- "With no one rushing it democratically, that (Mengistu) party was said to have had only 135,000 members, while militarily.... it kept the largest army in Africa. "
- "The Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic Front, EPRDF, has revised its belief in a small army when new realities developed all around. However, its most dramatic performance is the expansion of its party member base. Today it claims to have five million members"
- "Why don't you guys join the EPRDF?" He said. "I am a member because I don't want to spend a long time looking for job; I am a member because that is the only way I can study for my masters. If you are wise, you will do the same."
- "Now nearly every university student applies for membership, because the card is at least as important as the diploma and degree."
- "The recruits are organized in smaller groups called cells. The cell leaders give their members a Stassi-like order: report any misdemeanour you observe around you. This includes spying both on their party fellows and everybody else, although they are made to feel like they were not spying"
- "One of the purposes of member proliferation, he thinks, is to make everyone suspicious of the person near him, and create an environment of fear and passive obedience and acceptance. "
(By
Ayenew
Haileselassie,
Daily
Monitor)
Into
a
dreary
and
cold
small
Southern
village
in
Kembata
a
young
man
was
posted
as a
teacher
in a
local
government
school.
Those
were
the
dark
days
of
fear
under
a
Marxist
military
government.
Everybody
received
the
party
newspaper,
Serto
Ader,
and
pretended
that
they
loved
it.
At
night
this
young
teacher
would
keep
himself
warm
burning
the
piles
of
this
newspaper-
of
course
that
was
a
warmth
to
be
enjoyed
alone
unless
that
teacher
wanted
to
end
up
in a
cold
and
scary
prison.
Back
on
vacation
he
would
joke
how
the
party
doctrine
kept
him
warm,
and
it
was
not
a
very
funny
joke.
One
would
always
wonder,
"What
if
this
young
man
forgot
to
burn
the
entire
paper
to
ashes?"
The
fear
was
real
in
those
days,
one
that
concerned
your
life.
After
all,
that
regime
had
a
bloody
record
in
the
Red
Terror.
There
were
many
public
security
workers
who
spied
on
their
compatriots.
The
one
party
leadership
of
the
Workers
Party
of
Ethiopia
did
not
have
to
contend
with
another
party
to
ascertain
its
hegemony,
except
the
civil
war
that
raged
in
the
north.
With
no
one
rushing
it
democratically,
that
party
was
said
to
have
had
only
135,000
members,
while
militarily,
where
there
was
a
more
life
and
death
contention,
it
kept
the
largest
army
in
Africa.
The
teacher
passed
through
that
period
and
continued
to
witness
the
emergence
of
another
hegemony
in
the
21st
century
Ethiopia,
one
that
would
stunt
his
career
progress
unless
he
submitted
to
it.
The
Ethiopian
Peoples'
Revolutionary
Democratic
Front,
EPRDF,
has
revised
its
belief
in a
small
army
when
new
realities
developed
all
around.
However,
its
most
dramatic
performance
is
the
expansion
of
its
party
member
base.
Today
it
claims
to
have
five
million
members,
and
it
has
intensified
its
effort
to
'proselytize'
more
of
the
public.
The
main
purpose
is
to
avert
a
repetition
of
the
2005
election,
which
the
opposition
claimed
to
have
won.
The
EPRDF,
according
to
its
own
people
quoted
in a
recent
newspaper
article,
want
to
recruit
enough
college
students
and
civil
servants
who
will
be
baptised
in
revolutionary
democracy
enabling
the
party
to
deliver
enough
public
goods
which
will
lure
the
populace
into
loving
it.
In
other
words
the
EPRDF,
after
20
years
in
power,
seeks
the
legitimacy
of
winning
in a
truly
free
and
fair
election.
But
it
wants
to
do
it
its
own
way.
In
the
2005
election
the
rulers
of
the
country
revealed
how
little
they
understood
the
electorate
when
they
allowed
almost
a
free
election
complete
with
a
pre-election
debate.
They
had
dangerously
exposed
their
soft
underbelly
and
almost
got
it
ripped
apart.
Gebru
Asrat,
once
a
high
level
EPRDF
member
and
president
of
Tigray
Regional
State,
who
has
now
become
leader
of
an
opposition
party,
Arena
Tigray
for
Democracy
and
Sovereignty,
says
that
the
EPRDF
strategy
is
to
achieve
the
hegemony
of
Revolutionary
Democracy
and
destroy
every
other
political
thinking.
