Ethiopia Introduction
Figure 1. Administration Divisions of Ethiopia, 1974
Figure 2. Administrative Divisions of Ethiopia, 1987-91
An election official in Dembi Dolo, in Welega, explains
procedures as voters register for district and regional elections,
June, 1992.
Courtesy LaVerle Berry
A jubilant crowd in Asmera celebrates results of the
independence referendum, April 1993.
Courtesy Paul B. Henze
FEW AFRICAN COUNTRIES have had such a long, varied, and
troubled history as Ethiopia. The Ethiopian state originated
in the Aksumite kingdom, a trading state that emerged about
the first century A.D. The Askumites perfected a written
language; maintained relations with the Byzantine Empire,
Egypt, and the Arabs; and, in the mid-fourth century,
embraced Christianity. After the rise of Islam in the
seventh century, the Aksumite kingdom became internationally
isolated as Arabs gradually gained control of maritime trade
in the Red Sea. By the early twelfth century, the successors
of the Aksumites had expanded southward and had established
a new capital and a line of kings called the Zagwe. A new
dynasty, the so-called "Solomonic" line, which came to power
about 1270, continued this territorial expansion and pursued
a more aggressive foreign policy. In addition, this
Christian state, with the help of Portuguese soldiers,
repelled a near-overpowering Islamic invasion.
Starting about the mid-sixteenth century, the Oromo people,
migrating from the southwest, gradually forced their way
into the kingdom, most often by warfare. The Oromo, who
eventually constituted about 40 percent of Ethiopia's
population, possessed their own culture, religion, and
political institutions. As the largest national group in
Ethiopia, the Oromo significantly influenced the course of
the country's history by becoming part of the royal family
and the nobility and by joining the army or the imperial
government. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
religious and regional rivalries gradually weakened the
imperial state until it was little more than a collection of
independent and competing fiefdoms.
Ethiopia's modern period (1855 to the present)--represented
by the reigns of Tewodros II, Yohannis IV, Menelik II,
Zawditu, and Haile Selassie I; by the Marxist regime of
Mengistu Haile Mariam; and, since mid-1991, by the
Transitional Government of Ethiopia under Meles Zenawi--has
been been characterized by nation-building as well as by
warfare. Tewodros II started the process of recreating a
cohesive Ethiopian state by incorporating Shewa into his
empire and by suppressing revolts in the country's other
provinces. Yohannis IV battled to keep Ethiopia free from
foreign domination and to retard the growing power of the
Shewan king, Menelik. Eventually, Menelik became emperor and
used military force to more than double Ethiopia's size. He
also defeated an Italian invasion force that sought to
colonize the country.
Struggles over succession to the throne characterized the
reign of Zawditu--struggles won by Haile Selassie, the next
ruler. After becoming emperor in 1930, Haile Selassie
embarked on a nationwide modernization program. However, the
1935-36 Italo-Ethiopian war halted his efforts and forced
him into exile. After returning to Addis Ababa in 1941,
Haile Selassie undertook further military and political
changes and sought to encourage social and economic
development. Although he did initiate a number of
fundamental reforms, the emperor was essentially an
autocrat, who to a great extent relied on political
manipulation and military force to remain in power and to
preserve the Ethiopian state. Even after an unsuccessful
1960 coup attempt led by the Imperial Bodyguard, Haile
Selassie failed to pursue the political and economic
policies necessary to improve the lives of most Ethiopians.
In 1974 a group of disgruntled military personnel overthrew
the Ethiopian monarchy. Eventually, Mengistu Haile Mariam,
who participated in the coup against Haile Selassie, emerged
at the head of a Marxist military dictatorship. Almost
immediately, the Mengistu regime unleashed a military and
political reign of terror against its real and imagined
opponents. It also pursued socialist economic policies that
reduced agricultural productivity and helped bring on
famine, resulting in the deaths of untold tens of thousands
of people. Thousands more fled or perished as a result of
government schemes to villagize the peasantry and to
relocate peasants from drought-prone areas of the north to
better-watered lands in the south and southwest.
