Saturday, August 22, 2015

Gambella Stateless Nation

Gambella Stateless Nation by O'Kono
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to inform interested researchers, academicians, world governments, non-governmental groups, and laypersons who want to expand their knowledge about Gambella and its people. This paper intended mostly to focus on the history of Anywaa people as well as the Gambella region of Ethiopia with the analysis of recent cause of conflict that has rocked Gambella. 
Introduction
Gambella is a stateless nation that has been ruled by the Ethiopian government since 1956. Although Ethiopian government took over Gambella administrative role after the Britain left Sudan, Gambella remained relatively peaceful until the late 1970s.  This paper will contribute to the existing body of knowledge about the history of the people of Gambella and their struggle for equal justice and equity.
There were number of factors that were attributable to changes in Gambella dated in the early 1900-1990s.  Among those factors were:
                   I.            The influx of South Sudanese in 1960s-72 during Sudan’s first civil war where South Sudanese rebel movement Anya nya I  used Gambella to stage armed struggle against the Arab Islamic dominated Khartoum government;
                II.            Over taxation and mistreatment of Gambella people by Ethiopian government in early 1900s to 1960s;
             III.            Forced conscription by Ethiopian  to fight the Ethiopian-Eritrean civil war at that time in 1960-91 and Ethio-Somali war in 1970s;
             IV.            The second influx of South Sudanese to Gambella in 1978-91;started by Anyanya II and the Second Sudanese civil war by the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A);
                V.            Resettlement of highlander Ethiopians during the late 1980s famine; 
             VI.            Ethiopian People Democratic Revolutionary Front (EPRDF) 1991-present.
All of the above six historical events have contributed to instability and loss of lives in the Gambella region to present day. First South Sudanese armed struggles have forced Gambella people to fight for the liberation of south Sudanese people from the Arab dominance due in part the people of Gambella mainly Anywaa are divided between Sudan and Ethiopia. This division happened after colonial Britain ruled Sudan and the frontier. Prior to that Anywaa people were in their own territory governed by their own kings and chiefs. Peace was highly maintained. In the 1900s to late 1960s, Ethiopian government was involved in taxing Anywaa people without representation in the government of Ethiopia. Slavery business was recorded. Numbers of Anywaa people were abducted and sold to slavery by Ethiopian government. During the Ethio-Eritrea civil war Anywaa were forced to join national service to fight in the north. This had a major outcome for the Anywaa people because not only were they dying in the north, but also there was only one high school in Gambella region where students were captured in classroom or at night to join the army. Because of the forced enlistment, high numbers of students ages fifteen and above left school or town and sought refuge in gold mining area were there were no primary schools not to mention high school. This recruitment intensifies each year as the government of Ethiopia continued to lose the war from the north. The cases of abuses had  gone up. Due to that in late 1970s, Gambella people decided to establish a rebellious against the central government. They established what was called Gambella People Liberation Movement (GPLM). When the government learned that GPLM was conceived to put up assistance, the response was by far inhumane. Human rights abuses were committed against the Anywaa. 
            Another episode was the second influx of South Sudanese refugees to Gambella to fight the Sudan government. They were under military wing known as Sudanese People’s Liberation Army (SPLA). Given the estimated less densely populated Gambella, South Sudanese people were nearly outnumbered the people of Gambella mainly the Anywaa who live in constant villages. Other Gambella ethnics live in remote areas whereby the South Sudanese people did not affect their villages. This had negative consequences on the Anywaa people. The population of South Sudanese were estimated nearly 400, 000 whereas Anywaa people was less than. The majority of South Sudanese were young males. After they acquired military training, on their way back to Sudan to fight the Sudanese government, they began to rape Anywaa women, committed atrocities against Anywaa. Ironically, when they were fleeing to Gambella, it was Anywaa people who provided them food and safety. They continued to abuse Anywaa until 1991 when GPLM and EPRDF took power after toppling Ethiopian government.
