VIEWS OF THE OGADEN PEOPLE
UNDER
ETHIOPIAN COLONIALISM
BACKGROUND
The Ogaden Somali territory lies between Oromia to the West, Afar land to the
Northwest, the Republic of Djibouti to the north, Kenya to the south and The
Somali Republic to the east. Somali agro-pastorals people with a single
language, culture, and socio-economic structure inhabit the Ogaden territory.
The Ogaden Somali people were free, independent and powerful until colonial
powers from overseas came to Africa and started arming the Abyssinian chiefs in
the north of present day Ethiopia. The Abyssinians using the arms and expertise
provided by the colonialists captured Harar in 1884 and started raiding Ogaden
Somali villages in that area, killing the men and selling women and children as
slaves. The Ogaden Somalis resisted vehemently the encroachment of the
Abyssinian expansionists and succeeded in halting their advance. Even though the
Abyssinian military campaign to conquer the rest of the Somali territory failed,
the colonial powers recognised its claim over the Ogaden Somaliland and signed
treaties with them.
From 1886 to 1948, Abyssinia (renaming itself Ethiopia) waged a constant war of
conquest against the Somalis but failed in gaining any further foothold in the
Ogaden.
In 1935, Italy invaded Abyssinia and captured it along with
the Ogaden and the territories of other nations in the area. Then the British
defeated Italy in the Horn of Africa in 1941, and it administered the Ogaden for
eight years until it transferred the first part of the Ogaden (Jigjiga
area) to Ethiopia (the Abyssinians) for the first time. The next parts were
transferred in 1954 and 1956. Thus, Ethiopia gained the control over the Ogaden
without the knowledge or consent of the Ogaden Somalis. From that time onward,
successive Ethiopian regimes mercilessly suppressed the Ogaden people and
whenever the liberation movements seriously weakened and threatened Ethiopian
colonialism, a foreign power directly intervened to re-establish its colonial
rule over the Ogaden.
Ethiopia since the beginning of this century and up to now has
been characterised by one nation using the powers of state to subjugate and
exploit all the other nations within that artificial system. For almost one
century, the Abyssinians are abusing the concept of sovereignty and statehood to
deprive the rights of other people living under the rule of the artificial state
of Ethiopia.
Ethiopia is a state founded on colonial doctrine and bases its
rule on the use of force and emergency measures for oppressing the majority of
the people and exploiting them. Ethiopia claims that African borders inherited
from colonialism should be left intact and it inherited the Ogaden territory
from the colonial powers. At the same time, Ethiopia is boasting to be the only
African state that was never colonised. This means that Ethiopia has been a
participating partner with the colonial powers that divided Africa among
themselves but has never relinquished its colonial possessions.
To maintain such a colonial state, the rulers had to build a
massive military machine and embark on forcefully maintaining one of the most
vicious authoritarian rules in the third world. The resultant resistance from
the people and the inevitable taxing of material and moral resources of the
oppressing elite became Ethiopia Achilles’ hill and brought about the downfall
of its successive regimes. The relentless resistance of the colonised nations
and the consequential resource drainage brought down both the rules of Haille
Sellassie and the military Junta of Mengistu.
THE CURRENT REGIME IN ETHIOPIA
After the fall of Mengistu Haille Mariam, EPRDF (Ethiopian
Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front - the new name adopted by the Tigray
Peoples Liberation Front to camouflage it’s narrow ethnic base and rule
Ethiopia, succeeded in capturing Addis Ababa with the help of Eritrean Peoples
Liberation Front (EPLF). Although most of the nations under Ethiopian colonial
rule contributed to the weakening and downfall of the Ethiopian Politico-
military machine, specially the Ogaden Somali people who not only played a major
role but also involved their brethren across the border from the Somali
Republic, TPLF captured the seat of power and succeeded in gaining international
recognition.
At first the new Ethiopian rulers feeling weak and aware of
the international climate and the demise of totalitarian regimes and the era of
colonialism, forwarded a reasonable and plausible program for addressing the
burning issue of Ethiopian colonialism and its solution through recognising and
granting the right of nations to self-determination through a peaceful process.
EPRDF offered the charter program, which recognised the right
of nations to self-determination up to cessation and stated that a transitional
period of two years has to relapse before the nations could exercise that right.
Thus, EPRDF recognised the colonial nature of Ethiopia in principle.
