by Alemayehu G. Mariam
Meles Zenawi when he was alive and his apostles today (“Melesistas”) keep playing us in the Diaspora like a cheap fiddle.
 They make us screech, shriek, scream and shout by simply showing their 
mugs in our cities. How do they do it? Every now and then, the 
Melesistas suit up a few of their bumbling and bungling zombies from 
central casting and unleash them into the Ethiopian Diaspora to “sell 
bonds” for the “Grand Meles Dam”
 to be built over the Blue Nile. 
Anytime these zombies show up to 
panhandle chump change from their supporters, a welcoming committee of 
defiant and patriotic Ethiopian activists show up to chase them out of 
town like campers at a national park chasing coyotes scrounging at the 
trash bin. For the past several weeks, Diaspora activists have been 
routing these imposters across European and American cities; but 
incredibly, these brazen con artists show up in the next
 city like snake oil salesmen at a carnival. That really piqued my 
curiosity. Why do these scammers show up in city after city knowing that
 they will be confronted and chased out by young patriotic Ethiopians? 
Are they really fundraising by “selling bonds” in the Diaspora or are 
they using “fundraising” as a cover for something altogether different? 
Ummm!!!
First, the irrefutable facts about the Meles Dam hogwash.  As I demonstrated in my March 11 commentary, “Rumors of Water War on the Nile?”, the
 Meles Dam on the Blue Nile (Abay River) was  the exquisite figment of 
Meles’ imagination, and now the phantasmic idol of worship for his 
discombobulated apostles. Anyone who bothers to study the facts of this 
so-called dam project will readily conclude that it is pie in the sky. 
 It is “self-funded” because the multilateral lending institutions and 
private investors who normally bankroll such major infrastructure 
projects wouldn’t touch it with a ten foot pole standing a mile away. 
They have determined it is a white elephant. Egypt has also used its 
leverage to block funding sources.  Egypt has contingency military plans
 to undam the dam if it ever comes on line.
The
 fact of the matter is that it is impossible for the bumbling regime in 
Ethiopia, which sustains itself  through international panhandling, to 
raise the USD$6-10bn needed from the people of the second poorest 
country in the world. The regime does not even have sufficient foreign 
reserves to cover the cost of imports for three months. Its foreign debt
 exceeds USD$12bn; and despite windbagging about an 11 percent annual 
growth, the “fifth fastest growing economy in the world”, yada, yada, 
unemployment, inflation, mismanagement and corruption have put on life 
support an economy addicted to international handouts. 
The idea that 
nickels and dimes collected from Ethiopians in the country by staging 
“musical concerts, a lottery
 and an SMS campaign” and a buck or two from Diaspora Ethiopians could 
build such a project is simply nutty. Because the dam builders live in a
 fool’s paradise, they think Diaspora Ethiopians are all “fools and 
idiots” who will buy fantasy dam bonds. (Just as an aside, those who are
 buying Meles Dam junk bonds should first consider buying the Brooklyn 
Bridge in New York City.)  Anyway, the Diaspora “bond sales” effort has 
been a total failure. The regime recently announced that it had 
collected $43,160 from its latest bond sales in San Diego, CA. Yeah! 
Right!
For domestic public relations purposes, 
the Melesistas’ strategic objective in pushing the Meles Dam hoax is to 
create patriotic fervor and galvanize the entire population around an 
object of national pride while deifying Meles and generating political 
support for themselves to prolong their lease on political power. The 
Meles Dam would at once be a hydrological temple to worship  “Meles the 
Great Leader and Visionary” and a symbolic object of national unity that
 could rally massive support for the regime. 
The Melesistas have 
convinced themselves that by talking about the Meles Dam 24/7, 365 days,
 they can convince the people that the dam is actually under 
construction.  They blather about building the “largest dam in Africa” 
and Ethiopia becoming a middle income country and a formidable regional 
economic power in just a few years. They talk about their “visionary 
leader” and how they will blindly follow his vision to the end of the 
rainbow where they will collect their pot of gold in the form of Meles 
Dam bonds. They march on chanting their mantra: “We will follow Meles’ 
vision without doubt or question.”
They must really think the 
people are “fools and idiots” (to borrow a phrase from Susan Rice) to 
be fooled by their silly dog and pony show and talk of pie in the sky. 
 The Ethiopian people may not know about a “pie in the sky”, but they 
certainly know about the “cow they have in the sky whose milk they never
 see.”  But careful analysis shows the Melesistas have pulled this one 
right out of Joseph Goebbel’s bag of tricks: “If you tell a lie big 
enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.