It
also
wants
"to
multiply
its
members
by
the
millions
and
control
the
society."
"Revolutionary
democracy
is
misplaced
and
a
misnomer,"
says
Gebru.
"It
used
to
mean
the
exploitation
of a
capitalist
system
to
eventually
achieve
socialism."
It
has
been
years
since
EPRDF
dropped
socialism
and
embraced
the
developmental
state,
a
kind
of
government
controlled
capitalism.
Now
it
wants
its
revolutionary
democracy
ideology
to
prevail
in
all
social
groups.
It
wants
to
have
members
from
the
guards
to
the
managers
and
ministers
as
well
as
within
family
circles.
It
wants
to
ascertain
that
it
alone
will
be
the
only
opinion
and
decision
maker,
according
to
Gebru.
He
says
that
the
EPRDF
thinks
that
its
ideology
will
ascertain
such
hegemony
in
20
to
30
years,
when
revolutionary
democracy
will
die
naturally
giving
birth
to
liberal
democracy,
which,
according
to
him,
is a
recipe
for
dictatorship.
"When
that
period
is
over,
the
leaders
will
be
80
years
old
and
still
in
power,"
he
said.
Two
years
ago,
Gebru,
says
his
old
party
set
a
target
of
having
2.6
million
members
in
Tigray,
about
60%
of
the
population
of
the
region.
"That
is
all
adult
population,"
he
said.
And
the
adult
population
all
over
the
country
is
targeted
as
potential
member.
One
of
the
reasons
the
ruling
party
is
working
so
hard
to
recruit
more
members
is
that
most
party
members
to
whom
they
can
give
jobs
have
already
been
given
jobs,
according
to
one
of
the
younger
members
who
claims
to
have
heard
so
during
one
of
the
trainings.
That
called
for
recruitment
from
among
those
in
colleges,
a
move
that
worked
to
produce
fake
members
by
the
thousands.
Opposition
party
leaders
seem
only
slightly
concerned
about
the
EPRDF
expansion,
saying
that
it
only
served
to
undermine
the
ruling
party
itself.
They
see
it
as
one
segment
of
the
ruling
party's
work
to
weaken
them.
The
major
problems
for
them,
they
say,
are
the
continued
harassment
of
their
members
and
the
decision
to
dry
their
financial
resources.
They
can
only
receive
contributions
from
Ethiopian
passport
holders
and
they
must
keep
a
record
of
all
their
contributors.
Dr
Merera
Gudina,
a
long
time
opposition
leader
now
at
the
Union
of
Ethiopian
Democratic
Forces
(UEDF)
seems
confident
to
win
in a
free
and
fair
election,
reminding
that
400
out
of
he
600
soldiers
who
he
said
were
brought
to
his
constituency
in
the
last
election
to
vote
for
the
ruling
party
representative
had
chosen
to
vote
for
him
in
stead.
The
EPRDF
recruiters
say
that
the
expansion
is a
three
pronged
approach
covering
colleges
and
universities,
the
civil
service
and
MSE's
(micro
and
small
scale
enterprises)
separately.
A
lot
of
work
has
been
done
in
the
first
two,
while
the
work
on
the
MSE's
is
just
beginning.
Nearly
every
student
who
is
in
college
now
and
many
of
those
who
have
just
graduated
are
said
to
have
rushed
to
membership.
One
thing
the
party
has
said
openly:
not
everyone
can
study
for
a
master's
degree
at
government
universities
without
its
goodwill.
This
is
bolstered
by
the
recruiters
who
go
around
telling
students,
"let
alone
a
second
degree,
you
will
not
even
find
a
job
unless
you
are
a
member."
Newer
civil
servants
will
almost
all
be
party
members;
existing
ones
are
lured
to
the
party
because
that
is
almost
the
only
way
if
they
seek
to
hold
higher
office.
"If
anything
happened
in
the
university
compound,
I am
sure
they
will
hear
of
it,"
said
a
university
student.
By
the
quantity
the
party
membership
is
rising
so
is
the
security
network
expanding
at a
scale
that
has
never
been
matched
by
any
other
government
in
Ethiopia.
Going
back
for
comparison,
the
Stassi
of
the
former
East
Germany
(the
GDR)
is
the
single
most
important
expansive
and
destructive
network
that
emerges
to
the
mind,
although
what
is
happening
here
is
much
milder.
EPRDF's
manner
of
recruitment
relies
on
evangelists
that
go
around
preaching
the
gospel
of
revolutionary
democracy.