The Ogadenia National Liberation Front (ONLF), considering the
burden of the long struggle of the Ogaden Somali people and cognisant of the
priceless value of resolving the long standing conflict between Ethiopia and the
Ogaden people through peaceful means decided to give chance to peace and avert a
costly and unnecessary war.
But before the ink was dry, it became obvious to ONLF that
EPRDF was only buying time and was lying the ground for keeping intact the
colonial legacy it inherited and was scheming to attain the submission of the
Ogaden Somalis to it colonial rule through demagogy and token democracy. EPRDF
grossly miscalculated the gravity and depth of the Ogaden Ethiopian problem.
EPRDF blinded by its sudden and unexpected victory and the
temporary absence of challenge and armed opposition from The Ogadenia National
Liberation Front grossly miscalculated the severity and gravity of the conflict
between the Ogaden people and Ethiopia and the unbending desire of the Ogaden
Somalis to regain their usurped sovereignty and independence. EPRDF, forgetful
of the bitter experience of its people under the previous rulers and despite its
rhetoric of being committed to democracy and the rule of law and respecting the
right of nations began the construction of its politico-military structures for
maintaining the colonial empire of its predecessors.
Hence, all people concerned in ending the long-standing
conflict lost an excellent opportunity and EPRDF planted the seeds of the next
cycle of bloodshed and violence in the region. It started trying to divide the
Ogaden Somali people and undermine the leading role of ONLF by creating pseudo-organisations
based on tribal lines. At the same time, it spread its intelligence network and
military garrisons all over the Ogaden. In early 1992, the EPRDF government
masterminded the killing of several ONLF officials, including some members
belonging to the Front’s Central Committee. Then EPRDF attacked the
headquarters of ONLF in an effort to wipe it out but withdrew after sustaining
high casualties and postponed its plans.
In spite of all the intrigues and harassment of EPRDF, ONLF
and the Ogaden Somalis persisted in avoiding confrontation and continued
rebuilding their political and administrative institutions. In September 1992,
the Ogaden people went to the polls to cast their votes in a free and fair
election, for the first time in their long history, to elect their district
councils and representatives for the regional parliament. EPRDF strongly
campaigned for its surrogate parties and members, but in a landslide victory,
the ONLF won about 84% of the seats in the newly elected regional parliament.
In mid-1993, the regional government complained to the
government in Addis Ababa about its flagrant interference in the day-to-day
affairs of the Ogaden region, an act that contradicted the commitment to
regional autonomy and devolution of power to the regions. EPRDF retaliated by
freezing the regional budget, diverting international aid, discouraging
international Non Governmental Organisations (NGO’s) to work in the Ogaden, as
well as obstructing all initiatives, and projects deemed necessary for the
development of the region. In late 1993, the Ethiopian security forces arrested
the president, vice-president and secretary of the Regional Assembly, and it
transferred them to prison in Addis Ababa. EPRDF released them after ten months
without trail.
Finally, when EPRDF established its legitimacy as the
government of Ethiopia in the eyes of the international community, and its
military and economic resources was enhanced, it felt confident enough to mount
a military campaign against the Ogaden Somalis at the end of the transitional
period. Moreover, in order to get the raison d’être for its campaign of
terror and subjugation of the Ogaden people, EPRDF dictated to ONLF and the
Ogaden Somalis an unacceptable choice. In effect, EPRDF told the Ogaden Somalis
to either endorse a compulsory constitution that would legalise the colonisation
of the Ogaden people by Ethiopia and the participation in an election where
their role would be to endorse EPRDF nominated candidates. EPRDF strategy was to
deceive the Ogaden Somalis into sanctioning its colonial rule while at the same
time eliminating themselves from the political structures it intended to
maintain its hegemony over the nations and avert any future threat. In addition,
if the Ogaden Somalis oppose what it proposed, to get the motive for declaring
war on the Ogaden people and extricate itself from honouring the pledges it
entered in its moment of weakness and maintain the Ethiopian colonial legacy.
The Ogaden people, after deliberating on the moves and
intentions of EPRDF and understanding the choices EPRDF was presenting to
them—either to relinquish what they had fought for so long or to be trodden
upon, decided that it was unacceptable to succumb to the designs of EPRDF and
forgo the quest for their self-determination and freedom. A quest the Ogaden
people had shed so much blood for and suffered so much.
Therefore, on 28 January 1994, at a press conference in Addis
Ababa, ONLF called for a referendum on self-determination and independence for
the Ogaden. And on 22 February 1994, a cold-blood massacre took place in the
town of Wardheer, where more than 81 unarmed civilians were killed by TPLF
militias, who tried to kill or capture alive the chairman of the ONLF Mr.
