August 22, 2012 · 15 Comments
BRUSSELS — The recent death in Brussels of Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi finally brings to light what lay behind his mysterious two-month disappearance from public life. Ethiopia’s government had strenuously denied rumors of serious ill health caused by liver cancer. Now that the worst has, indeed, proven true, Ethiopia and all of East Africa will need to learn to live without the stabilizing influence of its great dictator-diplomat.
Meles was certainly both. Ethiopia has undergone a remarkable transformation under his strongman rule since 1991, when his Tigrayan minority group from the country’s north came to power with the overthrow of the odious Communist Derg led by Mengistu Haile Mariam (still enjoying a comfortable retirement in Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe).
CommentsInitially serving as the president of the first post-Derg government, and then as Ethiopia’s prime minister from 1995 until his death, Meles (his nom de guerre in the revolution) oversaw 7.7% annual GDP growth in recent years. Strong economic performance is somewhat surprising, given his party’s interventionist policy approach, but Meles showed himself to be a consummate pragmatist in attracting investment – particularly from China – to drive growth.
CommentsMeles’s own political provenance as the leader of the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front was Marxist-Leninist. But, when the Cold War ended, so, too, did his dogmatism. To his credit, child mortality was reduced by 40% under his government; Ethiopia’s economy became more diversified, with new industries like car manufacturing, beverages, and floriculture; and major infrastructure projects, including Africa’s largest hydroelectric dam, were launched. Ethiopia recently overtook Angola to become Africa’s third-largest economy – and, unlike the top two (South Africa and Nigeria), all without the benefit of gold or oil.
CommentsPerhaps more important than Meles’s domestic achievements was his diplomatic record. He was an indispensable ally of the West in the fight against Islamist terrorism, culminating in Ethiopia’s military operation in neighboring Somalia in 2006. More recently, Meles coordinated efforts with Kenya to stage limited strikes against the al-Shabaab militia, which has waged an unrelenting war to turn Somalia into a fundamentalist Islamic theocracy.
CommentsAt the same time, Meles courted China as both an investor and as a hedge against the West’s criticism of his human-rights record. And yet he controversially but rightly held out a hand of friendship to the breakaway region of Somaliland, before it became fashionable, and went as far as he could short of formal re-recognition of that ray of democratic hope in the Horn of Africa. Meles will be sorely missed in Hargeisa, as he planned to run a Chinese-financed gas pipeline through Somaliland territory from the Ogaden to the coast.
CommentsMore important, Meles put Addis Ababa on the map as the home of the African Union, and as a capital where Africa’s worst problems could be discussed in a pragmatic manner, unburdened by colonial grudges. Meles himself became a major diplomatic player, particularly over climate-change policy, and most recently was active in mediating border and natural-resource disputes between Sudan and the newly independent (and oil-rich) South Sudan. He will be remembered for accepting the painful secession of Eritrea in 1993, rather than prolong the civil war, and for his efforts to reach an agreement with Egypt over the use of the Blue Nile waters.
CommentsThe great stain on Meles’s record will always be his intolerance of dissent. To be sure, his human-rights record was far better than the Derg’s. For example, he allowed a private press to flourish, and in 2000 he became the first Ethiopian leader to hold multi-party parliamentary elections. Moreover, compared to neighboring Eritrea under President Isaias Afewerki or Omar al-Bashir’s Sudan, his regime was by no means the worst offender in the region. Nor was there much evidence of personal enrichment or widespread corruption.
Nevertheless, following a violently contested parliamentary election in 2005, in which more than 30 parties participated, Meles demonstrated open contempt for democratic pluralism and press freedom, jailing several journalists in recent years. At the same time, he imposed increasingly strict central control on his ethnically and linguistically diverse country.
CommentsAlthough nominally governed by “ethnic federalism,” where this threatened secession, as in Oromia or the Ogaden, Meles was quick to ignore the constitutional set-up. Although he strengthened religious freedom and peaceful coexistence between Muslims and Christians, the human-rights situation in Ethiopia remained poor. For example, groups like Freedom House and Human Rights Watch have documented widespread official repression of the Oromo people.
CommentsAnd yet Meles is irreplaceable – unmatched intellectually as an African leader (he dropped out of medical school, but went on to teach himself impeccable English and obtain European university degrees by correspondence), and unmatched politically at home, with no obvious successor groomed to replace him. In the Horn of Africa, there is no leader of his stature who could ensure the stability and strong governance that the region so desperately needs.
CommentsHailemariam Desalegn, Meles’s foreign minister, will take over Ethiopia’s government. But there will be considerable concern in the West about the danger of a power vacuum or struggle in a geopolitically vital but fractious country – and just when neighboring Somalia is supposed to be undergoing a transition to a new parliament and elected government.
CommentsFor his admirers and critics alike, Meles leaves behind a potent political legacy. He will be remembered as an African leader of major historical significance: visionary, despotic, and indispensable.
By Charles Tannock
Charles Tannock, MEP, is the European Conservatives and Reformists’ Foreign Affairs Coordinator and Rapporteur for the Horn of Africa at the European Parliament.
