TPLF, Solidarity and The
Brothers-in-Law
By Abraha Belai
September 18, 2002
It was in 1997, two years after I
left Ethiopia for the United States, that I joined an online discussion forum
called TigrayNet (The members-only forum is completely different from the
privately-managed Web site, Tigrai.org).
Since I was a journalist in my
country, and since a journalist was taken for politically neutral, and hence
reflecting more or less unbiased observations of events, I thought my first-hand
experience about the degree of destruction TPLF was wrecking on the life of
Ethiopia and her people would win unqualified support among members of the
forum. After all, I hoped, "we are living in America where every one
has at least the gist of ' the sanctity of human life'."
Before visiting the
saber-rattling war at TigrayNet, let us first try to get the definitions of some
media jargons to help us understand how the TPLF manipulates the
state-controlled media to advance its hidden agendas. What constitutes a good
fake is how well it resembles the real thing. This document* will help you be
able to distinguish real information from its three look-alikes, or
counterfeits: propaganda, misinformation and disinformation. Understanding the
counterfeits will enable you to become a much more critical consumer of
information.
(a) Information - This is
probably what you're looking for when you use the Internet for academic
purposes. Information, at its most basic, is data set in a context for
relevance. In other words, information tells us something that is understandable
and has the potential to become knowledge for us when we view it critically and
add it to what we already know.
(b) Propaganda - is a
commonly misused term. Because of its historical use, such as in the name of the
infamous "National Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda"
run by Joseph Goebbels for the Nazi government of Germany, many people associate
propaganda with inflammatory speech or writing that has no basis is [in] fact.
In reality, propaganda may easily be based in fact, but facts represented in
such a way as to provoke a desired response.
(c) Misinformation -
differs from propaganda in that it always refers to something that is not true.
It differs from disinformation in that it is "intention neutral": it
isn't deliberate, it's just wrong or mistaken.
(d) Disinformation - You
have now reached the lowest of the low. Never underestimate the evil intentions
of some individuals or institutions to say or write whatever suits a particular
purpose, even when it requires deliberate fabrication. (*Source: The
Sheridan Libraries of the Johns Hopkins University)
Disinformation: TPLF's old
Lethal Weapon
The Ethiopian public has long
realized that a repressive regime is no good companion of information. For that
reason, the state-controlled media are choked propaganda, or misinformation, or
the lowest of the low, disinformation. If you have heard the leader of the
country using a vulgar language to attack political opponents, it is a good
indicator from which side is his language coming: disinformation.
That is why the public is
always seen searching for alternative sources of information like the Voice of
America (VOA), Deutsche Welle Amharic Service, or other credible newspapers or
web sites. For this reason, no government media is taken seriously for its word.
Aware of this fact, the regime rushes to set up secret media outlets that would
be introduced to the public as if they were run by non-governmental, independent
individuals. For instance, it would be several years before the public knew
Walta was a Meles-owned news agency, because Walta started out its production
declaring that it was an "independent" privately managed project.
By the time Walta was known it
was serving the Meles regime, the damage was already irreversible.
Disinformation pushes the public to the edge of confusion and indecision - and
it is not only the media that serve as vectors of disinformation. There are
parties set up as opposition, radio stations set up as opposition, newspapers
set up as opposition, individuals presumed as government critics but whose
subtle activities are aimed at weakening the coming together of Ethiopians.
When the public discredits
EPRDF-owned radio stations like Radio Fana, or news agencies like Walta, the
government goes shopping for other means of spreading disinformation, like
paying a huge some of money for foreign freelance journalists who would grab the
chance to do the dirty job. A classic example is what is being spread against
the Ethiopian Democratic Party (EDP) and others, including The Tigrian
Solidarity. In this Indian
Ocean Newsletter, readers are advised to critically examine who is spreading
disinformation to forestall the coming together of Ethiopian forces by spreading
political malice via a supposedly "neutral" newsletter. It is our
right to discard the trash into the wastebasket. Many examples could be cited
how the Octopus-like tentacles of disinformation are keeping Ethiopians in an
information limbo. Being critical information consumers is the remedy that would
help us to make informed decisions in the fight for justice, democracy and
Ethiopian Unity.
To take you some years back to
Addis, when Meles tightened his grip on the independent journalists, his aides
somewhat sensed some form of discontent within the state-owned media circles. As
compared to the fledgling private newspaper industry, the state-owned media was
a giant establishment. About 800 journalists were working nationwide for the
state-owned media by 1994. The discontent was based on a dream that could not
come true: as Ethiopian journalists, we were dreaming the media - TV, radio and
newspapers like Herald and Addis Zemen - must be freed from government control
and managed by an independent body. Like any private companies, the media would
then survive on revenue earned from selling services to the public.
