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- <text id=91TT1297>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Ethiopia:Rebels Take Charge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- ETHIOPIA
- Rebels Take Charge
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The guerrillas seize the capital and agree to help form a peace
- government, but a unified and democratic Ethiopia remains a
- quixotic dream
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer--Reported by J.F.O. McAllister/Washington and
- Marguerite Michaels/London
- </p>
- <p> Finding himself one moment a rebel, the next the de facto
- ruler of Ethiopia, Meles Zenawi allowed himself a wry comment
- during a press conference in London last week. Asked about the
- banner hanging behind him, a red flag emblazoned with the image
- of an AK-47, the modern guerrilla's weapon of choice, the
- leader of the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front
- smiled. "I suppose we won't use the Kalashnikov anymore," he
- said, giving voice to widespread hopes that the decades of civil
- war in Ethiopia were finally over.
- </p>
- <p> But Meles spoke too soon. Within 24 hours his soldiers,
- who had just taken over the capital of Addis Ababa, were again
- firing their guns. This time they battled not government forces
- but thousands of civilians who had taken to the streets to
- protest the sudden ascendancy of Meles' maverick band. It was
- a curious reaction, considering that Meles' troops had deposed
- Mengistu Haile Mariam, the onetime lieutenant colonel who had
- ruled Ethiopia for 14 bloody years. The demonstrations and
- crackdowns left at least 10 dead and an additional 400 wounded.
- </p>
- <p> To be fair, it could have been worse, as it has been
- elsewhere. The recent fall of governments in Liberia and Somalia
- invited spasms of bloodletting that make the tumult in Ethiopia
- look like a tiff between friends. Still, the unrest in Addis
- Ababa laid bare the factional divisions that continue to plague
- Ethiopia, a country that has 70 ethnic groups and at least as
- many different languages. Holding together the country, or what
- remains of it, will be as daunting a task for the new regime as
- it was for the fallen one.
- </p>
- <p> The Democratic Front's saunter into Addis Ababa was not
- really part of anyone's plan, including the rebels'. Early last
- week the organization--along with guerrilla groups
- representing Eritrean and Oromo rebels--met with officials of
- the teetering central government for U.S.-brokered peace talks
- in London. The negotiations were made urgent by rebel pushes
- that put the Democratic Front just outside the capital and the
- Eritreans in command of all of Eritrea province. These advances
- prompted Mengistu to flee to Zimbabwe two weeks ago. After just
- a day, the parties were on the verge of agreeing to a cease-fire
- and a broadly based provisional government that would prepare
- the country for free elections.
- </p>
- <p> But before the deal could be signed and implemented, the
- regime of Mengistu's handpicked successor, Tesfaye Gebre-Kidan,
- imploded. Government troops turned on one another. Soldiers
- wantonly looted state property. Desperate, Tesfaye summoned
- Robert Houdek, the U.S. charge d'affaires in Addis Ababa, to
- tell him he could no longer control the situation. The interim
- Ethiopian leader promised he would issue a unilateral cease-fire
- and tell the people of the capital to welcome the rebels into
- the city.
- </p>
- <p> Tesfaye never followed through on his second pledge, but
- he did proclaim a cease-fire before seeking asylum at the
- Italian embassy. At that point, Herman Cohen, U.S. Assistant
- Secretary of State for African Affairs, announced in London that
- the U.S. was "recommending" that the Democratic Front enter
- Addis Ababa quickly "to stabilize the situation." The front
- obliged.
- </p>
- <p> Cohen's encouragement of the group's takeover made the
- U.S. the target of much of the animosity vented in Addis Ababa
- last week. Expecting to get a negotiated coalition government,
- many residents were furious to get instead a junta composed
- only of the Democratic Front. Resentments were further
- aggravated when Cohen announced that Washington supported the
- Eritreans' right to self-determination. Mobs marched to the
- gates of the U.S. embassy, shouting anti-American slogans and
- hurling stones into the compound. Protesters dubbed the change
- of government "Cohen's coup."
- </p>
- <p> Opposition to the Democratic Front is rooted in part in
- the eccentric politics of the group, which is an umbrella
- organization of resistance factions dominated by the Tigrean
- People's Liberation Front. Originally rigid Marxists, the
- Tigrean fighters have proclaimed themselves converts to
- pluralism and the free market, as have the Eritreans, who also
- once claimed allegiance to a quasi-socialism. But the policy
- statements of the Democratic Front, formed in 1988, still
- contain hints of old orthodoxy. Moreover, the moves the
- organization has made toward moderation are largely unknown to
- the citizens of Addis Ababa, who still tend to think of the
- Tigrean-led front as a group that out-Marxed Mengistu, whose own
- policies left the population impoverished.
