In my commentary last week, “Interpreting and Living MLK’s Dream”,
I discussed, among other things, Dr. Martin Luther King’s (MLK)
philosophy of nonviolent social change. MLK argued that the “crucial
political and moral question of our time” is the “need for man to
overcome oppression and violence without resorting to oppression and
violence.” I believe the crucial political and moral question for
Ethiopians today is how to transform Ethiopia into an oasis of
democratic governance in the middle of a sub-Saharan desert of African
tyranny in a nonviolent struggle.
MLK
dreamt about creating the “Beloved Community”– a community that has rid
itself of racism, poverty and militarism. He said, “The end of
nonviolent social change is reconciliation; the end is redemption; the
end is the creation of the Beloved Community. It is this type of spirit
and this type of love that can transform opponents into friends.”
The
question I seek to address here is whether and how Ethiopians,
particularly young Ethiopians, could use MLK’s “diplomacy” of love,
brotherhood, sisterhood and nonviolence in their struggle against an
entrenched and depraved dictatorship in their country. I use the word
“diplomacy” here advisedly to signify the importance of dialogue,
negotiations, compromise, bargaining, concessions, accommodations,
cooperation and ultimately peace-making and reconciliation. (I plan to
offer my views on the “diplomacy of nonviolent change” in Ethiopia on a
regular basis in the future.)
Recent clampdown on Semayawi (Blue) Party
According
to a BBC report, last week “some 100 members of Ethiopia’s opposition
Semayawi party were arrested and some badly beaten.” In June of this
year, Semayawi (Blue) Party (BP), a political party comprising of young
people and openly committed to nonviolent social change, had organized
its first major street demonstration against the ruling regime demanding
the release of political prisoners, journalists and human rights
activists. Regime police raided the BP headquarters to prevent a
scheduled “rally” by the party to demand political reforms. According to
BP chairman Yilekal Getachew, regime police assaulted party members and
confiscated sound systems, computers and other equipment. The rally has
been rescheduled for September 21.
Regime official Shimeles Kemal
“denied there had been a crackdown” and explained that the BP party
could not engage in protest activity because the “venue had already been
booked by a group condemning religious extremism.” The pro-government
counter demonstration was organized by the “Addis Ababa Inter-Religious
Conference”, a regime front organization. The
regime-staged counter-demonstration was an effort aimed at showing the
“vehement opposition of Addis Ababa resident against [religious]
radicalism recently observed in the country”.
MLK’s “first step” in nonviolent social change
How
relevant are MLK’s teachings in undertaking a nonviolent moral and
political struggle in Ethiopia? Can Ethiopians inform their struggle
against tyranny with MLK’s ideas of nonviolence, love, civil resistance
and disobedience? I believe MLK’s teachings are relevant to any society
suffering under tyranny, dictatorship, racism, poverty and militarism.
MLK taught that the first step in a nonviolent struggle is a commitment to truth which requires “information gathering”. He
understood that a struggle based on facts (in contrast to propaganda
and ideological indoctrination) is a struggle based on truth. He
believed that one must thoroughly and methodically research, investigate
and gather vital information on the scope, magnitude and severity of
problems facing the community before contemplating action. More
importantly, one must gain understanding and insight into the lives of
the people who are impacted by conditions of oppression and work with
social, civic and political organizations engaged in seeking to bring
about change. Without fact-finding and community support, the struggle
for nonviolent social change is likely to lead not only to uninformed
and erroneous decisions but also end up in counterproductive and
ineffective actions driven by anger, resentment and impatience.
MLK’s
prescription for “gathering information” is consistent with the old
adage that there is power in “information” and “knowledge”. Nelson
Mandela said it best: “Education is the most powerful weapon which you
can use to change the world.” Education is ultimately about acquiring,
imparting, accumulating and disseminating systematized knowledge and
information. In as much as formal education is important, as Albert
Einstein said, “imagination is more important than knowledge. For
knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while
imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to
know and understand.”