Ibrahim Abdalla Mohamed, who was addressing at that time a peaceful rally in the
centre of the town.
In February 1994, the Regional Assembly passed a unanimous
resolution in accordance with the Transitional Charter, demanding a referendum
on self-determination and independence for the Ogaden people, under the auspices
of international and regional bodies such as United Nations, Organization of
African Unity, European Union, and other independent non-governmental
organizations.
The EPRDF government in Addis Ababa reacted swiftly
overthrowing and virtually disbanding all democratically elected institutions in
the Ogaden, including the Regional Parliament. Like their predecessors, the
president of the Regional Parliament, vice-president and several members of the
parliament (MPs), were arrested and transferred to prison in Addis Ababa. Mass
arrests and indiscriminate killings also took place.
On 17 April 1994, the Ethiopian government launched a large
scale military offensive against ONLF positions and detained many suspected
supporters of ONLF and on 28 April 1994, at a press conference in Addis Ababa,
the then TPLF defence minister Saye Abraha claimed that all resistance movements
in the Ogaden had been destroyed and stamped out. In a petition addressed to the
president of the Transitional Government of Ethiopia (TGE), the elders of the
Ogaden asked the Ethiopian government to stop the military offensive against the
Ogaden people, and seek a peaceful dialogue to resolve the conflict, instead of
opting for a military solution, which complicates the already explosive
situation.
In May 1994, the EPRDF government sponsored a new surrogate
party called Ethiopian Somali Democratic League (ESDL), which is a version of
People’s Democratic Organizations (PDO), which exists throughout Ethiopia
within the EPRDF framework. The first congress of ESDL was held in Hurso under
the patronage of the then prime minister of TGE Tamirat Layne (now eliminated
also), who appointed a member of the ruling EPRDF coalition as a chairman of the
new pro-government party.
On 25 January 1995, the EPRDF government hastily arranged a
meeting in the town of Qabridaharre to convince the ONLF to participate in the
upcoming federal and regional elections. The meeting, which was chaired by the
then president Meles Zenawi (the current prime minister), failed when EPRDF
refused to allow independent arbitrators to participate in a negotiated
settlement. After that the ONLF, broke off all contacts with the EPRDF
government, closed down its office in Addis Ababa and boycotted elections in
1995.
Since 20 April 1994, combatants of the ONLF and Ethiopian
forces are fighting bloody battles and Ethiopia is vehemently denying the
engagements with the liberation forces. Certainly, the ongoing struggle for
self-determination and independence in the Ogaden continues to cause inhuman
sufferings and are the basis of instability and tragedy in the Horn of Africa.
The 1991 Charter and the new Constitution, which Ethiopia
espoused on 8 December 1994, guaranteed, as EPRDF claimed, the secession of a
people if they are, “Convinced that their rights are abridged or abrogated”.
In addition, the process of negating that the rights of the Ogaden Somali people
is constantly abrogated proved too costly to the ruling junta in Addis Ababa.
The tyrannical regime in Ethiopia started a campaign of
propaganda and public relation stunt in order to convince the international
community of it democratic and liberal nature and to legitimise its continued
presence in the Ogaden after the people requested to exercise their right to
self determination and announced that it was conducting elections in the Ogaden.
The Ogaden people thwarted its attempts but never the less it announced that the
elections were held and its bogus surrogates had won the seats in the Ogaden. At
the same time to further cloak its treachery, it formed its own ONLF party and
unashamedly declared that ONLF had taken part in its sham elections. This was a
clear indicator of its lack of confidence and inability to hide its failure to
control the Ogaden.
From that time onwards, Ethiopia has been moulding and
remoulding it sham representatives in the Ogaden, the so-called parties and
Ogaden parliament, more than five times but up to this day Ethiopia is unable to
manage the situation.
After failing to intimidate the Ogaden Somalis to go along
with its colonial program, EPRDF has embarked on a war of attrition with ONLF
and indiscriminate and inhuman tyranny against the Ogaden people. The Ethiopian
army (EPRDF militia’s) killed, imprisoned or looted thousands of civilians.
Hundreds of women were raped and for the first time in the history of the Ogaden
people, male children were raped.
