The Ethiopian Political Confession Challenge

This challenge is aimed primarily at those who are actively involved in Ethiopia’s political conflicts. Members of the silent majority are also challenged to take part because their silence in the face of their nation’s existential crisis is complacency

OPINIONS (ENGLISH)አበይት ጉዳይ

Yonas Birru

8/20/20246 min read

This challenge is aimed primarily at those who are actively involved in Ethiopia’s political conflicts. Members of the silent majority are also challenged to take part because their silence in the face of their nation’s existential crisis is complacency. The confession challenge starts with my own confession. I then tap or challenge 12 intellectuals and activists to participate by sharing their confession and tapping or challenging 12 others of their choice to do the same. The goal is not to point fingers on others, but to confess our own sins in terms of causing or exacerbating the current crisis.

The 12 people I call up on for the challenge are: Merera Gudina, Jawar Mohammed, Bekele Gerba, Ezekiel Gabissa, Alula Solomon, Daniel Berhane, Professor Getachew Assefa, Alemayehu Fentaw, Andargachew Tsegie, Aklog Birara, Messay Kebede, and Berhanu Abegaz. Notably, I have limited my challenge to four intellectual/activists each from Oromo, Amhara and Tigray tribal homelands because they are the primary forces in the nation’s political conflicts. People who are not named or people outside of the three groups may also participate posting their own confession and challenging others to participate.

We (intellectuals, activists and political junkies) are an integral part of the national political crisis by omission or commission whether our transgressions are misfeasance or malfeasance in nature. If we are to save our people who have become victims of political conflicts that have become accustomed to brewing and fomenting, we must start with our confession, repentance, and redemption. Thus, shall I stand before God and you my country women and men to confess, repent, redeem, and ask for forgiveness. This does not in any way negate my standing firm to what I believe.

My confession is a bit complicated because it involves two pens: Koki Abesolome and Yonas Biru. I created Koki Abesolome as a pen name in 1991 as a disrupter to expose the inherent flaw in our political, bureaucratic and social cultures. By necessity and intention, she was pushing the envelope to discomfort what she defined as hermitized and tribalized intellectuals. In terms of our current politics, she was an equal-opportunity-offender to the Amhara, Oromo and Tigray political class. As a result, I am seen as an Anti-Amhara, Oromo Phobic, and the Enemy of Tigrayans.

When I created Koki, my hope was to have her stand on her own without invading my space. After 30 years, it is difficult to tell where Koki ends and Yonas Begins. Admittedly, even when I actively sought to silence her tone and polemical style in my articles, I see her influence creeping in. My challenge was to contribute to the political discourse while using her to throw grenade on the tenets of our political culture. The narrative on Axum This, Adwa That and Lalibela ኡኡ, is as much about assailing our detrimental culture as it is about infusing sense into a senseless political landscape.

While admitting Koki’s in-your-face assault may be an overdose to our conservative culture, I still believe her positive contribution is more than the negative baggage she may have brought to bear. Today, it is hard to separate Koki from me or me from her. So, I take responsibility for both.

Let me first say what I sand by unapologetically. I stand by my position on the Tigray war. I believe the war was triggered by TPLF. I still support the federal government’s law enforcement campaign. No country or government would allow a renegade regional government to launch a war against it and brag about confiscating 70% of the nation’s military fire power, including missiles and thanks.

I believed then and still believe now that involving Eritrea was the right decision. It should be noted that TPLF officials and prominent activists such as Daniel Berhane were publicly courting Eritrea to stand with them. From the federal government’s point of view, the choice was to either allow TPLF to use the national weapons it had confiscated by force to overthrow the federal government or use whatever was available to it to stop it. So, inviting the Eritrean forces was the right call that the situation warranted.

It is also worth remembering Eritrea’s military intervention in Ethiopia was not new in Ethiopian politics. During the TPLF’s era, the Eritrean military force was in Ethiopia on the side of TPLF for two years after Eritrea declared its independence. So, the criticism from TPLF supporters and activists about Eritrea’s involvement in the recent war is hypocritic duplicity in steroid laced with psychedelic drugs that distorts a person’s perception of reality.

Where I blame the government is regarding its decision to deteriorate the law enforcement campaign into a civil war and the atrocities committed against civilians in Tigray both by the ENDF and forces that it brought to support it, including Eritrea and Amhara military forces. I have written many articles including those published by international outlets condemning this.

Since November 2020, I have called for a negotiated settlement and allowing access to unfettered international investigations of all atrocities committed by ENDF, Amhara, Eritrea and TDF forces. In my opinion designating TPLF as a terrorist organization was wrong. So was the government’s drive to dismantle TPLF as a political entity. My four proposals for ending the war published in November 2020, June 2021, June 2022 and November 2022 reiterated all these points.

I also stand by my many nuanced articles on Political Oromummaa that differentiated cultural and political Oromummaa. The same is true about my coining the term Amhara-Shene and ringing the bell of sirening the seeds of destructive impulses in the womb of Amhara extremism. I not only stand by my principled positions I believe that current facts on the ground have exonerated me assessment.

My Confession

I was an unreserved and vocal supporter of Prime Minister Abiy until April 6, 2019 — his first anniversary. I believed then and I still believe that his initial economic reforms were right, his resistance against both tribal and unitary forces and his cautionary policies of gradual political reform was also right on the money. After his first anniversary, I turned into a reserved supporter while criticizing him and his policies where needed. I directed my criticism both publicly and through his office.

It was in February 2022 I started to criticize him without holding back. During the war, I supported his administration where he needed to be supported and criticized him when I felt necessary. In retrospect, I see that my support was lauder and more frequent and my criticisms were more subdued and far in between.

My introspective expedition over the last several months has helped me to revisit the past with a new lens that time has cleared. Looking back, there were signals that show the tale-tell of a psychopath in the person of the Prime Minister. Speaking of election conflicts, he said “elections conflicts may lead to the death of tens or even hundreds of people. But soon after it will be forgotten, and life would go on.” His nonchalant description of the death (murder of hundreds of people) was a window in his psychopathic mind.

At the time his statement did not sit well with me. But the exuberance of euphoria and TPLF’s irrefutable intransigence with “my-way or the highway” attitude weighed in my political calculus. This is no excuse because as an intellectual, I should have risen above the euphoric exuberance.

In the process of writing this article I went through many of my published articles. There are no articles I wrote about, TPLF, Amhara Fano, Amhara Shene, Oromo-Shene, Oromummaa that I regret in tone or tenor. I understand that many of them may be too much for our conservative culture. Our culture sugarcoats the bad and the ugly. My intent was not only to show the ugly truth but also to lay it bear. For that I do not apologize.

There are, however, several articles I published between November 2000 and the January 2022 about the PM that I regret and would rewrite. The problem in my articles was that in the interest of protecting Ethiopia from Amhara- and Oromo-Shene and TPLF, I spared the Prime Minister from the kind of harsh and objective treatment that I reserved for extremist forces.

With the benefit of time, I now believe the extremism in Amhara, Oromo and Tigray are no more dangerous than his psychopathic impulses. I cannot deny my contribution to the creation of one of the worst and most dangerous psychopath to consolidate power. For that I feel both regretful and accountable.

On June 28, 2018, I wrote the below analysis under the by-line of Koki Abesolome. In the article, I divided government supporters and critics into three clusters each. I warned the need to rein in cluster one of each group.

I wish I listened to myself. My failure to do so led me to be part of the problem rather than a champion of what I outlined as a solution. I find it difficult to forgive myself for helping entrench a psychopath than seeking forgiveness from others.