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“Grow up!” Sir Bob Geldof
By
Alemayehu G. Mariam I March
14, 2010
Sir Bob Geldof told Meles Zenawi to
“Grow up!” when he found out that security forces directly under the control and
command of Zenawi had massacred hundreds of unarmed protesters following the
2005 elections. It looks like Sir Bob may have to take his own advice and do a
little growing up. In the days after the BBC reported its findings some ten days
ago on a scam that diverted $95 million from famine relief to weapons purchases
by Zenawi’s rebel group in Ethiopia in 1984, Sir Bob has been throwing temper
tantrums on the talk show circuits.
Before Bob became “Sir” Bob in 1986, and
“Saint Bob” before that for his work in famine relief in Ethiopia in 1984/5, he
was well known (vocalist in the Irish group
Boomtown Rats) for his brash and
abrasive personality in the British and Irish rock music scene. When he toured
the talk show circuit last week in the brewing Live Aid-gate scandal in
Ethiopia, he showed his true colors once again. He tongue-lashed, chewed out and
raked over the coals the BBC, its investigative reporters and editors and the
two former high level rebel group leaders-turned-whistleblowers who brought
international attention to the scandal. Sir Bob was literally frothing at the
mouth. He was furious, combative, huffy and testy. He was affronted, exasperated
and totally rattled by the BBC report. Sir Bob was pissed off big time, not at
the fingered criminals but at the journalists who dug up the evidence and the
whistleblowers who spilled the secret beans. In his interviews, Sir Bob confused
the issues and mischaracterized the report.
Sir Bob was categorical in his claim
that no Live/Band Aid money went to purchase weapons for the rebels at any time:
Not a single penny went on armaments.
Not one. Not a pound; not a penny. Let me be clear on that. And I've also spoken
to some of the others, including the Red Cross, who say it is absolute rubbish
that any of their money could have possibly gone on arms.
He said the two individuals who were
interviewed for the report by the BBC have an axe to grind, and should be
disbelieved because their intention was to embarrass Zenawi as the so-called May
election draws near:
The Ethiopians say that he [Aregawi]
wasn't even in the country at the time. This is a dissident political exile
whose specific enemy, of which he has a track record of spinning against, is
Meles Zenawi, the Prime Minister of Ethiopia, who has a General Election coming
up. He is not a credible voice whatsoever.
Sir Bob challenged the BBC or anyone
else to come up with a “shred” of evidence of misuse of any of the money he
raised, and offered to personally investigate and initiate a lawsuit to recoup
any stolen money:
Produce, produce one shred of evidence,
one iota of evidence - not some dissident exile malcontent in Holland. Produce
me one shred of evidence and I promise you I will professionally investigate it,
I will professionally report it; and if there is any money missing I will sue
the Ethiopian government who are the rebels who were fighting the war in Tigray
for that money back now and I will spend it again on aid. There is not… a single
shred of evidence that Band Aid or Live Aid money was diverted in any sense. It
could not have been.
However, beneath the veneer of public
outrage, Sir Bob was downright aghast and forlorn about what the scandal could
do to his image and legacy in Ethiopia and the rest of Africa:
[Live Aid] did influence the entire
debate about Africa and development and poverty.
It really did have a huge political impact that resonates to today…
Twenty-five … I was in Tigray just before Christmas and I saw what we began
twenty-five years ago. Valleys, which were moonscapes, now verdant and lush and
giving life and jobs and eighteen thousand Birr a year to the farmers of that
neighbourhood. That's what we started. We built dams. There's our names on
them. Not in armaments. We started that. Today, according to the Economist,
Ethiopia is the fifth fastest growing economy in the planet in the year of the
African World Cup. Isn't that the story, or part of the story?
In short, Saint Bob saved Ethiopia! The
Live/Band Aid-gate 2010 could seriously endanger his divine mission to save the
rest of Africa! Right now, it is time for Sir Bob to save Sir Bob.
But why so much sound and fury from Sir
Bob?
One wonders. Could it be that he finally
got a definitive answer to the question he posed in his trademark song (one of
the best selling singles of all time) in 1984: “Do they know it is
Christmas?”
Sir Bob seems to be having great
difficulty handling the truth now that he knows it. Whatever failings the two
former high ranking members of Zenawi’s rebel group may have, they are telling
it like it was:
Yep! We knew it was Christmas! It was
the best Christmas ever. Thank you, Sir Bob (or should we say Saint Bob [Santa
Claus?]) for stuffing the stockings with goodies and for the millions of dollars
under the Christmas tree. Tell ya what Bobby? Since them good old days back in
’84, for some of the big boys in the gang, every day been Christmas day!
The fact of the
matter is that despite Sir Bob’s histrionics and temper tantrums, famine relief
and aid is stolen and diverted for weapons purchases and other corrupt purposes
in Africa everyday.
On March 10, 2010, the New York
Times citing a U.N. report stated that $240 million in famine relief aid was
stolen in 2009 by Somali rebel groups and local contractors and U.N. staff:
As much as half the food
aid sent
to Somalia is
diverted from needy people to a web of corrupt contractors, radical Islamist
militants and local United
Nations staff
members, according to a new Security Council report. The [U.N. report] outlines
a host of problems so grave that it recommends that Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon open
an independent investigation into the World Food Program’s Somalia operations.