Yet there can be neither information,
knowledge, education nor imagination if the human mind is gripped and
made captive to the tyranny of fear and ignorance. Before taking
the first step of “information” gathering, those committed to nonviolent
change must overcome their fear of tyrants and dictators.
The
regime in Ethiopia has ruled by fear (not the rule of law) for over two
decades. Dissenters and members of the opposition are harassed,
intimidated, arrested, placed in prolonged pre-trial detention, tortured
and put on show trials and subjected to extrajudicial killings. As I
argued in my commentary “Edu-corruption and Mis-education in Ethiopia”,
the regime has used “ignorance as its most powerful weapon to prevent
change and cling to power. They have long adopted the motto of George
Orwell’s Oceania: ‘Ignorance is Strength’. Indeed, ignorance is a
powerful weapon to manipulate, emasculate and subjugate the masses. Keep
‘em ignorant and impoverished and they won’t give you any trouble.”
Overcoming the tyranny of fear: Precursor to MLK’s first step in nonviolent social change
MLK
said, “Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be
demanded by the oppressed.” Oftentimes, the oppressed are too fearful,
too traumatized and too confused to demand their freedom. For 30 years,
Hosni Mubarak ruled Egypt by spreading fear and loathing among the
population. Invoking a “State of Emergency (“Law No. 162 of 1958”),
Mubarak wielded unlimited power and imposed his iron will through a vast
network of secret police, spies, informants and honor guards who used
torture, intimidation and extrajudicial killings to make sure he stayed
in power and his opposition decimated. By the time he was thrown out of
office in 2011, he held an estimated 20,000 persons under the emergency
law; and according to human rights organizations, he held over 30,000
political prisoners. When Egyptian youth overcame their fears of
Mubarak and stood up to his secret police, spies, informants and
bloodthirsty thugs, it was all over for him and his kleptocratic regime.
In less than three weeks, Mubarak’s empire of fear, terror and torture
crumbled like an Egyptian ghorayebah cookie.
Most of the nonviolent social and political changes we have seen over the past three decades were the direct result of the people losing their fear of the tyrants who
oppress them. The Poles succeeded in their nonviolent struggle when
they lost their fear of their communist tyrants. In 1981, the Soviets
put General Wojciech Jaruzelski in charge to crackdown on Solidarity, a
non-communist controlled trade union established a year earlier.
Jaruzelski immediately declared martial law and arrested thousands of
Solidarity members, often in in the middle of the night, including union
leader Lech Walesa. Jaruzelski flooded the streets of Warsaw, Gdansk
and elsewhere in Poland with police who shot, beat and jailed strikers
and protesters by the tens of thousands. The crackdown drove the
opposition underground. Where the jailed union leaders left off, others including priests, students, dissidents and journalists took over. Unable
to meet in the streets, the people gathered in their churches, in the
restaurants and bars, offices, schools and associations. By 1988,
Poland’s economy was in shambles as prices for basic staples rose
sharply and inflation soared. In August of that year, Jaruzelski was
ready to negotiate with Solidarity and met Walesa. In December 1990,
Lech Walesa became the first popularly elected president of Poland. It
took nearly a decade to complete the Polish nonviolent revolution. When
Poles overcame their fears of Jaruzelski and his Soviet backers and
stood up to his secret police, spies, informants and bloodthirsty thugs,
it was all over for him and his iron-fisted regime.
Nonviolent
social and political change came to many of the former Soviet republics
and post-communist countries in Eastern Europe through the so-called
“color revolutions” (people wearing symbolic colors to show their demand
for change) over the past decade. In Serbia (2000) Georgia (“Rose
Revolution” 2003), Ukraine (“Orange Revolution” 2004) and Kyrgyzstan
(“Tulip Revolution” 2005), ordinary people engaged in defiant massive
nonviolent street protests which culminated in the removal of oppressive
and corrupt regimes. Not long ago, the “Arab Spring” dawned in the
Middle East when Ben Ali’s regime in Tunisia was swept away in the
“Jasmine Revolution.” The one common element in the “color
revolutions” was the fact that they were led by youth who had lost
their fear of their tyrannical oppressors.
