by Alemayehu G. Mariam*
Why I support Semayawi party as a political party
In
the days leading up to my speech at the first Semayawi (Blue) Party
town hall meeting in Arlington, VA, just outside of Washington, D.C., on
December 15, I was peppered with all sorts of questions. The one
recurrent question revolved around my unreserved support for Semayawi
Party after so many years of staying neutral and unaligned with any
Ethiopian political party or group.
As I explained in my interview on ethiotube.com,
my support for Semayawi Party should be viewed as an expression of my
total confidence in the power of Ethiopia’s young people to change the
destiny of their country and their readiness to struggle for peaceful
change. The percentage of Ethiopia’s population under the age of 35
today is 70 percent. The vast majority of the victims of human rights
violations in Ethiopia today are young people. The targets of political
persecution and harassment, arbitrary arrests and detentions, torture,
abuse and maltreatment in the prisons are largely young people. Young
Ethiopians are disproportionately impacted by pandemic unemployment and
lack of educational and economic opportunities.
Here
I record my “testimony” as a “witness” for Semayawi Party to affirm my
unshakeable belief that Ethiopia’s youth shall overcome and rise above
the dirty politics of ethnicity, pernicious religious animosity and
audacious political mendacity to build a shining city upon the hill
called the “Beloved Ethiopian Community.” This I believe to be the fixed
historical destiny of Ethiopia’s young people today.
My
“testimony” reveals only my personal views and opinions, and in no way
reflects on any past, present or future official or unofficial position
of Semayawi Party, its leadership or members. I have no role whatsoever
in Semayawi Party. The only role I have is the one I have proudly
conferred upon myself: “#1 Fan of Semayawi Party”. My steadfast
“testimony” here may raise eyebrows. I have heard some “criticism” that
by showing strong support for Semayawi Party I am in fact playing a game
of dividing society by age not unlike the divisive ethnic game of the
regime in power. I will let the young people be the judge of that. As
George Orwell said, “In times of universal deceit, telling the truth
will be a revolutionary act.” I consider my “testimony” on behalf of
Semayawi Party to be a “revolutionary act” against all of the political
deceit, hypocrisy and chicanery in all around I see.
Why am I am the #1 cheerleader of Semayawi Party?
First, I support Semayawi Party because it is a political party of young people, for young people and by
young people. It is a party that aspires to represent the interests of
the vast majority of Ethiopians. I underscore the fact that 70 percent
of Ethiopia’s population today is under age 35. (Life expectancy in
Ethiopia is between 49 and 59 years depending on the data source.)
Ethiopia’s Cheetah (young) Generation needs a party of its own to
represent the majority of Ethiopians. The Cheetahs need to speak up,
stand up and wo/man up for themselves. Only they can determine their
country’s destiny and their own.
The political parties of Hippos (my generation), by Hippos and for
Hippos are simply out of sync with the dreams, aspirations, ambitions
and passions of Ethiopia’s restless Cheetahs. We Ethiopian Hippos simply
do not understand our Cheetahs. So many of us have been rolling in the
mud of ethnic and killil (“bantustan” or “kililistan”) politics, muck of
communalism and sludge of historical grievances for so long that we
have become completely paralyzed. Ethiopia’s Cheetahs do not want to be
prisoners of antiquated identity politics nor do they want to walk
around with the millstone of the past tied around their necks. They
want to break free and choose their own destiny and invent their own
Ethiopia.
As
a not-so-loyal member of the “Order of Ethiopian Hippos”, I had great
difficulty accepting the fact that Ethiopia’s Cheetahs are very
different from Ethiopian Hippos. I had great difficulty accepting the
fact that the time has come for me and my Hippo Generation to pass on
the baton, stand aside and serve as humble water carriers for the
restless Cheetahs. That is why I transformed myself from a Hippo to a
Chee-Hippo, a transformation I documented in my commentary “Rise of the Chee-Hippo Generation”.
Second, I am deeply concerned about the future of Ethiopia’s youth. As I noted a few years ago,
“The wretched conditions of Ethiopia’s youth point to the fact that
they are a ticking demographic time bomb. The evidence of youth
frustration, discontent, disillusionment and discouragement by the
protracted economic crisis, lack of economic opportunities and political
repression is manifest, overwhelming and irrefutable. The yearning of
youth for freedom and change is self-evident. The only question is
whether the country’s youth will seek change through increased militancy
or by other peaceful means….” I believe Semayawi Party will play a
significant role in channeling youth frustration into peaceful
transformation in Ethiopia.