Aside from internal dissent, which was harshly suppressed,
the regime faced armed insurgencies in the northern part of
the country. The longest-running of these was in Eritrea,
where the Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF) and its
predecessors had been fighting control by the central
government since 1961. In the mid-1970s, a second major
insurgency arose in Tigray, where the Tigray People's
Liberation Front (TPLF), a Marxist-Leninist organization
under the leadership of Meles Zenawi, opposed not only the
policies of the military government but also the very
existence of the government itself.
In foreign affairs, the regime aligned itself with the
Soviet Union. As long as the Soviet Union and its allies
provided support to Ethiopia's armed forces, the Mengistu
government remained secure. In the late 1980s, however,
Soviet support waned, a major factor in undermining the
ability of government forces to prosecute the wars against
the Eritreans and the Tigray. Gradually, the insurgent
movements gained the upper hand. By May 1991, the EPLF
controlled almost all of Eritrea, and the TPLF, operating as
the chief member of a coalition called the Ethiopian
People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), had overrun
much of the center of the country. Faced with impending
defeat, on May 21 Mengistu fled into exile in Zimbabwe; the
caretaker government he left behind collapsed a week later.
The EPLF completed its sweep of Eritrea on May 24 and 25,
and a few days later EPLF chairman Issaias Afwerki announced
the formation of the Provisional Government of Eritrea
(PGE). Meanwhile, on May 27-28, EPRDF forces marched into
Addis Ababa and assumed control of the national government.
After seizing power, Tigrayan and Eritrean leaders
confronted an array of political, economic, and security
problems that threatened to overwhelm both new governments.
Meles Zenawi and Issaias Afwerki committed themselves to
resolving these problems and to remaking their respective
societies. To achieve these goals, both governments adopted
similar strategies, which concentrated on national
reconciliation, eventual democratization, good relations
with the West, and social and economic development. Each
leader, however, pursued different tactics to implement his
respective strategy.
The first task facing the new rulers in Addis Ababa was the
creation of an interim government. To this end, a so-called
National Conference was convened in Addis Ababa from July 1
to July 5. Many political groups from across a broad
spectrum were invited to attend, but the EPRDF barred those
identified with the former military regime, such as the
Workers' Party of Ethiopia and the All-Ethiopia Socialist
Movement, as well as those that were opposed to the EPRDF,
such as the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party and the
Coalition of Ethiopian Democratic Forces. A number of
international observers also attended, including delegations
from the United States, the Soviet Union, and the United
Nations (UN).
Although it received accolades for running an open
conference, the EPRDF tightly controlled the proceedings.
The conference adopted a National Charter, which was signed
by representatives of some thirty-one political groups; it
established the Transitional Government of Ethiopia (TGE),
consisting of executive and legislative branches; and it
sanctioned an EPLF-EPRDF agreement that converted Aseb into
a free port in exchange for a referendum on Eritrean self-
determination to be held within two years. The transitional
government was to consist of the offices of president and
prime minister and a seventeen-member multiethnic Council of
Ministers. To ensure broad political representation, an
eighty-seven member Council of Representatives was created,
which was to select the new president, draft a new
constitution, and oversee a transition to a new national
government. The EPRDF occupied thirty-two of the eighty-
seven council seats. The Oromo Liberation Front (OLF)
received twelve seats, and the TPLF, the Oromo People's
Democratic Organization, and the Ethiopian People's
Democratic Movement each occupied ten seats. Twenty-seven
other groups shared the remaining seats.
The National Charter enshrined the guiding principles for
what was expected to be a two-and-one-half-year transitional
period. The charter called for creation of a commission to
draft a new constitution to come into effect by early 1994.
It also committed the transitional government to conduct
itself in accordance with the UN Universal Declaration of
Human Rights and to pursue a foreign policy based on
noninterference in the internal affairs of neighboring
states. Perhaps its most significant provisions concerned a
new system of internal administration in which the principle
of ethnicity was to constitute the basis of local and
regional government. The charter recognized the right of all
of Ethiopia's nationalities to self-determination, a right
that was to be exercised within the context of a federated
Ethiopia, and called for creation of district and regional
councils on the basis of nationality.
Essentially, the National Conference was a first, basic
step in the reconstruction of a viable, legitimate central
government. With the end of civil wars all over the country,
the aim was to create a balance of competing ethnic and
political groups at the center of the state that would allow
the wounds of war to heal and economic recovery to begin.