How do the people lose fear of their oppressors?
The
history of nonviolent social and political change shows that people
lose the fear of their oppressors when the burden of their material
conditions outweigh the fear of their oppressors. Simply stated, people
lose their fear of their oppressors when they just can’t take it
anymore. They come to a point where they stand up and say, “Enough is
enough!”
During the civil rights movement, African Americans lost
their fear of police thugs, police dogs, police informants and police
brutality when they became sick and tired of the dehumanization,
discrimination and segregation they faced daily. When the bus driver
threatened to have Rosa Parks arrested if she did not go to the back of
the bus in Montgomery, Alabama in 1955, her answer was, “You may [have
me] arrested.” She ain’t moving; and she will no longer accept second
class citizenship. MLK’s essential message at the 1963 March on
Washington was the same. It was equality and justice for black people
under the Constitution or escalating civil resistance, civil
disobedience and protest. He announced, “We can never be satisfied as
long as the Negro is the victim of the unspeakable horrors of police
brutality… and our children are stripped of their self-hood and robbed
of their dignity…”
Gandhi launched the salt march of 1930 to
protest the British salt tax which charged ordinary Indians for a basic
necessity of life. Instead of paying the tax submissively, Gandhi
engaged in a massive act of civil disobedience leading tens of thousands
of people to the sea to make salt. The British arrested over 60,000
people, but thousands more took the places of those arrested forcing the
British to come to terms with Gandhi’s demands.
In the past two
years, the youth that led the “Arab Spring” mustered the courage to
confront their long-standing dictatorships because they felt hopeless,
helpless and futureless. The Middle East, like much of Africa, is
experiencing a youth bulge (large segment of the population comprised of
children and young adults). Neither the leaders nor the political
economy of those countries is capable of accommodating the needs of this
burgeoning population. There are few productive employment
opportunities for young people. The vast majority of the people could no
longer afford the basic essentials of life while the ruling elites and
their cronies wallowed in a sea of corruption, oil revenue and Western
aid.
I have long and repeatedly argued that Ethiopia’s youth will
be the tip of the spear of nonviolent social change in Ethiopia (no pun
intended). The youth bulge is estimated at 70 percent of the population.
According to a 2012 USAID study,
“Ethiopia has one of the highest urban youth unemployment rates at 50
percent and there is a high rate of youth underemployment in rural
areas, where nearly 85 percent of the population resides.” Another 2012 youth unemployment study in Ethiopia
reported that the “current 5 year [Ethiopian] development plan
2010/11-2014/5, the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP), does not
directly address the issue of youth unemployment, but rather implicitly
through improved performance of the various sectors in the economy.” The
study found that “in 2011, 38 percent of youth were employed in the
informal sector” which “often provides low quality, low paying jobs.”
The study reported high underemployment rates; “approximately 50
percent of youth reported being available and willing to work more
hours.” There is a substantial segment of the youth population that is
not only unemployed but also unemployable because they lack basic
skills. On the other hand, access to public sector jobs depends not so
much on merit or competition but connections and party membership. The
youth will no doubt demand greater economic justice and radical
political reforms that will enable them to have increasing input in
governance.
It is unlikely that the regime can remain indefinitely
in power by using repression and violence, particularly against the
youth. No amount of force can crush or subdue a rising tide of young
people in the population. According to the U.S. Census Bureau,
by 2050, Ethiopia’s population will more than triple to 278 million,
placing that country in the top 10 most populous countries in the world.
Demographic changes, persistent unemployment and galloping inflation,
limited educational opportunities, ever increasing cost of living and
expanding social media will make the youth in Ethiopia a powder keg on
short fuse.