            Then in 1980s, famine had made Ethiopian government to settle nearly 60,000 highlander Ethiopians to Gambella region. This is the same years when numbers of South Sudanese were quite high in Gambella as well. Even though these famine victims were highly welcomed by Gambella people, the central government armed them with AK-47 as for protection. Nonetheless, it was not long when they turn against their host, the Anywaa people. It was bad.
            The last but not least Ethiopian People Democratic Revolutionary Front (EPRDF) which is controlled by Tigrain People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Despite the fact that EPRDF/TPLF was GPLM allied, they turned against Anywaa people as soon as they took over the government. One good thing EPRDF/TPLF did was the elimination of SPLA from Gambella territory. Had SPLA stayed for another year they would have wiped out the Anywaa people. To present,  EPRDF/TPLF, has targeted and committed deplorable gross human rights violation in the Gambella region. They killed Anywaa elites, forced them into exiles, or imprison them. More details are discussed later in the paper.
However, there are two analyses we can conclude on the EPRDF/TPLF. It is all about power and economic control. They want to control Gambella so that they can do whatever they want to satisfy their political and economic interests. The people of Gambella are ethically different in physical appearance, language, culture, and religious beliefs. Gambella people are Protestants whereas the highlanders Ethiopian for the most part are Orthodox, Muslims, and Protestants. Furthermore, the majority of them come from resource-depleted area so they want to control economic power in the Gambella region. Although those are striking concerns, there are many more problems still to be discussed in the body of the paper. There is linear relationship between power, economic control, and violence against Gambella people by Ethiopian government.

Gambella  
Gambella and its Anywaa people are one of the world’s most neglected populations, living in a remote and isolated region of Africa. Gambella is located in the southwestern Ethiopia and southeastern South Sudan.  It is approximately the size of Republic of Rwanda, or U.S. state of Massachusetts, with an approximate population of about a million. To the present day, the indigenous people of this region have relied on the elderly for general wisdom, storytelling, tracing the history of their people, and maintaining a traditional political system with the history of the land and its boundaries. 
Due to lack of established documentation on Gambella, the history of their people and lands, this information has not been recorded until recent times, and their geo-political experience is unknown to the outside world.  That is why today, there is insufficient literature published or disseminated on the Anywaa people.  There is only a small amount of information published on the Anywaa, and that was in 1930’s by social anthropologists who were interested in Anyuak/Anywaa political system after the Anywaa rejected Britain colonialism. Some of the Gambella indigenous include Majang/Majanger, Opo, and Kumo, Olam, and Dhowak/Surma people.  Recently the Nuer ethnic from South Sudan have been included in the Gambella nation.  Colonial Britain gave them Ethiopian citizenship status in exchange for the land in the Ilemi Triangle (correctly spell as Olimi Triangle, which was named after an Anyuak King of Okwa village).  The Sudanese government at the time was not happy with the colonial behavior of awarding its citizens [Nuers] foreign citizenships [Ethiopian].  To complicate and make things worse, Nuers acquisition of illegal citizenship by colonial Britain was never resolved between Ethiopia and Sudan because WWII broke out.  To this day, the border issue remains a serious problem (Collins, 1983).
Gambela is a nation presently under the rule of Ethiopia since 1956, when Britain left Sudan and ceded Gambella to Ethiopia. They did this without the consent of the Gambellan people. According to Robert O. Collins, a Sudanese delegation headed by Foreign Minister Sayyid M.O. Yassein and Ethiopian Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs, Blatta Dawit Ogbagzy, and including, Ato Menassie Lemma, from the Finance Ministry, met in Addis Ababa on April 26, 1956. They agreed to hand Gambella over to the Imperial Ethiopian government on October 15, 1956.  Prior to colonial Britain in Sudan, Gambella was a free state and people ruled through its Chiefdoms and Kingdoms.