But the new Ethiopian colonial state headed by EPRDF has used
every trick in the books of colonial strategy but failed to obliterate the armed
national struggle of the Ogaden People and has been forced to occupy only the
major towns and move in heavily armed convoys.
Then Ethiopia frantically resorted to human rights violations
such as killings, imprisonments, forced conscription, exiling, intimidation and
harassment, suppression of basic democratic rights which highlight the suffering
of the peoples. The regime's policies of systematic underdevelopment include
economic sabotage, irresponsible plunder of resources with no regard to
sustainability of the environmental, denial of education opportunities,
socio-cultural dismantling and subjection to conflict-ridden political and
administrative structures.
Moreover in the Ogaden, EPRDF forces and Tigrean dealers, who
have been given concessions and game-licences by the Ethiopian government, which
is dominated by ethnic Tigreans, are devastating the poor and the fragile
ecological balance by widespread exploitation and depletion of forests for
military purposes, firewood and charcoal. The rich wildlife, including big game,
game birds, forests and water resources has all suffered irreparable damage in
the Ogaden under the Ethiopian government.
After it became obvious to EPRDF that it could not destroy the
national resistance of the people and that it was gaining momentum, EPRDF
following the strategies of its predecessors attacked stateless Somalia and
captured three regions. Ethiopia is intending to find scapegoats to blame for
its failure in subduing the Ogaden people and their rejection of its colonial
lust, divert attention and in a bid to maintain its credibility both inside and
outside Ethiopia. Ethiopia is also actively engaged in sabotaging the
reconciliation of the Somali people and building of a Somali state. At the same
time, Ethiopia is hosting summits for the Somali leaders and is posing as a
mentor to the Somali people and collecting funds from the UN on that issue.
The Ethiopian destabilisation plan is not limited to the
Somali nation. Ethiopia attacked Eritrea on the pretext of retaking two Eritrean
territories but in reality is intent in recapturing Eritrea and colonising it
again, but Ethiopia received from Eritrea lessons it did not bargain for.
Ironically, the Ethiopian government, which violates the very basic human rights
of all citizens in the empire-state of Ethiopia, including the Ogaden Somalis,
and wages wars against its neighbours, poses itself as a champion of Democracy
and Human Rights in Africa.
THE POSITION OF THE OGADEN SOMALIS
The Ogaden Somali people present the following summation of
their views about Ethiopia:
1. Ethiopia has colonised the Ogaden people and is
viciously continuing that colonial legacy in spite of the change of regime in
Addis Ababa and the Ogaden people categorically state that the present regime of
EPRDF is not different from the rule of it predecessors in substance.
2. The Ogaden people are a sovereign nation, have
the right to be masters of their destiny, and are intent on actualising that
right.
3. The Ogaden people will continue to struggle as long
as the Ethiopian state remains intransigent to the rights and wishes and
continue pursuing its inhuman oppressive policies.
4. The Ogaden people will not participate in the bogus
elections Ethiopia periodically conducts as a public relations exercise to
beguile the local and international communities and hide its colonial and
authoritarian nature, nor will they be take part in its colonial administrative
structures.
5. The Ogaden people calls upon the people of Ethiopia
not to participate in the maniacal purges the current regime is perpetrating on
the Ogaden people and become a party to the regime’s crime against humanity.
6. The Ogaden people calls upon the current EPRDF
regime ruling Ethiopia to desist from its current militaristic and aggressive
attitude and accept a peaceful negotiated settlement of the current conflict
between the Ogaden people and Ethiopia with the participation of third neutral
parties from the international community.
APPEAL TO THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
The Ogaden people inform the international community that the
Ethiopian government is violating their basic human rights and is systematically
exterminating them. Ethiopia is being encouraged to commit this genocide against
the Ogaden people by the lack of the international community censure over its
human Rights violations, and holding its rulers responsible for the gross human
rights, abuses perpetrated by its Army and Security Forces in the Ogaden.
The Ogaden people appeal to the international to recognise the
colonial nature of Ethiopia and its brutal repression of the Ogaden people and
hold it accountable for its acts. Furthermore, Ethiopia is using international
aid for military and political programs directed at oppressing the Ogaden
Somalis and other nations under it s colonial rule and in its expansionist
policies against its neighbours. Whenever its war coffers are depleted, Ethiopia
appeals for international aid for natural disaster victims, at the same time
Ethiopia has the means to attack two neighbouring states and maintain a huge
colonial occupation army in the Ogaden, Oromia, Afar, Sidama and other
territories of the oppressed nations. !
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