Additionally, there was the task of reconciling some
segments of the population to the impending loss of Eritrea
and of Ethiopia's Red Sea ports.
As the new order got under way, the Council of
Representatives elected Meles Zenawi president of the TGE.
Then, in order to implement the administrative provisions of
the National Charter, the TGE drew up twelve autonomous
regions based on ethnic identification and recognized two
multiethnic chartered cities--Addis Ababa and Harer. The
largest nationalities--the Amhara, Oromo, Somali, and
Tigray--were grouped into their own regions, while an
attempt was made to put culturally related smaller groups
together. Each region was composed of a number of districts
(weredas), intended to be the basic administrative unit. The
largest region--that of the Oromo--contained some 220
weredas; the next largest region--that of the Amhara--
contained 126, out of a total of 600 weredas in all of
Ethiopia. Under this system, each wereda exercised
executive, legislative, and judicial authority over local
communities, while the central government remained supreme
in matters of defense, foreign affairs, economic policy,
citizenship requirements, and currency.
In order to staff these new administrative units, the TGE
scheduled national elections. Originally foreseen for later
1991, these elections were postponed for administrative and
political reasons into 1992. By then, the authorities had
registered almost 200 political parties; few of them,
however, had a significant membership or any real influence
in shaping government policies. The TGE held preliminary
elections for local governing committees beginning in April
and for wereda and regional councils on June 21, 1992.
Security problems prevented elections from being held in
some areas, notably among the Afar and the Somali and in
Harer. More important, a corps of some 250 UN observers
concluded that the June elections suffered from a number of
serious shortcomings, including an absence of genuine
competition, intimidation of nongovernment parties and
candidates, closure of political party offices, and jailing
and even shooting of candidates. Numerous observers also
claimed that various administrative and logistical problems
impaired the electoral process and that many Ethiopians
failed to understand the nature of multiparty politics. As a
result, several political parties, including the OLF, the
All-Amhara People's Organization, and the Gideo People's
Democratic Organization, withdrew a few days before the
elections. On June 22, the OLF withdrew from the government
and prepared to take up arms once again. Nonetheless, the
TGE accepted the results of the elections, although it
appointed a commission to investigate irregularities and to
take corrective steps.
In the economic arena, the TGE inherited a shattered
country. In his first public speech after the EPRDF had
captured Addis Ababa, Meles Zenawi indicated that Ethiopia's
coffers were empty; moreover, some 7 million people were
threatened with starvation because of drought and civil war.
Economic performance statistics reflected this gloomy
assessment. In Ethiopian fiscal year
(EFY
--see Glossary)
1990/91, for example, the gross domestic product (
GDP
--see
Glossary) declined by 5.6 percent, the greatest fall since
the 1984-85 drought. Preliminary figures indicated a further
decline in GDP in 1991/92, although some gains were
registered for agriculture.
To resolve these problems, the TGE abandoned the failed
policies of the Mengistu regime. It began dismantling the
country's command economic system and shifted toward a
market-oriented economy with emphasis upon private
initiative. In December 1992, it adopted a new economic
policy whereby the government would maintain control over
essential economic sectors such as banking, insurance,
petroleum, mining, and chemical industries. However, retail
trade, road transport, and a portion of foreign trade was
placed in private hands; and farmers could sell their
produce at free-market prices, although land remained under
government control. While smaller businesses were to be
privatized, agriculture was to receive the most attention
and investment. By 1993 the state farms of the Mengistu era
were being dismantled and turned over to private farmers;
similarly, the agricultural cooperatives of prior years had
almost all disappeared. A major effort was also being made
to steer large numbers of ex-soldiers into farming as a way
of increasing production and of providing much-needed
employment.
Meanwhile, on October 1, 1992, the TGE devalued Ethiopia's
currency to encourage exports and to aid in correcting a
chronic balance of payments deficit. The country had in
addition begun to receive economic aid from several sources,
including the European Community, the
World
Bank (see
Glossary), Japan, Canada, and the United States.
Developments such as these provided a solid foundation for
future economic improvement--gains that in mid-1993 were
still very much in the realm of anticipation. It seemed
clear that Ethiopia would remain one of the world's poorest
nations for the foreseeable future.