The colonial British called the Gambella/Anywaa territory a ‘frontier,’ meaning a meeting place for those who are not planning to stay.  The British intention was to settle border disputes with Sudan at the expense of Ethiopia by giving away unwanted or undesirable territory, which they assumed was part of Ethiopia.  They failed to realize that Gambella/Anywaa territory was not part of Ethiopian land.  Thus, Gambella and the Anywaa people today remain a stateless nation under the oppressive regimes of Ethiopia because it was annexed by colonial Britain and given it to Ethiopia without the consent of its people.

Theoretical Framework
            The all situation of Gambella or Anywaa problems with Ethiopian governments can be conceptualized with the theory of political opportunities and violent political conflict. These theories highlight the connection between political structures, the distribution of political power, and collective action, according to (Jenkins and Perrow 1997; Tilly 1978; McAdam 1982; Jenkins 1985; Jenkins and Schock 1992; Tarrow 1989, 1994; Jenkins and Klandermans 1995). These theories assert that coercive behavior of governments should influence violent political conflict. Government would put sanction against dissidents, which tend to increase the level of violent political conflict since a coercive method of action taken by governments to suppress dissidents will instigate violent standoff. The basic assumption of these theories is that the sources of discontent that lead to violent political conflict are inherent in all societies and that the occurrence of political violence environment is a function of the political opportunities ( Schock, 1996). When we examine the conflict of Gambella by the Ethiopian government in the recent decades, they established economic inequality and political opportunity structures whereby Gambella people cannot equally participate in economic development or political structures. As a result, violence political conflict has flared up.
               
 Anywaa /Anyuak
The question many may ask is, how did the Anywaa people govern themselves before they fell under the rule of Sudan presently South Sudan and Ethiopian administrations?  Their Kings and Chiefs ruled the Anywaa. Still today, some part of Anywaa land, particularly in South Sudan, is still ruled by Kings and Chiefs.
          The Anywaa people live along the rivers of Agewi, Obooth, Akobo, Gilo, Alwero, and Openo between Ethiopia and South Sudan. The Anywaa have inhabited this region for over 600 years. The Anywaa are traditionally farmers who cultivate varieties of millet, corn, sesame, beans, tobacco, and bananas, among other crops (Evans-Pritchard, 1942).
Historically, the Anywaa are Nilots part of Luo tribe.  The Luo area racial group who are scattered across thousands of miles in Eastern and Central Africa. Fr. Crazzolara (1950: 5), noted, “The tribe into which the original group of the Luo/Lwo divided after leaving their country of origin in Egypt, are as follows, 1.  Boor, 2. Jo- Luuo, (Thuri, Bwodho, Jur), 3. Collo (Shilluk), 4. Anywaa, 5.Paari (Lokooro, Ber, Nyorro), 6.Acholi, 7.Alur, 8. Jo-Pawir (Jur), 9. Lango, 10.Kumam, 11.Jo- Pa- Wiir alias Jo-Ka-Weer, 12.Jo-Pa- Adhola, 13. Jo-Lwo (JaLuo), 14. Barabaig.”The Luo are presently found in South Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
            Anywaa society is divided into many patrilineal clans.  The members of the same clan elect their headman or King/Chief from the sons of a predecessor. The villagers will provide support to their leader with farm work, fish, meat, and entrust their communal drums and dance-ground to his custody (Evans-Pritchard, 1942).These traditional leaders have political systems that are and have always been similar to a true nation. There are judicial, executive, and defense branches.  A few villages, like Okwa for example, had both a King and a Chief.  King is head of the government and Chief is head of the land, orthe ‘Land Master,’ who carries out land acquisitions and distributions should new comers want to move to the area. In addition, there was an Earth Master who blesses hunting and fishing fields. For instance, if it were fishing reason, the earth master would be the one who must bless the lakes, rivers, or hunting fields before anyone could fish or hunt.  The Earth Master is more respected by everyone than the Chief or King.  The King or Chief cannot ignore Earth Master blessing power. 
