Ethiopia The Struggle for Power, 1974-77
Revolutionary monument extols the virtues of
communism.
Courtesy Paul Henze
Although not a member of the Derg per se, General Aman had
been associated with the Derg since July and had lent his
good name to its efforts to reform the imperial regime. He
was a well-known, popular commander and hero of a war
against Somalia in the 1960s. In accordance with the Derg's
wishes, he now became head of state, chairman of the Council
of Ministers, and minister of defense, in addition to being
chairman of the PMAC. Despite his standing, however, General
Aman was almost immediately at odds with a majority of the
Derg's members on three major issues: the size of the Derg
and his role within it, the Eritrean insurgency, and the
fate of political prisoners. Aman claimed that the 120-
member Derg was too large and too unwieldy to function
efficiently as a governing body; as an Eritrean, he urged
reconciliation with the insurgents there; and he opposed the
death penalty for former government and military officials
who had been arrested since the revolution began.
The Derg immediately found itself under attack from
civilian groups, especially student and labor groups who
demanded the formation of a "people's government" in which
various national organizations would be represented. These
demands found support in the Derg among a faction composed
mostly of army engineers and air force officers. On October
7, the Derg arrested dissidents supporting the civilian
demands. By mid-November, Aman, opposed by the majority of
the Derg, was attempting unsuccessfully to appeal directly
to the army for support as charges, many apparently
fabricated, mounted against him within the Derg. He retired
to his home and on November 23 was killed resisting arrest.
The same evening of what became known as "Bloody Saturday,"
fifty-nine political prisoners were executed. Among them
were prominent civilians such as Aklilu and Endalkatchew,
military officers such as Colonel Alem Zewd and General
Abiye Abebe (the emperor's son-in-law and defense minister
under endalkatchew), and two Derg members who had supported
Aman.
Following the events of Bloody Saturday, Brigadier General
Tafari Banti, a Shewan, became chairman of the PMAC and head
of state on November 28, but power was retained by Major
Mengistu, who kept his post as first vice chairman of the
PMAC, with Major Atnafu as second vice chairman. Mengistu
hereafter emerged as the leading force in the Derg and took
steps to protect and enlarge his power base. Preparations
were made for a new offensive in Eritrea, and social and
economic reform was addressed; the result was the
promulgation on December 20 of the first socialist
proclamation for Ethiopia.
In keeping with its declared socialist path, the Derg
announced in March 1975 that all royal titles were revoked
and that the proposed constitutional monarchy was to be
abandoned. In August Haile Selassie died under questionable
circumstances and was secretly buried. One of the last major
links with the past was broken in February 1976, when the
patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, Abuna Tewoflos,
an imperial appointee, was deposed.
In April 1976, the Derg at last set forth its goals in
greater detail in the Program for the National Democratic
Revolution (PNDR). As announced by Mengistu, these
objectives included progress toward socialism under the
leadership of workers, peasants, the petite bourgeoisie, and
all antifeudal and anti-imperialist forces. The Derg's
ultimate aim was the creation of a one-party system. To
accomplish its goals, the Derg established an intermediary
organ called the Provisional Office for Mass Organization
Affairs (POMOA). Designed to act as a civilian political
bureau, POMOA was at first in the hands of the All-Ethiopia
Socialist Movement (whose Amharic acronym was MEISON),
headed by Haile Fida, the Derg's chief political adviser.
Haile Fida, as opposed to other leftists who had formed the
Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party (EPRP), had
resourcefully adopted the tactic of working with the
military in the expectation of directing the revolution from
within (see
Political Participation and Repression, ch. 4).
By late 1976, the Derg had undergone an internal
reconfiguration as Mengistu's power came under growing
opposition and as Mengistu, Tafari, and Atnafu struggled for
supremacy. The instability of this arrangement was resolved
in January and February of 1977, when a major shootout at
the Grand (Menelik's) Palace in Addis Ababa took place
between supporters of Tafari and those of Mengistu, in which
the latter emerged victorious. With the death of Tafari and
his supporters in the fighting, most internal opposition
within the Derg had been eliminated, and Mengistu proceeded
with a reorganization of the Derg. This action left Mengistu
as the sole vice chairman, responsible for the People's
Militia, the urban defense squads, and the modernization of
the armed forces--in other words, in effective control of
Ethiopia's government and military. In November 1977,
Atnafu, Mengistu's last rival in the Derg, was eliminated,
leaving Mengistu in undisputed command.
Data as of 1991
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