By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
We saw last week that post-World War II Ethiopia witnessed
significant achievements in economic and other fields. This did not,
however, prevent the growth, in the 1960s and early 1970s, of steadily
increasing political discontent. Now read on:
The 1960 Coup d’Etat
Complaints at the slow pace of Ethiopian economic development, which
was seen as comparing unfavourably with that of other African countries,
and criticism of the Emperor’s autocratic rule, led to an escalation of
political discontent in the late 1950s. During his absence on a state
visit to Brazil, in December 1960, his Imperial Bodyguard staged a coup
d’etat. Its mastermind was Garmam Neway, an American-educated radical
and dedicated civil servant, whose brother, Mangestu, happened to be
head of the bodyguard. The plotters arrested most of the Ministers,
several of the Emperor’s closest confidants.
The coup received immediate support from University College students,
who demonstrated in its favour. The population as a whole, however,
failed to rally behind the insurrection, as Garmam and Mangestu had
hoped. The coup was speedily crushed by the army and airforce. Before
surrendering, however, the plotters killed most of their ministerial
prisoners.
The Emperor, who, on hearing the news of the rebellion, had
immediately decided to return, entered Addis Ababa in triumph. The
coup’s student supporters on the other hand refused to accept defeat. In
the months and years which followed they continued to agitate, and
gradually succeeded in permanently politicising the country’s steadily
expanding student body.
Eritrea
In Asmara, meanwhile, the Eritrean Assembly voted, under Ethiopian
Government pressure, on 14 November 1962, for the territory’s complete
union with Ethiopia. Eritrea, on the following day, was accordingly
declared an integral part of Ethiopia. The legality of this act was,
however, challenged by many Eritreans. Some of them shortly afterwards
founded their territory’s first militant opposition organisation, the
Eritrean Liberation Front, ELF.
“Land to the Tiller!”
Discontent in Ethiopia itself was by then markedly on the increase.
Students, particularly after 1965, demonstrated against the government
more or less regularly each year, with escalating determination. They
focused on the need for land reform, with the cry, “Land to the
Tiller!”, as well as on the treatment of the capital’s beggars, on the
alleged corruption of senior officials, on the catastrophic famine of
1972-4 in Tegray and Wallo, which was comparable in intensity only to
the Great Famine of the previous century, and on rising prices.
Discontent also manifested itself in several small-scale peasant
disturbances, mainly in the southern provinces, and in on-going
agitation among the trade unions many of whose members thought that
their official leadership was too subservient to the government.
Many people, even within the ruling elite, were moreover increasingly
of opinion that the then Ethiopian mode of government was antiquated.
Many were also concerned that the ageing Emperor was not apparently
grooming his heir, the Crown Prince, to succeed him.
The Cabinet
Haile Sellassie, then in his eighties, was by this time increasingly
concerned with foreign rather than internal affairs, and had relaxed his
previous day-to-day scrutiny and control over the administration. The
Government, as a whole, seems moreover to have been half-hearted in its
recognition of the need for reform.
It was decided in 1960 that the Prime Minister, Aklilu Habtawald,
instead of the Emperor, should chose the cabinet, but this limited
constitutional reform failed to change either the composition or the
spirit of the administration, and left the government’s critics
unsatisfied.
A landlord-tenant reform bill was presented to Parliament in 1968,
but met with such strong opposition in the landlord-dominated assembly
that it had not been passed six years later when Revolution erupted.
Somalia
Despite the Emperor’s flair for personal diplomacy the country
suffered, perhaps unavoidably, from strained relations with neighbouring
Somalia. The latter country had come into existence in 1960, through a
merger of the former Italian colony of Somalia (which had been for ten
years under U.N.-sponsored Italian Trusteeship) and the former British
Somaliland Protectorate.
The newly established Somalia state, inspired by the earlier British
idea of a Greater Somalia, from its inception claimed the Ethiopian
Ogaden, northern Kenya, and the southern half of the French Territory of
the Afars and Issas, formerly the French Somaliland Protectorate. All
three areas were inhabited by ethnic Somalis.
Tension between Ethiopia and Somalia peaked in 1964, when an
undeclared war broke out, and an OAU cease-fire failed to put an end to
continued periodical clashes.
Sudan
Ethiopian relations with neighbouring Sudan were also often tense.
This was largely due to Ethiopian support for the Anya-Nya rebels in the
southern Sudan, and Sudanese support for the Eritrean Liberation Front.
Refugees from both sides were placed in camps near the common frontier,
thus enabling them to pursue their political agitation and other
activities unhampered.
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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