian saying goes, “The donkey said
after she is dead she does not care if grass ever grows.)
The late
T-TPLF mastermind Meles Zenawi was fond of saying that without his guiding hand
Ethiopia will go the way of Yugoslavia. The former Yugoslavia is today seven
nations. That was Meles’ dream for Ethiopia. That is the T-TLF’s dream today.
After they go, Ethiopia will go 7 or 9 separate ways.
Meles is
gone and Ethiopia is still here.
After the
T-TPLF is gone, Ethiopia will continue to be here.
It is the
privilege of self-proclaimed messiahs that the road will end with them and
without them.
There is no
question that the Ethiopia-stan made of killils and kililistans will end with
the end of the T-TPLF.
Didn’t apartheid
end (at least officially) with the end of white minority rule in South Africa?
Ethnic
federalism (ethnic apartheid) is the womb and amniotic fluid in which the
T-TPLF was gestated and born.
Kililistans
were birthed to maintain the T-TPLF in power. Just as there could be no white
minority rule and bantustans in South Africa without apartheid, there could
also be no T-TPLF rule without ethnic federalism and killilistans.
But I have
chosen to re-frame the question “quo vadis” in an imaginative way.
The question
is, “Where is Ethiopia going after the T-TPLF is gone?”
To me that
question is similar to asking a person afflicted by cancer what he would do if
s/he is suddenly free of cancer.
Supposing a
person who is unjustly imprisoned for decades is suddenly set free, how would
that person feel?
Supposing a
population held in bondage for decades were set free, how would they feel?
I think we
can answer these questions with other questions.
How did the
majority of South Africans feel when the minority white apartheid regime
collapsed and was replaced by majority rule in 1994?
How did the
majority of South Africans feel when Nelson Mandela and thousands of
anti-apartheid leaders and political prisoners were released in 1991?
How did the
majority of South Africans feel when they stood up for hours to cast their
ballots for the first time in their lives and managed to elect the government
of their own in an election that was not rigged, in a free and fair election,
an election that was not won by 100 percent by the minority white apartheid
regime?
The 600
pound gorilla or the 6,000 pound elephant in the room is where Ethiopia is
going after the T-TPLF is gone, swept into the dustbin of history?
Where is
Ethiopia going after the mud walls of T-TPLF dictatorship come tumbling down
and the T-TPLF glass palaces of illusion behind the mud walls are shattered by
a tsunami of popular uprising or creeping resistance?
Will
Ethiopia go the way of Humpty Dumpty who “had a great fall” and could not be
put back together by “all the king’s horses and all the king’s men”?
Or will
Ethiopia rise from the ashes of the T-TPLF and be all it can be?
I have
prophesied that the T-TPLF is on its last legs living on borrowed time. T-TPLF
prime minster recently said the T-TPLF can no longer expect to cling to the
backs of the people. Those days are over, according to Hailemariam.
The
question, “Where is Ethiopia going?” cannot be answered without asking the
corollary question, “Where is the T-TPLF going?”.
The T-TPLF
is going to the dustbin of history!
The T-TPLF
is a dead end street for Ethiopia.
So here are
two questions that need to be addressed: 1) What happens in the run up to the
time when the T-TPLF is swept into the dustbin of history? 2) What happens
between the time the T-TPLF is swept in to the dustbin of history and history
is made to replace the T-TPLF?
The
Solution- A road map for the long road to freedom?
I will come
back to the African proverb. “If you don’t know where you are going, any road
will take you there.”
The road map
is a new Ethiopian constitution.
I have
studied the T-TPLF constitution. It is a patchwork of borrowed language from
other constitutions just like the T-TPLF’s so-called anti-terrorism law is a
cut-and-paste of terrorism laws from different countries.
From what I
have been able to gather from the T-TPLF constitution, there is no such entity
as “Ethiopia”, only “peoples, nations and nationalities” in the land mass known
as Ethiopia.
Perhaps I
should correct myself because the landmass known as “Ethiopia” is itself in
question today after you subtract the land given in “arbitration” in the
northern border to an invading army and a 700-plus kilometer slice of land
secretly handed over to the Sudan.
In the
Preamble to the T-TPLF constitution, it is written, “We, the
nations, nationalities and Peoples of Ethiopia…”
There is no
nation as “Ethiopia” per se constitutionally, only nations, nationalities and
peoples.
Just to
clarify what I mean, let me ask you to consider the Preamble to the
Constitution of the United States which states: “We the People of the United
States…”
There is one
people of the United States (“We the People…”) even though the United States is
a nation of immigrants who came from all nations, nationalities and peoples of
the world.
“We the
people…” is the principal reason why the U.S. has survived and prospered,
despite major imperfections for well over two centuries. (I did not say
abominations like Donald Trumpenstein.)