Since the downfall of the Mengistu regime, Ethiopia's human
rights record has improved. At the same time, the TGE has
failed to end human rights abuses. In the absence of a
police force, the TGE delegated policing functions to the
EPRDF and to so-called Peace and Stability Committees. On
occasion, personnel belonging to these organizations were
alleged to have killed, wounded, or tortured criminal
suspects. There were also allegations of extrajudicial
killings in many areas of the country.
Several incidents in early 1993 raised further questions
about human rights in Ethiopia. On January 4, security
forces opened fire on university students protesting UN and
EPRDF policies toward Eritrea and the upcoming independence
referendum. At least one person, and possibly several
others, died during the fracas. In early April, the Council
of Representatives suspended five southern political parties
from council membership for having attended a conference in
Paris at which the parties criticized the security situation
in the country and the entire transitional process. A few
days later, on April 9, more than forty instructors at Addis
Ababa University were summarily dismissed. The TGE alleged
lack of attention to teaching duties as the reason for its
action, but the instructors asserted that they were being
punished for having spoken out against TGE policies. These
developments came on top of United States Department of
State allegations that more than 2,000 officials of the
Mengistu regime remained in detention without having been
charged after almost twenty months.
One of the most serious dilemmas confronting the TGE
concerned its inability to restore security throughout
Ethiopia. After the EPRDF assumed power, it dismantled the
440,000-man Ethiopian armed forces. As a result, several
hundred thousand ex-military personnel had to fend for
themselves. The government's inability to find jobs for
these soldiers forced many of them to resort to crime as a
way of life. Many of these ex-soldiers contributed to the
instability in Addis Ababa and parts of southern, eastern,
and western Ethiopia.
To help resolve these problems, the TGE created the
Commission for the Rehabilitation of Ex-Soldiers and War
Veterans. By mid-1993 this organization claimed that it had
assisted in the rehabilitation of more than 159,000 ex-
soldiers in various rural areas. Additionally, commission
officials maintained that they were continuing to provide
aid to 157,000 ex-soldiers who lived in various urban
centers.
Apart from the difficulties caused by former soldiers and
criminal elements, several insurgent groups hampered the
TGE's ability to maintain stability in eastern and western
Ethiopia. The situation was particularly troublesome with
the OLF. For example, in mid-1991 government forces clashed
with OLF units southwest of Dire Dawa over the rights to
collect qat revenues. Qat is a plant that produces a mild
narcotic intoxication when chewed and that is consumed
throughout the eastern Horn of Africa and in Yemen. Although
the two groups signed a peace agreement in August, tensions
still existed, and fighting continued around Dire Dawa and
Harer at year's end. In early 1992, EPRDF-OLF relations
continued to deteriorate, with armed clashes occurring at
several locations throughout eastern and western Ethiopia.
After the OLF withdrew from the elections and the government
in late June, full-scale fighting broke out in the south and
southwest, but OLF forces were too weak to sustain the
effort for more than a few weeks. Even so, in April 1993 the
OLF announced that it was once again expanding its
operations, but many observers doubted this claim and the
OLF's ability to launch effective military campaigns against
government forces.
The TGE also experienced problems with the Afar
pastoralists who inhabit the lowlands along Ethiopia's Red
Sea coast, particularly during its first year in power. In
early September 1991, some Afar attacked a food relief truck
column near the town of Mile on the Addis Ababa--Aseb road
and killed at least seven drivers. The EPRDF restored
security in this region by shooting armed Afar on sight.
Since then, EPRDF-Afar relations have remained tense. Some
Afar have associated themselves with the OLF, but many
others joined the Afar Liberation Movement, which by early
1993 claimed to have 2,500 members under arms.
Elsewhere in eastern Ethiopia, the TGE experienced problems
with the Isa and Gurgura Liberation Front (IGLF). On October
4, 1991, clashes between government forces and IGLF rebels
resulted in the temporary closure of the Addis Ababa-
Djibouti railroad near Dire Dawa and the disruption of trade
between the two countries. The fighting also disrupted
famine relief distribution to nearly 1 million refugees in
eastern Ethiopia. By early 1992, the IGLF still had refused
to recognize the EPRDF's right to maintain security in the
Isa-populated area around Dire Dawa. By 1993, nonetheless,
improved conditions allowed the Addis Ababa-Djibouti
railroad to operate on a fairly regular basis.