Third,
I wholeheartedly believe in youth power. Youth idealism and enthusiasm
have the power to change hearts, minds and nations. Youth power is more
powerful than all the guns, tanks and war planes in the world. The
American civil rights movement was carried on the backs of young people.
The vast majority of the leaders and activists were young people. Dr.
Martin Luther King was 26 years old when he organized the nonviolent
protests in Birmingham, Alabama. By the time John Lewis was 23 years
old, he had been jailed 24 times and beaten to a pulp on so many
occasions that he does not remember. On May 6, 1963, over 2000 African
American high school, junior high and even elementary school students
were jailed for protesting discrimination in Birmingham.
Young
Americans stopped the war in Vietnam. The free speech movement that
began at a California university transformed free speech and academic
freedom in the United States for good. Barack Obama would not have been
elected president without the youth vote. Youth have also played a
decisive role in the peaceful struggle to bring down communist tyrannies
and more recently entrenched dictatorships in North Africa and the
Middle East. The tyrants in the seat of power in Ethiopia today were
“revolutionaries” in their youth fighting against imperial autocracy and
military dictatorship. In their old age, they have become the very evil
they fought to remove.
I
believe in the power of Ethiopia’s youth who have long played their
part to bring about a democratic society and paid enormous sacrifices
for decades. In 2005, the regime in power in Ethiopia today massacred
hundreds of young people in cold blood in the streets and jailed tens of
thousands. (I joined the human rights struggle in Ethiopia shocked and
outraged by that crime against humanity.) Even today, Ethiopia’s young
people continue to pay for democracy, freedom and human rights with
their blood, sweat and tears. Ethiopia’s best and brightest have been
persecuted, prosecuted, jailed, brutalized and silenced. At the top of
the list are Birtukan Midekssa, Eskinder Nega, Andualem Aragie, Reeyot Alemu, Bekele Gerba, Abubekar
Ahmed, Woubshet Taye, Olbana Lelisa, Ahmedin Jebel, Ahmed Mustafa,
Temesgen Desalegn, the late Yenesew Gebre and countless others.
Last but not least, I am in broad agreement with the Semayawi Party Program.
It is a well-thought out and practical program that can effectively
address the multifaceted problems of the country. In my special area of
concern focusing on the administration of justice, human rights and
enforcement of the rule of law, I find the Party’s program to be
particularly robust. The Party supports a fully independent and
competent judiciary completely insulated from political pressure and
interference. Judges shall have lifetime tenure subject to impeachable
offenses. The Party supports the establishment of a Constitutional Court
with full judicial review powers. The Party pledges to abide by and
respect all international treaties and conventions to which Ethiopia is a
signatory. The Party is committed to the full protection of individual
rights, including the right to free speech and religion. There shall be
strict separation of religion and state. The Party opposes any
censorship of the press and curtailment of the activities of civic
organizations and associations. The Party’s program emphatically states
that the loyalty of the armed and security forces is to the country’s
Constitution, and not to a political party, ethnic group, region or any
other entity. The Party’s platform on economic, political, social and
cultural issues is equally impressive.
Why I support Semayawi Party as a movement and true voice of Ethiopia’s Cheetah (young) Generation
It
is my opinion that Semayawi Party is much more than a political
organization concerned with winning votes to hold political office. I
would find nothing unique in Semayawi Party if it were merely an
organization preparing itself for mundane elections and parliamentary
seats. In a country where there are over 80 “registered parties” (the
vast majority of which are nominal ethnic parties) and the ruling
“party” wins “elections” by 99.6 percent, it would be absurd to create
another party such as Semayawi to compete for a miniscule less than
one-half percent of the votes. That is why I believe Semayawi Party is
indeed a movement of young people, by young people and for young people
in Ethiopia.
I
regard “Semayawi Party Movement” to be an organizational mechanism to
articulate the dreams and ideals of Ethiopia’s young people about the
country they want to build for themselves and pass on to the next
generation. As a Movement, Semayawi Party serves in various capacities.
It is as an “educational” institution enlightening young Ethiopians
about the history, traditions and cultures of their diverse country. It
teaches young Ethiopians that they are the proud descendants of patriots
who united as one indivisible people to beat and route a mighty
invading European army. Unlike today, Ethiopia was once the pride of all
Africans and black people throughout the world. The Movement aims to
regain Ethiopia’s pride in the community of nations.
