Awol K Allo
Awol
K Allo, is the Lord Kelvin Adam Smith scholar at the University of
Glasgow Law School, UK. Previously, he was a lecturer in law at St
Mary’s University College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The film seeks to transform the “demands for freedom of religion” into a joint criminal enterprise with terror groups.
On
February 5, 2013, Ethiopia’s only and publicly funded Television
Station, ETV, aired a controversial documentary during prime time in
violation of an outstanding court injunction. Oddly subtitled “Boko
Haram in Ethiopia”, Jihadawi Harekat
– Arabic for “jihadi movement” – denounces leaders of Ethiopia’s
year-long protest movement for alleged links to foreign terrorists.
Muslims in Ethiopia have been protesting the government’s control of the Supreme Islamic Council and its imposition of
al-Ahbash, an unknown Islamic sect across mosques in Ethiopia. In a
press statement last year, the bipartisan US Commission on International
Religious Freedom said: “The Ethiopian government has sought to force a
change in the sect of Islam practiced nationwide and has punished
clergy and laity who have resisted.” Elected to represent the movement,
the accused Muslim leaders were arrested and charged under Ethiopia’s
anti-terrorism law when negotiations with the government failed last
July.
A joint production of the Ethiopian National Security
Agency, the Federal Police and ETV, the film draws a parallel between a
local protest movement recognised for its peaceful acts of resistance
with Africa’s most notorious terrorist groups such as Nigeria’s Boko
Haram, Mali’s Ansar Din and Somalia’s al-Shabaab.
With dozens of
journalists, politicians and activists already charged or convicted
under its vague and broad anti-terrorism law that criminalises all forms
of dissent, the fight against terrorism has become the primary
juridical framework within which to legitimise and justify war against
political foes. It is the new legal ideology in which these political
motives are institutionalised to provide long-standing relationships of
domination some legal pretext. In Ethiopia today, America’s “war on
terror” is used to short-circuit both the constitution and international
criticism.
Making fiction intelligible
Made
to portray the Muslim community’s struggle for religious freedom as a
terrorist ploy designed to “establish an Islamic state”, Jihadawi Harekat
is less about what it describes so much as the alternative reality that
it depicts and crystallises. By drawing politically explosive parallels
between groups with radically different political presuppositions, the
film dramatises and escalates the gravity of the threat. It replays
deeply held narratives of the past and accentuates the “evil” embodied
by the committee in its attempts to frame them as “public enemies”
working towards a common goal with groups that inhabit an entirely
different political universe.
To amplify this new reality, that
is, the cinematic production of new subjects of terrorism, the film
appropriates pre-existing frames of reference that sociologists call
“processes of signification”. To augment the parallel, it situates the
protest movement in the context of terrorism – a discourse whose
antecedent is always Islamic and “whose stereotypical characteristics
are already part of socially available knowledge”.
Just because
the protest movement shares the antecedent “Islam” with al-Shabaab and
Boko Haram, the signification equates a peaceful movement that operates
within the framework of Ethiopia’s own constitution with violent groups
on the sole basis of their imputed common denominator. The exemplar
images of violence embodied by al-Shabaab and Boko Haram are situated
within the geopolitical context and cultural idiosyncrasies of Ethiopia
to essentialise the association and ultimately render its absurd
collocation socially intelligible.
There are temporal, spatial,
material and editorial questions that the film cannot account for. By
connecting events that took place from East Africa to West Africa, from
North Africa to the Middle East, by gathering actors of differing
ideological persuasions into unity, by reducing complex and contingent
historic and political issues into self-evident mathematical varieties, Jihadawi Harekat inadvertently slips into a crisis it cannot contain or suppress.
One
excellent example is a hinge the film uses to connect the leaders of
the protest movement to the Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt. In an unedited
interrogation clip wrongly broadcasted after the film, the interrogators
coerce Abubakar Ahmed – the chairman of the committee chosen to be
representative of the Muslim community – into accepting their conclusion
that the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafis have the ultimate goal of
establishing an Islamic world under Sharia law.
While the
reduction of such complex and contingent issues of historical and
theoretical specificity into an either-or binary is emblematic of the
logic through which the film establishes its central thesis, I am
interested in the logic used to connect the ideologies of the
Brotherhood in the Middle East to the protest leaders in Ethiopia. This
pivot is a distinguished Qatari public intellectual, Jassim Sultan whose
teachings two members of the protest leaders were said to have
attended.
In an article that examined the increasing role of Qatar in the politics of the Middle East, The Economist holds up Sultan as an exemplary figure known for his “middle-of-the road” politics, not the extremism depicted in Jihadawi Harekat.
Sultan, whom the film accuses of being a middle man between the
“extreme ideological orientations” of the Brotherhood and Ethiopia’s
“jihadists”, was praised by The Economist as, “a renowned
Qatari intellectual, [who] strikes a chord by rejecting the
Brotherhood’s demand for strict obedience… derides its slogan, ‘Islam is
the solution’, as facile”.
By editing conversations about
conversations, copy-pasting interrogations about different spatial,
temporal and material co-ordinates into a coherent Ethiopian story, the
film seeks to transform the most basic demands for freedom of religion
into a joint criminal enterprise with terror groups near and far.
Nowhere else is the conjuncture between words and images, facts and
fictions, times and spaces, persons and events manifestly absurd as in Jihadawi Harekat.
Instead
of generating a moral panic that serves as the material fabric for
social control, the film generated consequences that are destabilising
the regime. In a statement to the press, a coalition of 33 political
parties emphatically denounced the film as yet another spectacle that
epitomises the ruling party’s contempt for the constitution and the rule
of law.
Boomerang effects
The film, along
with the ongoing trial, offers an important window into the cleavage
that divides the old Ethiopian Muslim subjectivity from the new. Thanks
to the government that never ceases to generate crisis and mobilise the
law and its court system to cement this crisis, these events have opened
up a space for critical cultural-political awareness.
Muslims in
Ethiopia, who conceive their religious subjectivity as apolitical and go
about their lives, have begun to realise that their religious identity
can be a potent site of subjectification and domination. As one of 20th
century’s prescient political thinkers, Hannah Arendt formulates this
point; an attack against a specific identity creates spontaneous moment
of political self-awareness. “If one is attacked as a Jew,” Arendt said,
“One must defend oneself as a Jew. Not as a German, not as a
world-citizen, not as an upholder of the Rights of Man.”
Because
of the events of last year, there emerged a critical space in which a
society that rarely, if at all, engages in questions of law and
politics, protested the usurpation of its constitutional guarantees. In
their struggle, Muslims in Ethiopia began to see unfair closures and
systematic subjections taking place at sites and moments they could not
have seen before. The government’s uncanny response to basic demands of
religious freedom has created a rare opportunity for a decisive break
with a docile political past and for the formation of a new collective
consciousness.
Awol K Allo, is the Lord Kelvin Adam Smith
scholar at the University of Glasgow Law School, UK. Previously, he was a
lecturer in law at St Mary’s University College, Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.
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