Overcoming fear together and finding courage together
I
do not want to suggest here that fear and loathing resides only in the
hearts and minds of the oppressed. Fear strikes not only the victims but
also the victimizers. Those who run the regime in Ethiopia and their
cronies have their own fears and tribulations. As I argued in great
detail in my commentary, “Terminal Paranoia”,
regime leaders have used fear to cement their ugly and divisive ethnic
politics. By setting one group against another and inspiring distrust
and hatred, they have managed to cling to power for a long time. Today,
the façade of political institutions they have created for the various
ethnic groups to maintain their control no longer works. Their appeal to
ethnic loyalty inspired by fear of what other groups might do to one
group no longer holds sway. They are overwhelmingly rejected by every
single ethnic group in the country, bar none. The people have come to
the obvious realization that the regime’s “ethnic federalism”
(Bantustan-style regions) has only served the interests of a few
kleptocratic ruling elites and their cronies. Thus, the ruling elites
fear “payback” for their nasty games of ethnic division.
The innermost fear of the regime operators is the likelihood of a spontaneous mass uprising.
Regime leaders are terrified by the prospect of a sudden popular
uprising breaking out and literally consuming them. They have deep fears
of accountability and retribution. They know they have committed
unspeakable crimes against humanity, war crimes and serious crimes
punishable under their own criminal laws and the Constitution. They also
know that they will be held accountable for their corruption and abuse
of power if a mass uprising takes place. The specter of prosecution and
punishment for crimes they have committed keeps them in a state of high
anxiety and sleeplessness. In the final analysis, the regime’s problem
is the same as the proverbial tiger rider’s. They have been riding the
Ethiopian tiger for over two decades. They know one day they have to
dismount; and when they do, they will be looking straight into the angry
eyes, gleaming teeth and pointy nails of one big hungry Ethiopian
tiger!
Truth and Reconciliation
MLK dreamed
about creating a “Beloved Community”. Ethiopians cannot aspire to
create a “Beloved Community” permeated with fear. My understanding is
that many regime leaders and their supporters are gripped by fear and
desperately seek an “exit strategy”. They seek assurance that they will
not face extreme retribution in the event of change; indeed, they hope
to get some accommodation that will allow them to retain their wealth
while having an opportunity to play a role in the future of the country.
The victims of the regime fear the use of indiscriminate violence to
cling to power as seen after the elections in 2005 where hundreds of
people were gunned down in the streets.
Perhaps there is a way to
“negotiate fear itself.” Nelson Mandela and F. W. de Klerk managed to
negotiate their fears in a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Mandela
had to make distasteful moral choices and tough political compromises.
de Klerk had to convince his diehard Apartheid racists that change is
not easy but their choice was to abandon their ways and come to terms
with the new reality or lose everything. He told his people, “In order
for change to happen, you must really accept the need for change. Yes,
it’s scary.” By negotiating their fears, Mandela and de Klerk made significant strides to create their “Beloved South African Community.”
South Africans have a long way to go; and two decades later, they are
still struggling with the economic and political legacy of Apartheid.
If
Ethiopians are to create their own “Beloved Community”, they must begin
to “negotiate their fears”, which requires a reckoning with the history
of the past 22 years and an open and honest discussion of their
innermost fears. MLK said, “The end of nonviolent social change is
reconciliation; the end is redemption; the end is the creation of the
Beloved which transforms opponents into friends.” I believe it is time
to invent a “new diplomacy of nonviolence” which facilitates the
creation of a Beloved Community in Ethiopia. It is a diplomacy that
stresses dialogue, negotiations, compromise, bargaining, concessions,
accommodations, cooperation and ultimately peace-making and
reconciliation. MLK said, “Men often hate each other because they fear
each other; they fear each other because they don’t know each other;
they don’t know each other because they cannot communicate; they cannot
communicate because they are separated.” It has also been said that the
“only thing to fear is fear itself.” I believe the only thing to fear is
fear of each other; and the only thing to be courageous about is to
communicate with each other without fear, with honesty and in good
faith.
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