By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
We saw last week how Mussolini’s invasion led to the establishment of an Italian fascist empire. Now read on:
A.O.I.
The Italian occupation led to important political and other changes. 
Italian-occupied Ethiopia was officially merged with Eritrea and 
Somalia, into an entirely new territory designated Africa Orientale 
Italiana (A.O.I.), i.e. Italian East Africa. This for the first time 
brought the greater part of the Horn of Africa under a single 
administration. The area was divided into six constituent units: 1) 
Eritrea, including the former Ethiopian province of Tegray, with capital
 at Asmara; 2) Amhara, formed out of the old provinces of Bagemder, 
Gojjam, Wallo, and northern Shawa, with capital at Gondar; 3) Galla and 
Sidamo, comprising lands to the south-west, occupied by people of that 
name, with capital at Jemma; 4) Addis Ababa, later renamed Shawa; 5) 
Harar, the town of that designation; and 6) Somalia, including Ogaden, 
with capital at Mogadishu. As a result of these arrangements Ethiopia 
ceased to be a legal entity.
The Addis Ababa Statues, and the Aksum Obelisk
Mussolini, from the outset, was determined to remove all symbols of 
Ethiopia’s historic independence. He gave personal orders for the 
removal of two Addis Ababa’s principal statues, one of Emperor Menilek, 
the victor of Adwa, and the other of the Lion of Judah. He later gave 
orders for the looting, and shipping to Rome, of one of the great 
obelisks of Aksum. The loot taken to Italy also included the aforesaid 
Lion of Judah monument, five Ethiopian royal or other crowns, and a 
number of historically interesting paintings which had adorned the 
Ethiopian Parliament building.
Economic Grandeur
Fascist Italy, which had to justify its invasion of Ethiopia both to 
itself and to the world, was motivated by dreams of economic grandeur. 
This objective had to be carried out in an extensive territory with a 
still very limited infrastructure, and in the face of strong on-going 
patriotic resistance. Mussolini, in this far from enviable position, was
 willing to invest far more capital and resources in his newly won 
empire than the older colonial powers, who had been concerned 
essentially with short term profits, had ever done. The Italian 
occupation was therefore accompanied by very considerable Italian state 
expenditure, much of it, however, unwisely, or corruptly, spent.
Immediate strategic interests, as well as long term economic 
considerations, necessitated heavy initial investment in road 
construction. In 1936-7 as many as 60,000 Italian workmen were employed 
on the roads, though this figure fell by 1939 to 12,000 Italians, 
assisted by 52,000 “native” labourers. The rudimentary pre-war Ethiopian
 road network centred on Addis Ababa, was in this way integrated into a 
more extensive grid based on the Italian colonial ports of Massawa and 
Mogadishu. The country’s road mileage was thus considerably expanded. 
Such road-building, though impressive, was achieved at the price of 
postponing, and seriously curtailing, investment in other, potentially 
more profitable, fields of economic activity.
The number of Italians in the empire as a whole was by 1939 a little 
over 130,000. This was far lower than the fascists had originally 
anticipated, but nevertheless led to the construction, in the principal 
towns, of a substantial number of European type buildings, government 
offices, shops, flats and houses. Their location was based on rigid 
urban segregation between Europeans and `natives’. Intermarriage, or 
even co-habitation, between the races was strictly prohibited, and 
transportation in buses and other vehicles was strictly segregated.
Addis Ababa
The greatest urban development took place, not surprisingly, in Addis
 Ababa. The city witnessed the establishment of two segregated Italian 
residential areas: Case INCIS, a quarter reserved for state officials, 
called after its managing corporation, the Istituto Nazionale per Case 
degli Impiegati dello Stato; and Casa Popolare, or workers’ flats. Some 
20,000 Ethiopians were evicted and transferred to the west of the 
settlement, which was projected as `native city’. The capital’s market, 
located since Menilek’s day in the centre of the town, near St George’s 
cathedral, was moved westwards to this `native’ area.
The city’s facilities, and particularly those of its white 
population, were substantially improved. An electric grid, ran by a 
para-statal company, the Compagnia Nazionale Imprese Elettriche, often 
referred to as CONIElL was established, and the supply of water expanded
 by the construction of a dam at nearby Gafarsa.
Industrial development in the empire as a whole was, however, 
curtailed by fears that it would compete with establishments in the 
Italian “motherland”, and thus endanger Italian exports. Several small 
factories were, however, established, notably for cement and textiles at
 Dire Dawa, for hessian rope and sacks at Jemma, and for pasta and 
biscuits at Kalite, just outside Addis Ababa.