 The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield 
the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of 
the lie. 
It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of 
its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the 
lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the 
State.” Isn’t this exactly what the Melesistas  are doing in 
Ethiopia now – repeat the dam lie, development lie and repress dissent 
and persecute journalist who tell the truth?
The Melesistas 
think they are so smart that they can hoodwink not only Ethiopians in 
the country but also those in the Diaspora. They put on a dam “bond 
selling” show to convince Diasporans that the Meles Dam is real and that
 it is the panacea to Ethiopia’s economic woes. “Buy dam bonds! Ethiopia
 will be rafting on a river of milk and honey once the Blue Nile is 
dammed.” But only a damned fool would believe that.  
According to the 
World Bank, Ethiopia’s “power sector alone would require $3.3 billion 
per year to develop” in the next decade. Currently, power tariffs are so
 underpriced that they range between “$0.04-0.08 per kilowatt-hour” and 
are “low by regional standards and recover only 46 percent of the costs 
of the utility.” For every dollar they spend supplying power, they lose 
54 cents! In other words, these guys hawking the Meles Dam junk 
bonds and promising billions in profits are losing their shirts on the 
power they are selling right now! Why would anyone trust and buy dam 
bonds from those who can’t even make a damn profit from existing dams? 
Why would anyone buy dam junk bonds when the outlook for the energy 
sector in Ethiopia is so damn bleak? The Melesistas fantasize 
that they can pay off bondholders by selling power from the dam to the 
Sudan, Egypt and the Arabian peninsula. Why the hell would Egypt or the 
Sudan buy power from a dam that damns them by effectively reducing their
 water supply for agriculture and their own production of power?
The
 real aim of the Meles Dam is not the construction of a dam over the 
Blue Nile but to use the specter of the construction of a gargantuan dam
 on the Nile to inspire fear, loathing and dread of an imminent regional
 water war. Simply stated, the dam idea is an extortion scheme to scam 
the international community and downstream countries for more aid and 
loans as a price for continued regional stability, avoidance of conflict
 and maintenance of the status quo. Suffice it to say, one has to be a 
damned “fool and an idiot” to believe the Meles Dam will ever be built 
or buy Meles Dam junk bonds and expect a return. (Buying the Brooklyn 
Bridge is a much better investment.)
Shadowboxing Smoke and Mirrors
So,
 why do the Melsistas send zombies into the Diaspora on a fool’s errand?
 They know they will be shamed and disgraced and chased out of every 
American and European city like stray dogs at a bazaar. They know they 
will be lucky to squeeze a few hundred dollars at a Diaspora “bond 
selling” event. Do they do it because they are professional beggars and 
panhandlers?
There is a deceptively simple method to their 
madness. They send their zombies in the Diaspora to make us shadowbox 
smoke and mirrors. They are playing a simple but clever psychological 
game.
The Melesistas are getting hammered everyday by bad 
publicity. Hardly a day passes without some report by an international 
human rights, press or research organization documenting their 
monumental crimes against humanity. Just in the past few months, there 
have been numerous reports and press releases by Human Rights Watch, the
 Committee to Protect Journalists and a host of newspaper and television
 outlets, including Al Jazeera and CNN, on massive human rights 
violations, land grabs, ethnic cleansing, suppression of religious 
freedom and other issues in Ethiopia. Recently, the World Bank made 
public a 448-page corruption report on Ethiopia. 
A couple of weeks ago, the U.S. State Department released its annual Human Rights Report on Ethiopia documenting the
 regime’s “arbitrary killings, torture, beating, abuse, and mistreatment
 of detainees by security forces, harsh and life-threatening prison 
conditions, arbitrary arrests and detentions, detention without charge 
and lengthy pretrial detention, illegal searches, 
“villagization” (pillagization) program, restrictions on freedom of 
assembly, association, and movement, interference in religious affairs…”
 This past week, they got clobbered in the international press for a 
kangaroo appellate court affirmance of the 18-year sentences of the 
internationally-acclaimed journalist Eskinder Nega and dynamic 
opposition leader Andualem Aragie.
The Melesistas have become 
international pariahs and desperately want to change the topic from 
Eskinder Nega, Reeyot Alemu, Woubshet Taye, Andualem Aragie…, 
corruption, ethnic cleansing, land giveaways, suppression of religious 
freedom and interference in religious affairs and critical human rights 
reports. They want to take control of the international public relations
 agenda. They want to shed off their international image as corrupt 
thugs who trample on human rights and steal elections. They want to 
reinvent themselves as anti-poverty warriors and statesmen of economic 
development. 