          The penalty for those who break traditional norms is that they would be cursed, and thus risk being attacked by snakes, crocodiles or some other terrible calamity. In villages where there are both a King and a Chief, the King would be the head of state and the Chief the head of the land. If someone broke the law, the executive (King/Chief) would convene the court with his judicial branch to resolve the issue. If there were a war, the head of defense would lead the force with guidance from the head of the village, a King or Chief. If a murder was committed, the King or Chief would order an investigation into the cause of death.  If it was an accidental death, usually the alleged would be ordered to pay punitive damages. In the worst cases, if the murder was intentional, the accused could be put to death in public.
         The laws have always been well defined across the Anywaa culture, even though its own King or Chief governs each village.  Nonetheless, there is no written constitution or body of law. The Anywaa constitution remains an oral tradition. For many centuries, this unwritten constitution made Anywaa land one of the most stable, and peaceful regions in the entire African continent.
            Lucy Mair’s (1962) extensive study of what she terms, “minimal governments in stateless societies,” gives many examples of the complex and varied ways in which disputes in such communities are resolved.  For instance, writing in 1962 in her book Primitive Governments, she describes how the Anuak people of Africa dealt with violent disputes:
“In an Anuak Village [disputes] are talked out in the presence of the headman and elders, and the nearest approach to a verdict is the consensus of opinion reached in this public discussion. A headman is entitled to formal respect, and this imposes a certain order upon the proceedings. The idea that revenge for killing could be pursued within the limits of so small a community as an Anuak village is as unthinkable there as anywhere else, but the Anuak way of preventing this is for the killer and his kin to leave the village till the anger of his victims has had time to cool (Mair, 1962: 49).”
            Communities such as the Anuak maintained a relatively high degree of social order through a variety of ingenious methods that were rarely based on large inequalities of status or, indeed, wealth. Anywaa village’s territory could stretch over 30-50 square miles, within which specific parts of the territory would be reserved for fishing, gaming and hunting.  Anywaa village political/geographical boundaries were always well drawn within the Anywaa country.  All knew this and no one can violate village territory without permission or the violator will be fined.
            Basically, the Anywaa people have lived in autonomous villages governed by clearly defined rules.  If the Chief abuse his power, the villagers would rally behind another aspirant Chief (son of a Chief not just an ordinary villager).  However, a King cannot be overthrown or replaced until death, when his son will be crowned and assume the responsibility. In the worst-case, if he has no grown son, a kin would take over.  Anywaa-land was divided in two types of traditional government systems, Kingdoms and Chiefdoms. For example, Kings ruled Adongo, Tier Nam and part of Nyikani and Chiefs ruled Ciro, other part of Nyikani, Gilo, Lul, and Openo.

Stateless Nation to Nation/State: Future of Gambela
            Gambela has an oral history of nearly 3000 years of being a free nation. Following cession of Gambella to Ethiopia in 1956, the people of Gambella begun to experience much oppression at the hands of Ethiopian governments.  The people of Gambella were, often massacred, forced to work, and sold into slavery.
            For example Majid Abud al-Ashakr who was a Syrian born in 1884, was brought up in a Syrian orphanage in Jerusalem, after both of his parents were killed by the Turkish. In the nineteenth century, he accompanied a Danish missionary to the hadramut where he experienced a host of adventures, and then ended up in Harrar, Ethiopia in 1906.  Majid liked Ethiopia where he worked with a German merchant; learned Amharic and acquired a managerial post with Idliba Hassan’s in Gore, in the western part of Ethiopia, thepresent-dayOromiya region.  While in Gore he won the confidence of Gore governor Ras Tassama, who later accorded him with estate at a place called Gomera near Gore from the emperor Laj Yasu in 1914.  Majid, to prove his loyalty to the emperor, led an Ethiopian punitive expedition into the Baro (Openo) river bank/Salient in 1916 to punish the Anywaa who refused to recognize Ethiopian sovereignty and to wage guerrilla warfare across the frontier into the Sudan. At that time, he managed to defeat the Anywaa in a bloody fight at Itang on the Openo riverbank and he had to withdraw before carrying out hostilities in the Sudan (Collins, 1983).  Thereafter, Majid return to highlands, and his affiliation with Emperor Laj Yasu earned high respect. For the next ten years, he lived quietly on his estate in Gomera until Haile Seassie appointed him as Frontier. In 1932, Haile Selassie appointed Majid to be the head of the frontier region of Gambella. In early 1933, Majid again marched on Gilo Anywaa with his 360 well-armed men to punish the Anywaa.  Sudan leadership reinforced the Pibor and Akobo resistance, and supported them with warplanes to prevent the Anywaa fleeing across the frontier from Majid’s army and to aide Majid’s movement. 