And
you
don't
have
to
believe
such
a
gospel,
but
you
are
made
to
believe
that
you
have
no
choice.
"A
stranger
never
comes
to
talk
to
you,"
said
the
university
student.
"It
is
always
one
of
your
friends."
He
always
strained
his
young,
collegiate
mind
debating
the
demerits
of
the
Ethiopian
Peoples
Revolutionary
Democratic
Front
(EPRDF)-
Ethiopia's
ruling
-er-
front.
They
have
been
doing
that
in
their
dormitory
very
often.
One
day
there
were
just
three
of
them
fighting
it
out,
until
a
question
that
ended
all
debates
came
from
one
of
them,
who
was
already
party
member,
although
they
had
not
known
all
the
time.
"Why
don't
you
guys
join
the
EPRDF?"
He
said.
"I
am a
member
because
I
don't
want
to
spend
a
long
time
looking
for
job;
I am
a
member
because
that
is
the
only
way
I
can
study
for
my
masters.
If
you
are
wise,
you
will
do
the
same.
You
do
not
have
to
believe
in
it.
Think
about
it."
Faced
with
the
prospect
of a
prolonged
spell
of
joblessness
and
the
possibility
of
their
first
degree
becoming
their
last
as
well,
these
two
young
men
decided
to
join
the
party.
The
young
rational
mind
had
gone
to
work
instantly.
His
brother
who
had
a
college
diploma
had
been
out
of
work
for
a
number
of
years,
while
his
friends
followed
the
party
road
to
employment
in
the
fields
of
their
training.
His
family
earn
very
low
incomes,
and
he
does
not
want
to
add
to
the
burden.
Besides
whenever
he
thought
of
his
career,
he
had
always
thought
of
getting
his
second
degree
first.
"I
was
surprised,"
he
said.
"Nearly
everyone
in
my
class
was
there."
Other
sources,
who
are
now
"comfortably"
employed,
were
coaxed
into
membership
when
they
heard
reports
that
earlier
year
graduates
were
struggling
to
find
jobs.
This
lady,
whose
name,
work
and
the
college
she
attended
will
not
be
identified
because
she
fears
being
traced,
joined
in
the
first
semester
of
her
last
year.
If
she
had
waited
till
the
second
semester,
her
request
to
join
the
party
would
have
been
rejected.
The
benefit?
She
and
all
her
friends
now
have
jobs,
while
most
of
her
seniors,
the
ones
she
knew,
are
still
looking.
Now
nearly
every
university
student
applies
for
membership,
because
the
card
is
at
least
as
important
as
the
diploma
and
degree.
She
is
mad
within
herself
that
she
had
to
become
a
party
member
in
order
to
get
a
job
and
unhappy
that
she
had
to
prove
her
loyalty
in
more
ways
unacceptable
to
her
in
order
to
get
her
dream
job;
nevertheless,
she
does
not
regret
that
she
has
become
a
member.
She
would,
otherwise,
still
be
looking
for
a
job.
New
recruits
are
assigned
to
ethnic
specific
organizations
with
in
the
EPRDF:
the
Oromos
would
go
to
the
OPDO,
the
Amharas
to
the
ANDM,
the
Tigres
to
the
TPLF,
and
those
from
the
Southern
regional
state
to
SEPDF.
The
recruitment
is
not
really
so
low
cost
as
it
seems
in
university
campuses.
The
EPRDF
has
undertaken
seven
rounds
of
trainings,
according
to
some
of
its
cadres,
involving
thousands
of
people
at a
time.
The
lady
who
spoke
on
condition
of
untraceable
anonymity
said
that
her
group
that
was
taken
to
Zway
for
training
involved
40
bus
loads
of
people.
"We
were
all
given
four
bottled
waters
a
day,
and
the
food
was
always
meat,"
she
said.
The
meeting
lasted
18
days,
and
she
shakes
her
head
as
she
thinks
of
the
cost.
In a
recent
training
for
7,500
teachers
divided
between
Addis
Abeba
and
Fiche
town,
the
EPRDF
had
to
pay
the
Addis
Abeba
participants
50
Br
allowance
per
day,
while
those
in
Fiche
had
a
budget
of
70
Br
per
day
for
their
food,
water
and
accommodation
expenses,
although
they
received
no
cash.
Each
participant
was
given
six
books
for
the
training
on
various
topics:
revolutionary
democracy,
EPRDF
programme,
initiating
democratic
struggle,
capacity
building
strategy,
urban
and
industry
development,
and
education
quality.
