Zenawi's
PR
machine
hides
many
brutal
truths
By Dulla
Abdu |
April,
26, 2008
The
Houston
International
Festival
and the
Lucy
exhibition
at the
Museum
of
Natural
Science
highlight
the
positive
aspects
of the
African
nation
of
Ethiopia.
Knowingly
or not,
however,
both
iFest
and the
museum
have
been
complicit
with the
government
of
Ethiopia
in
shunning
a large
segment
of the
Ethiopian
population
in
Houston.
The
concerns
of
Ethiopians
in
Diaspora
and at
home
have
been
marginalized
by the
PR
machine
of the
regime
in Addis
Ababa,
which
denies
the
existence
of human
rights
violations
and
record
famine.
While
the
Ethiopian
government
is
spending
millions
in
lobbying,
American
tax
dollars
are
being
used to
prop up
the
regime
and to
ship
weapons.
At the
same
time,
almost a
quarter
of the
Ethiopian
population
is
facing
starvation.
The
United
States
is about
to send
more
grain,
but not
as much
as it
once
did.
The
Ethiopian
government
response
to the
recent
rise in
commodity
prices
was to
use
merchants
and
farmers
as
scapegoats.
But the
primary
culprit
for
perennial
food
deficit
and
famine
in that
country
is
flawed
economic
policies
and
abuse of
human
rights.
A
dictatorship
with no
free
media
and
which is
not
accountable
to its
people
has all
the
means at
hand to
use any
excuse
for its
failure.
It has
taken
extraordinary
measures
to
arrest
and
punish
many
traders
and
farmers
for
rising
prices.
Rural
poverty
and
starvation
in
Ethiopia
are
directly
related
to land
ownership.
The
country
has a
vastly
superior
land
mass,
great
potential
and
rainfall
not only
to feed
itself,
but also
to help
feed the
rest of
Africa.
Indeed,
it was
once
referred
to as
the
breadbasket
of
Africa
because
of its
climate,
fertile
soil and
location.
Unfortunately,
that
natural
endowment
has not
been
used to
advantage
and has
even
been
thwarted
by
successive
regimes'
desire
to own
and
control
land.
The
country's
agonizing
economic
and
political
conditions
are a
direct
result
of
government
policy.
Many
starving
countries
blame
weather
for
their
troubles.
But the
primary
reason
for
famine
and
starvation
in
Ethiopia
is not
the
vagaries
of
nature,
greedy
merchants
or
farmers;
rather,
it is
the
unsustainable
and poor
stewardship
of
economic
policy
by the
state —
including
faulty
land
ownership
policies,
the lack
of a
free
market
and good
governance,
and
failure
to
decentralize
and
establish
clearly
defined
property
rights.
Bondage
to
communism
in
Ethiopia
is a
huge
roadblock
to
economic
development.
It has
failed
to allow
and
promote
incentives
for
market-based
institutions
to
allocate
resources
in a
more
efficient
and
sustainable
fashion.
Appropriate
policies
and use
of
technologies
stemmed
the tide
of
famine
in the
1960s in
India
and
Pakistan,
and made
less
endowed
countries
like
Israel
exporters
of a
variety
of food
products.
In
Ethiopia,
however,
the
government
owns 100
percent
of the
land,
and the
citizens
are
hostage
to the
party
bosses,
who have
the
right to
evict,
confiscate
and
threaten
any
property
owner
with any
punishment.
In
Ethiopia,
as in
North
Korea,
citizens
have no
rights
to sell
or
borrow
against
their
own land
because
they
have no
title to
it. The
farmers,
consequently,
have no
incentives
to
preserve
the soil
and to
introduce
more
innovative
ways to
improve
their
farming
techniques.
Their
incentive
to
produce
more is
also
constrained
by
government
control
of their
market
through
government
boards
that
collect
grains
from the
rural
areas
and sell
it to
urban
dwellers,
sometimes
at
exorbitant
prices.
Despite
these
facts,
Ethiopia's
government-controlled
media
have
portrayed
farmers
and
merchants
as
scapegoats
for the
recent
price
rises in
order to
assuage
consumers
and
assign
blame.
The
other
underpinning
for the
rising
poverty
in
Ethiopia
is lack
of
access
to
technology.
The
Ethiopian
regime
controls
the
Internet,
cell
phone,
telephone
and
other
major
tools of
communication
and
economic
development
inside
the
country,
which
makes it
easy to
watch
and
control
the
country's
80
million
primarily
poverty-stricken
people.
Ethiopia's
biblical
suffering
will
continue
unless
there is
a
dramatic
shift in
current
U.S.
policy.
Bluntly
speaking,
United
States
should
review
its
policy
toward
Ethiopia.
Continuing
present
policies
will
only
embolden
the
Ethiopian
regime
to
continue
along
its
disastrous
path.
Ethiopia
will
degenerate
into a
failed
state
like
Somalia,
if not
worse.
Originally
published
by
Huston
Chronicle,
Abdu,
originally
from
Africa,
is a
Houston-based
writer
on
foreign
policy.
He can
be
e-mailed
at
dula06@gmail.com