Disunity:
Eritrea’s
Perennial Preoccupation
By
Sami Mehari
Sept.
30, 2002
Like the
Eritrea of yesteryears, today’s Eritrea continues to have many factors
of disunity that are quite familiar to most of us. Therefore, the struggle
for unity today is, as ever before, a major preoccupation of all
responsible individuals and organizations in the society.
Parties of the 1940s
Parties and
fronts proliferate when there is a simmering crisis that needed an urgent
solution. Take the second part of the1940s when many parties appeared and
disappeared within a short span of time. By the year 1950, the total count
of parties and political associations reached 15.
No parties in the 1950s
Like the
Eritrea of the 1990s and of today, the Eritrea of the 1950s did not have
parties because Ethiopia’s interferences in internal Eritrean affairs
caused their forced disappearance. In other words, Emperor Haile Selassie
did not want “Hashewiye partitat”.
However, by the late 1950s and early 1960s, there emerged
underground groups by patriots coming together with the wish of “doing
something”. They gave names to their cells, but those small groupies
could not come up with a programme or action because of the circumstances
of the period. (This writer knew individuals who were engaged in letter
writing to threaten high officials in the name of ‘organizations’,
which did not actually exist – like someone’s Madena’e for mahber
deleyti natsinet ertra!) Eventually, the organizations that garnered the
wishes and aspirations of the patriotic youth of that era were the
Eritrean Liberation Movement (ELM/Haraka/Mahber Shew’ate) and the
Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).
Divisions in the 1970s
In the early
1970s, internal organizational crisis in the ELF gave way to the creation
of separate groups most of which still survive in a way or the other.
Another crisis that ensued the military defeat of the ELF in the hands of
the EPLF/TPLF in 1981 also produced a good number of new political and
social groupings, which also exist till now.
Today’s Groupies Reach
30+
The defeat of
the PFDJ leader’s military adventures against all neighbours has, since
mid-2000, given way to a new wave of groups and associations, all of them
“wishing to do something” to solve the grave national crisis in
today’s Eritrea.
One cannot be
sure how many fronts and (declared) parties we have at the present, but
one can estimate more than those Eritrea had in 1950 – i.e. more than
15. But if we take into
account the various politics-oriented movements and associations for
peace, reconciliation, democracy and human rights as well as the public
forums and foundations amongst the Eritrean Diaspora, the number could
reach as high as 30 or more. At this point, one can sense trouble with
having too many disparate bodies, turning our political discourse to a
‘Tower of Babel’. It then becomes important to pull these forces
together so that taking effective action could be possible.
Mergers Called for
The concern of
Eritreans today is, therefore, not shortage of organizations/associations
outside Eritrea but their unwieldy big number. This situation calls for
urgent streamlining. It is
for this reason that its former critics are belatedly appreciating the
existence of the Alliance. There is need for more tightening up within the
existing political organizations in the opposition and among the fast
increasing civic societies. Consolidating the scattered human and material
resources could definitely generate a big energy that can be unleashed to
remove the dangerous PFDJ setup in Asmara that can even put an end to
Eritrea as we know it. The danger is as serious as that!!
It is in this light
that our people warmly welcomed the latest announcement of the initial
steps taken for unity talks between the ELF-RC and the ELF headed by
Abdalla Idris.
The ELF-RC/ELF Promise for
Greater Unity
We all know that ELF, the mother
organization of the Eritrean Revolution, started breaking down ever since
three splinter groups left it before the convening of its first congress
in October-November 1971. The ELF again broke into groups following a
military action by the former military chief of the front, Abdalla Idris,
in March 1982.
Since then, we had the ELF-RC
under the legally-elected leadership of Ahmed Nasser and his team, the ELF
faction led by Abdalla Idris, and the Saghem which was in the initial
period known as the ELF-Central Leadership. The ELF we knew between 1971
and 1981 thus ceased to exist after the military incident of March 1982 at
Rasai in the Eritrea-Sudan border. (I add the following note for the
information of those who were too young to know: - former PLF factions
other than the EPLF also started to be known as ELF-something, and not
PLF-xy. E.g. the ELF-UO or united organization of the late Osman Saleh
Sabbe and the old Obel group, which existed as the ELF-National Council
until it reportedly agreed earlier this year for merger with the ELF of
Abdalla Idris.)
In effect, if the ELF-RC, the ELF
and the Saghem come together, it would mean the reconstituting of the
pre-March 1982 ELF. But that may not be easy to achieve today, and others
would say it is not even desirable. It
is true that the political cadres in general had retained common Jebha
culture like: a) staunch belief in national unity that they could not
achieve but, instead, fell victim to it; b) the desire to have a front
accommodating Eritrea’s diversity (which was not a Shaebia culture); c)
respect to the common folks and the wish to serve them, whenever possible;
and d) the devotion to exhaustive discussions and commitment to elections
etc.
But we must take note of the fact
that, during the past 20 years, the three organizations mentioned here
underwent different experiences and dropped and/or absorbed different
political thoughts and trends that were not part of the old ELF. The
ideologies and new trends alluded to include social democratic thoughts,
commitment to Arabism (e.g. ELF-NC which is now within Abdalla’s ELF)
and the Marxist ideology, including the claim for ‘self-determination up
to secession for Eritrean nationalities now under the yoke of the Tigrinia
Nation’.
I am mentioning these points to
show that our factors of disunity keep increasing with time. However, one
can see that it is within the possible to come to terms on many major
issues for the sake of national salvation, which must come above
everything else at this stage of our struggle to remove an obstacle to
Eritrea’s much needed democratic transition.
The very fact that the two have
agreed to study ways and means of coming much closer than at present is in
itself a welcome development. The proposed joint reviews of past
experiences and problems will for sure contribute to the much needed
reconciliation and mutual acceptance, and scale down feelings of
animosities.
But also assuming total
unification takes place between the ELF-RC and ELF, which is also possible, it will then mean three fronts in the
Alliance have merged. This is
so because the ELF is a unity of two factions, which until early this year
were led by Abadalla Idris (ELF) and Hassan Al-Assad (ELF-NC),
respectively. Due to the influence and weight of the ELF-RC and the ELF in
the Alliance, one can also expect a ‘domino effect’ thus accelerating
the much dreamt of unity. The
Alliance would by then be able to take bolder measures to clear its own
house and be able to receive other partners in a national coalition bound
by a national charter or ‘covenant’. This coalition would bring
together a strengthened/streamlined Alliance, the EPFL-DP and other
parties and/or political associations. That will be the time when the
opposition holds a national conference.
Our Hopes and Expectations
Eritreans today are not that
enthusiastic for the rebirth of the old Jebha and Shaebia, as they
existed. This trend would have to be broken. Although no one would be
against today’s unity efforts in order to strengthen the opposition and
assist in removing the dictatorship, yet the great expectation for the
post-Isayas era is to see a new breed of parties emerging with members
from the entire Eritrean diversity and unaffected by the Jebha and Shaebia
barricades of the old.
The Eritrean people want all
unity moves to succeed in order to build strength for the forces opposed
to the militarist regime. The civic societies are also expected to tighten
up their networking so that they may help in the struggle to build a new
democratic system over the ruins of PFDJ.
And may the current attempts for
unity between the ranks of the opposition succeed!!
Samimehari@hotmail.com
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