            During that time, British officials in the Sudan did not trust Ethiopia or Majid.  In 1934, Majid went back to Gambela with the new title, “Imperial Agent for the Nilotic Tribes of Illibabor [Gore] and Sayo-Wallega Province, (Collins, 1983:380).”  He came with several hundred men with machineguns.  To his surprise while, he was collecting taxes in Gambella region, a great numbers of Openo’s Anywaa devastatingly attacked him on May 26.  Luckily, his machine guns and his life were spared, but his leg was badly shattered.  Sixty of his strongmen were killed on the spot, and the remaining retreated toward Gambella town. The police from Gambella managed to rescue him.  In that raid, Majid lost everything he had: baggage, ammunition, guns, large quantities of currency, and only half of his men were able to get back (Collins, 1983).  It was a great humiliation and shock to Majid, the British, and Haile Selassie. Few people know much about these conflicts and the human rights abuses because those who documented the events, like Dr. Collins, were from the West and the material they published could not be disseminated to readers back in Ethiopia or Sudan. This part of the Anywaa history still remains alive in the oral tradition and is kept by a few elderly individuals.
From the1960s to early 1991, the Gambella people were often conscripted involuntarily to fight the civil war in the northern part of the country Tigray region (the then Eritrean province that became an independent nation 1993) and Ethio-Somali war in 1970s.  During this time, Gambella had only one high school, three middle schools, and a few elementary schools. To this day, Gambella has only two community colleges; one teachers training college of liberal arts, and another is an Agriculture college which finally upgraded to Gambella University. The federal government of Ethiopia has refused to build a university in Gambella despite the major contributions Gambella has been making to Ethiopia since Italian war (WWII). During WWII when Italy troops took over Ethiopia, and King Hale Selassie sought Britain military power to liberate Ethiopia, Anywaa/Anuak were divided, whereby one group supported Italian and the other with British. The Anywaa people, at the time, had fallen out with British because the Anywaa of Adongo (present-day South Sudan) attacked colonial army of Britain when they infiltrated their territory in 1912 with intention to colonize Anywaa. The place where the initial attack took place remains a living shrine site. Because of this embarrassment, British became furious with the Anywaa people. In 1937, about 30 Italian officers and some 4,000 troops mainly of Eritreans, Somali, Anywaa, and Oromo, captured Maji town from the Ethiopians, which at the time was governed under the British appointed adviser Lieutenant Colonel D.  A. Sandford (Collins, 1983).
Late Ethiopian,  Prime Minister Meles Zenawi was asked if he would someday consider building a university in Gambella.  He replied, “. . . not during my time, maybe someone after me.” Imagine, Ethiopia is currently constructing thirteen new universities across their country.  The Gambella airport is also way below acceptable standards whereas Ethiopian government has built a university and modern international standards airport in Somali region. Is this a skin color issue?  I think so. Meles Zenawi died in July 2012 without proposing a university to be built in Gambella. However, there were some of his points which had contributed to peace building in Gambella and his refusal to recognize Nuer as Ethiopians. 
