Ethiopian Organizations Oppose European Union proposed amendment on security policy in the Horn of Africa

EU FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND SECURITY POLICY ON HORN OF AFRICA RESOLUTION (2021/2206 (INI)).

17 June 2022

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To: Honourable David McALLISTER, Chair, Committee on Foreign Affairs (AFET)
Subject: Foreign Affairs and Security Policy on Horn of Africa Resolution (2021/2206 (INI)).

Dear Sir,

We, the undersigned organizations world wide, with members including Ethiopians and citizens of European and North American countries are writing you to express our objection to the proposed amendments concerning Ethiopia in the Foreign Affairs and Security Policy on the Horn of Africa draft resolution (2021/2206 (INI)). While the proposed amendments cover wide rangingissues of concern to us, we are particularly distressed by amendments 108, 109 and 171. Amendment 109 calls for “an urgentdeployment of an AU-led international peacekeeping force with a robust civilian protection mandate to Western Tigray, ….”

To begin with, amendment 109 uses the term “Western Tigray” whereas the inhabitants of the area call their land Wolqait- Tsegede. Western Tigray is a term stealthily inserted into the lexicon of the conflict in Tigray by the Tigray People Liberation Front (TPLF) to enhance its claim that the area is an integral part of Tigray. In fact, Wolqait-Tsegede was made part of Tigray through illegal incorporation soon after the TPLF took power in 1991, without the consent of the residents who happen to be Amharic speaking. Shortly thereafter, it initially resettled about 70,000 of its demobilized combatants in the area and tens of thousands more during its 27-year control of the country while at the same time evicting Amharic speaking people who call the region their ancestral homeland.

This arbitrary and unlawful measure of the TPLF did not go unchallenged. For 29 years, the people of Wolqait-Tsegede had been peacefully protesting the decision by petitioning the EPRDF government to undo the illegal incorporation into the regional administration of Tigray. It is, therefore, incredulous that Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch would step into thishighly contested issue and echo the TPLF narrative and refer to the area as “Western Tigray,” knowing fully well that there existed no such administrative entity before 1991.

The use of the term Western Tigray and the call for sending in a so-called peacekeeping force by MEP sponsors of the amendment prima facie is inappropriate in our view, to say the least. First, it amounts to endorsing the politically motivated rebranding of“Wolqait-Tsegede” as “Western Tigray.” The rebranding of the name of the territory is an important first step in the strategy ofTPLF and its lobbyists in their desperate effort to implant their false narrative in the international fora.

Secondly, the call by members of the European Parliament for international intervention in the internal affairs of Ethiopia based on a controversial report, every bit of which bears the hallmarks of TPLF propaganda, seriously compromises the objectivity of the entire debate.

What is more, the EU is still reluctant to endorse and support the implementation of a joint investigation report covering the same war-torn areas of northern Ethiopia by the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) and the Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights (OHCHR) of 3rd of November 2021. Yet, Amendment 171 calls for a new internationalcommission of inquiry focusing on what it calls “alleged crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing” by Amhara forces againstTigrayans.

The bias of the sponsors of the amendments is obvious. They all appear to endorse the recent Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch reports which employed a much more questionable methodology in its investigations than the report by EHRC and OHCHR. The 27 years of brutal TPLF dictatorship, mass detention, extra judicial killings, human rights violations, and rampant corruption of the TPLF regime are mentioned nowhere in these amendments, let alone sanctioned.

The Ethiopian Constitution has a legal provision to address internal border disputes and identity issues. The House of Federation, in accordance with Article 48 of the Constitution, is mandated to resolve matters of internal border disputes and identity questions in different parts of the country. It is a common practice for internal border disputes such as the case of Wolqait- Tsegede and Humera and other disputed areas to be taken care of through existing internal administrative/legal mechanisms. Other similar cases in the country have been handled accordingly.

And finally, it is worth noting that as a backdrop to these resolutions and amendments and calls for intervention in Ethiopia, Ethiopians have begun engaging in an all-inclusive peaceful process they call “national dialogue” to try and reconcile theirdifferences, and usher in an era of peace, development, and national unity. Permanent solution can only be drawn through such domestic legal/traditional means and not by prescribing for a buffer through deploying international peacekeeping force. It is such measures that should be encouraged and supported and not foreign intervention that will exacerbate the situation.