EPRDF then sensed the urge and
journalists were allowed to organize themselves under "Ethiopian
Journalists Association." But hidden organizers turned out to be TPLF
cadres, and those who would lead the Association were already selected before
any meeting of journalists. The goal was the country's media would be
administered under an independent board of directors within three to five years.
Seven years after the Journalists Association was founded in 1994, the country's
media were transferred to Meles Zenawi's cadres: Bereket Simon, and Netsanet
Asfaw, (Dis)information minister and vice minister, respectively. (What do
opposition parties learn from this trend: Would Meles hand over power after 2/3
years, or a state of emergency would be declared to endorse himself a
prime-minister for life?" Though bitter, the latter is in perfect harmony
with TPLF culture.
TPLF, TigrayNet and the
Brothers-in-Law of TPLF
Established by a group of
Ethiopian scholars in 1994 mainly to discuss academic matters, and at times,
humanitarian issues in our country, TigraiNet grew in the next few years and
became the hotspot of political bigwigs of the cyber world. When I joined the
online forum in 1997, the forum was, more or less, comprising the following
three groups:
a) TPLF supporters -
(vocal and known for speaking the language of TPLF bosses).
b) TPLF opponents - (Vocal and known for speaking the language of the
common people - the quest for democracy and justice, and against ethnic
division).
c) Hidden government spies - (spies monitoring who was saying what from
their offices in Mekelle, Addis Ababa, and the various Meles embassies around
the globe).
TPLF supporters (group a)
could rightly be addressed as TPLF cadres. Their devotion to the TPLF leadership
was too much one would always wonder if the real TPLF combatants had reached
such level of political "purity."
At first, my debut into
TigrayNet was like leaping from the frying pan into the fire. I suddenly found
myself in a compound owned by MLLT. It was shocking. When we used to live in
Ethiopia, we would always look up to those fellow Ethiopians living in America
and Europe, and who would help us by advocating for the interests of their
people. After all, model democracies are in the West! We thought they had
savored the taste of living in democratic societies, and would never tolerate
any mistreatment of their fellow people back home. What a hoax! Some members had
never changed for ages since TPLF left around the border with the Sudan. Though
physically here in the U.S., mentally, they were there, back in the wilderness
of Africa. It was an uphill battle to wake them up that TPLF was no more a rebel
organization but a government recognized by the U.N., and condemned by all.
The self-styled TPLF
supporters were posing as criminal investigators and were staring down anyone
who dared criticize TPLF bosses. The conflict with me took a different turn. I
was like a daring army unit encircled by a big enemy. But I'd positioned myself
inside a formidable fortress of facts that would render TPLF propaganda useless.
What I lost in Ethiopia, I found it in abundance here in America…writing with
a purpose to change minds that have been the target of years of TPLF/EPLF
disinformation project.
The greatest U-turn in the
psyche of those who were TPLF sympathizers came in when Meles made an
unforgettable speech before Eritrean fighter jests knocked out an elementary
school in Mekelle, and led to an all-out war.
To quell overriding public
fears that Eritrean invasion of Ethiopia was imminent, Meles made an extensive
interview with one magazine, and said: "The history we have with Eritrea is
written with blood and a golden ink. The heresy that is spinning out of the
public rumor mill is nothing but a cheap talk of the liquor house." (Asser,
a TPLF-owned, Tigrinya-language publication. March 1998).
That infamous speech followed
a month later by the cluster-bombing of Ayder school children and parents as
well as civilians in Adigrat town was perhaps the single most powerful
historical incident that changed Tigrainet members from passive onlookers to
ardent, anti-TPLF Ethiopian patriots.
Those who have been denouncing
the Meles/TPLF clique as a danger to our country suddenly found ourselves
welcoming a long line of a newly-arriving opposition delegates. Lions came out
of their dens roaring. From writers, we became readers. It was a joyous moment
when we began to reap what we had harvested. The conflict, despite its horrors,
truly came in as a blessing for Ethiopian Unity. All Ethiopians roared at once,
and the episode was summed up by one western diplomat, who put it as: "Isaias
of Eritrea united Ethiopians in two weeks what Meles could not do in 7
years." Once a taboo at TigrayNet, opposition to TPLF leaders became
mainstream thought by 1999, one year into the conflict.
From TPLF critic to Embassy
PR
Although I had received what
could be construed as a "threat" from one TPLF functionary in DC a
year earlier, the silence of the embassies during the war with Eritrea became a
serious issue that had to be solved with greater expediency.
