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- <text id=91TT2435>
- <title>
- Nov. 04, 1991: Ethiopia:Return to Normalcy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 04, 1991 The New Age of Alternative Medicine
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 47
- ETHIOPIA
- Return to Normalcy
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As the country begins to recover from war, President Meles
- explains his unorthodox approach to governing
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Marguerite Michaels/Addis Ababa
- </p>
- <p> Looking backward, life seems to shine with new promise.
- The civil war that ravaged Ethiopia for 30 years is over. In
- the five months since Mengistu Haile Mariam, the country's
- hard-line Marxist dictator for 14 years, was driven from power,
- the competing guerrilla bands have achieved a relative peace and
- joined in a transitional government. The death toll has fallen
- from 10,000 people a month to a few hundred. Where torture and
- disappearances once silenced opposition voices, Ethiopians now
- feel free to voice their demands and even shout insults at
- President Meles Zenawi, a democratic exercise he withstands
- calmly. "That's their right," says Meles. With the recent rains,
- even the gods seem to be smiling on the drought-ravaged land.
- </p>
- <p> The view ahead, however, is clouded. The shattered economy
- remains moribund, the country's 53 million citizens
- impoverished. The treasury is empty, half the factories are
- closed and much of the farmland is eroded. Famine still
- threatens millions of people. Foreign aid has amounted to a mere
- trickle as potential Western donors wait to see if Ethiopia's
- much vaunted turn toward democracy is a genuine renunciation of
- years of Marxism or just a good sales pitch. The government
- careens from one crisis to the next--banditry in the east,
- smuggling in the west, demobilization of Mengistu's army--with
- no road map to guide it. Where most of black Africa has opted
- to quell tribal rivalry by imposing strict one-party rule, Meles
- has embarked on a daring multiparty experiment that acknowledges
- ethnic differences. But many of the country's 70-odd ethnic
- groups continue to view one another over the barrels of the guns
- that were never confiscated when the civil war ended. "This is
- a country without any democratic experience," says Meles,
- "plunging into it with arms in hand."
- </p>
- <p> It is something of a miracle, then, that the political
- center fashioned after Mengistu's flight is holding. Though the
- interim government is dominated by Meles' Ethiopian People's
- Revolutionary Democratic Front, its ruling council includes
- representatives from 35 different parties. Last July it adopted
- a charter ensuring each ethnic nationality the right to
- self-determination. Step One--12 regional elections to be held
- by the end of the year--will pave the way for local autonomy
- or even secession. Already, the Red Sea province of Eritrea has
- set up its own provisional government and will hold a United
- Nations-sponsored referendum on independence in two years.
- </p>
- <p> All this could quicken Ethiopia's total disintegration.
- The many tribes have always been held together by force only.
- But Meles, the man shepherding this unorthodox democratic
- experiment, is remarkably serene about the unpredictable
- prospects. "A feudal monarchy and a repressive dictator couldn't
- hold Ethiopia together," he says. "Now we are trying another
- way. If Ethiopia breaks apart, then it wasn't meant to be."
- </p>
- <p> Pragmatic beyond his 36 years, Meles responds to trying
- circumstances is untried approaches. Take his tactic for dealing
- with tribal violence. Over the past few months, hostilities have
- raged between the Afars and Tigreans, the Gurages and Wolaytas,
- the Anuaks and Nuers, and the Oromos and Tigreans. Meles could
- try to pacify them all by force. Instead, he has approached
- tribal elders to find less drastic compromises. In the case of
- the Afars, for instance, he has asked the elders to designate
- which tribesmen should be armed. "To disarm them all is
- unacceptable to the Afars," Meles explains. "So the choice is
- to disarm the irrational elements and arm the rational
- elements." By this risky equation, he is calculating that if
- only the most cool-headed are armed, perhaps they will choose
- not to use their weapons.
- </p>
- <p> Meles is also throwing out the textbooks on capitalism to
- fashion distinctly Ethiopian economic policies. In August his
- government unveiled a draft program that elicited skeptical
- grimaces in the West. While the plan opens up road transport and
- retail trade to private capital, it also maintains government
- control of the petroleum, mining and chemical industries. Even
- less encouraging to potential aid donors, who want to see
- evidence that capitalist inclinations have buried socialist
- leanings for good, private ownership of land is still forbidden.
- Meles regards this as critical to protecting the interests of
- the poor peasant farmers who constitute almost 90% of the
- population.
- </p>
- <p> Meles sees this solution as practical, not polemical. "If
- the economic policy doesn't address the peasant's concerns, if
- the cities are bleeding the peasants as in most of Africa, then
- you cannot have democracy," he says. But such approaches have
- kept the foreign aid dollars from flowing. Some Ethiopians are
- resentful that the foreign aid spigot is still dry. "You said
- you would help those countries that formed democracies," says
- Tekola Hagos, Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs. "Where's the
- beef? Please send cash." But Meles appears more tolerant. "For
- us there is a commitment to democracy even without aid," he
- says, "so whatever funding the U.S. gives us is a plus."
- </p>
- <p> Other crises press on the government, giving rise to the
- phrase most commonly heard around the capital city of Addis
- Ababa: "We're still working on that." One troubling issue is the
- detention of nearly half of Mengistu's 400,000-strong army in
- two dozen camps around Ethiopia and over the border in the
- Sudan. Meles is worried that if the troops are released en
- masse, they will return home to find no food and no jobs. With
- half the population unemployed or underemployed, freedom for the
- soldiers is not likely to come soon. "You'd have people trained
- to kill with nothing else to do," says Meles. "That's a recipe
- for political disaster."
- </p>
- <p> There are also thousands of civilian detainees, former
- sympathizers of Mengistu, who are being held without trial in
- Addis Ababa. The conditions are better than tolerable, and there
- have been no charges of torture. But few are being released. "We
- can't deal with them without a new judicial system," Meles
- explains. He believes that the establishment of courts must take
- a backseat to political and economic agendas, and offers no
- apology for the delay.
- </p>
- <p> Meles knows he must move quickly to entrench reforms and
- win the respect and trust of all the Ethiopian people. But the
- young President is determined not to be diverted from his
- political priorities, even if each step forward is followed by
- multiple steps backward. "Democracy is the only way to unify the
- country," he insists. And if ethnic or economic problems
- overwhelm this unorthodox venture, sending Ethiopia the way of
- Yugoslavia? Then that too will be an exercise in democracy. For
- if the grand experiment fails, it will be the choice--and
- fault--of all Ethiopians.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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