Considering all the above, dear sir, we request that the honorable members of the European Parliament reconsider the amendments they have tabled on the issue of Wolqait-Tsegede in general and refrain from endorsing the decidedly partisan and interventionist view reflected in the joint report by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.

Please accept, Mr. Chairman, the assurances of our highest consideration. For further correspondence, kindly contact Defend Ethiopia Task Force in Belgium at Defeth.be@gmail.com

CC: Members, Foreign Affairs Committee, The European Parliament, The European Council Initiated by:

  • ▪  DefendEthiopiaTaskForceinBelgium(DETF-BE)

  • ▪  Defend Ethiopia Task Force in Europe (DEFT-EU) organized in Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy,

    Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands and the United Kingdom

    Endorsed by:

  • ▪  American-Ethiopian Public Affairs Committee (AEPAC)

  • ▪  Ethio-American Development Council (EADC)

  • ▪  Ethio-Canadian Network for Advocacy and Support (ECNAS)

  • ▪  Ethiopian Community in Spain (ECSP)

  • ▪  Ethio-Czech Community z.s. (ECC)

  • ▪  Ethiopian Diaspora Associations in Belgium (EDAB)

  • ▪  Ethio-France Association for Development of Ethiopia (EFADE)

  • ▪  EthiopianForumforDialogueandCooperationinGermany(EFDCG)

  • ▪  Global Ethiopian Advocacy Network (GLEAN)

  • ▪  GETFACTet (GETFACTet)

  • ▪  Network of Ethiopians in Geneva for Action Task Force (NEGAT)

  • ▪  United Ethiopian Community Association in South Africa (UECASA)

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“WE HAVE STABBED A FELLOW DEMOCRACY IN THE BACK” Rasmus Sonderriis

 

WE HAVE STABBED A FELLOW DEMOCRACY IN THE BACK” 

Rasmus Sonderriis

 

My speech about the war in northern Ethiopia delivered at a public meeting at IDA (Danish Society of Engineers), Copenhagen, March 22, 2022.

Following an introduction by moderator Adam Moe Fejerskov and 10-minute talks by EU representative Kristin Fedeler and Danish ambassador to Ethiopia Kira Smith Sindbjerg. Followed by journalist Knud Vilby and a Q&A session.

Thanks a lot for inviting me here tonight.

It’s encouraging that the EU diplomat and the Danish diplomat have spoken, diplomatically, about carrying on development cooperation with Ethiopia. By contrast, the EU and Denmark have zero moral credit left on the account to lecture Ethiopians on how to go about their horrible war. The Ethiopians have just been through a traumatic near-death experience, in which their new-born democracy and their fragile unitary state fought for survival against the dictatorial old guard. Ethiopians who share our ideals of human rights and ethnic coexistence were expecting our support. But what did we do, us good people in the rich and powerful part of the world? We stabbed them in the back! It seems like Kristin and Kira realize how deeply unpopular Denmark and the EU have become in Ethiopia.

Why exactly? Well, let’s turn back time to the near-death experience at the beginning of November. The media continue to refer to it as ‘the Tigray War’, although by now four months have passed without any fighting in Tigray. Instead hell has moved to the Afar and Amhara states, where about 15 million people live under TPLF occupation. All equipment in hospitals, clinics, labs, schools, universities, offices, factories, yes, even waterworks, is being plundered and, if it can’t be transported to Tigray, it’s destroyed. Rapes and executions are the order of the day.

We may say, as many people have said, that this is revenge for other atrocities in Tigray committed before that by soldiers from Ethiopia and Eritrea. But justice it is not. An attempt at justice is what’s going on in Ethiopian courtrooms, where Ethiopian soldiers, 60 so far, are being held to account by their own side for the first time in the country’s history. Of course, we should support that and, by the way, our press ought to cover it, which nobody has done yet.

Alright, now back to the near-death experience. This is when the TPLF leaders and supporters change their tune. They no longer go on about a ‘war on Tigray’, but about conquering strategic high ground deep into enemy territory, pointing their artillery at new enemy towns. And they talk especially about how they are marching towards the capital Addis Ababa.

The so-called Ethiopia experts in the media immediately sentence this march to be a walk in the park, following the recent playbook from Kabul. “The government is collapsing, it’s a question of weeks, if not days”, is the cliché used again and again. The Danish embassy chimes in with the choir of embassies calling for their nationals to be evacuated. On November 5th, CNN even reports that troops from Tigray stand on the outskirts of the city. Wow, that almost got me worried, but, phew, just CNN fake news.