I believe
the Preamble to the Constitution of the New Ethiopia should begin with the
following phrase, “We the People of Ethiopia, in order to…”
Second, the
constitution of the New Ethiopia should have language along the following
lines: “The powers not delegated to the national Ethiopian government by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states
respectively, or to the people.” In other words, the new national government of
the New Ethiopia will function only to the extent that the national
constitution grants power to it. You may have seen similar language in
the tenth amendment to longest enduring constitution in the world.
Third and
straight up, the new constitution of the New Ethiopia should adopt in its
entirely Article 55(4) of Ghana’s Constitution: “Every political party shall
have a national character, and membership shall not be based on ethnic,
religious, regional or other sectional divisions.”
If these
three constitutional objectives could be achieved, what remains is getting on
Nelson Mandela’s long road to freedom.
Imagine a
freedom ride on Nelson Mandela’s Way.
What is
Mandela’s way? It is the way of freedom from the mental prison and slavery of
racial and ethnic hatred and sectarianism.
Mandela
said, “As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom,
I knew if I didn’t leave my bitterness and hatred behind, I’d still be in
prison.”
I believe a
new constitutional roadmap to the New Ethiopia will lead all Ethiopians out of
the mental prisons of long-simmering ethnic hatred and geographic cages called
“kilils” into the promised land of truth and reconciliation.
Mandela’s
way of truth and reconciliation.
Many
countries have undergone a truth and reconciliation process including
Rwanda, Argentina, Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Ghana and Chile.
There are
different approaches to truth and reconciliation. The basic idea is to help a
country heal its political and social by uncovering the truth about human
rights violations that had occurred during a particular period. The
basic idea is you cannot build a new nation on a foundation of revenge and the
Hamurabic Code of “an eye for an eye.” That could only lead to a nation of
blind people.
Ethiopia is
the global poster child for human rights violations so a truth and
reconciliation process is vital for a post T-TPLF Ethiopia.
I believe a
successful truth and reconciliation process will pave the road to genuine
multiparty democracy.
I am talking
about a multiparty democracy based on the rule of law, respect for human
rights, governance accountability and transparency.
I do NOT
mean a multiparty democracy based on ethnicity, religion, language, region and
so on.
Good
governance depends upon the ability of individuals and groups to express their
opinions and compete in the political process. A strong multi-party political
system enables citizens to organize around issues and advance ideas, policies
and programs for governance. A strong multiparty system ensures people who
share similar views and opinions to organize and pressure government.
Competitive multiparty systems provide political space for the expression
of civic discontent and engagement into constructive policy debates for
peaceful change. A multiparty political system facilitates inclusion of
marginalized groups in society, particularly youth and women.
So, I will
ask the question one more time. “Where is Ethiopia going?”
Ethiopia is
going out of T-TPLF kililistan into a constitutional democracy where the rule
of law prevails and human rights are respected.
Ethiopia is
walking out of artificial and unnatural kililistan homelands into one Ethiopian
nation.
Let me
invoke the old African saying one more time. “If you don’t know here you are
going any road will take you there.”
Now, we know
where we are going and which road we need to take to get where we want to go.
The destiny
of Ethiopia is in the hands and feet of all Ethiopians. They have the power to
pick her up or to drop her and shatter her like glass. They can walk with her
on the long road to freedom or they can leave her in the wheelchair built for
her by the T-TPLF.
Where
Ethiopia is going is up to all of the people of Ethiopia.
Let me come
back to Einstein and Shaw one more time.
Einstein
said, “Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited
to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world,
and all there ever will be to know and understand.”
I believe
Einstein meant that human destiny is not determined just by what we know, but
also by what we can imagine. It was Einstein who asked the supremely beautiful
imaginary question, “What if I can ride a beam of light across the universe?”
What if we
can imagine establishing a genuine multiparty democracy based on a foundation
of the rule of law in Ethiopia?
What if we
can imagine establishing a federal system of government in Ethiopia based on
the division of powers between the national and sub-national governments?
What if we
can imagine establishing political parties organized NOT on the basis of
ethnicity, religion, region, language, etc.?
What if we
can imagine an Ethiopia free of the T-TPLF cancer on the Ethiopian body
politics?
I let my
imagination run free and wild. Like Shaw I ask, “You see things; and you say,
‘Why?’ But I dream things that never were; and I say, ‘Why not?’”
If some can
imagine the freedom of riding on a beam of light, why can’t we imagine setting
on a long walk to freedom?
Ultimately,
the question of where Ethiopia is going will be answered by Ethiopia’s young
women and men, Ethiopia’s Cheetah Generation with the support of Ethiopia’s
Hippo Generation. It is going to be answered by the thousands of political
prisoners in Ethiopia who are paying the ultimate price for our freedom.
ALL ROADS
LEAD TO THE NEW ETHIOPIA!!!
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