Ethiopia’s
Person of the
Year: MP Bulcha
Demeksa
Bulcha
Demeksa
(photo: ips)
Jimma Times
- “Obsaan annan
goromsaat dhuga”
For an
outsider visiting
this old country
where the coffee
bean originated,
figuring out the era
and the political
environment in
Ethiopia can
sometimes be as easy
as riding a minibus
taxi in its capital
city. Colored in
blue-and-white,
taxis are the most
preferred means of
public
transportation in
Addis Ababa
(Finfinne). Often,
they carry aboard up
to 12 passengers
through out this
melting pot of the
country that became
the headquarters of
the African Union
(AU) since the days
of Emperor Haile
Selassie I. If a
taxi’s radio is not
tuned in to the
usual Reggae or
Amharic music, the
Ethiopian parliament
debates are blasted
out loud once in a
while. Despite a
national
election
three years ago
ended with 193
protesters gunned
down and with calls
of massive fraud by
European observers,
the taxi’s
passengers still
show much curiosity
and interest in
current political
events, hence
attentively listen.
But their curiosity
is sometimes
interrupted, for
many of them, by a
voice in parliament
speaking in Afaan
Oromo about the
long-standing
worries and problems
facing Ethiopia’s
largest ethnic
group.
The Chairman of the
Oromo Federalist
Democratic Movement
(OFDM) Bulcha
Demeksa would not
have been legally
allowed to speak
Afaan Oromo in such
a stage during the
Emperor’s era, but
the privilege is not
always guaranteed
even under the
current Ethiopian
People’s
Revolutionary
Democratic Front
(EPRDF) ruling
party. In fact,
Bulcha criticized
the EPRDF government
for forbidding his
party to talk in
Afaan Oromo in key
times, like during
the 2005 national
election. The EPRDF
responded by
accusing Bulcha of
“stirring public
emotions” by
speaking in Afaan
Oromo. Yet MP Bulcha
says
he has much bigger
aims since,
according to him,
Afaan Oromo should
become one of the
two official
languages of
Ethiopia. He
advocates for a
presidential system
in Ethiopia and for
a genuine ethnic
federalism where
only Oromos can
control their own
destiny, including
having political
autonomy, as Bulcha
told Jimma Times's
defunct Yeroo
newspaper. Though
for now, Bulcha’s
urgent worries in
the latest
parliament sessions
appear to be the
seemingly endless
imprisonment and
sometimes killing of
Oromos in all
corners of Oromia.
These are Bulcha’s
worries that Meles
can, of course,
quash in two seconds
by his famous slogan
“the jailed Oromos
have connections to
OLF” and
worries that are
even quicker – much
quicker – forgotten
by the Addis Ababa
passengers in the
taxi, who are now
comfortable to hear
the parliament lingo
returned back to
Amharic.
This has been the
reality in the
capital city for
many years, a place
where the largest
ethnic Oromo group
in the country is a
minority group. Even
though the
passengers in the
taxi know well
enough about the
EPRDF government in
power, enough not to
say a word about
politics fearing
EPRDF spies nearby,
they still trust the
EPRDF who spoke in
Amharic about OLF,
more than they trust
the Oromo MP who
complains of abuses
in the rural. This
might be the reason
why many Oromo
scholars claim that
despite many
Ethiopians in the
urban opposing the
successive
dictatorships since
Mengistu’s Derg era;
they still have not
given respect to the
“question of
nationalities.”
Writing about the
Ethiopian student
movements during the
last Emperor’s time,
one Ethiopian
scholar named
Mekuria Bulcha said
“the inability to
acknowledge ethnic
identities and
grievances
intrinsically
undermined the
capacity of the
student movement to
conduct a
rational-critical
democratic
discourse.” Meaning:
a person can be
deeply and actively
opposed to the
consecutive
dictatorships in the
capital city but
still remain out of
touch with reality
on the lasting solutions
needed and on the
grievances of
ethnicities and
nationalities inside
Ethiopia.