Trade made a poor showing, and in some sectors actually declined. 
There were three main reasons for this. Firstly, fascist xenophobia, 
which resulted in the expulsion of long-established Indian and other 
foreign merchants, most notably the major Indian firm of Mohomedally and
 the French company, A. Besse. Secondly, efforts to replace the old, and
 well-liked, silver Maria Theresa thaler by Italian paper money, the 
value of which declined during the occupation, and was almost 
unacceptable by the population at large. Thirdly, the establishment of 
top-heavy, bureaucratic, and at times corrupt, state trading 
corporations.
“A Place in the Sun”
An important fascist objective, much publicised at the beginning of 
the invasion, was to win Italy a “place in the sun”, by settling 
hundreds of thousands, if not actually millions, of Italians in the 
empire, to solve what was officially described as Italy’s “surplus 
population”. Settlement schemes were accordingly attempted, at Bishoftu 
and Holata, on the outskirts of Addis Ababa, and in the provinces, at 
Wagara, Charchar and Jemma. Such projects, however, proved a dismal 
failure. Would-be settlers were discouraged by the difficulty of 
embarking on agricultural work in an accustomed environment, by lack of 
adequate infrastructure, by insecurity occasioned by Ethiopian patriotic
 resistance, and by a shortage of Italian state funds, which had been 
allocated elsewhere. The result was that only a few thousand Italians 
were settled. The empire could not even feed its Italian population, and
 had to import substantial quantities of wheat from Italy.
Education and Health
Social and welfare services were directed mainly to the Italian 
population. A number of small new hospitals were constructed, mainly for
 Europeans. An extensive innoculation programme for “natives” was, 
however, instituted. Several prewar Ethiopian schools were reopened for 
the instruction of Italian children. Education of “native” youth was 
strictly controlled, with the avowed aim of preventing the emergence of a
 “native intelligentsia”. Many Ethiopians nevertheless obtained manual 
work in road or house-building, or service in the colonial army, and 
learnt at least some elements of the Italian language.
Racism
Italian fascism had little interest in race until the occupation of 
Addis Ababa, but the strictly controlled Italian press soon began to 
devote considerable attention to the issue. The Gazzetto del Popolo of 
21 May 1936 thus proclaimed that “the fascist empire must not be an 
empire of half-castes”. Many newspapers argued that to prevent such a 
possibility it was necessary to keep Italian colonists “rigidly 
separate” from the “natives”. The Italian media in ensuing months became
 ever more racially vociferous. A not untypical article declared that 
fascism “protected the race” and tried to “keep it pure”. A speaker at a
 Congress of Colonial Studies, held in Florence in April 1937, asserted 
that Italians must affirm the “dignity of race” in order to protect 
their “prestige as rulers”. Such utterances served as a prelude to the 
enactment of a series of increasingly strict racial decrees. The first, 
signed by the Italian king, Vittorio Emanuele, on 19 April 1937, 
prohibited conjugal relations between Italians and “native” (but did not
 prevent the former from consorting with “native” prostitutes). A number
 of ordinances establishing urban and other segregation were afterwards 
issued.
The racist influence of nazi Germany, which became increasingly 
apparent in the autumn of 1938, led to the founding, on 5 August, of a 
virulently racist Italian magazine, La difesa della razza, i.e. Defence 
of the Race. This was followed, on 5 September, by an anti-Semitic royal
 decree, which inter alia rendered illegal the marriage of Italian 
Aryans and Jews. Further legislation was enacted, on 29 June, providing 
“Penal Sanctions for the Defence of the Prestige of the [Italian] Race 
in face of the Natives of East Africa”. A later decree of 13 May 1940 
reduced the status of `half-castes’ to that of the “native” population. 
Racial laws, though firmly endorsed by the fascist party, ran counter to
 Italy’s “Latin temperament”. Many Italian men, who had come to Africa 
without wives, found ways of associating with Ethiopians of the opposite
 sex, and not a few were deported or otherwise punished for this 
offence.
Autarchy
The last years of the occupation were particularly difficult. The 
fascist authorities, anticipating the Duce’s involvement in a European 
war, embarked on a strict policy of autarchy, designed to make the 
empire as far as possible, self-sufficient. Horse-drawn garries, or 
carts, were for example introduced as a substitute for cars making use 
of petrol.
 Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org 
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