Calling me from his office in
DC, the TPLF guy had told me that what I was writing was being documented, and
in fact, by then my postings had fattened to the size of a book. He said one guy
in his office was deployed. and his job was "YOU!" "He follows up
what you are doing daily." In other words, what he was telling me was that
the Sword of Damocles was hanging over my head, and I better shut up.
I thanked him for doing a
great service because who knows one day I may go into the office, and ask them
if they could hand me back what I've been writing for years. Telephone threats
have no meaning other than being a strong basis for a lawsuit.
Anyway, when embassies could
not do their duties, TigrayNet members suggested that a vacant job public notice
that was posted at the Ethiopian Embassy in DC was the right job for me, and the
house had to endorse the candidate to do the Public Relations work that may help
stem Eritrea's unstoppable disinformation barrage. This is to underscore the
point that those of us who were underdogs one or two years earlier had already
won the trust of the majority of Ethiopians at the forum, and were being fancied
for "responsible positions."
With the exception of a
minority, who the tide of opposition was threatening them with being swept away,
and who would later reveal to us as the brothers-in-law of the either Sebhat
Negas or Alemseged Gebre-Amlaks, my name was endorsed as a TigrayNet choice who
must work in the Embassy in DC.
I thanked those who placed
their trust in me. However, I reminded the forum that what Ethiopia made the
victim of Eritrea's round-the-clock war propaganda assault was not a lack of
distinguished Ethiopian scholars and polished diplomats of international
caliber, but the falling of the Ethiopian political turf into the hands of the
country's enemies. No body was sent to DC. What for? How the war ended…and how
the five border-commission jurists, no matter their reputation, and for whom
they would tilt the balance, and how Ethiopia lost her territories was but a
foregone conclusion for anyone who had paid a critical attention to the
root-causes of Ethiopia's woes.
The Split of TPLF, the
Birth of Solidarity, and the Re-emergence of TPLF Brothers-in-Law as Heirs of A
Lost Power
There is no doubt that the
split of TPLF was one of the factors that contributed to the birth of the
Tigrian International Solidarity for Democracy and Justice (Solidarity) in
August 2001. However, given the decade-long high-handed TPLF rule in Ethiopia,
Solidarity was long overdue in coming. After the split, Solidarity found
conditions conducive to fostering a democratic culture among Tigrians in the
Diaspora. More matured Tigrians that had abandoned sharing their thoughts for
several years emerged from different corners. In the meantime, Meles, who was
shocked by the newly-found opposition spirit among Tigrians, was sending his
high-level cadres to American cities to, as usual, instill fear, and create
division.
Here in Seattle, we welcomed
our cadre's share in the name of Assefa Mamo. Assefa began to talk but slipped
into the mistreating and vilifying…the long culture of TPLF…to hush us into
silence as though we were part of a community in freedom-denied Tigrai.
He did not know that times
have changed, and would be castigated in a way he has never seen before. Some
resentful voices told him his offensive remarks were a measure of his party's
vulgar culture that should have long been torn asunder. I had a chance to air my
thoughts as well. I cleared my throat, and raised my voice: "Ato Assefa,
today you are no more rebels; you are no more freedom fighters. For over 11
years now, you have turned into functionaries of a regime that has destroyed the
lives of our people. You are part of a tyranny. You are responsible for whatever
crimes your government has committed. The Ethiopian people would take you to
justice or bring justice to you the way they did to the your predecessors. The
Derg were ordinary citizens before they assumed power, and became human wolves.
You are no more different than them. The Ethiopian people will deal with you the
way they dealt with the Derg as tolerating slavery has never been part of their
glorious history."
That should have served Assefa
Mamo a wake-up call from his years of indulgence in years of lunacy. A
bewildered Assefa later confided in one of his 'friends', in Tigrinya, "Hamedan'u
Lbele Defaryu?" (What a fearless menace?) Meles cadres were cut down to
size in various cities. They encountered more voices who sent cold chills down
their spine. The world of TPLF was turned up side down.
Yes, courage comes when you
know your enemy inside out, when you know criminals have held your country
hostage, and as criminals are deep down cowards, because they always approach
you from a guilty-ridden conscience, they lose. Even if they do not read the
public mind, their hunch tells them: "Anything that is morally wrong cannot
be politically right." In public, they may display a false look of being
bold, but deep down, God knows how trembling knees are supporting the swollen
bellies.
