January 8, 2014by dula
Ethiopia
besides being the seat of the African union, cradle of mankind, carries
great historical symbol for people of African origin. Ethiopia earned
this position as one of the longest independent nations, and for
repulsing Western colonial occupation. Despite this legacy, Ethiopians
have never enjoyed rule of law or fair and free election.
Representative
of warring factions from South Sudan are in Ethiopia to hammer out
their differences and to form democratic union where all different
groups can live in peace. Unfortunately, Ethiopia is not a place to
teach such lessons. The Ethiopian regime pretended for long for things
that it is not in order to earn respect and foreign aid.
In
Ethiopia the government perfected the Machiavellian system where ethnic
groups are pitted one against another, embraced the bantustanization of
Ethiopia, resources are controlled like in North Korea and Cuba by the
state, where the state owns land, access to Internet, telecommunication,
banking and all other vital means of production causing many Ethiopian
to live a precarious often miserable economic and political existence.
Freedom of the press, free assembly, civil societies, and political
parties are barley existent or survive at the whims of the regime.
In
2005, the late Meles Zenawi allowed unfettered debate among candidates
believing that he was assured of victory, but when the polls started
coming, he realized that he was losing in all major cities and in most
of the country side except in Tigre, Silte, Hadre regions, so he stopped
the countdown and declared victory. When protest erupted he used
deadly force killing over 190 peaceful protesters and arrested hundreds
of thousands. The U.S. government and African leaders looked the other
way because the sway Ethiopia holds in Africa. After Meles emerged
unscathed except condemnation by a few representatives in Europe and the
U.S., leaders in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Sudan realized that if Meles
can get away by stealing an election, they can do it too. The Kenyan
attempt was bloody, others were less bloody, but the pattern for
dynasties or one party apparatus were set in motion. Now some elections
in Africa are ceremonial because the winner is predetermined.
Ethiopia
holds the key to democracy in Africa. So in order to restore democracy
in Africa, Ethiopia as the seat of the OAU has to uphold the rule of
law, respect free and fair election, then the rest of Africa will
follow suit. Ethiopia plays a significant leadership role and that role
has to include in promoting democracy in the continent. African leaders
come to Ethiopia in a regular basis at least once a year and see
Ethiopia’s oppressive system year after year surviving and the West
giving a blind eye. So goes the rest of Africa.
Ethiopia will
hold its true place in history not as the physical capital of Africa, or
as the cradle of man kind, only when it upholds the rule of law and
becomes a pride for the rest of the oppressed African masses, as it did
during pre-colonial Africa. The Obama administration has tremendous
power on Ethiopia, a country landlocked and far dependent on aid ill can
afford to alienate the West.
All Africans from Eritrea, Ethiopia
and others are yearning for democracy and for American leadership.
Unfortunately, leadership has been reactionary only willing to put out
fires instead of building a roadmap for democracy for the continent.
Some
countries like Ethiopia are exempt from respecting the rule of law
despite their repeated defiance. Many African leaders are aspiring to
anoint themselves and their children for life whether it is good for the
country or whether the people support it or not. The West especially
Washington is eager to acquiesce in the name of stability, which in this
case is a mirage, because there is no stability without respect for
rule of law.
Billions of souls from Third World nations are
potential terrorists, unless we end their extreme poverty, oppression
and suffering. For Africa, the first place to start is Ethiopia.
Unless
other African countries including Ethiopia pledge to hold free and fair
election, respect the rule of law and respect the rights of their
citizens regardless of their tribe or religion, the leaders of South
Sudan may not want to be an exception to the norm. In the long run, for
Africa to enjoy peace, stability and economic growth, ethnic and/or one
party dictatorship has to be forbidden.
The writer can be reached at dula06@gmail.com
No comments:
Post a Comment