Forced conscription caused the majority of Gambella youth to dropout of schools and sought refuge in Damballa, a gold mining district (presently known as Dima Woreada).  This dropout rate has contributed to the high illiteracy rate in the region. As a result, in the late 1970s, Gambella formed an armed group tonight the Ethiopian government in order to establish self-autonomy.  The armed group was called the Gambella People’s Liberation Movement (GPLM), and Agwa Alamo led it.  They fought alongside the present ruling party’s Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). In1989, the GPLM and TPLF, among other rebel groups, formed an umbrella organization called Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF).  In 1991, this coalition toppled Ethiopian government forces, known as the Dreg, and they formed a government.  GPLM’s mission was to establish full autonomy, whereby the people of Gambella have the unconditional right to elect or remove their leaders whenever the majority decides to do so.
Unfortunately, in 1992 because of the conspiracy by bodies which did not want to see stable Gambella region, GPLM forces assassinated their leader,  Mr. Agwa Alamo.  After that, everything fell apart. Okello Oman who was GPLM security chief was appointed as president of Gambella.  He remained in that office until 1997 when he was unconstitutionally removed by EPRDF and beaten nearly to death.  President Okello Oman died five years later from an illness related to the EPRDF brutality. The EPRDF only wants a symbolic leader, not someone who will argue with them.  As a famous saying in Ethiopia goes, “if a color of something is red and EPRDF agent tells you it is green, you better say it is green or you will be in deep trouble.” One can imagine what kind of a government it is that does not respect the people’s leaders.
            During the infamous famine of 1980’s, the Ethiopian government had relocated over 60, 000 settlers from all over Ethiopia into the Gambella region without the knowledge or permission of the Gambella citizens. These immigrants were forcibly settled among the Anywaa villages. They were skeletons when they were brought to Gambella. Colleges and universities students throughout Ethiopia were sent to build settlements for the settlers, locally known as Kambata at the time.  The truth is they were not Kambata, but a mixed group of people consisting mainly of Amhara, Tigare, Oromo, Adinya, Wolaita, and Kambata. The unspoken mission of the government was to assimilate the Gambella people through intercultural marriages with the settlers.  In addition, the government armed the settlers with assault rifles. Non-governmental organization like Cultural Survival has documented these mass settlements and forced conscription of Anywaa people to fight in Ethiopian wars.
In short time, the settlers started mistreating their hosts, the Anywaa people.  They illegally erected checkpoints in the middle of villages, and it was common for them to beat up Anywaa villagers.  For example, in a village called Okuna (Okunakijang) in Abobo Woreada, the settlers thoroughly abused the Anywaa people.
I remember an incident that took place in Okunakijang. I was in the 4th grade in 1988, and on Okuna’s elementary school soccer ground.  A young man from a settler community from mender ane or (village #1), of which the majorities were Kamabta people, was returning from Village # 2 where he worked in construction.  He decided to stop by the soccer game on his way home to play a bit before heading home.  It was late and getting dark. The game was about to end. However, he asked some of his friends in the fields if he could replace one of them so he can play.  His friends refused. Finally, he went to his goalkeeper friend and he managed to convince him. Therefore, he became a goalkeeper. Coincidently he was drunk. Unfortunately, in a matter of minutes highlander who was a nurse in mender ulete (village #2) shot a high-flying ball.  This young man failed to catch the ball and the ball landed on his chest. He died instantly. When the message reached village #1 they assumed the Anywaa players killed their son.  At that time, I lived in teachers’ compound few yards from the soccer field. Teachers were a mix of Anywaa people and highlanders.  The village #1 residents instead of trying to find the cause of the death pick up their guns and machetes marched toward the teachers’ compound with intention to massacre the Anywaa teachers.  When we heard, our community decided to sit and wait for them to come.  We did not have any means to defend ourselves but we relied on the power of our land because we had not committed any crime.  By the will of God, someone who was among the players managed to inform them that the incident was not caused by Anywaa rather a nurse from village #2.  Then, they headed to village #2, luckily the settlers in village #2 were also armed thus they were able to protect the nurse. The nurse was evacuated to Gambella town and then later he was assigned to different location. 