On November 9th in Washington DC, a grand press conference is convened, featuring leaders from no less than nine rebel movements who are joining in the triumphal procession, ready to share power. Nobody in Ethiopia has ever heard about these nine rebel leaders, though they’re recognized as Uber drivers. Never mind, the world press, including newspapers here in Denmark, lap it up.

The fact that the United States lets these people declare publicly how they are going to shoot their way to regime change convinces the Ethiopians that the USA is participating in the coup attempt.

So Biden sends his diplomat Jeffrey Feltman to Addis Ababa to say four-five times in one press briefing that, no, no, no, no, the US is not taking sides, neither for the TPLF nor for the government. But at the same time, he acknowledges that Abiy Ahmed’s government has democratic legitimacy and that, if the TPLF were to enter the capital, it would be “a blood-bath situation”. Spine-chilling stuff, right? But that’s when it’s official. The USA does not side with a fellow democracy against those out to commit a bloodbath against it.

Those were the anxious times when I wrote the long-read report from Addis Ababa that earned me the invitation here tonight. I stuck my neck out by writing the opposite of everyone else, namely that the TPLF was still “unlikely” to reach the capital. Granted, I never saw it coming that I would one day support Ethiopia against my own country Denmark, indeed against the entire Western world, but this semi prediction that the war was about to turn, well, at least I can brag about that today.

What was it based on? That I saw firsthand how Ethiopians were setting aside their disagreements to unite against a common enemy.

The TPLF and its supporters are constantly fanning the flames of ethnic resentment. They generalize about the Amharas being the oppressors who need to have their power taken away by the Oromos. They omit to say that Abiy Ahmed is Oromo. And that his government is truly multi-ethnic, including a Tigrayan minister of defense.

And what happened when it came down to it in Ethiopia? Proud Oromos, such as the marathon runner Feyisa Lilesa, volunteered to the front to defend Amhara state. Amharas learned to greet in the Oromo language. There was urgent fraternization across ethnic and political divides, that is, the complete opposite of what the TPLF had pinned their hopes on.

Because, in the short run, the TPLF has the best generals and a vast stock of money and weapons. But in the long run, its economic base in Tigray is too small to win. Getachew Reda, who appears to be the TPLF’s second in command, made it clear in an interview on BBC Hardtalk that he would be perfectly comfortable with Ethiopia falling apart. In essence, the TPLF strategy is: “If they won’t let us rule the country, let there be no country to rule at all.”

So apart from the drones, it was the togetherness, the shared will to save the unity of Mother Ethiopia, that upset the TPLF’s calculations. And incidentally made a lot of ‘Ethiopia experts’ look very foolish.

It all bodes well for the future, although disagreements are bound to reappear as the external threat is diminished.

Anyway, throughout the period when Ethiopians were mobilizing for battle, it rang out like a mantra from Denmark, from the European Union, from Western-funded organizations and think tanks. “There is no military solution”. The truth is there is no solution without at least a military component. Unless the solution is to commit suicide that is. The West consistently pushed for passivity: “Don’t send your fighter jets, keep them grounded, don’t buy drones or weapons, don’t mobilize more soldiers, no stirring speeches, arghhh, it’s so bellicose, we don’t like that, blah blah blah.”

This goes to show the importance of the narratives that we all carry inside our heads in order to simplify complex political conflicts. In that, I must include myself, of course. To me the narrative was: “A nascent, fragile, imperfect democracy defends itself bravely against a totalitarian enemy marching on its capital to commit a bloodbath”. Just like in Ukraine today. But the narrative that won the day was about a stereotypical, brutal African tribal war. Prime Minister Abiy’s speeches were labelled as war-mongering, but some of us found them inspiring, much like Zelensky’s rhetoric today.

Curiously, everyone in the West realized the danger of an “Ethioslavia”, of Ethiopia breaking up, followed by decades of civil war over the new borders, and 115 million refugees. But then, in the next breath, the reasoning would be, for instance in editorials in The Economist weekly and here in Denmark in Politiken Daily, that the West therefore had to push Abiy even harder to declare a ceasefire, that is, impose more sanctions on Ethiopia.

This is the equivalent of saying: “The patient is ill, but she is refusing our medicine, she says it’s going to kill her. So now we must beat her up, that’ll teach her to take the medicine that we tell her to take. Because we know what ails her much better than she does.”