It suggests that the program rebuild the food distribution system — which serves
at least 2.5 million people and whose aid was worth about $485 million in 2009 —
from scratch to break what it describes as a corrupt cartel of Somali
distributors… American officials believe that some American aid may have fallen
into the hands of Al Shababa, the most militant of Somalia’s insurgent groups.”
For Sir Bob to
categorically claim that “not a penny” of the relief money was taken by Zenawi’s
rebel group flies in the face of the inescapable African reality of corruption,
fraud, waste, abuse and outright theft of not just humanitarian aid, but all
kinds of international economic aid and loans. If Somali
“contractors, radical Islamist militants and local United
Nations staff members” could steal $240
million in food aid in 2009 with all the sophisticated and “best
practices” monitoring and auditing mechanisms of the U.N. in place, why does Sir
Bob tenaciously hold the childish belief that Zenawi’s rebel group could not
have taken a “penny” from the aid money he raised in 1984? Sir Bob does not want
to face the truth so he has chosen to bury his head, like the proverbial
ostrich, in the sands of denial.
Dr. Aregawi Berhe,
one of the eyewitnesses to the scam, was a commander in the rebel army.
Gebremedhin was a senior finance officer of the rebel group. Just because they
have been critical of the Zenawi regime does not mean they are fabricating lies.
As the Independent newspaper which interviewed Sir Bob noted: “That does not
mean they are wrong, but it sets up reasonable doubts.” That is indeed a fair
place to begin establishing the truth. Let Gebremedhin, Dr. Aregawi and many
others with first hand knowledge of the facts (including all the principals
implicated in the wrongdoing and the NGO bagmen who carried cash to pay the
rebels) be called to testify publicly before an independent international
inquiry commission. Regardless, as percipient witnesses any evidence given by
Gebremedhin and Dr. Aregawi to date is admissible in any court of law in the
world, except kangaroo court.
Zenawi, speaking
for the first time on the issue last week said he met with Sir Bob in Nairobi
who expressed deep disappointment over the BBC report.
Amazingly, Zenawi neither confirmed nor denied the central
allegation in the report that he and/ or other members of his rebel group
diverted relief money in 1984 for military purchases or any other purposes.
It was a brilliant anticipatory legal maneuver stonewalling on the central issue
as Zenawi leaves no potentially incriminatory statement which could later be
used to impeach (show prior inconsistent statement) him. Naturally, one would
have expected an impassioned denial and condemnation of the purportedly vile and
scurrilous accusations. But not a word. Instead, Zenawi savagely attacked the
integrity and professionalism of Martin Plaut, the BBC reporter who broke the
story, as a former Eritrean stooge experienced in distortions and lies
(elsewhere known as “yellow journalism”). He accused others who had commented on
the matter as being driven by “blind hatred.”
Sir Bob should know better. In fact, he
does. After he learned of the shooting of innocent protesters following the May
2005 elections, Sir Bob told Channel 4 News on June 9, 2005
what kind of a man Zenawi really is:
Spare me, what are they doing? It is
pathetic. I despair, I really despair. No doubt, I'll get a briefing from the
Ethiopian embassy: 'it wasn't like this, it was like that'. Grow up, they
make me puke. I
know those people, Meles Zanawi is a seriously clever man, what is he
doing? What is he doing closing down radio stations, and journalists and that,
it's a disgrace. Behave.
Whatever disagreements we may have with
Sir Bob on the BBC report, we share his despair fully. We really despair with
him. We agree with him wholeheartedly that it is a shame and a disgrace to shoot
down innocent unarmed protesters in the streets, shut down the independent
press, jail opposition political leaders and engage in gross violations of human
rights. We share his belief that it is disgrace and a crime to misuse a single
penny earmarked for bread and butter for the hungry to buy guns and bullets for
a rebel army. Unfortunately, the fact is that the world is menaced by “seriously
clever men” who will stop at nothing, even stealing food from the mouths of
babes. That makes all of us puke with disgust, not just Sir Bob. Because one
believes in a noble cause, it does not follow that those with whom one comes in
contact are also noble.
It is a great thing Sir Bob did in Live
Aid back in 1984 and thereafter. But there is new thinking and evidence on the
horizon. As Dambissa Moyo’s new book “Dead Aid” shows, the influx of aid,
including humanitarian aid, is at great risk of both being corruptly diverted
and of exacerbating existing endemic corruption in Africa. It may be hard for
Sir Bob and the rest of us naïve Ethiopian utopians to open our eyes in Africa’s
New Age of Kleptocracy and see “seriously clever men” and con artists lining up
to cannibalize their people for their last bowls of rice and handful of pennies.
The fact remains that there is
still famine of the
worst kind in Ethiopia and Africa that no Live Aid, Band Aid or Dead Aid can
cure. It is a famine of democracy, justice, accountability, transparency, rule
of law and human rights.
In the final analysis, the BBC report is
not about Sir Bob’s reputation or legacy in Ethiopia or his future humanitarian
work in Africa. It is about the truth; and if Sir Bob is truly committed to
finding out the truth, let’s come together, relentlessly pursue it and let the
chips fall where they may. We believe the truth shall make us all free!
===
Alemayehu G. Mariam,
is a professor of political science at California State University, San
Bernardino, and an attorney based in Los Angeles. He writes a regular blog on The
Huffington Post, and his commentaries appear
regularly on pambazuka.org, allafrica.com, newamericamedia.org and other sites.
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