Debates and the 2010 Ethiopian Election:
Report and Philosophical Reflection

18 March, 2010 | Teodros Kiros (PhD)

    Debates are by definition
    cantankerous, although they should
    not be.  The recent debates were not
    cantankerous. On the surface, they
    were smoothly organized.

    The first three rounds of the recent
    debates invite an objective analysis,
    which I modestly attempt. I will
organize my reflection on three foundational debates, (1) Is the ruling regime
democratic? (2) Is the ruling regime governing well?
And (3) My vision for Ethiopia.

Responding to the question of democracy and governance, EPRDF’s Ato
Demeke Mekonnen and Ato Redwan Hussein began the third round of
debates by asserting that the ruling regime has put the country on the right path
and that its democratic agenda is developing and that there are hurdles and
obstacles on the way, but the Opposition does not want to recognize them as
it is composed of obstructionists.  Ato Mekonen dispassionately reported that
the ruling regime has introduced an economic development which has put
Ethiopia on a modern Economic path of growth, that it has for the first time
enabled nationalities to assert themselves as political beings with rights
anchored on good governance as the foundational anchor of political and
economic democracy, and that an effort is underway to reconcile individual
rights and the rights of nationalities.

(1) All the Opposition candidates, without exception, responded by agreeing
that the ruling regime is not democratic. The ruling regime, contended the
candidate for EFDHG, uses democratic centralism to crush dissent.  For the
past eighteen years, contended the candidate, the highly centralized party has
promised democracy on paper, and delivered no free speech, no freedom of
conscience, and no free press. By irrelevantly using the Haile Selassie Regime
and the Derg as examples of oppression, it has been misleading the public by
claiming that it has introduced democracy to the Ethiopian people. On the
ground, what the Ethiopian people see is one and the same, oppression and
the denial of freedom. Films are censored; critical books and journalism are
not published. Even the limited political space allotted to the debates is not
democratic, when measured by the flagrantly unfair distribution of time given
to the candidates.

Medrek’s candidate Dr. Merera, as well us Ato Lidetu (EPD) joined forces
and argued that there is no actual practice of democracy, and the amount of
democratic space that is given to Opposition parties is carefully measured, and
that what we have in Ethiopia is a one party rule, that the ruling party is
using a single ideology to recruit and sustain its members, that the party
bribes followers and appointes cadres willfully without following democratic
rules and that it speaks with two ends of its mouth when on the one hand it
tells the peasantry that they are the base of revolutionary democracy and on
the other hand considers them unprepared to rule themselves since they are
considered illiterate and incompetent. This point is further reinforced by Ato
Asfaw Getachew (ERP) who essentially concluded that there are no
established rules of developing genuine political competition among parties
with different interests in the country.  What we have are uniformed voters
who are not even voting for their rational interests.

The remedy to this distorted democracy is Liberal Democracy, concluded
EDP’s candidate.

Medrek’s Dr. Merera forcefully noted that in so far as the ruling regime
continues to control political space for the opposition candidates, does not
allow the voters to vote their conscience, does not allow free speech and
dissent, will not allow the opposition to win the election by democratic means,
does not respect the very laws that it has established, does not expect
informed voters to recall oppressive public officials, continues to use confused
mixture of socialism and democracy, one could justly conclude that there is no
democracy on the ground in contemporary Ethiopia.

(2) Is there good governance in Ethiopia? All the candidates of the Opposition
responded to this question with a resounding no, while the candidates of the
ruling party defended their accomplishments with a characteristic orthodoxy.
For Ato Lidetu (EDP) the ruling regime continues to be untransparent,
unaccountable, undemocratic in its practices versus its claims, obstructs the
judicial system with threats and intimidations, underpays judges and employs
15 years old to judicial positions, sustains unclean and unsafe clinics and
prisons, and its officials are largely unethical and dishonest. Ato Gebru Asrat
(ARENA/Medrek) reinforces the above assessments with his own
observations and adds that the ruling regime is dangerously using the political
notion of foes and friends and has put the opposition as the foes who must be
annihilated, that the regime continues to rob banks, and give lands to ministers
and ambassadors, and at the same time live with the famished bodies of 15
million Ethiopian people, that corruption is rampant in the country, and the
nation's schools have deteriorated from previous standards.

Ato Kasahun Kebede  (KINIJIT) blasted the ruling regime by arguing that the
ruling party is totally undemocratic as well as a corrupt government which uses
ethnicity and tribalism to stay in power, that it specializes in creating
conflicts among nationalities and ethnicities, that it rewards its blind
followers with undeserved positions thereby sacrificing the National Interest,
that it micromanages political space through bribes and incarceration of
dissidents, that it is a police state, which uses excessive force to intimidate
dissidents. Moreover it is blatantly corrupt and HADSO has not renewed any
political culture or developed any new economic ideas. The ruling party is
more like a business establishment that a justly organized political system of
democratic governance.

(3) If Medrek is to lead Ethiopia its manifesto must be propelled by a
powerful vision of Ethiopians as self-empowering moral subjects capable and
willing to live Democracy, as clear, creative, courageous beings with
transformative ideas, a living function of the fact that human beings are
creatures of mind, and that they are capable of constructing themselves as
creative beings.

I have argued for this thesis in Self-Construction and the Formation of Human
Value: Truth, Language and Desire (Praeger, 1999) that humans are
value-creating beings under a democratically infused vision of human beings as
power generating beings with ideas.

Indeed, clarity, creativity and courage are precisely the foundations of Living
Democracy, as the nerve center of a new Ethiopianity.

Years of systematic brainwashing had taught human beings that they are
greedy, selfish, unsocial and competitive.  Moreover, they were also taught that
democracy is nothing more than voting and participating in the market
motivated by the profit motive. Even if these narratives of human nature are
not true, it is enough that humans believe in them and practice them, as those
who believe will inevitably develop these features by practicing them. As
Aristotle has correctly taught that virtues and vices become our living features
by practice.

What we call human nature is essentially taught through a repeated practice,
which then becomes a habit. Suppose, however, that the same human beings
are told and taught that they are cooperative, social, sharing and kind. If they
were to consistently practice these virtues, they essentially evolve into
possessing them.  I urge Ethiopians to internalize living democracy as a
practice of New Ethiopianity.

The ruling regime’s revolutionary democracy does not encourage Ethiopians
to tap into their creativity, master their courage, conquer their fears and change
their conditions, when their miserable everyday life requires it. Instead,
courage is overwhelmed by fear, hope is conquered by despair, change is
silenced by powerlessness, and transforming the human condition is displaced
by resignation.

In direct contrast, living democracy builds on the hidden resources of
individuals. Clarity, creativity, courage and internal power, the potential
virtues of democratic citizens turn toward life.

New Ethiopianity needs Living democracy with new eyes. We need to begin
seeing differently, by engaging our clear, creative, appropriately fearful and
internally powerful senses. Living democracy as a way of life, demands that we
engage ourselves with life’ challenges in a concrete way.

Change is fundamentally an inner experience, which then spills over the external
world.  A changed individual can then seek to change the external world.  The
inner world is a world of fear, impossibility, but also hope and change. Living
Democracy is dynamic cycle of hope and fear, fear and hope.

My vision for Ethiopia is New Ethiopianity guided by the principles of living
democracy as opposed to the distorted democracy of the ruling regime.

Dr. Teodros Kiros is Senior Editor at Ethio Quest News. He can be
reached:
 kiros@fas.harvard.edu
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