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Finding New Tools to Fight Genocide,
Dictatorship and Corruption
A Summary of Obang’s Talk in Dallas
(Part One)ǀ June 4, 2009
On
Sunday, May 31, 2009, I had the great pleasure of
meeting with Ethiopians in Dallas, Texas. I will
summarize my talk in two parts; however, before I start
my summary, I would like to thank the individuals from
the Dejen Le Democracy (Constituency for Democracy)
who organized this meeting. Dejen Le Democracy is a
human rights organization, located in Dallas, Texas
whose members have done a remarkable job in promoting
democracy, human rights, justice and equality.
I would like
to thank the chairman of Dejen Le Democracy, Ato Tefe
Assefa, the vice chairman, Dr. Betru Gebregziabher, and
the planning committee, Ato Zewge Kagnew, Ato Girma
Negussie; Ato Dejen Asaye; Ato Solomon Abate; Ato Fikre
Deresse and Ato Yirga Ansye who not only made this event
possible, but also were extremely gracious hosts,
providing warm hospitality to me during my visit.
I also want
to thank the three wonderful Ethiopians who love their
mother country so much that they drove all the way from
Houston, an eight-hour drive, to attend this meeting.
One of these men, my friend Ato Dula Abdu, is one of the
many Ethiopians whom I have only met via email or phone,
but who I have never seen face-to-face until this time.
What a great opportunity!
Along with
brother Dula, was a young Ethiopian man, Bezabeh
Gezahegn. He is someone who expressed great interest in
the principles of the solidarity movement, endorsing the
needed solution as having to come from people at the
grassroots level, especially young Ethiopians who are
right now are an untapped resource, needing to be
brought into the struggle. He explained that the young
people do not like politics, but that the Solidarity
Movement, with the principles of “humanity before
ethnicity” and that “no one is free until all are free,”
present another option that will more easily engage the
silent majority of the youth because ‘the future belongs
to them.”
Another great
Ethiopian, Ato Youssef, was the one who drove, driving
through the night to reach home in order to work the
next morning. He is someone I just met for the first
time, but who had kept informed about the work of the
SMNE and wanted to be part of it because he loves his
country. After Dr. Ato Betru gave me a wonderful
introduction, he encouraged the audience by recognizing
that they represented the unity we desired because there
were people present at the meeting from all the
different political groups.
I began my
talk with the following question: Why are you and I
here today? Is it because of what is going on within the
borders of Ethiopia? Is it because of one or more of the
following: genocide, massacres, extra-judicial
killings, disappearances, torture, systematic rapes,
destruction or confiscation of property and livelihood,
arbitrary arrests, politicized courts, thousands of
political prisoners, land “give- aways” to outsiders
(Sudan, Djibouti, etc) while grabbing land from
indigenous Ethiopians, the exploitation of natural
resources, widespread governmental corruption,
oppression and injustice, environmental destruction or
one-party control of every sector of society—government,
military, communications (Internet, mobile phones, TV,
radio, press, etc), economy (contracts, trade
agreements, give-away leases of Ethiopian land to
non-Ethiopians, banking and finance, private enterprise
and investment opportunities, development, education,
the arts (music, etc), civic organizations (including
high positions in religious organizations), lack of land
ownership, agricultural development or available
fertilizers unless one is a member of the EPRDF and the
domination of most every opportunity for advancement
within Ethiopia unless one supported Meles and the EPRDF,
causing a huge exodus from Ethiopia?
I could go on
and on and I believe the majority of Ethiopians would
agree with me—the list of “what is wrong” with Ethiopia
is endless. The important question then is—if so many
Ethiopians are against this brutal and oppressive
regime, how can so many be held captive by so few? Some
might say it is because “they” have the “guns” and
control the “mighty institutions” of Ethiopia. Others
might blame international outsiders whom they see as
“propping up” this dictatorship through financial aid,
but I would challenge both of these views as being
insufficient in explaining what prevents nearly 80
million Ethiopians, in a country that prides itself in
never being colonized, from stopping such abuses
perpetrated by their own government? Perhaps we need to
find some “new tools” and approaches to bring peace,
justice, security, civility and opportunity to Ethiopia.
Pulling Out
the Supporting Legs of a Dictatorship
I was in
Washington DC only two weeks ago when I met with the
renowned and outspoken advocate for Africa, George
Ayittey, Professor of Economics at American University
in Washington DC, and founder of Free Africa
Foundation, an organization dedicated to free
Africans from “vampire” dictators who exploit the
people. He told me, “Most Africans do not realize that
dictators are standing on a table in order to pretend
they are stronger and more powerful than they are in
reality. The mistake made by most Africans who are
fighting against dictatorships is that they attempt to
fight these dictators at that level, while they are
propped up by these tables. They will never succeed this
way; instead, to overcome such regimes, Africans must
pull down the table, leg by leg, by confronting the
specific weaknesses and vulnerabilities of these
dictatorships. One leg of the Meles regime is already
wobbling!