I personally felt much relieved and safer after moving to Abobo town in 1989 because Okuna was so insecure and the settlers were making their own laws to justify harming the Anywaa.  At that time, they could commit any crime against the Anywaa and get away with it because the government was behind them.
Again, in Okuna, in September 1991, when the then government was overthrown, mender arate (village #4) residents, who were mostly Tigare, blocked the road to Abobo town so that Okuna people could not flee.  Next, these villagers killed four Anywaa travelers who were on their way to Abobo.  The death of these four individuals had turned Okuna into battleground. The family of the victims retaliated on settlers by killing many of them.  As a result, the government of EPRDF/TPLF to this day, has turned Okuna into their slaughter ground.  They accused Okuna people of carrying out the massacre against the settlers; meanwhile it was settlers who initiated the violent acts.  They hold so much unfounded resentment against the people of Okuna, but it is based in their failure to investigate the root causes of the bloodshed. 
Okunakijang people are known throughout Anywaa-land for their unconditional welcoming, love, friendly, and warm-heartedness.  Indeed, they did initially welcome the settlers with their open hearts. Unfortunately, the lack of good governance by previous and present regimes have resulted in tragic conflicts and caused the loss of many precious lives.
In December 13, 2003, the Ethiopian National Defense Forces (ENDF) collaborated with their highlander counterparts and committed atrocities which independent human rights observers have called genocide against the Anywaa elite and its community leaders, including a pastor.  Many Anywaa were jailed for years without due process.  Since then, more than 10,000 civilians have fled to neighboring and other countries. New York based Human Rights Watch (March 2005), investigated and published a report titled, “Targeting the Anuak: Human Rights Violations and Crimes against Humanity in Ethiopia's Gambella Region.”
In 2010, the Ethiopian federal government introduced what they called “Villagization” in Gambella region.  The government claimed that the scheme was designed for fast-paced development in the region in terms of infrastructure, health facilities, education, and agriculture. Ironically, this plan has resulted in the forced displacement of about 70,000 people over 3 years so that mega-agribusiness firms can make massive land-grab farmlands.  Another report published by Human Rights Watch titled, “Waiting Here for Death,” confirmed these government manipulations, mismanagement, and human rights violations against the Gambella people.  As a result, those who resisted the government eviction were forced into exile, put in jail and large numbers of youth were killed.
In summary, although Gambella region has exhibited developmental progress under EPRDF regime, it is not satisfactory to the people of Gambella. The Ethiopian government and highlanders (alternatively Abyssinian) people still deliberately treat Gambella as a peripheral state, and therefore they do not give it the needed developmental attention they provide to other northern or southern regions of the country.  The theories of economic inequality, political opportunity structures, and violent political conflict can explain those human rights abuses.
The highlanders treat the people of Gambella as second-class citizens.  The highlanders maintain a practice of racial inequity to keep darker skinned people inferior to them.  The highlanders, whose their ethnic origins are still questionable, assume they are better than the dark-skinned Gambelleans.  The highlanders are the result of interracial marriages with the Arabs, Turks, and Persians among others before they settled to present day Ethiopia.  This is well recorded by archeologist, biologists, and researchers.  The majority of highlanders to present day still refer to Gambella people as slaves because they believe the darker skinned person is the slave he becomes.  Paradoxically, Habasha are the very same people who possessed so much pride in the discovery of the ancient human Lucy, who has been proven the mother of all modern human beings.  Who was Lucy? She was a dark-skinned African.  This misguided education about how slavery came into being is unacceptable and deplorable.  Indeed, Gambella is very rich with minerals, farmlands, and water resources however, it will not fully develop as long as the highlanders political leadership, and economic monopoly continue to stand in the way of progress.  Despite of the unfounded dominance of the Habasha, the people of Gambella have no intention to seek statehood or independence as the EPRDF/TPLF regime claim.  Instead, the Gambella people will continue to struggle for their basic human rights and full autonomy.  The majority of Gambella people believe that without Hong Kong like autonomy, the survival rates of Gambella indigenous will be very slim.  The governments of the Ethiopian-backed highlanders have exerted too much destructive pressure on Gambellan people and believe they are better than the Gambella. This is delusional ideology by the majority of the Habasha people.    Above all, Gambella will prevail and Ethiopian history will be rewritten with the Gambella people included and playing a major role. 