Project Syndicate
August 22, 2012
Follow @somalilandpressBy Hassan Ali
Tags: Addis Ababa, Brussels, Charles Tannock, Ethiopia, Meles Zenawi, Somaliland, Sudan
This is good news for civil right movement in ethiopia and in general all of africa.ONE LESS DICTATOR in our continent.
Ato Meles Zenawi is gone…Ethiopia has the choices of either continuing the hardcore policies
of meles Zenawi or choose a more rational policy shift to encourage peaceful solutions to
prevail and replace the usual hostile enviorments with Somalia, Eritrea, Ogadenia, Oromo,
and other internal conflicts inside Ethiopia.
Cheers.
Mohamed Cheers (stupid)
Ato Melses was a man of his own mission. He had the mission to make his country great and he did sort of.
What about the bloody Siilaanyo, the lier who is going to lead Somaliland by lies? Talk about where Somaliland stand now and where it was, you stupid !
Atto Silaanyo is a man of his own mission. He has the mission to make Somaliland great.
I wonder if you are from Somaliland to have such retarded mentality…or maybe you are a
student of Kayse Banjuuti Hindi bhai lol.
Cheers.
Cheers
Lets just hope someone sincere replaces him as succesor, because the Horn of Africa can't afford another failed state. And this is also a lesson for the leadership of the region and their governments to loosen their grib on power, allow inclusive politics, reconcile those ethnic or religious tensions that exists in their communities and promote equitable sharing of political and economic power. No doubt Somaliland will benefit from more democratic Ethiopia rather than authoritarian one in region as the two nations share mutual interests in wide ranging areas such as border security and commerce.
Weather you use term like dictators and so forth it undeniable fact that Mr Mels was far thinking and gifted leader who lifted millions of Ethiopian out severe poverty, he has not only modernized Ethiopia, but he raised this country to a very high and respectable status in the African continent and world at large, Meles Zenawi was one of few special people who happen to appear is this world like Albert Instein, Neson Mendela, Abraham Lincon etc once in a blue moon, and we Ethiopians have learned a lot from him. He was great son of Africa who made its voice to be heard in the world forums.
We Ethiopia Somalis Felt his death very deeply, we are really sad , yet we are sure that we will triple our efforts to to make sure that his dream of establishing prosperous Ethiopia is reached.
Meles has painfully constructed a new Ethiopia on solid foundation that will never be dismantled, we are not bothering about power struggle, any body who thinks this way is naive, because what bother us is to brings Ethiopia on side on middle income country by implementing our five year growth and transformation plan.
IN THE HISTORY OF ETHIOPIA HE WILL BE THE ONLY LEADER WHO WILL BE BURIED IN HIS COUNTRY WITH RESPECT AND DIGNITY!
-Mohammed Aden Ali.
Jijiga-Somali Region of Ethiopia.
Mo Aden Ali of FB was always a slave; and slaves make no meanings what so ever.
No replays to a man with naked ass like Mhmd.
Amhara peasants shouldn't be brought back to power instead we need to keep the habesha divided along with those pasta eritreans. while they began fighting among themselves, we will sneak up from behind and get Ogaden and afar. you see how smart i am? this how Somali leaders suppose to think. if i was the president of somalia I will invade Hargeisa and chase siilaanyo and make Ethiopian and Eritrean fight.
This is the reason Somalia is in this situation. It is really a disgrace to live with such people and call themself Somali and Muslim. How can you sleep at night? Are you not scared of Allah's punishments? Instead of peace and love you chose hate and wars. Wake up before it is to late for you, once the angel of death is infront of you there is no going back.
Look for harmonize and peacefull Solution for Somali, and not wars and killings of innocent people. If you are a Muslim, pleace act like it.
Salamucalaykum
Typical Puntlandgeezer …in the history of Darodism, whether from Ogaden orr elsewhere,
witnessed… nothing but utlimate holocaust genocidal failures. Do you know why bcoz the
Darodism dna lineage goes back to the Pharaoh tribes..that's why your Puntland policies are
always against the Afro-semitics majorities of both Somaliland and Somalia!. Prophet Moses
and his pure Israelities semitics had awkward hard times with your old Pharaoh Arabs and history
upto doomsday generations keeps on repeating transmissions between new generations. Being a
rational minded human being, I consider your nuisance comments as ridiculous nonsense.
Come to Hargeisa with your nonsense and you are back to your old history…do you understand
buddy dillydally lol.
Cheers.
loool puntlandGeezer I agree with you the Ethiopian bit but there's need to attack Hargeisa, as soon as south settles down they will be the first one to seek somali unity. plus Somali region in Ethiopia belongs to Somalia and we not Quitters.
kkkkkkkkkk spoken like a true dar00d. AS LONG AS DAR00DS BREATH IN SOMALIA WE WILL NEVER FIND PEACE. i hope the iss@qs attack dar00ds from their side and we haw!ye should attack them from our side. as long as they live we will never have peace.
geezer you love somaliland so much lol
always around yea you will soon apply for somaliland citizenship kkkkkkkkkkk
till then chill kid and act like you know
Ethopia is free now no more Dictatorship we are only one nation one peaple i hope we stand up our right
no matter what mr somaliland call as oromo,Elrltria or ogadenya or other hamasha we only one ethiopian