The defeat for TPLF was the
triumph for Solidarity. We witnessed Solidarity's seasoned political activists
from various corners: scholars, professionals, former and current political
activists from TPLF, EDU, EPRP, TAND. In addition to spreading civic education,
Solidarity saw a necessity in destroying the Berlin Wall Melesites had built for
years in the minds of Tigrians. The yawning rift of animosity the Meles/TPLF
clique created between Tigrians and other fellow Ethiopians began to shrink as
Solidarity hosted a series of important seminars, and co-hosted Ethiopian
rallies such as in New York City during the Border Commission ruling.
Solidarity's mission remains to help nurture democratic values and the respect
of human rights in Ethiopia. Though Solidarity was created to voice concern over
the dismal political, economic, and geopolitical conditions of Ethiopia,
brothers-in-law were not all that happy. It should be clear that as proponents
of democratic pluralism, there is nothing wrong in the creation of a TPLF that
we are told will challenge the Meles-controlled TPLF in power.
However, this scenario
raises three questions:
a) Do we have to put
the cart before the horse, and fight for the needs of the few TPLF dissidents
whose secrets of conspiracy with Meles are now being exposed by none other than
veteran TPLF fighters, or;
b) Put the horse before
the cart, and fight for the freedom of the people of Ethiopia, empower them with
their God-given rights so that they would be the masters of their own destiny?
c) Meles has lost power
in Tigrai. Worse still, he has seen the Ethiopian Democratic Party (EDP)
welcoming Tigrai, and Tigrai welcoming EDP. EDP taking roots in Tigrai means
teaming up with local democratic forces - many of them could be the tens of
thousands of former TPLF members. The future triumph of EDP in Tigrai means
Tigrai is coming out of the ethnic enclosure Meles and his slaves built since
Day One. Rather than allowing the EDP Meles cannot control by any means, it is
better for Meles to keep Tigrai under slavery by allowing an
"opposition" party that would hatch out of TPLF under Tewolde-Gebru
Asrat. So was Alemseged's visit to the U.S. genuine, or something struck with
Mr. Meles? Afterall both of them were politburo gurus!
Sadly, when the
brothers-in-law were confronted with such logical reasoning, they forgot that
they had told us they would tolerate everything provided we send the 9 guys back
to power. But when we tested their nerves, they went berserk, and resorted to
disinformation.
TPLF disinformation
Manifestations in our life
a) Leading war-front
combatants are rounded up from Zalambesa, and tortured at Tatek Military Camp
secretly (Fact). The gossip that is fanned into a wildfire by the cadres
would be: "400 army members were found of being AIDS patients. The
government took the measure of quarantining them because the soldiers were a
risk to the public."(Disinformation). And the unsuspecting public
that only knows there is an AIDS hospice at Tatek but has no clue about the
crime behind the arrest of the soldiers, would give its own verdict: "That
is why they took them to Tatek. It is good for the soldiers that they may find a
cure to the killer disease."
b) A Teachers union
president challenges the nation's educational policy (fact), but the government
side would broadcast: "Dr. Taye was found conspiring to overthrow the
government by force, and is sentenced to 15 years in prison."
(Disinformation). There is no independent judiciary to expose that crime, nor a
free press that would carry out its own investigations, and expose the fallacy
of the brutal government measure. Packed with malice, TPLF marches forward with
its crime.
c) Meles is charged
with betraying a nation (fact), and the sentence is "Siye and Bitew Belay
are sentenced to solitary confinement for "corruption."
(Disinformation). Here it is worth noting that TPLF used its own tactics to
destroy those who laid down the foundation stone and built the evil organization
for many years.
d) A top commander from
the war front is suddenly found murdered in his home in Addis Ababa (fact). TPLF
would write its own "news": "Colonel Berhe was shot dead by his
wife, who also killed herself." (Disinformation).
If we are not aware to what
extent has Meles/TPLF used disinformation as a lethal weapon, it would remain
difficult for us to emerge from the political quagmire we have lived for over a
decade now. A series of neutral looking web sites, newspapers, or even
"scholars" have been and are being used to sow the seeds of division,
fear and frustration among the justice-yearning wider Ethiopian communities.
Given the political intrigues
of TPLF, and its mastery at the use of the campaign of disinformation, outright
blackmail and character assassination, Bisrat Amare, a 17-year TPLF veteran, and
former TPLF senior security chief warns: "In the history of the few TPLF
leaders - both those in power and those purged - there has never been any
transparency within their closed circle. They rejoiced in destroying the lives
of others. When, after 10 years of extravagant life in power, suddenly slipped
into a power struggle, they began slinging mud balls at each other. As to my
observation, TPLF leaders would go into the annals of Ethiopian history as
criminal thugs who did a great harm Ethiopia and Ethiopians."
No hard feeling to
brothers-in-law, but the wheels of history should keep rolling forward, and not
backward.
Back to main page!
|