They want to be seen as the new “new breed of African 
leaders” toiling indefatigably to eradicate poverty and promote economic
 development and democracy.
In a Machiavellian maneuver, they 
have, to some extent, succeeded in getting Diaspora Ethiopians, 
particularly the activists, to promote their “dam development” agenda 
for them in America, Europe and elsewhere. Every time Diaspora 
activists confront the zombie junk bond dealers and brokers, they are 
seen talking (but saying nothing) about development, growth, 
infrastructure projects and how the Meles Dam will transform Ethiopia 
into an economic powerhouse. 
(They never mention the massive foreign 
debt, the USD$12bn that has left the country illegally since 
2001, the massive youth unemployment, accelerating population growth, 
etc.). They always sheath their bloody hands in the glove of development
 talk. When activists protest and confront these zombies, they appear to
 be anti-development obstructionist agitators. That’s is the exquisite 
trick of the Melesistas. They want the world to see Diaspora  Ethiopians
 as a bunch of rowdy, wild, disorderly, loudmouthed, raucous, 
uncivil and intolerant bunch who will not even allow civil discussions 
of “development”. They aim to create and nurture the image of a 
few combative “Diaspora extremists” and an overwhelming number of 
silent (as a church mouse) regime supporters who are afraid to come 
forward (or attend their “bond selling” events) and show their support 
for fear of attack by the “extremists.” 
In the mix are the hapless 
Diasporans who have to go back and forth to Ethiopia to secure their 
property and business interests. Those guys are toast; either they pay 
protection money (buy dam bonds) or get jacked up on some trumped 
up charge and lose their properties or worse.
The 
Melesistas’ strategy to counter bad publicity and capture the domestic 
and international public relations commanding heights is based on three 
principles: Distract, distract and distract some more. Distract 
Ethiopians inside the country from critical political, social and 
economic issues by bombarding them with inane development propaganda. 
State television (which is watched by virtually no one in the country) 
is filled with ceaseless barrages of nauseating and mind numbing amateur
 development propaganda. 
It is vintage police state propaganda aimed at 
convincing a largely illiterate population that famine is plenty, 
decline is development, poverty is wealth, dictatorship is democracy and
 the man who destroyed the country is its savior.
The second 
strategy is to distract Diaspora Ethiopians from vigorously pursuing an 
agenda that promotes democracy freedom and human rights. They unleash a 
few smooth-talking empty suits with empty heads and let them wander from
 one city to another in the U.S. and Europe just to get Ethiopian 
activists emotionally worked up about a fantasy dam and lose their focus
 on issues of  human rights violations, abuse of political prisoners, 
ethnic cleansing, suppression of religious freedoms, and myriad economic
 problems.  
Some Diaspora activists react vigorously whenever they 
see these hapless empty suits at “bond selling” events react vigorously 
believing they are confronting the master criminals. Therein lies the 
trick. The Melesistas are so clever that they have succeeded in making 
some of us believe that the puppets are actually the puppet masters. We 
need to be aware that the empty suits they send into the Diaspora to 
sell the dam bonds are just schmucks and buffoons who do what they are 
told; or “zombies” as the great African musician Fela Kuti would have 
called them (“Zombie go… zombie stop…zombie turn…zombie think…” ) They 
are bait and are offered as scapegoats to the Diaspora.  By chasing the 
puppets out of town, some of us feel we have chased out the puppet 
masters. But the puppet masters laugh at us because our victory is the 
victory of the shadow boxer who knocked out the shadow.
The third 
strategy of the Melesistas is to distract donors and human rights 
organizations from criticizing them on their atrocious human rights 
record. They want to justify and convince them that the masses of 
ordinary Ethiopians are interested in the politics of the belly and not 
the politics of the ballot. Meles declared, “My view is that there is no direct relationship between economic growth and democracy historically or theoretically.” They
 want to convince donors and human rights organizations that the masses 
do not care about human rights or democracy; they are concerned only 
about filling their bellies. To them, the masses of poor, illiterate, 
hungry and sick Ethiopians are too dumb and too damn needy to appreciate
 “political democracy.”