Exposing
Meles and the TPLF as Genocideers, Destined for the ICC
One of those
legs that has been effectively supporting this
dictatorship was the portrayal of Meles Zenawi as a “new
breed of African leader,” a reliable partner in the War
on Terror and a legitimate representative to the G-20
meeting in the UK this past April. To prevent the
collapse of this particular leg of the table, the Meles
regime fervently has to “protect its image” by covering
up a pattern of systematic perpetration of Ethiopian
government sponsored incidents of genocide, crimes
against humanity, war crimes and other gross human
rights abuses. Opposition groups could talk about
injustice, lack of democratic process, suppression of
rights and generic human rights abuses without fear of
affecting the strength of the table leg, but it becomes
a different matter when an internationally respected
human rights expert in genocide defines the Anuak
massacre as meeting the stringent definition of
genocide, when he relates responsibility for it to Meles
and his cronies and then requests a formal investigation
by the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights! Meles has
now suddenly been associated with the likes of Omar al
Bashir, Charles Taylor and Slobodan Milosevic, becoming
a genocide perpetrator destined for the International
Criminal Court!
It must have
struck a major nerve in this regime for Meles even
cancelled his press conference following the G-20 and
one month later, Meles supporters, from the
government-sponsored website, AigaForum, are trying to
do “damage control.” In an effort to free themselves
from any responsibility, they are blaming another ethnic
group from Gambella, the Nuer and then also blaming the
Anuak for committing “genocide” against each other or
attributing it to “ethnic conflict.” Interestingly, to
do so, they must negate the results of their own
Commission of Inquiry done a year after the genocide
where they blamed six Oromo soldiers for the massacre of
December 13-15, 2003. Instead, in this article, they
call it an example of “ethnic conflict.”
Let me show
you a video that we in the Solidarity Movement for a New
Ethiopia will be sending to the UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights that was just recently completed.(This
video will be posted in the future along with the
letter. Following the video presentation, the talk
continued.)
The Next Leg
of the Table is our own “Village” thinking!
Today, I want
to talk about pulling down one of the strongest legs
supporting the deception of power and might that is
holding up the Meles regime—our own “village”, “tribal”
or “regional” thinking which stands in the way of
creating a “New Ethiopia”, hospitable for all
Ethiopians. This is not something Meles has to do, but
it requires our own action! All by itself, it may not be
enough to bring Meles down, but without it, we will
never succeed in accomplishing our ultimate goals, even
if we overcome Meles and the TPLF by other means.
So I ask those of you who are involved in this
struggle, “Are you fighting for a “village,” a “tribe,”
a “region” or for a country?” I would propose that the
reason for our past failure in this struggle is because
we have been fighting only for our own “villages! “
As you may
see, when I use the word “village”, I mean it to be
interchangeable with region, ethnicity, political group,
religious group, civic organization or any other
subsection of our society whose individual goals are for
ego, power, greed and domination over everyone else
rather than for strengthening our nation as a whole. A
healthy society is one where all who live within its
borders can find a hospitable home, rather than whoever
is strongest taking all for itself without any care for
others who might be weaker or less ruthless. It is
similar to the Anuak only fighting to advance the Anuak
without caring about their Gambella neighbors—the Nuer,
the Mazangir, the Opo, the highlanders, the Komo and so
forth. It is like the people of Gambella fighting only
for themselves without regard to those in
Benishangul-Gumuz, in Oromia, in the Southern Nations,
in Afar and so forth. It is like the TPLF supporters of
Meles, fighting only for other TPLF Meles supporters
rather than for all Tigrayans. It is like Tigrayans
fighting only for themselves, forgetting about all other
Ethiopians in their villages, region or in the country.
This is
small-minded, self-destructive and selfish thinking that
will never bring down a leg of the table; neither will
it bring about a healthy Ethiopian society after Meles
goes. Once we have a better-functioning society, we must
broaden our worldview further by caring not only for
Ethiopians, but caring about our nation’s
neighbors—Sudan, Eritrea, Djibouti , Somalia and Kenya.
We must seek ways to live in peace, harmony and
productive collaboration with them as well as with our
global neighbors. Therefore, when I use the term
“village,” it refers to all our smaller subsections that
are focused on gaining dominance over others rather than
on contributing to building a stronger nation that would
benefit all Ethiopians.
Fighting for
a Village
When we fight
for a village what results?
Culture of
division with five stages of disintegration
1.
Disagree and split:
Previous partners fight, disagree or have a falling out
and instead of attempting to directly deal with the
problem and find solutions, they split, often
bad-mouthing the other.
2.
Offer no apologies and hold on to resentments:
Parties to the conflict take no accountability for the
problem or no responsibility in resolving it.
3.