Thus,
an outsider can
easily feel the
ongoing political
tension that is
compounded by the
varying
ethno-political
interests and the
complex historical
role of ethnicity in
this deeply diverse
society. The tragic
stories and details
of this political
tension can be felt
outside the taxis in
the streets of Addis
Ababa where hundreds
were killed and
wounded. But these
are not the same
tragic stories that
Bulcha was talking
about or that the
international media
has access to reach.
For those stories,
one has to travel
far away from the
lights of Addis
Ababa to rural
places, revealed
during the short
minutes in
parliament that
Bulcha Demeksa had a
chance to speak. The
rest is available if
one dares to listen
to his OFDM
opposition party.
According to one
political observer,
Bulcha Demeksa’s
OFDM party has
virtually taken the
role of a human
rights organization
as well as a
journalist in a
country where both
of these jobs are
considered daredevil
professions. His
party’s decision to
organize a
comprehensive list
of Oromos imprisoned
or killed by
security forces in
Ethiopia have become
the new threats on
the reputation of
the government
authorities who feel
no pressure to stop
harassing
Ethiopians, except
those “untouchable”
MPs. Thus, families
from east and west,
from north and south
of Oromia jam the
phone lines of
Bulcha Demeksa’s
party offices to
tell their stories
and grievances. Most
of these suffering
Oromos describe
relatives imprisoned
or sometimes even
killed on suspicion
of links to the
prohibited Oromo
Liberation Front
(OLF). Depending on
the week, Bulcha’s
list of Oromos
abused can reach
well over a hundred
and some families
might even re-call
again, to tell about
a relative who was
sitting next to them
during the last
phone call, but has
disappeared since
then.
One thing is however
clear: all these
families know very
well that the OFDM
on the other phone
line has as little
power as a catholic
priest listening to
confessions and
pleas. The best they
can hope for is that
the OFDM officials
will tell their
stories to the
outside world and,
with any luck, some
miracle happens.
Despite OFDM’s
limitation, for
millions, it is
better than nothing.
Most of the time,
Ethiopia’s remaining
local daredevil
journalists quote
the OFDM MP. For
these local
journalists, it is
much safer to quote
the “untouchable” MP
than to quote what
they hear and see in
their own eyes
firsthand.
Otherwise, they
might join the
dozens of
journalists
imprisoned or
exiled. Furthermore,
what Bulcha’s OFDM
has excelled at
seems to be
achieving internal
political stability
enough to be the
choice of
alternative voice
for many
international media
outlets. Through out
the year, it seemed
like most
international media
articles about
Ethiopia’s political
crisis have his name
stamped on them.
Despite being
allowed a small
number of parliament
seats, his OFDM has
achieved much more
for the average
Ethiopian and has
remained durable, as
other opposition
parties break apart
or stay too busy
with internal
squabble. Democracy
and Justice might
not be the status
quo in Ethiopia but,
once in a while,
Bulcha’s pleas also
get relatively
addressed by the
government, enough
to respond to the
May Massacre of 400
Oromos in western
Oromia-Gumuz
boundaries.
When he is not busy
with his OFDM party
activities in
Ethiopia or with his
Awash International
Bank (AIB), a rare
private bank success
story in Ethiopia’s
poor financial
sector, Bulcha is
also seen
campaigning in the
Oromo Diaspora. OFDM
and the Oromo
Diaspora do not have
much difference.
They both speak one
language, one
ancestry and they
come from the same
experience and
history, but differ
on the destination
they want to go. The
OLF, a militant
and separatist Oromo
nationalist
organization that
entertains an
ideology of
self-determination
up to secession, has
large support in
most of this
Diaspora. The OLF
calls Ethiopia a
colonial state
illegally
established and
expanded by forces
of Emperor Menelik
II (mainly composed
of ethnic
Amhara-Tigray
peoples) and their
Shoan Oromo allies,
led by Ras Gobana
Dachi. Though, long
before the Ethiopian
state was officially
expanded in the
manner described by
OLF, all of these
ethnic groups have
been gradually
assimilating due to
commercial interests
and migrations. Yet
according to Oromo
scholars, forced
assimilation by
those in power
obstructed the
voluntary and
natural assimilation
seen in many parts
of the multi-ethnic
Africa – a continent
whose people often
governed themselves
in small village
arrangements and
moved around freely
without much
boundary
restrictions for
thousands of years.
