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The
Ethiopian government, through inaction, repression, and
obfuscation is a major cause of the developing Ethiopian
famine
Alemayehu
G. Mariam
(November 25, 2009) It is hard to talk about Ethiopia these
days in non-apocalyptic terms. Millions of Ethiopians are
facing their old enemy again for the third time in nearly
forty years. The black horseman of famine is stalking that
ancient land. A year ago, Meles Zenawi's regime denied there
was any famine. Only 'minor problems' of spot shortages of
food which will 'be soon brought under control', it said
dismissively. The regime boldly predicted a 7–10 per cent
increase in the annual harvest over 2007. Simon Mechale,
head of the country's Disaster Prevention and Preparedness
Agency, proudly declared, 'Ethiopia will soon fully ensure
its food security.' For several years, the regime has been
touting that its Productive Safety Net Program would result
in ending the 'cycle of dependence on food aid' by bridging
production deficits and protecting household and community
assets. Famine and chronic food shortages were officially
ostracized from Ethiopia.
But the famine juggernaut could not be stopped. Recently,
Mitiku Kassa, Ethiopia's state minister for agriculture and
rural development, was panhandling international donors to
give US$121 million in food aid to feed some 5 million
people. The United Nations World Food Program says a much
larger emergency fund of US$285 million in international
food aid is needed to avert mass starvation just in the next
six months.
Zenawi's regime has been downplaying and double-talking the
famine situation. It is too embarrassed to admit the
astronomical number of people facing starvation in a country
which, by the regime's own accounts, is bursting at the
seams from runaway economic development. USAID's Famine
Early Warning Systems Network in its September 2009
Situation Report indicated that there are 'an additional 7.5
million' individuals to those reported by the Ethiopian
government who are 'chronically food insecure'. Regardless
of the euphemisms, code words and rhetorical flourish used
to describe the situation by politically correct
international agencies, between 15–18 per cent of the
Ethiopian population is at risk of full-blown famine,
according to the estimates of various international famine
relief organizations.
Many Ethiopians view the recurrent famines as an expression
of divine wrath. Successive governments have evaded
responsibility for their failure to prevent or mitigate
famine conditions. In 1973–74, Ethiopia's 'hidden famine',
exposed to the world by the BBC's Jonathan Dimbleby,
resulted in the deaths of an estimated 200,000 Ethiopians.
Emperor Haile Selassie said he was unaware of the magnitude
of the famine. He lost his throne and life in the ensuing
military coup. In 1984–85, the Soviet-supported socialist
military junta known as the 'Derg' denied the existence of a
famine which consumed over 1 million Ethiopians. Today, the
regime of Meles Zenawi shamelessly presides over a third
apocalyptic famine in 40 years while boasting to the world
an '11 per cent economic growth over the past six years'.
Every Ethiopian government over the past four decades has
blamed famine on 'acts of God'. The current regime, like its
predecessors, blames 'poor and erratic rains', 'drought
conditions', 'deforestation and soil erosion', 'overgrazing'
and other 'natural factors' for famine and chronic food
shortages in Ethiopia. Zenawi's regime even has the brazen
audacity to blame 'Western indifference' and 'apathy' in not
providing timely food aid for the suffering of starving
Ethiopians.
Penny Lawrence, Oxfam's international director, observed
after her recent visit to Ethiopia: 'Drought does not need
to mean hunger and destitution. If communities have
irrigation for crops, grain stores, and wells to harvest
rains then they can survive despite what the elements throw
at them.' Martin Plaut, BBC World Service News Africa editor
explains that the 'current [famine] crisis is in part the
result of policies designed to keep farmers on the land,
which belongs to the state and cannot be sold'. So the
obvious questions for Zenawi's regime are: Why is all land
owned by a government that has rejected socialism and is
fully committed to a free-market economy? Why has the regime
not been able to build an adequate system of irrigation for
crops, grain storages and wells to harvest rains?
Indian economics Nobel laureate Amartya Sen argued that the
best way to avert famines is by institutionalizing democracy
and strengthening human rights: 'No famine has ever taken
place in the history of the world in a functioning
democracy' because democratic governments 'have to win
elections and face public criticism, and have strong
incentive to undertake measures to avert famines and other
catastrophes'. Ethiopia's famine today is a famine of food
scarcity as much as it is a famine of democracy and good
governance. Ethiopians are starved for human rights, thirst
for the rule of law, ache for accountability of those in
power and yearn to breathe free from the chokehold of
dictatorship. They are dying at the hands of corrupt,
foreign-aid profiteering and ethnically-polarizing dictators
who cling to the Ethiopian body politic like blood-sucking
ticks on a milk cow.
Sen's democratic network of 'famine early warning systems'
does not exist in Ethiopia. Opposition parties are crushed
ruthlessly, and their leaders harassed, persecuted and
jailed. Birtukan Midekssa, the first woman political party
leader in Ethiopia's recorded history, today languishes in
prison doing a life term on the ridiculous charge that she
had denied receiving a government pardon in July 2007
following her kangaroo court conviction and two-year
incarceration. The free press is silenced and journalists
imprisoned for exposing official corruption and offering
alternative viewpoints. They do not dare report on the
famine. NGOs, including famine relief organizations, are
severely hobbled in their work by a law that 'criminalizes
the human rights activities of both foreign and domestic
non-governmental organizations', according to Amnesty
International.
All along, Zenawi has been hoodwinking international donors
and lenders into supporting his 'emerging democracy'. After
two decades, we do not even see the ghost of democracy on
Ethiopia's parched landscape. All we see is the spectre of
an entrenched dictatorship that has clung to power like
barnacles to a sunken ship, or more appropriately, the
sunken Ethiopia ship of state.
Images of the human wreckage of Ethiopia's rampaging famine
will soon begin to make dramatic appearances on television
in Western living rooms. The Ethiopian government will be
out in full force panhandling the international community
for food aid. Compassion-fatigued donors may or may not come
to the rescue. Ethiopians, squeezed between the black
horseman and the noisome beast that is the Ethiopian
government, will once again cry out to the heavens in pain
and humiliation as they await for handouts from a charitable
world. Isn't that a low, down-dirty shame for a proud people
to bear?
Alemayehu G. Mariam is a professor of political
science at California State University, San Bernardino, and
an attorney based in Los Angeles. This article was
originally published by the
Huffington Post.
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