- </p>
- <p> Ethnic tension was a central element of the trouble in
- Addis Ababa. The central government, like the capital itself,
- has long been dominated by the Amhara people, who consider
- themselves the most sophisticated of the Ethiopians and
- therefore the country's rightful masters. The Tigreans speak a
- different language and stem from a region hundreds of miles
- north of the capital. They have been rivals of the Amharas for
- two millenniums, going back to a time when the capital of
- ancient Ethiopia was Aksum, in the heart of Tigre country. When
- the Democratic Front arrived in Addis Ababa, hundreds of people
- flooded into the streets simply to stare in wonder at these
- strange Tigreans, these "bandits" and "barbarians" Mengistu had
- warned about for years.
- </p>
- <p> The newcomers are saying many of the right things,
- promising, for instance, that there will be no indiscriminate
- reprisals against members of the former regime. Meles said in
- London that only those who committed "war crimes and things like
- that" would be punished and that they would be tried in the
- open, with international human rights groups invited to observe.
- Some excesses are nonetheless inevitable. According to
- diplomats, Tigrean soldiers have already summarily executed a
- few of Mengistu's aides.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the Tigreans, as well as the Eritreans, have a
- better record of respecting human rights and democratic
- principles than Mengistu did. In the areas the rebels have
- administered since before Mengistu's fall, democracy exists at
- the village level, based on people's councils that seem to be
- freely elected. Political debates are lively, and medical and
- educational systems are better than most of those offered by the
- central government.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, the Tigreans say they do not intend to rule
- Addis Ababa indefinitely. Under terms worked out in London, a
- wide spectrum of Ethiopians are to meet again by July 1 to
- construct a more broadly based government that would lead the
- country until multiparty elections are held within the next 12
- months.
- </p>
- <p> The Eritrean leaders, however, have no interest in
- Ethiopia's governance but simply want to break away from the
- country. Established as an Italian colony in 1890, Eritrea
- expected nationhood after World War II but was instead federated
- with Ethiopia in 1952 at the recommendation of the United
- Nations. In 1962 the Eritrean parliament voted for full
- unification amid reports of bribery and intimidation of its
- members by the government of Emperor Haile Selassie.
- </p>
- <p> In the weeks before Mengistu fled, when the Americans were
- trying to persuade him that the country would not unravel if he
- stepped down, the Eritreans said they were willing to postpone
- their independence vote, perhaps for several years. But once
- victory was secured, they wasted no time asserting their
- secessionist agenda. In a press conference last week, Issaias
- Afewerki, leader of the Eritrean People's Liberation Front,
- stated baldly, "Eritrea is not part of Ethiopia." He added that
- his group would administer the province until a vote on
- Eritrea's status is held, a plebiscite the front is convinced
- will endorse secession.
- </p>
- <p> Many non-Eritreans oppose the province's independence for
- economic as well as nationalistic reasons. Without Eritrea, with
- its long Red Sea coast, Ethiopia would be landlocked.
- International food aid, essential in combating famine when the
- rains fail, enters the country primarily through the Eritrean
- ports of Massawa and Assab. The Eritreans have pledged that they
- will permit goods to flow freely through their territory, but
- many Ethiopians wonder whether they can trust such promises from
- a group that has fought Addis Ababa for three decades.
- </p>
- <p> For now, the Democratic Front's position on Eritrea is
- much like Washington's: it endorses the right of the Eritreans
- to their referendum but wants a unified Ethiopia and so hopes
- that the vote, if held, goes against secession. As the day of
- reckoning approaches, tensions between the two groups may erupt.
- Already, there are strains between Meles and Issaias, who have
- been friends for 16 years. Issaias is upset that Meles succumbed
- to U.S. pressure to promise elections within a year. Meles is
- angry that Issaias reneged on his original pledge to participate
- in the transitional government to be established by July 1.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the problem of the Oromos, who form the
- largest group of all in Ethiopia. The Oromo Liberation Front was
- annoyed that while the Tigreans marched into the capital, they
- were left on the sidelines. Though the front, with only 7,000
- fighters, is militarily insignificant, the Oromo constitute 40%
- of the country's 51 million people. The Oromo rebels are
- pressing their demands for a referendum on either autonomy or
- independence for the southern provinces, their heartland. That
- call has done nothing to ease long-standing suspicions between
- the Oromo and Tigrean groups, who have clashed in the past.
- </p>
- <p> Given the disparate agendas of all the factions, the
- prospects for putting together an enduring government within a
- month are slight. The chances that Ethiopia will then proceed
- to build a true democracy are slimmer still. The country has no
- history of democracy, and the forces that now espouse it are
- only recent converts. While the factions in authority today may
- prove more progressive and able than the antiquated regime they
- replaced, peace and democracy remain distant goals. The
- Kalashnikov is sure to have its place in Ethiopia for some time
- to come.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-