I
share in “Semayawi Party Movement’s” core values. Semayawi Party
believes in peaceful nonviolent struggle against tyranny and injustice. I
champion peaceful nonviolent struggle against tyranny and injustice
anywhere in the world. Semayawi Party believes in the transformative
power of Ethiopia’s youth. A compilation of all of the weekly
commentaries I have written on Ethiopian (and African) youth over the
past 7 years could easily form a book length apologia (defense) of the
transformative power of Ethiopia’s youth. My slogan has always been and
remains, “Ethiopia’s youth united can never be defeated. Power to
Ethiopia’s youth!”
Semayawi
Party Movement has only one goal: Creating the “Beloved Ethiopian
Community” in the same vein that Dr. Martin Luther King dreamed of
creating his “Beloved Community” in his long struggle for human and
civil rights in America. Dr. King taught, “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.” I believe the “Beloved
Ethiopian Community” shall soon rise from the ashes of the kililistan
(bantustan) Ethiopia has become.
The
foundation for Semayawi Party Movement’s “Beloved Ethiopian Community”
is unity, peace and hope. A “Beloved Ethiopian Community” is united by
its humanity and is immune from destruction by the divisive forces of
ethnicity and communalism. It is a Community that strives to establish
equality, equity and accountability. The “Beloved Ethiopian Community”
is a society at peace with itself and its neighbors. I believe Semayawi
Party aspires to invent a new society free from ethnic bigotry and
hatred; free from fear and loathing and free from tyranny and
repression. Semayawi Party aims to build a Community where all
Ethiopians – rich and poor, young and old, men and women, Christian and
Muslim — are free to dream, free to think, free to speak, to write and
to listen; free to worship without interference; free to innovate; free
to act and free to be free. I believe Semayawi Party Movement will use
peace creatively to transform enmity, animosity and bellicosity in
Ethiopian society into amity, cordiality and comity. I believe the
Movement will choose dialogue over diatribe, negotiation over negation,
harmony over discord and use principles that elevate humanity to defeat
brutality, criminality and intolerance.
The
“Beloved Ethiopian community” is a “land of hope and dreams.” It is a
community where young people could look forward to equal opportunity,
equal justice and equal rights. It is a community where Ethiopia’s youth
can freely share their common hopes and dreams. I have faith in
Ethiopian youth’s “audacity of hope”.
Let us ask what we can do for Semayawi Party
I
encourage and plead with all Ethiopians, particularly those in my Hippo
Generation, to stand up and be counted on the side of Semayawi Party
Movement. I know many have legitimate questions, doubts and skepticisms
based on unpleasant past experiences as they consider lending their
support. I have been asked, “How can we trust these young and
inexperienced leaders to do the right thing?” I answer back, “How well
did our experienced and trusted Hippo leaders do?”
Surviving
under the most vicious dictatorship in Africa brings out the very best
in many young people. Semayawi Party Movement leaders, members and
supporters have shown us what they are made of: courage, integrity, discipline,
maturity, bravery, honor, fortitude, creativity, humility, idealism and
self-sacrifice. They have been arrested, jailed and beaten. They did
not stop their peaceful struggle. What more sacrifice must they make
before they can convince us that they deserve our full support? They are
young and passionate; and they have all of the experience they need to
continue their peaceful struggle for change.
Some
have asked me for assurances that Semayawi Party is not a front for the
regime or other hidden forces. All I can say is that if Semayawi Party
Movement leaders, members and supporters are regime lackeys, then so are
Prof. Mesfin Woldemariam, Prof. Yacob Hailemariam, and to mention in
passing, Prof. Al Mariam. If the regime is so clever as to use Semayawi
Party to broadcast its commitment to the rule of law and democratic
governance, I am all for it. If today the regime released all political
prisoners (including those held in secret prisons), repealed its
oppressive laws, stopped massive human rights violations and stealing
elections, I will be the first one to go out in the street and sing them
praises. It is not about the people in power; it’s about the evil done
by people in power.
I
have been told that nearly all Ethiopian political organizations that
have been launched in the past decade or so have eventually failed. I
have been asked, “How can you be sure Semayawi Party will not fail?”
