Taming  Polarization  and  Bridging  Divides: The  Failure  and  Redemption  of  Ethiopian  Politics

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Yonas  Biru,  PhD

As  I  have  maintained  in  several  of  my  articles,  the  Ethiopian  political  landscape  is  dominated  by two  groups  of  people:  Hermitized  souls  whose  mindset  is  stuck  in  yester-century  and  those  who have  lost  their  soul  to  either  Marxism  or  tribalism.  The  former  sees  their  articles  of  faith  as  self- evident  truth  and  the  later  lacks  a  moral  compass.  Both  exist  in  a  borrowed  time  unable  to  come to  terms  that  the  philosophical  anchors  upon  which  their  political  views  are  hanging  have  long expired.

 

 

The  perennial  clashes  across  and  within  these  two  groups  have  deprived  Ethiopia  the  ability  to develop  a  deliberative  conflict  resolution  culture  and  redemptive  character.  Such  a  culture  brings to  the  fore  conflict  entrepreneurs  and  alienates  thought  leaders  and  nation  builders.  More  than anytime  in  our  recent  history,  we  are  witnessing  an  unparalleled  polarization  in  our  political discourse.  Consequently,  simmering  tensions  are  approaching  a  boiling  point.

 

 

The  silver  lining in these dark  times is  that  the prevailing polarization in our  political  system does not  reflect  an  inherently  polarized  country.  What  it  signifies  is  that  extremist  political  actors  who tends  to  be  loud  and  overbearing  are  dominating  the  public  discourse  bandwidth  and  the  silent majority  (aka  the  moderate  majority)  is  morbidly  silent.

 

 

The  emergence  of  the  silent  majority  is  a  rational  political  phenomenon  driven  by  two  factors. The  most  important  factor  is  whether  public  opinion  has  influence  over  public  policy.  If  the government  is  perceived  to  pay  little  to  no  attention  to  public  opinion,  most  rational  people  opt out  of  political  debates.  This  is  the  case  in  Ethiopia  whose  PM  is  more  like  a  cross  between  an absolute  monarch  and  an  evangelical  patriarch.  He  does  not  sees  the  people  as  owners  and authors  of  the  nation’s  sovereign  power  from  whence  he  draws  his  prescribed  and  limited authority.  The  PM’s  Problem  is  partly  rooted  in  religion,  as  I  have  explained  at  the  end  of  this proposal.

 

 

The   second   factor   is   the   nation’s   vulgar   political   culture   that   repels   people   of   reason   and conscience  and  attracts  conflict  peddlers  and  political  profiteers  from  the  ranks  of  the  morally malnourished  and  ethically  devoid  demographic  misfits.  Casting  the  demons  out  of  our  political market,  therefore,  requires  two  deliberate  actions.

 

 

 

First,  the  PM  must  come  to  terms  that  his  governance  style  is  fostering  political  apathy  exiling the  moderate  majority  into  a  place  of  “hear-no-evil  and  speak-no-evil” political  asylum.  Capable Ethiopians   with   subject   matter   expertise,   intellectual   repute,   psychological   temperance,   and fundamental human virtue find themselves alienated by him. The onus for taking the first critical step  of  involving  the  silent  majority  rests  on  his  shoulders.

 

 

The  second,  and  just  as  equally  important  factor  depends  on  the  nation’s  ability  to  overcrowd conflict  peddlers  and  political  profiteers  by  breaking  the  silence  of  the  moderate  majority.  This requires  deliberate  and  active  actions  by  opinion  entrepreneurs  and  moral  leaders  within  the silent  majority.

 

 

Coordinated  corrective  actions  by  the  PM  and  the  silent  majority  will  provide  an  impetus  for change  by  fostering  the  emergence  and  influence  of  centrist  opinions  that  are  amenable  for consensus  building.  Only  when  we  change  the  dimension  and  function  of  the  political  calculus that   governs   conflict   peddlers   can   we   sanitize   the   political   culture   and   create   a   conducive environment  to  bridge  political  divides  on  vital  issues.

 

 

Unfortunately,  what  we  see  is  the  PM  and  conflict  peddlers  accusing  each  other  while  paying  no heed to the fact that each has a role in the political orgy that has begotten a basterdized political system  with  no  rational  foundation.