Well, how we got that wrong! The patient survived, but only by ignoring our unfriendly advice. We owe the Ethiopians an apology, and that’s putting it mildly. Instead of analyzing the political context, instead of focusing on who is legitimate and who is not, we have been signaling our pacifist virtues, we have been arrogant and prejudiced.

What went wrong? Why did the narrative turn out so different from Ukraine? That’s a big question. Knud Vilby will talk about it after me, and we might discuss the various reasons here tonight, but the most important factor was probably the readiness to believe the TPLF’s s war propaganda about Abiy Ahmed supposedly being on an insane quest to starve and murder every single Tigrayan.

Yes, there are indeed genocidal potentials in Ethiopian politics today, and not just in Tigray. This is precisely why we need to strengthen the only realistic chance of democratic coexistence, which is the federal government! It has been militarily weak, so weak that it has, unfortunately, been forced to obtain help from the Eritrean dictatorship and from ethnic militias. Nevertheless, it’s not like there is a more moderate alternative to the current government.

And according to the UN “joint report” released on November 3rd, there is no evidence that Ethiopia has used starvation as a weapon, or that it has any kind of genocidal agenda.

I do not wish to play down the suffering in Tigray, but who is to blame? The TPLF has militarized society through and through. All resources from little Tigray are diverted to this big war, including over 1000 relief-aid trucks that have entered Tigray without coming back. The TPLF constantly attacks the same roads used by the aid convoys. Debretsion Gebremichael, TPLFs top leaders, has called it a “people’s war”, that is, what Goebbels called a “total war”. No wonder there is hardship in Tigray.

Helen Clark, who is a former Prime Minister of New Zealand and head of UNICEF, that is, she counts as one of the world’s great and good, wrote in the Guardian, in a piece full of misinformation about the war, that “to prevent genocide, we must sound the alarm before we arrive at certainty”.

But no, wild accusations without evidence don’t prevent anything, on the contrary, they pour more fuel on the fire. Helen Clark surely sees herself as an angel of peace, but she’s singing along to a militaristic refrain that tells ordinary Tigrayans they have the choice between killing and getting killed.

Yes, there has been a brutalization in Ethiopia, on both sides. Sadly, this is something we see in most wars, including in Ukraine. It’s all very well that we keep our heads cool and concern ourselves with the humanitarian aspect, including the civil rights of the vast number of Tigrayans who live outside of Tigray. But if we want Ethiopians to listen, we need to talk in a spirit of solidarity with their security challenges. Imagine, for instance, if we had given them the drones, instead of forcing them to buy from Turkey, then perhaps we could’ve asked for some favors in return.

My final point is remarkably simple: What is it that keeps the peace in our own highly successful countries? What is it? Is it power-sharing deals between the strongest warlords? Of course not, we have our democracy to distribute power. So, what is it? Is it pacifist sermons? No! So, what is it? This is no small matter. We’ve been told by the two diplomats here tonight that our development cooperation must not support a war economy. But how about supporting security? There is no development without security, without peace. And what keeps the peace in our own countries is the state’s monopoly on violence under democratic rule of law! This bears repeating. The state’s monopoly on violence under democratic rule of law! Good for us. Good for Ethiopia.

Thank you.

Rasmus Sonderriis

 

ይድረሰ ለተከበሩ የኢትዮጵያ ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር ዶ/ር አብይ ኣህመድ

ሚያዝያ 6 2014.         April 14 2022

                            ይድረስ ለጠቅላይ ሚንስትር አብይ አህምድ ዶ/ር

 

ለክቡርነትዎ በዚህ አጭር ደብዳቤዬ ደጋፊዎ እንደመሆኔ መጠን አንድንድ በጣም የሚያሳስቡኝ ጉዳዮችን ለማንሳት እሞክራለሁ። ሀሳቦቼን ከመግለጼ በፊት እርሶም ሆነ ሌሎች ይኼንን ጽሑፍ የሚያነቡ ሰዎች እንዲያውቁልኝ የምፈልገው እንደግለሰብ እርሶዎ ወደሥልጣን ከመጡ ጊዜ ጀምሮ በኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ የተካሄዱትን ለውጦች በማድነቅ፡ አመራሮም በአሁኑ ጊዜ ለኢትዮጵያ አስፈላጊ እንደሆነም የምረዳ ግለሰብ ነኝ ። በየጊዜው በተለያዩ ጉዳዮች ላይ የሚሰጡት አስተያየቶች/ መመሪያዎች አመርቂና ደስ የሚሉ ራዕይ ያላቸው አገር ገንቢ መሆናቸውንም እገነዘባለሁ።