In western Ethiopia, during the July-September 1991 period,
the EPRDF engaged in several battles in Gojam and Gonder
with the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party (EPRP), the
only major political group excluded from power.
Additionally, in Gambela, the EPRDF battled the Gambela
People's Liberation Front, which claimed the right to
administer Gambela without EPRDF interference. The downfall
of the Mengistu regime also created a crisis for
approximately 500,000 southern Sudanese who lived in refugee
camps in and around Gambela. Although the new government
claimed they could remain in Ethiopia, nearly all of the
refugees, fearing reprisals for belonging to or supporting
southern Sudanese insurgents that the EPRDF opposed, fled
toward southern Sudan. As a result, by early 1992 fewer than
15,000 Sudanese refugees remained in western Ethiopia.
In southern Ethiopia, crime was the main security problem.
In late March 1992, EPRDF troops reportedly arrested 1,705
armed bandits and captured thousands of weapons, including
machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades. Despite this and
similar sweeps, many Western observers believed that
security problems would continue to plague the EPRDF regime
for the foreseeable future because of the large number of
available arms and unemployed ex-fighters in the south.
In contrast with the political divisiveness in Ethiopia,
nearly all Eritreans appeared to support the EPLF and its
goals. As a result, in the first two years after military
victory, the PGE was able to move swiftly on a number of
fronts. As one of its first acts, the new government
expelled thousands of soldiers and personnel of the former
Ethiopian army and government in Eritrea, together with
their dependents, forcing them across the border into
Tigray. The PGE maintained that the expulsions were
necessary to free up living quarters and jobs for returning
Eritreans and to help reduce budgetary outlays. In October
1992, the government opened schools across Eritrea. A few
weeks later, the PGE announced new criminal and civil codes
and appointed dozens of judges to run the court system. A
National Service Decree made it mandatory for all Eritreans
between the ages of eighteen and forty to perform twelve to
eighteen months of unpaid service in the armed forces,
police, government, or in fields such as education or
health.
Perhaps most important, the PGE honored the agreement it
had reached with the EPRDF and the OLF in 1991 to postpone a
referendum on the question of Eritrean independence for two
years. By early 1993, given the general popularity of the
PGE and the desire among Eritreans to be free of control
from Addis Ababa, the outcome of the referendum was a
foregone conclusion. On April 23-25, 1993, the PGE carried
out the poll. In a turnout of 98.5 percent of the
approximately 1.1 million registered voters, 99.8 percent
voted for independence. A 121-member UN observer mission
certified that the referendum was free and fair. Within
hours, the United States, Egypt, Italy, and Sudan extended
diplomatic recognition to the new country. Thereafter,
Eritrea joined the UN, the Organization of Africa Unity, and
the
Lomé
Convention (see Glossary).
A month after the referendum, the EPLF transformed the PGE
into the Government of Eritrea, composed of executive,
legislative, and judicial branches. Supreme power resided
with a new National Assembly, comprised of the EPLF's former
central committee augmented by sixty additional
representatives from the ten provinces into which Eritrea
was divided. Aside from formulating internal and external
policies and budgetary matters, the assembly was charged
with electing a president, who would be head of state and
commander in chief of the armed forces. The executive branch
consisted of a twenty-four-member State Council, chaired by
the president. The judiciary, already in place, continued as
before. At its initial meeting on May 21, the assembly
elected Issaias Afwerki president. This new political
configuration was to last not longer than four years, during
which time a democratic constitution was to be drafted and
all members of the EPLF would continue to work for the state
without salary.
In the months following independence, the Eritrean
government enjoyed almost universal popular support. Even
such former adversaries as the Eritrean Liberation Front
(ELF), the Eritrean Liberation Front-United Organization,
and the Eritrean Liberation Front-Revolutionary Council
issued statements of support for the referendum and for the
new regime. During his first press conference after the
referendum, President Issaias stressed that his government
would pursue pragmatic and flexible policies. He also
discussed prospects for close economic cooperation with
Ethiopia and raised the prospects of a future confederation
between the two countries. Meanwhile, the president pledged
that Aseb would remain a free port for goods in transit to
Ethiopia. Additionally, he reaffirmed the EPLF's commitment
to the eventual establishment of a multiparty political
system, but there would be no political parties based on
ethnicity or religion.