A product
of modern ideologies
and the grievances
of Oromo people, the
OLF attracts wide
support for its
armed struggle for
separation, similar
in ideology to the
Black separatist
movements in America
and Biafra
secessionists in
Nigeria. In
contrast, other
Oromo organizations
like OFDM desire not
only equality for
Oromos inside the
framework of a
strong, democratic
and united Ethiopian
state, but they also
seek to dominate it
since they are the
majority. According
to them, the
majority seceding
from the minority
does not seem
sensible. Most of
all, Bulcha stands
firmly against an
ideology of
"violence to end
violence" and
opposes armed
struggle. Experts
supplement that
poverty and
illiteracy can often
fuel a never-ending
cycle of armed
struggles in third
world countries.
Also the manner
Bulcha opposes armed
struggle is not only
for the sake of
peace in Ethiopia
but also to reverse
the culture of armed
struggle and
militancy in
dissident that could
haunt Oromia for
ages, even if it
secedes.
“I don’t believe you
can take power by
force…if you do,
another force will
take power from you
and it will go on
endlessly like that”
he told loudly to
OLF supporters in
Minnesota, a place
where tens of
thousands of exiled
Oromos call home.
Not many Oromos in
the Diaspora were on
his side that July
day when Bulcha
spoke loudly to the
Minnesota crowd, but
the various
divisions inside OLF
and the undefeated
record of armed
struggles gone
terribly wrong in
the horn of African
history were on his
side. Other Diaspora
Oromos understood
his role in this
horror film in the
horn of Africa but
one OLF supporter
said Bulcha needs a
supporting cast,
adding that even
"Martin Luther King
needed Malcom X."
Bulcha’s solo effort
in the US to
reconcile the two
different worlds is
a work in progress.
But that was not the
only reason why he
went to the United
States.
His OFDM party can
not wait too long
since an unforeseen
phenomenon is
mounting in Ethiopia
as his party members
are being imprisoned
left and right,
including OFDM
Secretary General
Bekele Jirata. Even
the now powerless
Coalition for Unity
and Democracy (CUD)
couldn't keep its
last remaining piece
functional, with its
Chairwoman Birtukan
Mideksa sent back to
jail. Like thousands
of other Oromos
jailed since OLF was
established in 1973,
the family man and
activist Bekele
Jirata was
imprisoned on
suspicion of links
to the OLF. Nobody
knows how many
innocent Oromos have
died on allegations
of OLF linkage the
last 35 years. It
almost seems like
more Oromos have
been killed on
suspicion of OLF
links than the
number of government
forces killed by OLF
army to liberate
Oromos. All previous
rulers have used OLF
as a scapegoat to
crackdown on
peaceful dissident.
Some Ethiopians say
the current
government is happy
to inherit that
scapegoat as well.
As the violence and
abuses continue what
keeps Bulcha
motivated,
determined and
patient does not
appear to be his
faith on the Meles
government to change
itself or improve.
Like he said, a
group that takes
power by force in
this part of Africa
is likely to remain
by force as long as
it can. In one
interview, Bulcha
said the
international
context – mainly the
fate of
dictatorships
worldwide – will
have an impact in
Ethiopia to his
favor. “We are 80
million people and
our political
catastrophe can
hardly remain within
our boundaries” he
added. One way to
take advantage of
this international
context is unity
among Oromos and
unity between the
Ethiopian opposition
groups, the MP says.
And as the scholar
Mekuria credited the
misery of the
Ethiopian state to
its failure “to
re-define its
identity as a
composite of the
identities” of
various
ethno-linguistic
groups, the country,
in that sense, also
remains a work in
progress that
desperately needs
many Bulcha Demeksas
– for perseverance,
courage,
steadfastness and
leadership. “In
order to move
forward as a nation,
we must heal the
wounds… [But]
looking only at the
past would deter us
from moving
forward,” says
Bulcha Demeksa, with
an audacity of hope
that can survive
only by his
time-tested
patience, against
all odds.
Source: Jimma Times