Legacy of the great manipulator
Manipulation
 of the Diaspora is one of the chief legacies of Meles. Wikileaks 
cablegrams portray Meles as a slick, scheming, crafty and cunning 
hombre. He could have achieved greatness but undid himself because he 
was unable to tame his voracious appetite for extreme vindictiveness and
 revenge and could not bridle his bottomless capacity for maliciousness,
 viciousness and obduracy. Those who claim to know Meles say he knew his
 opposition better than the opposition knew itself. Distraction, 
diversion, misdirection, hoodwinking, chicanery, paralogy and sophistry 
were the hallmarks of Meles’ strategy. 
The cunning dictator was able to 
shroud his corrupt empire for two decades by pursuing a propaganda 
policy of mass distraction and by staging one farcical political theatre
 after another. As I have long maintained, Meles’
 “attitude was that he can outwit, outthink, outsmart, outplay, outfox 
and outmaneuver boatloads of Ph.Ds., M.Ds., J.Ds. Ed.Ds or whatever 
alphabet soup of degrees exist out there any day of the week. He 
seemed to think that like the opposition leaders, Ethiopian 
intellectuals are dysfunctional, shiftless and inconsequential, and will
 never be able to pose a real challenge to his power.” In a rare moment 
of candor responding to a journalist’s question about Diaspora 
Ethiopians protesting his overseas visits,  Meles confessed, “We may be 
at fault in some way. I am sorry. 
That maybe we didn’t communicate well 
enough to those Ethiopians living abroad what is happening, what we are 
doing here.” Meles’ apostles keep making the same mistake. Like 
shepherd, like sheep!  Like Meles, like Melesistas!
Criminal violations in selling unregistered securities in the U.S.
There
 have been questions raised about the legality of the sale of Meles Dam 
bonds as “securities” in the U.S.  Under federal and most state laws, a 
“security” is broadly defined and includes stocks, bonds, debt and 
equity securities, notes, investment contracts, etc. Unless exempted, 
all securities must be registered with the Securities and Exchange 
Commission (SEC) and/or relevant state agencies prior to selling or 
offering for sale to the public. A security which does not have an 
effective registration statement on file with the SEC and/or 
the relevant state agency is considered an unregistered security. Buying or selling unregistered
 securities is a crime under federal and state laws. 
The SEC can 
prosecute issuers and sellers of unregistered securities under section 
20(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 (which regulates original issuers) 
and seek injunctions if the Securities Act has been violated, or if a 
violation is imminent. Section 8A also allows the SEC to issue orders to
 issuers of unregistered securities to cease and desist and seek civil 
penalties under Section 20(d) if an issuer violated the Securities Act, 
an SEC rule, or a cease-and-desist order.
Like most states, 
California Corporations Code sections 25110-25118 set strict guidelines 
for any securities sold in that state. Any person or entity who 
willfully sells or transports unregistered securities through interstate
 commerce or buys such securities  could face serious criminal 
liabilities under California Corporations Code section 25540, subd. (a) 
with penalties of incarceration for up to three years and a fine up to 
$1 million. California prosecutors, like their federal 
counterparts, could also seek injunctive relief and civil penalties.
There
 are a few limited  exemptions to the registration requirement. One of 
them is an exemption “for certain foreign government securities brokers 
or dealers”.  Pursuant to 17 CFR 401.9, “A government securities broker or dealer (excluding
 a branch or agency of a foreign bank) that is a non-U.S. resident shall
 be exempt from the provisions of sections 15C(a), (b), and (d) of  the 
Act (15 U.S.C. 78o–5(a), (b) and (d)) and the regulations of this 
subchapter provided it complies with the provisions of 17 CFR 
240.15a–6…” In other words, the bond “brokers and dealers” sent to the 
U.S. to sell the Meles Dam bonds must meet the multifarious requirements
 of  federal securities law and other regulatory requirements including 
full disclosure, proof of maintenance of required books and records 
relating to the bond issues and written consent to service of process 
for any civil action arising from disputes in bond related transactions.
 It is highly unlikely that the “brokers and dealers” selling the Meles 
Dam bonds in the United States qualify under 17 CFR 240.15a–6 and 15 
U.S.C. 78o–5(a).
Fight the Power, not the smoke and image in the mirror
Diaspora
 activists should keep their eyes on the prize, not on the smoke and 
mirrors of the Melesista Road Show, Carnival and Circus.