There are no guarantees Semayawi Party will not fail. If it fails, it
will not be for lack of willpower, enthusiasm, dedication and sacrifice
by Semayawi Party leaders and members. It will be mainly because of lack
of support, lack of good will, lack of confidence, lack of generosity
and lack of material and moral support from their compatriots inside
Ethiopia and in the Diaspora. If they should fail and we feel arrogant
enough to wag an index finger at them and say, “I told you so!”, let us
not forget that three fingers will be pointing at us silently. Nelson
Mandela pleaded, “Do not judge me by my successes, judge me by how many
times I fell down and got back up again.” Let us judge Semayawi Party
not by the chances that it will slip and fall in the future but by how
many times it is able to get back up after it falls, with our help and support.
Some
have expressed concern to me that their financial contributions could
be abused as has happened so many times in the past. They want
assurances of strict accountability and transparency. They ask me, “How
can we be sure Semayawi Party will not abuse our trust as others have in
the past?”
The
Semayawi Party Support Group in North America is a gathering of the
most dynamic and disciplined group of young Ethiopians I have had the
privilege to know and work with. These young Ethiopians have committed
significant resources out of their own pockets to support the cause of
Ethiopian youth. They are young professionals and private businessmen
and women representing the ethnic, gender and cultural diversity of
Ethiopia. They understand and appreciate the values of accountability
and transparency. They relate with each other on the basis of honesty
and integrity. For my money, I have no problems taking chances with them
because I am convinced they will not let me down! I have full faith in
the integrity of Ethiopia’s young people; that is my guarantee they will
do the right thing.
In
my speech at the first town hall meeting for Semayawi Party on December
15, I told the audience that Yilikal Getnet, the chairman of Semayawi
Party, did not come to the United States to beg for support or panhandle
for nickels and dimes. Semayawi Party does not want a handout or
charity from us in North America. Yilikal came to America to share with
us the trials and tribulations of his party, the challenges they face,
their humble accomplishments under a brutal dictatorship and the dreams
and hopes of Ethiopia’s young people for a free and democratic Ethiopia.
I
believe that in all of the town hall meetings scheduled for Semayawi
Party in the U.S., we should receive Yilikal, Semayawi Party members and
supporters as heroes of a growing youth movement for peaceful change in
Ethiopia. We must use the town hall meetings to celebrate not only the
individual acts of heroism of youth leaders like Yilikal, Eskinder,
Andualem, Reeyot and so many others but also to rejoice in the raw
heroism of those young people demonstrating in the streets crying out
“Anleyayim! Anleyayim!” (We will remain united!) or ‘Ethiopia, Agarachin! Ethiopia, Agerachin! (Ethiopia, our country!). (I always get a lump in my throat when I hear them chanting “Anleyayim! Agerachin, Ethiopia!)
For
me, Yilikal’s presence in our midst as the leader of Semayawi Party is a
reminder that the young people who were massacred in 2005 peacefully
demonstrating a stolen election did not die in vain. He is a live
witness that the peaceful struggle of those massacred for free and fair
elections and the rule of law continues no matter what. So the question
for us is: What can we do for Semayawy Party Movement? A better question
is how do we show our appreciation, respect and admiration to our young
heroes — the fallen ones, the ones in jail, the ones being tortured,
those facing daily harassment, persecution and humiliation?
Semayawi
Party Movement needs all the support they can get. They need our moral
support. They need our encouragement; they need to know we have
confidence in them. Most of all, they need material support to undertake
their youth outreach, education and awareness programs. They need
material support to expand and sustain their organizational presence
throughout the country. They need material support to maintain a robust
legal defense fund. They need our material support to stand up to the
richest, most corrupt and ruthless dictatorship on the African
continent.
Our
financial gift to Semayawi Party Movement is merely a token of our
appreciation and an indication that we are with them as long as they
keep their peaceful struggle for justice, equality, democracy and human
rights. Our gift to Semayawi Party Movement is an investment in an
Ethiopia at peace with itself. We give so that the next generation of
Ethiopians will live in a new Ethiopia unburdened by our mistakes and
ignorance. It is our individual and social responsibility to support our
young people. If we don’t support our children – all of the young
people in Ethiopia – who will?
Let us ask what Semayawi Party can do for us
In August 2012, I asked, “Who can save Ethiopia?” in a commentary titled, “Cheetahs, Hippos and Saving Ethiopia”.
