Raya refers a tract of land stretching from Ala wuha in the south to Alaje in the north. That is bigger than Adwa and
Axum awrajas combined. Historically, this is where the Weyane rebellion
started in 1928 as a spontaneous reaction to a repressive system of the
time. Originating in their present day Kobo wereda, the revolt would
quickly spread to cover the entire Raya and Wejerat provinces.
Later,
the inhabitants of Enderta joined the revolt and a sort of
quasi-organized alliance was formed after a decade of Raya and Wejerat
rebellion. This alliance, Weyane, would emerge so potent that by its
heyday it practically liberated the provinces of Raya, Wejerat and
Enderta.
The imperial government with the support of British Air force
resorted to aerial bombardment of the rebel held areas which caused a
wide-spread damage, including complete erasure of villages. However, the
most detrimental factor that actually caused the demise of Weyane was
to come from none other than Adwa people. In 1943, Dejazmach Gebrehiwot
Meshesha along with a dozen of Adwans exploited the trust vested on them
to assassinate the leaders of the Weyane movement. This is significant
for in the Ethiopian tradition, at least until then, if one manages to
kill the leader one will win the battle. Meshesha and co. breach of the
traditional trust and value was so venomous that even to this date
mistrust and resentment runs high in Raya. It is to be noted that if not
for Meshesha of Adwa, the people were in a very strong bargaining
position and if one has to look how similar revolts in Bale and other
regions were resolved, the rebels demand for better governance was
within reach. As a thank you for their contribution, Meshesha and his
fellow Adwans were rewarded heavily by Haileselasse while a series of
punitive attacks continued on the ‘originators’ of Weyane and ultimately
Raya was divided between Wollo and Tigray.
When the TPLF started
the armed insurrection in Ethiopia, it took little time to transform
itself as an Adwa-only club by the same inherited act of treachery. The
legacy of resentment that Meshesha and co. left means TPLF-Adwa had hard
time to set foot in Raya. Hence, they needed to come up with a trick
and did it so by cosmetically inserting the word Weyane in the Tigrigna
version of its name. Taken with the harsher realities under DERG, Rayans
reluctantly sided with TPLF on the principle of the lesser devil. Soon,
tens of thousands of Raya youth joined the TPLF, including forming the
majority and the backbone of Hadush “Hayelom” Ariaya’s fighting force
that brought the little known “Hayelom” into prominence. However, if the
experience of my village is anything, it is fair to conclude that
almost all the Raya recruits ended up as cannon fodders. Those who
survived, especially the independent and rational ones, would have never
escaped the Meles-Sebhat death squad. In Raya, for example, it is not
uncommon to talk to your relative TPLF fighter over the phone in the
morning only to be notified of his death of “natural” consequences on
the same day. I will say more on the motives next time. But for now, I
want to draw your attention to the following Table, which is taken from
the 1994 and 2007 population census of Ethiopia. I think this
illustrates how the Raya and Adwa are faring under the TPLF-Adwa
administration.
Table 1: Population of Raya and Adwa awraja towns in 1994 and 2007 census1
Clearly,
7 towns (Robit, Gobiye, Waja, Mersa, Korem, Wedisemro, Chelena) of Raya
from the total 11, i.e., 64% of the town that existed in the 1994
Census Ethiopia have died or are dying. Well, with Adwa awraja towns
the figures show a hard-to-believe growth registering as ridiculous as
1033% for Gerhusenay, Idegaarbi(377%), Nebelet(266%); even noticeable is
the emergence of a novel city (Diobdibo) in the 2007 census, attesting
to the developmental and modernization campaigns in Adwa rural areas as
well. The bar graph of the rate at which towns are expanding (Adwa) or
shrinking (Raya) shown below can only be a proof that in the so-called
Tigray “killil” both, depending on the area, de-constructive and
constructive policies are in operation. To the unsuspecting, it may
occur that this might have to do with the pre-1991 TPLF bandit caused
civil war. However, it is not quite so for, for instance, there was no
single bomb that was dropped on Adwa towns nor was a confrontation in
populated areas in the entire Adwa awraja. There was insignificant
causality as far as the civilian population of Adwa is concerned for the
TPLF military engagement tactic in Adwa/Axum area was totally different
from the rest awrajas. For example, Korem town alone might have
received far more arial bombardment than the entire Adwa awraja. From
SehulMikael (the Godfather of Ethiopia’s disintegration), to
Meshesha-Sebhat-Meles-Sebhat(again), there exist very little
dissimilarity.
Right
now, Alamata, the only remaining city not to die fast enough as Adwans
would have liked to see, is under open destruction. The residents never
complained on the absence of developmental activity but never expected
that the Adwa administration of the city will come-up with a destruction
agenda. Surprised by the revelation, the unsuspecting residents went to
Mekelle to air their grievances in the hope that the big men there
might be rational and take proper action. However, Abay Woldu’s
administration did not give it a second to listen; just ordered more
Bulldozers, armored tanks and a battalion to effectively carry out the
planned destruction. Worse, those who complained the demolishing of
their belonging are rounded-up and now languish in Adwa operated secret
Tigrayan jails.
Reference:
- Central Statistical Authority Ethiopia: The 1994 populaion and Housing Census of Ethiopia. Results for Tigray region, Volume 1, Statistical report.Table 2.2, Page 11
- Central Statistical Authority Ethiopia: The 1994 populaion and Housing Census of Ethiopia. Results for Amhara Region, Volume 1, Statistical report.Table 2.2, Page 13
- The 2007 Population and Housing Census of Ethiopia: Statistical Report for Tigray Region, Table 2.1, page 7
- The 2007 Population and Housing Census of Ethiopia: Statistical Report for Amhara Region, Table 2.2, page 11
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