Ethiopian
 Americans are fortunate to live under a Constitution that guarantees 
our right to free expression and peaceful protest. As citizens, it is 
our moral duty to exercise our constitutional rights. We have recently 
seen Americans using their right to protest by launching the “Occupy” 
protest movement. Historically, the civil rights movement relied on 
sit-ins, sit downs, teach-ins, rallies and marches as a form of direct 
nonviolent action to bring about change. Nonviolent mass protests 
eventually led to passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which ended 
racial segregation, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 which removed 
barriers to voting. The anti-war and free speech movements relied on 
non-violent protests to defend expressive freedoms and end the war in 
Vietnam. Nonviolent protests were also used in the anti-Apartheid 
movement in the U.S. resulting in boycotts, divestments in 
corporations  and spurring legislative and diplomatic action which 
hastened the end of Apartheid.
The main point is that Diaspora 
Ethiopians should be laser-focused on the prize and make sure that 
democracy will in the end triumph over dictatorship in Ethiopia; human 
rights are vindicated and human rights abusers are held accountable 
and any government in Ethiopia shall fear the people and the 
people shall never fear their government. We should not be distracted by
 empty suits with empty heads lurking in and out of town to scrounge up 
chicken feed. We should not be angry at programmed zombies at “bond 
selling” events because they are just wretched flunkies and 
bootlickers, who given the opportunity will make a beeline to the 
immigration office to file for political asylum. We should not mistake 
the puppets for the puppet masters. 
We should not confuse shadow for 
reality.
We should be aware not only when we are being abused but 
also used. We should never let them make us do their dirty jobs because 
they can cleverly manipulate our psychological disposition to righteous 
indignation. We should never react because that allows them to take 
control of our emotions and reactions.  
We should always act and never react. Most importantly, we should engage in proactive activism instead of reactive activism. When
 we are proactive, we plan things out carefully and strategically. 
Nonviolent protest is a highly disciplined effort. Dr. Martin L. King, 
Jr. taught, “In any nonviolent campaign there are four basic steps: 
collection of the facts to determine whether injustices exist; 
negotiation; self-purification; and direct action.” We should educate 
and train ourselves in the ways of nonviolent protest. When confronting 
the zombies, we should maintain a high degree of composure and display 
self-dignity in our expressions of defiance. At dam “bond selling ” 
events, protesters should adequately prepare pre-event publicity. 
Serious attention should given to the development of press kits and 
talking points. Press  and law enforcement liaisons should be trained 
and designated. Well informed and articulate spokespersons should be 
selected to give press interviews. Adequate attention should be given to
 post-event follow up activities.
It is a great disservice to oneself and to our great cause to engage in nonviolent protest without reading and understanding Gene Sharp’s extraordinary work, “From Dictatorship to Democracy” available online for free.  An Amharic translation of Gene Sharp’s book is also available online free of charge (here) for
 anyone to download or print. Ignorance cannot drive out ignorance, only
 knowledge can. We must educate ourselves in the ways of peaceful 
protest, or our efforts will produce few results. We are less likely to 
be manipulated if we keep ourselves informed and develop critical 
analysis skills that cut through the blather of our adversaries.
While
 those of us in the older generation (“Hippos”) wallow in self-pity and 
cynicism, it is inspiring to see young patriotic Diaspora Ethiopians 
(“Cheetahs”) using their right to peaceful protest to resist the zombies
 of tyranny. Just as the task of building a fantasy dam belongs to 
the Melesistas, the construction of the new Ethiopia is a task reserved 
for the young Cheetahs. It is painful to admit that we Hippos have 
not been much of a role model for the Cheetahs. We 
have unkindly criticized the Cheetahs for their lack of engagement, 
apathy and single-minded pursuit of flash and cash. 
We grumble that the 
Cheetah generation is the lost generation and there is no one to save 
Ethiopia (but it has been a long time since we Hippos looked into the 
mirror without smoke).
I am afraid there is little that Ethiopians
 Cheetahs could learn from Ethiopian Hippos. Perhaps Ethiopian Cheetahs 
can get inspiration from other Cheetahs. In the past 2 years, we have 
seen inexperienced youth using social media bring down dictators or 
force them to make radical changes in governance in North Africa and the
 Middle East. The key to their success was their ability to get in 
tune and on the same wavelength with each other, and to be able to speak
 the same beautiful language of peaceful change and protest. As always, I
 believe Ethiopian youth united — across ethnic, religious, 
linguistic, gender, and regional lines — can never be defeated!
“Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights. Get up, stand up, don’t give up the fight.” Bob Marley
Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.

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