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Ethiopia: Democratic Reform a New Phenomenon, Says Think-Tank
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
NEWS
Posted to the web June 17, 2004
Addis Ababa
Democratic reform is a new phenomenon in Ethiopia, despite a history
stretching back over 3,000 years, and has been largely driven by local pressure
rather than by the international community, a new report says.
Recent reforms had consisted of the replacement of imperial rule, then the
emergence of opposition political parties and a private press that is just over
a decade old, the independent Ethiopian think-tank, the Forum for Social Studies
(FSS), said in a report entitled "Democratic Assistance to Post-Conflict
Ethiopia".
It said Ethiopia "had little to thank international donors for on the long
road to democratic reform", noting that aid and support for the country had been
largely in the form of emergency relief, with "little focused on improving
rights".
The Donors' Advisory Group (DAP), a forum where donors meet to address issues
in Ethiopia and is co-chaired by the World Bank and UN Development Programme,
declined to comment on the report. But a source close to the group told IRIN
that the international community "plays and continues to play" a key role in
Ethiopia's democratisation process.
Not only had the DAP funded areas like human rights and electoral reform, but
international election observers had played a role in the 2000 election, the
source said. He stressed that the criticism by the FSS was "harsh" given that
the organisation was "one of many civil society groups" supported by the
international community.
The FSS report, the first to monitor the effectiveness of international
support for democratisation in Ethiopia, said donor interests had often
overridden concerns for human rights abuses, thereby "inspiring little
confidence". The donors had also on some occasions "bowed" to government
pressure.
"Donor assistance to the democratisation process in Ethiopia has been
comparatively limited," the authors of the report, Desalegn Rahmato and Meheret
Ayenew, said. "The impact of international assistance on the democratisation
process in this country has been very limited in terms of enduring results,"
they added, noting that foreign aid to Ethiopia had totalled US $1.6 billion in
2003.
According to the report, despite steps having been taken towards improving
human rights, abuses persisted. "Other donors have not taken any determined
measures to hold the government accountable on cases of serious human rights
violations," it said. "A few donors have made some efforts to convey their
concerns to the government, but none have shown any willingness to take a public
stand on abuses carried out by the security forces."
It added: "As a general rule, donors have acted individually, and on
occasions their individual interests have overridden their stated commitments to
human rights", noting that "the Ethiopian government is heavily dependent
international donors".
The Addis Ababa-based organisation further argued that democratic debate
largely took place between donors and government, while the public was mostly
excluded. It warned that the current switch by donors to direct financial
support for the government would serve to further exclude the public.
"It will in the long run undermine democratic change by making the government
accountable to the donor community and not its own citizens," FSS said. It added
that the limited funding available had largely taken the shape of support for
the electoral process, improvements to the justice and court systems, and
support for parliament and for a growing civil society and the media in the
country.
The criticism comes as the country gears up for the 2005 national elections
that, diplomats say, will be a litmus test for the ruling party on its
commitment to democratic reform. In 2000, the ruling coalition, the Ethiopian
People's Revolutionary Democratic Front, won 90 percent of the vote.
Dr Merera Gudina, who heads the Oromo National Congress, has told IRIN that
his organisation might boycott the 2005 election unless there is major electoral
reform. Merera, a political affairs lecturer at Addis Ababa University, said
voters in some regions did not have equal representation. He also questioned the
independence of the electoral authorities.
Source IRIN June 17,
2004
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