These
trainings
also
lasted
18
days.
Reports
of
the
outcomes
vary.
A
local
paper
recently
reported
that
all
participants
in
the
Addis
Abeba
training
and
90%
in
Fiche
had
filled
the
membership
form.
A
cadre
told
this
writer,
however,
that
45%
of
the
participants
in
Fiche
had
rejected
the
call
for
membership,
and
most
of
them
did
not
even
take
the
six
books
with
them,
leaving
behind
a
big
litter.
The
recruits
are
organized
in
smaller
groups
called
cells.
The
cell
leaders
give
their
members
a
Stassi-like
order:
report
any
misdemeanour
you
observe
around
you.
This
includes
spying
both
on
their
party
fellows
and
everybody
else,
although
they
are
made
to
feel
like
they
were
not
spying.
"If
you
see
someone
breaking
a
window
pane,
you
have
to
report
him,
because
he
is a
bad
fellow."
So a
student
had
his
membership
repealed
because
he
was
spotted
by
other
members
while
he
jostled
to
enter
first
into
the
university
cafeteria
at
meal
time
in
order
to
get
the
best
part
of
the
stew.
When
Moslem
students
staged
a
demonstration
against
the
decision
of
the
Science
Faculty
of
the
Addis
Ababa
University
not
to
allocate
a
worship
site
within
the
compound,
Moslem
EPRDF
members
allegedly
gave
away
the
plotters,
who
were
taken
away
and
....
In
the
work
place
this
could
take
place
in
different
ways.
People
do
not
trust
each
other,
even
when
they
are
all
members,
so
they
keep
their
mouths
shut
or
they
could
find
themselves
being
the
issue
of
the
next
cell
evaluation.
Usually
one
person
makes
this
mistake,
and
everybody
else
takes
a
lesson.
They
don't
open
up
even
when
they
think
they
knew
each
other
well.
At
other
times
a
member
you
do
not
know
could
come
complaining
about
a
service
and
demanding
if
had
no
right
to
be
served
unless
he
were
a
party
member.
Similarly
someone
impersonating
a
job
applicant
could
come
and
ask
if
he
needed
to
bring
support
letter
from
local
government
officials
(meaning
about
his
party
activities).
In
both
cases
the
civil
servant
must
answer
that
both
the
service
seeker
and
the
job
applicant
are
treated
just
like
any
other
Ethiopian
on
the
basis
of
right
and
merit.
During
the
2005
election,
the
opposition
parties,
particularly
the
Coalition
for
Unity
and
Democracy,
that
had
seemed
close
to
stage
a
democratic
coup,
had
reached
a
point
where
they
could
no
longer
hold
secret
meetings.
What
they
said
in
secret
was
always
disclosed
in
public
particularly
by
an
Amharic
newspaper
that
stopped
publication
shortly
after
the
election
crisis
was
over.
Some
opposition
party
members
say
that
there
are
now
people
with
in
them
whom
they
suspect
of
being
EPRDF
moles,
but
they
do
not
give
them
away
for
lack
of
evidence
and
for
fear
of
repercussions
- if
they
knew,
they
might
end
up
being
suspects,
too.
Gebru
says
that
the
ruling
party
constantly
works
to
infiltrate
his
small
and
young
party.
An
EPRDF
source,
who
talked
to
this
writer
looking
around
uneasily,
said,
"Why
do
you
and
I
talk
so
carefully?
Because
we
do
not
know
who
these
people
around
us
are."
One
of
the
purposes
of
member
proliferation,
he
thinks,
is
to
make
everyone
suspicious
of
the
person
near
him,
and
create
an
environment
of
fear
and
passive
obedience
and
acceptance.
Such
information
network
is
becoming
established
at
universities,
government
offices
and
the
general
public,
although
the
average
person
so
far
has
no
fear
of
dropping
dead
as a
result
of
what
he
or
she
says.
However,
one
has
to
be
in
such
network
in
order
to
get,
sometimes
even
keep,
a
job
in
the
government
hierarchy,
particularly
the
kebeles,
sub-city
and
city
administrations.
One
brazen
new
member
attached
a
copy
of
his
membership
ID
(dubbed
green
card
by
the
new
members)
with
his
CV
when
he
applied
for
a
job-
it
might
have
been
a
coincidence,
but
he
got
the
job.
