Will State of Emergency Lead to Dialogue and Reconciliation?

State-of-emergency-5monthsMarch 10, 2017 - It's been five months since Ethiopia declared a state of emergency in response to widespread protests and unrest, reports the VOA, and there are no signs indicating when it might end.

Since October, thousands have been arrested and sent to military-style camps where they live in squalid conditions, perform strenuous exercises and get beaten when they falter, according to Befeqadu Hailu, a former detainee. The prisoners have also undergone reeducation training, including a crash course on the country’s constitution.

Despite the release of about 20,000 detainees, top opposition leaders remain in jail. Most have been charged under the Ethiopia's anti-terrorism law, which is often used to stifle dissent and arrest journalists, the report claims.

 Ethiopian officials insist the state of emergency is stabilizing the country.

“As of now, the state of emergency has accomplished its goal," said Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, speaking to reporters in January.

René Lefort, a journalist who has covered the region since the 1970s, believes the government’s actions reflect a power struggle between the federal government and regional police forces.

“The state of emergency didn't play an important role in maintaining or reestablishing law and order in Ethiopia,” said Lefort. “Because, before the state of emergency, the security forces and the army or police had almost a free hand to act as they want without any heavy legal constraints," he said. "The state of emergency has simply been part of the game between Addis Ababa and the local authorities or the regional authorities.”

Ethiopia’s ruling party, the EPRDF, has engaged in dialogue with opposition members, but Lefort said they are yet to make meaningful concessions.

 With protests and violence subsiding, he believes real progress may be possible if the EPRDF is willing to meet the opposition’s demands.

“We're in a crucial period,” Lefort said. "Now that Ethiopia is relatively calm, we will know if the ruling power is really ready to discuss [things] with the opposition and to make some steps in the direction of the opposition.”

The opposition currently has no power in the national government. The EPRDF controls all 547 seats in parliament.

 Alex de Waal, a research professor at Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, said the long-term solution for the country must come through reconcilation, not revolution. Diaspora efforts for an armed insurrection and overthrow could be disastrous for the country.

“It is reckless and irresponsible to go over armed insurrection. I think what we are seeing at the moment is an onpass where those [in] the internal domestic opposition in Ethiopia, Ethiopian civil society, recognize this, and their leaders are pressing for a reform rather than a revolution agenda,” de Waal said.

“I'm absolutely sure that's the right way to go. The government is dragging its feet in responding, and we hope they don't drag their feet, they do respond with more alacrity.”

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Ezega

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