 

 

To  address  the  challenges  noted  above,  I  propose  to  organize  a  zoom  conference  to  kick  off discussions  on  four  critical  topics.  There  must  be  a  concurrence  plan  to  build  on  the  inaugural conference  with  a  series  of  subsequent  in-person  and  virtual  conferences  to  engage  political stakeholders  in  Ethiopian  and  in  the  diaspora.  Ideally,  the  conference  should  be  organized  by people  of  the  silent  majority  demography  both  from  the  home  front  and  the  diaspora.  Four proposed  topics  for  the  conference  follow.

 

 

  1. Breaking the  Silence  of  Reason  and  Conscious

 

 

The  moderate  majority  is  the  conscious  of  the  nation.  Even  though  those  who  constitute  it  are disinterested  in  engaging  with  the  nation’s  peddlers  of  conflict,  they  are  neither  blind  nor  deaf to the goings on. They are disengaged for reasons outlined above. The purpose of this conference topic  is  to  foster  discussion  on  ways  to  encourage  both  the  PM  and  the  silent  majority  on  how best  to  break  the  silence  of  the  nation’s  conscious.  Presenters  will  address  existing  challenges

 

and  propose  innovative  ways  of  building  discussion  forums  and  charting  organizational  layouts to  bring  the  moderate  majority  out  of  the  cold.

 

 

  1. Unlocking Impasses  and  Expanding  the  Horizon  of  the  Political  Discourse

 

 

Ethiopia is stuck in prolonged political deadlocks and irreconcilable tribal conflicts. Every political conflict  is  elevated  to  a  make-or-break  level.  The  challenge  is  how  to  unlock  the  impasse  by counterbalancing entrenched extremist positions with diverse voices of reason and civil dialogue. For  three  decades,  the  constitution  has  been  the  source  of  the  nation’s  political  and  armed conflicts.  Yet,  the  political  discourse  has  not  moved  an  iota  beyond  the  “unitarist”  (አሃዳዊ)  vs. “tribalist” (ጎጠኛዊ) labeling and counter labeling that the two warring camps throw at each other. Neither is prepared to consider alternative views outside of the አሃዳዊ vs. ጎጠኛዊ diatribal confines.

 

 

The  consequence  has  been  aggravating  the  country’s  existing  deep  divisions,  rather  than  finding a  middle  ground  or  an  alternative  space  of  engagement.  It  is  this  dynamic  we  must  understand if  we  are  to  deal  with  the  political  culture  ravaging  our  nation.  Only  then  can  we  transform political  actors  from  being  bestial  remnants  of  our  heritage  as  risen  apes  to  becoming  forgivable fallen  angels.

 

 

The proposed conference in this regard will invite people with different perspectives and opinions on how to move the debate away from አሃዳዊ vs. ጎጠኛዊ impasse. The conference will help broaden the parameters the political contours. It will also move the nation toward reducing the prevailing political  congestion  and  softening  the  polarized  discussion.

 

 

  1. Defusing the  Gathering  Storm  in  the  Amhara-Oromo  Political  Nexus

 

 

This  is  one  of  the  most  critical  areas  that  can  become  an  existential  threat  for  the  very  survival of the nation unless addressed expeditiously and handled judiciously. Internal (TPLF) and external (Egypt)  forces  are  doing  everything  in  their  power  to  capitalize  on  the  conflict  between  the  two tribal camps. Addressing the vexing problem requires dealing with different parts of the Amhara- Oromo  political  nexus.

 

 

On  the  two  extreme  ends  of  the  spectrum,  we  have  adherents  of  Ortho-Amhara  extremism  and believers   of   the   OLF   tribal   liberation   theology.   The   Orto-Amhara   designation   refers   to   the marriage  of  extremist  Orthodox  followers  and  Amhara  tribalists.  For  Oromo  extremists,  the  PM is  building  a  “Neo-Menilik”  kingdom  and  committing  suicide  against  the  Oromo.  For  Ortho-

 

Amhara  extremists,  he  is  committing  genocide  against  the  Amhara  “በጥንት ጊዜ ግራኝ መሃመድ በከፈተው በር ገብቶ.” These are extremists with next to none chance for reconciliation. Spending time on them is  a  zero-calorie  intellectual  effort.  It  will  produce  neither  light  nor  power  that  makes  change possible.

