The Christian Science Monitor
The strategic Horn of Africa country is one-third Muslim and two-thirds Christian; why is its state-TV ginning up religious tension?
Ethiopia, a US ally in the battle against Al Qaeda-affiliated
militants in Somalia, added to mounting worries about religious discord
in the diverse east African state by screening a provocative documentary
on Islamic extremism.
Ethiopian Muslims are furious about the film, which they say
dishonestly blurs the distinction between legitimate political protest
and violence by using lurid images of foreign terrorists that have
nothing to do with them.
The program, Jihadawi Harekat (Holy War Movement), ran on
state-TV at peak watching hours last week, and it associates local
Muslim protesters now on trial with militant groups such as Nigeria’s
brutal Boko Haram movement and Somalia’s Al Shabab, as well as unrelated
Ethiopian militants.
Currently, 29 leaders of a Muslim protest movement, and
representatives of two Islamic charities are on trial in Addis Ababa,
facing charges of plotting violence to create an Islamic state. The
trial is being held behind closed doors in order to protect some 200
witnesses, according to the government.
The Muslim defendants were arrested in August after nearly a year of
nonviolent protests over what they allege is unconstitutional Ethiopian
state meddling in Islamic affairs.
“The risks posed by violent religious radicalism in Ethiopia are not
imaginary,” says Jon Abbink, senior researcher from the African studies
center at Leiden University in the Netherlands. “But the documentary is
probably over-doing it; the susceptibility of Muslims in Ethiopia to Al
Qaeda-like radicalization is slim,” he says, adding that the film would
appear to “delegitimize” peaceful political disagreements by Muslims and
set up the possibility of a “backlash.”
Ethiopia is considered a stronghold of Sufism, an approach to the
practice of Islam sharply at odds with that of Al Qaeda and aligned
groups. The area has been heralded for centuries for the largely
peaceful co-existence of its varied religious communities – though
concerns are rising over extremism. Twice in recent years the Army has
invaded Somalia to pursue and combat Islamist militants and salafis
whose influence is said to be increasing on the Ethiopian side of the
border.
Muslims make up a third of a population of around 90 million in
sub-Saharan Africa’s second-most populous nation, according to CIA
statistics. There are an estimated 57 million Christians.
Ethiopia’s key position in the Horn of Africa – adjacent to volatile
Somalia and Sudan and in close proximity to the Middle East and North
Africa – gives it an importance in the eyes of Western nations. It
receives some $3 billion in strategic aid from various donors and
Washington has looked on approvingly as Ethiopian troops take on
militants in Somalia and as its peacekeepers patrol the flash-point
Sudanese region of Abyei.
In return, Ethiopia allows the US to fly surveillance drones over Somalia from the southern Ethiopian city of Arba Minch.
Stoking tensions
The Muslims who protested (largely peacefully) for nearly a year are
led by a 17-man committee from the Awalia Muslim Mission school.
Those on trial say the state is leading a coercive campaign, pushing
the nation’s 31 million Muslims towards identifying with a more moderate
strain of Islam called Al Ahbash. They allege the government is fearful
of a perceived new radical Islamic impulse and is attempting to
strengthen its control of Ethiopia’s main Islamic national council.
The group is demanding that Muslims be allowed to run their own affairs, and for their leaders to be released.
Government officials claim the campaign is a stalking-horse for extremists planning an Islamic takeover.
Last week, in the midst of hot debate over the trial of the
29, Ethiopian Television [ETV] ran the hour long documentary, and then
repeated it on consecutive days at peak-time after the news.
While authorities may have intended their documentary to be
informative, it has in fact stoked fears among Christians about Muslim
intentions, and reignited mass protests by Muslims at mosques.
The film starts with shots of Al Shabab fighters in Somalia and
scenes of carnage following Boko Haram bomb attacks in Nigeria. Then it
segued to interviews with alleged militants, some from a cell of 15
Ethiopians recently arrested.
In the film, one man, Aman Assefa, told the cameras they were
planning attacks in Ethiopia after being trained and armed by Al Shabab.
Then, inexplicably, clips of interviews with some of the 29 on trial
and of speeches from Awalia leaders followed. Then interviews with
ordinary Ethiopian citizens appeared, saying that the Muslim group’s
demands for more religious autonomy were bogus because there is ample
religious freedom in Ethiopia.
In a phone interview after the film was aired, government spokesman
Shimeles Kemal said the documentary revealed “loosely connected terror
networks” in Ethiopia, with shared objectives.
“The whole thing was coordinated by the government,” says Kedir Mohammed, a taxi driver, expressing skepticism.
In recent days, some 90,000 Muslims, the biggest grouping since
Ramadan in August, gathered around Grand Anwar, the largest mosque in
Ethiopia, located in the Muslim-majority market area of Addis Ababa,
after Friday prayers last week to respond. Signs proclaimed “ETV is a
liar” and “ETV. Made in False.”
“This is going to increase more and more until those people are released,” says Mr. Kedir the taxi driver.
“There’s no fear but people became more angry with the government,” says 17-year-old trader Abdulkarim Mohammed.
Propaganda or public information?
Opposition politicians were similarly outraged when ETV, the only Ethiopian broadcaster, screened a comparably skewed program, Akeldama
[Field of Blood], just as charismatic critics of the government
Eskinder Nega and Andualem Arage were being prosecuted last year.
Dissidents view the latest broadcast as the natural act of a police
state that is intolerant of dissent and dependent on divisive propaganda
to focus public attention away from its misrule.
“Keep on recording at least half of your crimes, that is part of our
collective memory,” exiled Addis Neger newspaper editor Mesfin Negash
wrote in a statement addressed to “Dear Oppressors” on Facebook.
“The only thing I like about your court drama is this aspect of
recording your history of injustice and the crime you are committing in
the name of justice.”
Many ordinary citizens were divided over the film. Even some who are
sympathetic to the government have questioned its timing in the midst of
a high profile trial. Others have praised it.
”After watching the documentary my mother said something like ‘I
didn’t know terrorist were that organized in Ethiopia and a threat to
our country,’ ” says one viewer who said she considered the program
“ridiculous” propaganda. “She said the government has done the right
thing to crackdown before it gets worse.”
A middle-aged rental agent from a Christian family alleged that a
quarter of Muslims support extremists and that many newly wealthy
Muslims are building mosques with cash from Gulf states, in a comment
expressing typical frustration and suspicions among Christians.
“The government is trying to reduce the power of Muslims,” he says,
after asking for the interview to be moved away from a Muslim-owned
property.
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