I pleaded with Ethiopia’s youth to lead a national dialogue in search
of a path to peaceful change. I have repeated my appeal to them in
various ways since then.
I
call upon Semayawi Party Movement to continue and intensify the
reconciliation dialogue among themselves and launch a reconciliation
dialogue in the broader Ethiopian youth community. I believe the
dialogue on national reconciliation in Ethiopia must begin within
Ethiopia’s youth communities. Ethiopia’s Cheetah’s must empower
themselves, create their own political and social space, set their own
agendas and begin multifaceted dialogues on their country’s transition
from dictatorship to democracy through dialogue. They must develop
their own awareness campaigns and facilitate vital conversations among
youth communities cutting across language, religion, ethnicity, gender,
region and so on. Their dialogues must be based on the principles of
openness, truth and commitment to democracy, freedom and human rights.
They must dialogue without fear or loathing, but with respect and
civility. Above all, the Cheetahs must “own” the dialogue process. At a
gathering of Cheetahs, Hippos should be seen and not heard very much;
welcomed and encouraged to observe Cheetahs in action. The Cheetahs must
keep a sharp eye on wily Hippos who are very skillful in manipulating
youth. They should learn not to fall in the trap young people fell
during the “Arab Spring”. The cunning Hippos outplayed, outmaneuvered
and marginalized them in the end.
I
believe reconciliation dialogues should begin among activist youth in
informal and spontaneous settings. For instance, such dialogues could
initially take place among like-minded activist youth at the
neighborhood and village level. Activist youth could undertake an
assessment of their capabilities, potentials, opportunities and
obstacles in setting up and managing a community-based informal
reconciliation youth dialogues. Youth activist could focus on creating
broader youth awareness and involvement in the dialogue process by
utilizing existing organizations, institutions, associations and
forums.
Reconciliation
dialogue involves not only talking but also actively listening to each
other. Youth from Ethiopia’s multiethnic society have much to learn from
each other and build upon the strengths of their diversity. Ethiopia’s
Cheetahs should also learn from the mistakes of the Hippo Generation and
the experiences of youths of other nations. I urge Ethiopia’s Cheetahs
to be principled in their reconciliation dialogues. They should always
disagree without being disagreeable. Disagreeing on issues should not
mean becoming mortal enemies. Civility in dialogue, though lacking among
Hippos, is essential for Cheetahs.
Silence of our…?
“In
times of universal deceit,” silence speaks louder than words and
pictures. Dr. Martin Luther King said, “In the end, we will remember not
the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” As I end
this commentary, I must speak up against the “silence” of our “friends” because sometimes
silence is more eloquent than speech. When the leader of Ethiopia’s
youth party came to Washington, D.C. for the very first time and spoke
to a capacity crowd of Ethiopians unseen in the past several years, the
Voice of America (VOA) was conspicuously absent. VOA did not send a
single reporter to cover the event. I do not know why the VOA decided to
absent itself from the event. I do know that the Semayawi Party event
was no less important than the variety of Ethiopian sports, cultural,
academic and community events and even book signings VOA routinely
covers on weekdays and weekends in around Washington, D.C. Perhaps for
the VOA Semayawi Party and Ethiopia’s youth are a simple issue of mind
over matter; VOA does not mind and Ethiopia’s youth don’t matter.
I
want VOA to know that when they faced the slings and arrows of Meles
Zenawi, when Zenawi outrageously accused them of “promoting genocide in
Ethiopia”, I stood up for them. I defended their integrity,
professionalism and impartiality time and again. I expected the VOA to
attend the Semayawi Party event and report on the proceedings with the
integrity, professionalism and impartiality they have shown in the past.
Perhaps Ethiopians will begin to ask whether the Voice of America is
now the Silence of America (SOA). We will continue to listen to the SOA,
but not in silence.
No more silence; let us shout out and show our support for Semayawi Party Movement
Let
us be silent no more. Let us proudly proclaim our support for Semayawi
Party Movement. Let’s stand tall and proud with them. Let’s show them we
appreciate and support their peaceful and nonviolent struggle for
change. Let’s assure them that no matter how long it takes to walk the
long road to freedom, we will be with them. They will be victorious in
the end. Let’s show Semayawi Party Movement we love them!
Ethiopia’s youth united can never be defeated. Power to Ethiopia’s Youth!
Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.
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