ስልጣን ላይ እንደመጡ .ማለትም ጠቅላይ ሚኒስተር ከሆኑበት ጊዜ አንስቶ  የገጠመዎት ችግሮች እርስዎ ለኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ ከገለጹት በላይ የኢትዮጵያ ሁኔታ አስአቸጋሪ እንደነበረና እንደሆነም እረዳለሁ። በፅናቶም አደንቆታለሁ።።  የተካሄዱትን መዋቅራዊ ለውጦችን፤እንደመከላከያ፣ የደህንነት መዋቅር፣ የፍርድ ቤቶችና የማረሚያ ቤቶች ፣ የምርጫ ቦርድና የምርጫ ሕግ፣ የሚዲያ ተቋማትና የሚዲያ አካባቢ የተደረጉ ለውጦች አመርቂ ናቸው፡እላልለሁ።  አንዳንዶቹም ውጤት እያሳዩ ነው። በኔ ግምት እነዚህ መዋቅራዊ ለውጦች ቋሚ ሆነው የሚቀጥሉ ናቸው ብዬ ተስፋ አዴርጋለሁ።

 እርስዎ ይኼንን ውጤታማ ለውጥ ሲያካሂዱ/ሲመሩ ገና ከጅምሩ በአንፃሩ ለውጡ እዳይሳካ የተሰሰለፉ ኀይሎች እንደነበሩና አሁንም እንዳሉ እረዳለሁ። እነዚህ ኃይሎች በተለያየ ስም እራሳቸውን ቢጠሩም የእርስዎን መንግስት ገና ከጅምሩ ‘አሀዳዊ’ ነው ብለው በመፈረጅ አሁን ላለንበት ቀውስና ችግር አንዲሁም  ለገባንበት/ላለንበት  የጦርነት ሁኔታ አድርሰውናል።

አሁን ወደ ተነሳሁበት  ቁም ነገሮች ልመለስ። እንደሚከተለዉ አቀርበዋለሁ።

  1. በየቦታው ክልሎች ውሰጥ በሚደርሱት መፈናቀሎች ግድያዎች አስተያየት ሳይሰጡ በዝምታ ማለፍዎ፤

  2. ክልሎችን ማስፋፋትዎ፡

  3. ክቡርነትዎ ወደ ሥልጣን እንደመጡ የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ በሙሉ ከዳር እስከዳር እግዚአብሔር ለእስራኤሎች ሙሴን እንደላከው ሁሉ የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ አምላክ እንደላኮት አድርጎ ነበር  የተቀበለዎት….  ወጣቱ፣ ሽማግሌው ፣ ሴት ወንዱም ፡የኢትዮጵያ እናቶችም  በዕንባ አምላክን በማመስገን እርስዎን ተቀበሉ፤ ፀለዩሎት። እርሶም አፀፋውን መለሱ። “ስንወለድ ኢትዮጵያዊያን ስንሞት ኢትዮጵያ” በማለቶዎም ጭምር። እንደቀድሞ የኢትዮጵያ  መሪዎች “አገሪቷን”  ከማለት ፈንታ ኢትዮጵያ እያሉ በስም መጥራት ስለጀመሩ።

  4. በዚህ መሀል ቀስ በቀስ ገና ከጅምሩ በኦሮሚያ ክልል በምዕራብ ወለጋ ባንኮች ሲዘረፉ፣ ቀበሌዎች ሲያዙ፣ ሰዎች በዘራቸው ምክንያት ሲፈናቀሉ ሲገደሉ፡ ይኼ ሁኔታ የቀን ተቀን ዜና መሆን ጀመረ። የመፈናቀል የሞት ጥቃቶች ወደ ጉጂም ተዛመቱ። መንግሥትም ይኼንን የሚያደርገው የኦሮሞ ነፃ አውጪ ግንባር ነው ሲል ነበር።