Another
man
had
to
be
pushed
out
of a
job
he
kept
for
years.
He
took
his
case
to
the
responsible
person,
one
of
the
new
generation
of
recruits.
This
responsible
person
was
not
satisfied
with
the
reasons
given
for
his
dismissal
and
went
to
enquire
and
learned
that
the
man
was
not
a
party
person,
and
his
position
was
not
meant
to
be
filled
by
someone
like
him.
Such
criterion
was
applied
when
she
and
her
team
were
recruiting
several
new
employees.
The
recruiting
committee
interviewed
all
the
applicants,
reviewed
their
documents,
and
passed
the
list
of
the
selected
people
to
the
manager.
They
bitterly
discovered
that
people
they
had
not
interviewed
were
given
the
jobs;
the
manager
did
not
keep
the
secret
from
them
because
they
were
all
party
colleagues.
He
said
the
people
who
were
given
the
jobs
were
party
members.
But
then
that
was
how
she
got
her
job:
she
was
applying
everywhere,
when
she
was
informed
that
she
had
already
been
given
an
appropriate
job
where
she
was
not
looking.
Working
party
members
in
Addis
Abeba
say
that
they
have
five
to
six
meetings
every
month
related
to
the
party;
most
take
place
in
their
work
places
(cell
meetings).
There
are,
however,
two
meetings
that
bring
together
several
cells
in
each
sub
city.
Nearly
all
of
these
meetings
take
place
on
normal
working
hours
achieving
party
objectives
at
government
expense.
At
the
work
place
each
cell
member
has
specific
activities;
it
could
be
recruiters
or
rapporteurs,
etc.
Their
commitments
are
measured
by
how
much
they
tell
on
their
colleagues
at
cell
meetings,
how
many
new
members
they
recruit,
and
how
active
they
are
during
meetings.
Such
people
can
grow
up
to
become
executives.
In
Addis
Abeba,
the
kebele,
sub-city
and
city
administrations
are
not
only
firmly
controlled
by
the
party
but
all
the
staff
are
carrying
out
party
work
even
though
they
are
paid
government
salaries.
The
Administrations
of
all
99
kebeles
each
have
15
cabinet
members
and
two
counsellors
(representing
the
youth
and
women's
leagues)-
all
of
them
appointed
by
the
ruling
party.
The
two
counsellors
are
officially
there
to
do
party
job;
they
are
given
that
name
so
that
their
salary
will
come
from
government
coffers,
according
to
one
such
person.
Practically
all
17
people
are
political
appointees
and
they
are
doing
party
work
all
the
time
at
government
expense.
There
is
plan
to
add
three
additional
staff
for
each
kebele.
A
new
salary
scale
which
is
being
considered
will
offer
a
salary
of
2,600
Br
(a
130
Br
raise
for
some
of
the
staff)
plus
300
Br
housing
and
mobile
phone
allowance.
The
chief
executive
officers
earn
3000
Br
salary
plus
allowance.
At
each
of
the
10
sub-cities
five
appointees
earn
a
3,600
Br
salary
and
400
Br
allowance,
while
the
chief
executive
earns
a
salary
of
4,200
Br
and
2,000
Br
allowance.
All
of
these
people
keep
themselves
as
busy
with
party
work
as
they
do
with
their
regular
work-
all
on
normal
working
hour
and
government
pay.
Gebru
Asrat
adds
to
this
saying
that
the
Tigryan
People's
Liberation
Front,
TPLF,
the
dominant
group
in
the
EPRDF
family,
has
only
one
office
in
Tigray
because
it
actually
uses
government
offices,
employees,
resources
and
budget
to
do
its
work.
One
kebele
appointee
said
that
they
recruit
three
directors
for
a
school,
and
the
most
important
criterion,
more
than
education
and
experience,
is
the
political
credibility
of
the
candidates.
"The
reasoning
is
that
the
result
that
the
people
want
shall
be
delivered
under
the
leadership
of
EPRDF
people,"
said
this
source.
This
is
where
the
teacher
who
taught
in
the
south,
the
young
lady
who
recently
joined
the
civil
service
and
the
young
university
student
all
find
themselves
at
odds
with
what
is
going
on.
The
one
finds
himself
in a
depressing
situation
where
his
career
has
been
called
to a
halt-
no
way
up
the
executive
ladder
except
through
the
ruling
party.
"Getting
an
executive
position
is
difficult,"
said
the
anonymous
lady,
too.
"I
have
always
wanted
to
become
a
----.