 

 

On the relatively less polarized part of the Amhara-Oromo nexus exists a second group of people who are emotionally invested in the conflict after years of politically nurtured tribal radicalization. These are people who may be able to recast their perspectives and see the situation in a different light if engaged in a constructive discourse. There is yet a third group representing a large swath of  the  people  who  constitute  the  silent  majority.

 

 

The  challenge  is  facilitating  constructive  political  discussions  across  the  second  and  third  groups of  people  to  overshadow  and  crowd  out  the  venomous  noise  and  thwart  the  destructive  clashes perpetrated  by  adherents  of  Ortho-Amhara  extremism  and  believers  of  OLF  tribal  liberation theology.

 

 

The  conference  will  help  broaden  the  parameters  of  the  political  discourse  and  move  the  nation toward  softening  our  polarized  discussion.

 

 

  1. Getting the  Evangelical  God  Out  of  Our  Politics

 

 

One  of  the  most  dangerous  developments  that  has  occurred  since  PM  Abiy  came  to  power  is  the evangelical  seduction  of  the  nation’s  political  governance.  It  is  partly  responsible  for  the  crisis we  are  embroiled  in.  The  phenomenon  is  no  less  dangerous  than  the  brewing  Oromo-Amhara conflict.  Unless  dealt  with  a  sense  of  urgency,  it  will  lead  to  serious  problem  with  existential consequences.

 

 

I  have  addressed  this  issue  in  detail  in  one  of  my  earlier  articles.  In  summary,  the  most  salient point  worth  repeating  is  that  the  PM’s  anti-intellectual  sentiment  and  his  reluctance  to  seek advice  and  guidance  from  subject  matter  experts  is  rotted  in  his  expressed  belief  that  he  gets advice  and  counsel  from  divine  forces.  The  fact  that  the  PM  is  a  devoted  Christian  is  not  a problem.  If  anything,  it  is  important  to  have  a  God-fearing  leader  in  charge  of  the  leavers  of political   power.   The   problem   is   his   inclination   to   smuggle   divine   forces   in   our   secular constitutional  order.

 

God makes the blind see and raises the dead. But he neither formulates political policies nor runs bureaucracies.  Despite  the  PM’s  belief,  God  is  not  into  dispensing  political  and  military  advice. Leaving   mundane   political,   bureaucratic   duties   to   God   has   led   our   nation   to   deep-rooted bureaucratic  dysfunctionality,  security  breakdown  and  abysmal  diplomatic  failure.

 

 

There  are  two  issues  in  need  of  national  consensus.  First,  should  religion  have  a  place  in  our nation’s politics? If so, which religion? This is not a trivial issue because the theological foundation of  prosperity  Gospel  is  orthogonal  to  the  guiding  principles  of  Orthodox  Christians,  for  example.

 

In  time  of  national  distress,  the  Orthodox  would  call  up  on  its  flocks  and  friends  to  plead  God with  collective  እግዚኦታ.  In  contrast,  followers  of  Prosperity  Gospel  feel  that  at  any  moment  they have more to celebrate than to lament. Therefore, they are not into እግዚኦታ. Instead, they do እልልታ even  at  the  time  of  crisis  and  string  of  mass  murders.  That  is  why  the  PM’s  office  called  upon the  people  of  Ethiopia  to do a collective national እልልታ to praise the Lord.

 

 

Ethiopia  is  going  down  in  flames  as  its  PM  leads  the  people  with  a  synchronized  እልልታ with ጭብጨባ.  If you wonder why the PM does not talk a lot about mass murders and does not travel to Wellega to console the families of victims of mass murder, you have the answer in his religious belief. The  Prosperity  Gospel’s  two  guiding  principles  “our  destiny  is  in  God’s  hands”  and  “the  Power of Positive Thinking” may be good for our spirit, but it is colossally bad for our mundane politics.

 

 

From  political  perspective  what  the  country  needs  is  neither  እግዚኦታ nor  እልልታ,  but  a  political leadership supported by people with subject matter expertise and administrative experience. That is why our constitution is secular and there is no mention of God or divine deity in it. It is in violation of this cardinal principle that the PM has unilaterally smuggled his religion in our body politics and put our nation at a grave risk. The people must insist that if he cannot do without his religion, he should leave politics. If he wants to remain in politics, he should leave his religion with his family and his church.

 

 

The  proposed  conference  will  open  this  critical  issue  for  a  national  debate.  The  nation’s  survival depends  on  it.

Addis Insight
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