-------------  
References

Aberra Jemberre. 2000. An introduction to the legal history of Ethiopia: 1434 – 1974. Münster,

Hamburg, London: LIT-Verlag

Donham, D. 1986. Old Abyssinia and the new Ethiopian empire: Themes in social history. In the Southern marches of imperial Ethiopia. Essays in history and social anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge university press.
FAO .2008a. Number of hungry people rises to 963 million. Rome. December.
FAO .2008. The State of Food and Agriculture (SOFA) 2008. Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, Rome.
FAO. 2008c. Crop prospects and food situation. Rome. Feb.
Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (FDRE). 1995. The constitution of the federal democratic republic of Ethiopia. Addis Ababa
FDRE.1997. Rural land administration proclamation of the federal government of Ethiopia. Proclamation No. 89/1997. Addis Ababa: Federal Negarit Gazeta.
 FDRE, 2003a. A proclamation to amend the investment re-enactment proclamation No. 280/2002. Proclamation No. 375, Federal Negarit Gazeta, Addis Ababa, October 2003.
FDRE. 2003b. Investment incentives and investment areas reserved for domestic investors, Federal Negarit Gazeta, Council of ministers regulation No. 84/2003.

FDRE. 2008. Council of ministers regulation to amend the investment incentives and investment areas reserved for domestic investors regulation. Regulation No. 146, Federal Negarit Gazeta, Addis Ababa, March, 2008.
FDRE Ministry of foreign affairs. 2010. “Politically motivated opposition to agricultural investment”. A week in the Horn, 22 January 2010. Accessed from the website on April 10, 2012. www.mfa.gov.et/Press_Section/Week_Horn_Africa_January_22_2010.htm#4
Hertel, T., Preckel, P., Cranfield, J. and Maros, I. 2004. The earnings effects of multilateral trade
           liberalization: Implications for poverty. The World Bank Economic Review, 18 (2).
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI, 2006-09). Retrieved on February 8, 2013
              from http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/bp013all.pdf
Jaatee, M., and Mulataa, Z. 2012. Paper presented on Oromo studies association annual
              conference (July 14-15), Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
IRIN News (March 2011). Ethiopia: The great land-grab debate. Retrieved on April 30, 2013
              from http://www.irinnews.org/Report/92292/ETHIOPIA-The-great-land-grab-debate
Marshall, G "secondary analysis." A Dictionary of Sociology. 1998. Retrieved May 04, 2013
              from Encyclopedia.com:
Mersha, G. 2011. International agri-capital farm renting intensifies Gambela's woes.
South Centre. 2008. Food and Energy crisis: Time to rethink development policy. Geneva.
              September.
The Oakland Institute. 2009. The Great Land Grab: Rush for world’s farmland threatens food security for the poor.
Trans-Frontier Conservation Initiative (TFCI) task force. 2010a. Prospecting the Omo-Gambella landscape for the establishment of a network of protected areas. Power point presentation by Sanne van Aarst, Parks and buffer zones management program, Addis Ababa.
Trostle, R. 2008. Global agricultural supply and demand: Factors contributing to the recent increase in food commodity prices. WRS-0801. Economic research service. USDA, Washington, DC.
UNCTAD. 2008. The least developed countries report 2008. United Nations publication. New York and Geneva.

Weissleder, Lucie. 2009. Foreign direct investment in the agricultural sector in Ethiopia, Eco-fair trade dialogue: discussion paper No 12, University of Bonn, Heinrich Boll Stiftung, Misereor, October 2009. Accessed from the website on June 1, 2012. www.ecofairtrade.org/pics/en/FDIs_Ethiopia_15_10_09_c.pdf

No comments:

Post a Comment