But
in
order
to
get
that
job,
I
will
need,
for
example,
to
befriend
people
and
encourage
them
to
speak
their
heart,
and
report
them
if
they
say
the
wrong
things
about
the
party.
So I
have
given
up
thinking
about
my
dream
job,
because
it
will
take
a
long
time
for
things
to
change
enough
for
me
to
be
able
to
get
it
without
party
loyalty.
I,
like
most
of
my
friends,
am
keeping
the
membership
because
I
have
no
choice.
I am
now
looking
for
any
job-
any
job-
out
of
government."
The
party
cadre
looked
uncomfortably
at
this
writer
and
said,
"I
am
not
proud
of
what
I
do."
The
recent
defection
of
Ermias
Legesse,
Bereket
Simon's
deputy
at
the
Office
for
Government
Communication
Affairs,
during
a
visit
to
the
United
States,
is
at
least
in
part
caused
by
this
situation.
The
university
student
had
consulted
his
father
before
he
made
his
choice,
a
choice
which
he
has
kept
a
secret.
"It
is
up
to
you
to
decide,"
the
father
told
his
son.
"Don't
just
do
anything
that
is
against
your
conscience."
With
or
without
parental
consultation
thousands
have
made
their
choices.
From
the
rank
and
file
to
the
higher
positions
of
authority
the
EPRDF
is
accumulating
members
that
do
not
believe
in
its
cause,
members
that
want
it
to
lose
and
get
lost.
In
recent
EPRDF
gatherings
for
various
groups,
the
ruling
party
has
been
trying
to
imbue
its
new
members
with
the
self-sacrificing
commitment
that
the
members
of
the
Tigrian
People's
Liberation
Front
(TPLF)
had
displayed
when
they
started
fighting
the
derg
regime
in
the
1970's.
By
as
much
as
the
EPRDF
is
getting
new
members
who
consider
their
membership
as
pre-condition
for
job,
it
is
also
able
to
raise
millions
of
Birr
from
the
business
community.
The
last
election
has,
however,
left
evidences
of
the
Front's
inability
to
get
the
votes
of
even
its
members.
It
also
had
transpired
that
public
admiration
and
love
for
EPRDF
people
(such
as
Arkebe
Okubay)
for
public
goods
created
did
not
translate
into
votes
for
the
same
person.
One
voter
said
at
the
time,
"Arkebe
is a
good
man,
but
he
is
EPRDF."
EPRDF's
recruiters
unofficially
consider
higher
education
and
government
jobs
as a
reward
for
membership,
while
the
new
recruits,
at
least
those
that
talked
to
this
writer,
consider
it a
price
they
are
paying
to
earn
their
daily
bread.
Under
this
polarized
interpretation
of
the
same
situation,
will
the
ruling
party
sit
and
hope
for
the
best,
or
will
it
do
something
outrageous
to
make
sure
that
all
its
members
voted
for
it?
That
is
yet
to
be
seen,
but
Gebru
does
not
see
the
ruling
party
benefiting
out
of
this.
Both
Gebru
and
Merera
say
that
the
leadership
of
the
ruling
party
involved
the
simultaneous
use
of
its
power,
government
resources
and
the
security
forces.
"They
could
rule
any
length
of
time,"
Gebru
said.
"Their
life
could
be
long
under
a
situation
where
there
is
no
coordinated
opposition
by
the
society.
Finally
the
outcome
is
disaster.
Look
at
what
happened
to
Congo
and
Somalia
when
Mobutu
and
Ziad
Barre
went
out
of
office."
He
expresses
fear
for
what
could
happen
when
all
the
pent-up
frustration
and
emotion
is
released
one
day,
and
adds,
"That
is
why
we
say
there
has
to
be
reconciliation
in
Ethiopia."
The
reconciliation
issue
has
been
raised
since
the
beginning
of
the
EPRDF
government,
but
the
leaders
have
always
rejected
it
saying
that
nothing
has
happened
that
required
reconciliation.
Meanwhile
the
opposition
leaders
express
faith
that
many
of
the
new
EPRDF
recruits
will
vote
for
them
in
the
next
election.
The
young
civil
servant
wanted
so
much
for
things
to
change
that
she
could
barely
hide
her
interest
in
the
production
of
this
article.
"Do
you
think
what
you
write
will
make
a
difference?'
"Yes."
"Then
you
must
write
it
quickly,"
she
urged.
Source:
Jimma
Times