  5. የዛሬ ሦስት ዓመት ወይም ከዚያ በፊት ይኼ ሁኔታ በአባ ገዳዎችና በክልሉ መንግሥት እየተፈታ ነው፤ ሊፈታነው ወዘተ…  ቢባልም  የሰዎች በዘራቸው መፈናቀልና መሞት ቀጠለ። የነዚህ ጽንፈኛ ኃሎች መሪ አዲስ አበባ ውስጥ ቁጭ ብለው፡ የልብ ልብ ተሰምቶቿው “ማን ማንን ትጥቅ ያስፈታል” ብለው መፎከር ጀመሩ። ነፃ አውጪ ድርጅት ስሙን ቀይሮ ሸኔ ነኝ ሲል እኝሁ መሪ አላውቃቸውም አሉ። ነገሩ ዓናችሁን ጨፍኑ ላሞኛሁ ሆኖ ተገኘ ። አሁን በሁሉ ኦሮሚያ ተስፋፈተዋል። የኦሮሚያ መንግሥትም ሆነ የፈደራሉ መንግሥት መፍትሔ ማግኘት አልቻሉም።

  6. ዓላማዬ በኢትዮጵያኖች ላይ የሚደርሰውን ሰቆቃ ለማተት ሳይሆን ይኼንን ሁኔታ በሚመለከት እርሰዎም ሆነ የክልሉ መንግሥት ዝምታ መምረጣችሁ ነው።

  7. እነዚህ በዘር ተለይተው የሚፈናቀሉትን ሆነ  የሚሞቱትን  እርሶና የክልሉ ኣስትዳዳሪ የሚመሩት የሕዝብ አካል ናቸው። እኔ ደጋፊዎ እንደመሆኔ መጠን ሰዎች ለምን እነዚህ ሀላፊዎች ዝም ይላሉ ብለው ሲጠይቁኝ መልስ አጣለሁ። ምስጢሩ ምንድነው? የርስዎ መናገር ለተፈናቃዮችም ለሟቾችም ቤተሰብ ማጽናኛ ይሆናል የሚል እሳቤ ስላለኝ ነው።

  8. እርስዎ ለሰዎች የርሂራሄ ገፅታ ያሎት መሆኖዎን በብዙ ድርጊትዎ አሳይተዋል። ጨካኝ ሰው አይመስሉኝም።

  9. እንደ ደጋፊዎ የእርስዎ በዚህ ጉዳይ ላይ አለመናገርዎ ከባድ ዋጋ እያስከፈሎት ነው የሚል ግምት አለኝ። አንድ ነገር ያድርጉ።

  10. እርስዎ ወደ ሥልጣን እንደመጡ በአዋሳ ንግግር ሲያደርጉ በንግግሮዎ መሀል ክልል የአስተዳደር ወሰን ነው በማለት ወደፊት እንደሚቀየር አቅጣጫ ያሳዩ መስሎኝ ነበር። ሆኖም ክልሎች በእርስዎ የሥስት ዓመት ዘመን በሁለት ጨምረዋል። ክልሎችን መቀነስ ሕገ መንግሰት ማሻሻል ስለሚጠይቅ መቀየር ወይም መቀነስ ይከብዳል። ማስፋፋት ለምን አስፈለገ? የሚምስለኝ በአገራችን ላይ ብዙ የስደት የሞት የጦርነት ቀጠና ያደረገን የክልል ጉዳይ ነው። መስፋፋት ያለበት አይመስለኝም።   

            የዳስፖራ ደጋፊዎ

 

What a difference a war makes!

What a difference a war makes!

People leaving the conflict zone in the Ukraine conflict. ( Image screenshot from AP video via ABC news)

By Addissu Admas

It must occur to anyone endowed with a minimum sense of fair play how Western media has treated so differently the war in Ethiopia and the one now going on in Ukraine. I do not want to begin by accusing Western media for such glaring difference to its deep-seated bias, prejudice or even racism, even though these have certainly played a role in it. I want to give the benefit of the doubt to Western media by considering also other factors that we must consider if we want that our judgment does not become slanted and narrow.