Develop parallel structures:
In “anti-collaboration,” one or both sides of the
split group, starts a new organization with the same
goals, duplicating efforts and losing energy and focus
on primary objectives by competing with the previous
organization, decreasing the probability of
collaboration.
4.
Suspension of reality:
Act as if no problem had occurred, pretending there is
no reason to apologize and denying what is in fact, the
sabotaging of the efforts of others.
5.
Refuse to talk with previous friends, colleagues and
supporters:
Instead of bringing cohesion and reconciliation, energy
is expended in developing “opposition camps” of
followers who will “agree” to hold grudges and
resentments against those in “enemy” camps. Previous
friends stop working together and get caught up in petty
battles, causing both groups to lose focus on the
greater objectives, allowing Meles to advance his hold,
laughing and gloating at the infighting.
How can we
proceed in light of this?
Disagreement
is part of our human experience and we must find ways to
deal with such disagreements in a productive rather than
destructive way. So many groups have been created by
people wanting to accomplish noble goals; but then,
common to our human experience; there is a disagreement
or an ego that gets in the way. Instead of working hard
towards respecting each other, listening to valid
arguments and finding solutions or consensus, those
involved become defensive, angry and split.
When ego is involved, disagreements simply are a cover
for power seeking or stroking one’s ego by having to get
credit, attention, power, prestige or simply, “your own
way.”
Disclaimer: I
am not talking about setting boundaries, which sometimes
lead to splits, over important principles. These might
be for philosophical, strategic, ethical, moral,
practical, logistical or other valid reasons. At these
times, such dividing, if done correctly, honestly and
civilly, may be exactly the right thing to do; however,
within our Ethiopian culture, we have far too many
splits and divisions for what appear to be avoidable
reasons.
This has made
our job very difficult. Following these divisions,
people who used to talk to one another and work
together, no longer do so. Hatred, competition and the
sabotage of each others’ efforts begin and soon, both
become greater enemies of each other than of the evil
system of the Woyane that they are trying to fight.
People problems, differences of opinion and
disagreements are part of any human effort. Turf battles
can begin, mistakes can be made, tempers can flare,
insulting words can be said in the heat of the battle
that are later regretted and feelings can be hurt. When
parties cannot admit their part, humble themselves and
apologize, the seeds of division begin. When secret
motives are not openly admitted, but run contrary to the
stated goals, inevitably there will be
misunderstandings, questions and conflict. Sometimes two
or more sides develop competing personally ambitious
agendas that are not openly admitted, but undermine the
entire organization. Instead of openly discussing the
problem, parties deny the existence of such agendas;
continuing to advance them—others start their own
parallel organization and still others, simply become
disenchanted and leave the struggle entirely. Those who
have become divided, pretend as if nothing ever
happened, making resolution of the differences
impossible without a change of attitude.
There will be
battles to fight, but we must take care in picking which
ones are the important ones—like justice and freedom for
all; but instead, our civic, political and religious
organizations are broken into two, four or five and
spend so much energy fighting that our entire struggle
is de-energized. This is one of our core problems. It is
as big of an obstacle to overcome as any other and is
demonstrated in the way that people do not talk to one
another. I can give not just one example, but can come
up with a list of countless groups who are divided. Why
is it that we can create countless organizations that
simply continue to break into pieces? It is a way to
avoid the hard work of listening to each other,
considering another’s point of view, giving up our own
agenda for self-advancement and working to meet our
larger goals. Why is it that a minor disagreement can
break up an entire organization? The hurt feelings that
make people not talk to each other and only to the
people of your own village, has become a leg that is
supporting the table on which is standing Meles Zenawi.
We can pull out this leg from underneath him or continue
a harmless fight against him by fighting for our own
small goals, acting as if we are contributing to the
betterment of our country, but sadly, the truth is that
we are contributing to its disintegration.
To me,
bringing Meles down is not something I am worrying
about. It will eventually happen for he is like someone
standing on a table with four weak legs; however, if
that table collapses when we are not talking to one
another or cooperating with each other, we will not be
ready to find a lasting peace. Finding a lasting peace
is something that depends on everybody within the
boundaries of Ethiopia; requiring us to reach out and
work with diverse groups beyond our own. This is why I
am saying we should be fighting for a country, not for a
village, a tribe or a region, like Meles is doing. The
TPLF was created to liberate a region and a tribe, but
if we want to create a lasting peace where none of us
will be free until we all are free, then we have to
fight for a country and for humanity. “Fighting for a
Country” will be covered in Part Two.
May God
change our hearts and make us to be people who care
about our fellow human beings, fearing Him and obeying
His life-giving principles. May God help us to not be
selfish in being opportunists or in fighting for only
our own tribes, villages and regions, but instead may He
help us to stand up for the justice and protection of
all his precious people of Ethiopia, the Horn of Africa
and all of human kind.
............
Please do not
hesitate to email me if you have comments to: Obang@solidaritymovement.org
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