Its popularity notwithstanding, the Eritrean government
faced many problems and an uncertain future. Economically,
the country suffered from the devastation of thirty years of
war. Eritrea's forty publicly owned factories operated at no
more than one-third capacity, and many of its more than 600
private companies had ceased operations. War damage and
drought had caused agricultural production to decline by as
much as 40 percent in some areas; as a result, about 80
percent of the population required food aid in 1992. The
fighting also had wrecked schools, hospitals, government
offices, roads, and bridges throughout the country, while
bombing had destroyed economically important towns like
Mitsiwa and Nakfa.
To resolve these problems, Eritrea implemented a
multifaceted strategy that concentrated on restarting basic
economic activities and rehabilitating essential
infrastructure; encouraging the return and reintegration of
nearly 500,000 Eritrean refugees from neighboring Sudan; and
establishing the Recovery and Rehabilitation Project for
Eritrea. Additionally, the Eritrean government reaffirmed
its commitment to a liberal investment code, the response to
which by mid-1993 was encouraging. Even so, the Eritrean
government estimated that it needed at least US$2 billion to
rehabilitate the economy and to finance development
programs--aid that it sought largely from Western countries
and financial institutions.
Another serious issue confronting the new government
concerned the status of the country's armed forces. Since
the country's liberation in 1991, the government had lacked
the funds to pay salaries. Nevertheless, officials adopted a
compulsory national service act that required all former
fighters to labor without pay for two years on various
public works projects. When the new Government of Eritrea
extended unpaid compulsory national service for an
additional four years on May 20, 1993, thousands of
frustrated former fighters who wanted to be paid and to
return at last to their families demonstrated in Asmera. The
government responded by promising to begin paying the
fighters and by instituting a military demobilization
program that would allow volunteers who could fend for
themselves to return to their homes.
Eritrea's long-term well-being also depended on President
Issaias's ability to preserve the country's unity. Achieving
this goal will be difficult. Eritrea's 3.5 million
population is split equally between Christians and Muslims;
it also is divided into nine ethnic groups, each of which
speaks a different language. A reemergence of the historical
divisions between the Muslim-dominated ELF and the largely
Christian EPLF is possible and could prove to be the young
country's undoing. Also, at least some Eritreans doubted
President Issaias's pledge to establish a multiparty
democracy and viewed with skepticism his determination to
prevent the establishment of political parties based on
ethnic group or religion. However, as of mid-1993, Eritrea
remained at peace, and the government enjoyed considerable
support. As a result, most Western observers maintained that
the country had a good chance of avoiding the turbulence
that plagued much of the rest of the Horn of Africa.
The ultimate fates of Ethiopia and Eritrea are inevitably
intertwined. For economic reasons, Ethiopia needs to
preserve its access to Eritrean ports, and Eritrea needs
food from Ethiopia as well as the revenue and jobs that will
be generated by acting as a transshipment point for
Ethiopian goods. Also, political and military cooperation
well be necessary to prevent conflict between the two
nations.
Despite this obvious interdependence, Ethiopia and Eritrea
face a difficult future. Many Ethiopians, primarily those
who are Amhara, and some Eritreans, largely from the Muslim
community, remain opposed to Eritrean independence and the
EPLF-dominated government. These malcontents could become a
catalyst for antigovernment activities in both countries.
Within Ethiopia, the TGE's concept of ethnicity as the basis
for organizing political life has aroused controversy and
has stymied many of the TGE's policies and programs, thereby
reducing chances for the emergence of a democratic
government. Additionally, if the EPRDF does not broaden its
ethnic base of support and bring such groups as the Amhara
and the Oromo into the political process, the likelihood of
violence will increase. As of mid-1993, it was unclear
whether the TGE's plans for a new constitution and national
government would resolve these problems or would founder on
the shoals of ethnic politics and economic despair.
September 10, 1993
Thomas P. Ofcansky
Data as of 1991
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