If we are to believe the media, the whole world has now condemned Putin and his invasion of Ukraine. We are now fed on a daily basis and round the clock scraps of video images depicting shelling; millions of Ukrainian mothers and their children being loaded onto trains to flee the country to neighboring countries; young men brazenly defying the mighty Russian army, and dead bodies strewn on the road, and the young Ukrainian president in military sweater continuing to rally his nation and asking the West to come to his aid, etc… I do not doubt that what I see, hear or read in the media is the truth. Moreover, I whole-heartedly feel that Ukrainians should not have to suffer and be stripped of their independence for any reason or by anyone: as a people, they are entitled to all the respect and dignity that every nation is entitled and deserves. In brief, this war is wrong-headed and I would have wished sincerely that President Putin had chosen a different course of action. I arrived at this conclusion because I heard the voices of Ukrainians and not only that of the Western Media. Indeed, what the Western Media has done in my opinion is to amplify their voices. This is the very opposite of what happened and continues to happen in the case of Western media’s coverage of Ethiopia and other African countries.

From the outset, Western media did not want to hear what the people of Ethiopia felt, wanted and said; it merely imposed its own narrative on them as to sway the opinion of its own citizens and maybe support the governments of the West. It chose not to remember under what regime Ethiopians had suffered for 27 long years. It omitted consistently who indeed was responsible for starting the war in the first place. It denied the right of a duly elected government to exercise its very important duty of fighting insurrectionists. It sided unabashedly with a truculent and predatory armed party, because either it was the creature of mighty America and/or it pursued one time her proxy wars in the Horn. It did not matter that the vast majority of Ethiopians wanted to rid themselves for the last time a hate mongering party that has deprived them of liberty, unity and peace; what mattered most was what the American and European countries saw as their advantage. It is for this reason that Ethiopians everywhere rose with the cry of “NO MORE”.

Can you imagine if the Western media had the decency of listening to what the very large majority of the Ethiopian people had to say? If It summoned the courage of interviewing on a daily basis the PM on what transpired and how he planned to bring to an end the war. What the reasons for the conflict were in the first place. How he intended to preserve the unity of the country. What help he required to achieve his goal, etc…etc… No, they chose to listen only to what they have anointed to be the victim, the TPLF and nothing more. They ignored the fact that the Ethiopian people, including the Tigrean people, have been the true victims, not only of TPLF’s 27 yearlong regime, but also of its ill-conceived, ill-designed and ill-conducted war to recapture its lost power. The West is horrified that Ukrainian civilians have been killed in the dozens or maybe in the hundreds since the start of the Russian invasion. How many poor country folk in Amhara, Afar, and Tigray have been killed by the senseless war that began at the instigation of the TPLF? Most likely by the tens of thousands. Our lives do not matter enough for Western media to find out the truth.

The big excuse of Western media is that the Ethiopian government did not want to give free access to Western reporters. I cannot sympathize with this pretext. Can you lie about a person if you do not like the way that person treats you? Can you expect to be welcomed with open arms if you come with your preconceived judgment and narrative? If you are unable to report truthfully, if you do not have the facts at hand, I say, quoting the famous British Austrian philosopher Wittgenstein, “whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent”. This should be also the motto of every western news medium.

Western Media has been more than eager to hear from the Ukrainians themselves, to render them masters of their own narrative. Have you seen any Western media allowing Ethiopians to speak their truth? It did not matter because we were silenced and buried by their own contrived speculations, which had no basis in reality. Or, more precisely, they chose to give voice to the grievances of a party and its supporters that have been victimizing the whole of Ethiopia for nearly three decades. Where in lies their sense of fair play?

I am not naïve as to compare the situation in Ukraine with the one in Ethiopia. In Ukraine, the danger of confrontation between the global powers is in full view, in Ethiopia only a specific strategic point and perhaps a very limited regional one is at stake. It would be unconscionable and unreasonable to compare them let alone equate them.  However, fairness in reporting has nothing to do with the magnitude of the powers or dangers involved. What I say is give us what is owed us: The Truth! Apply the same objectivity you are willing to apply to Western nations to us. Give us back our voices and do not silence us with your own narratives. See the Ethiopian conflict for what it is as you are clearly doing with the Ukrainian occupation.

Our narrative is simple, if Western media is willing to listen. I am not alone to adhere to it; the majority of Ethiopians have never wavered from it. Most agree that the American war of independence was fought for liberty, and so is the Ukrainian to preserve the independence of Ukrainians. The American civil war was fought to preserve the Union against the secessionist south. And so is the Ethiopian war being fought to preserve  Ethiopia’s unity against the many divisive forces inside and outside the country. So long as the Ethiopians want to preserve their unity, there is no reason for the West to dictate the terms that are more convenient to it. As it respects Ukraine, so it should respect Ethiopia and the choices of its duly elected officials.