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Misplaced outrage
By Fekade Shewakena ǀ Feb. 4, 2010
The harrowing experience of Ethiopians on the doomed
Ethiopian airliner in the Mediterranean Sea last week, and the racist ways in
which grieving Ethiopians who were trying to know the fate of their fellow
Ethiopians on the plane were treated in Lebanon, could have been used to raise
important questions and start a more important discussion. Sadly, it is being
deflected in a useless direction – complaint about racism, anger at the wrong
parties and a cyber-war or words with the wrong culprit. Frankly, I find the
self deceptiveness and empty bravado and hypocrisy of my fellow Ethiopians more
maddening than the racism and degrading treatment of Ethiopians in Lebanon which
we know exists in the region all along. It is good to be angry and not
unreasonable at all. But it will be a foolish exercise if we don’t know where
to direct our rage to. In my view, this anger has to be directed primarily at
ourselves for letting this to happen to us. If we think that this experience
is an isolated case then we have closed our eyes. What has gone so wrong with
our generation, the sons and daughters of a proud people, who throughout the
ages fought hard to keep their pride and dignity and never let anybody look down
on them? What the damn went wrong with us!
As we often do in many cases, we are taking our eyes off the
big picture, completely failing to raise and answer the most important questions
that we need to ask ourselves about our country and ourselves as a people. How
and why have we ended up being subjected to this kind of humiliation and racism
and how are we going to end it? How is it that the beacon of hope and freedom
of black people around the world ended up making an industry out of exporting
their beautiful children to slave labor in the Middle East at the turn of a new
century?
To those of you who seemed to be angry by the racist
treatment of our fellow Ethiopians, I have some more questions for you. What
were you expecting a bunch of maidservants who live and work much like medieval
slaves were going to be treated like in a country where most people only know
them as domestic slaves? Do we expect them to read our history before they buy
their slaves and be forced to care that we Ethiopians are a proud and dignified
people with a along and proud history of not allowing ourselves to be looked
down upon by anybody? Was this the only incident and instance that Ethiopians
have been treated in inhuman, degrading and racist ways around the Middle East?
Have you asked why even our Airline, Ethiopian, the island of modernity in
Ethiopia that we are all proud of for its world class service and record, and
frankly, one that dwarfs most Middle East carriers in every respect, couldn’t
dodge the racism. Have you seen how minutes after the accident and before any
evidence was available, the transport minister of Lebanon and their journalists
blamed the accident on the pilot. And mind you, this is a terrorist infested
area and the first eye witnesses were saying the plane went down in flames.
You see, after all, Ethiopian Airlines is owned and operated by a country and
people that dump their beautiful children as slaves in their countries to work
seven days a week in the most dehumanizing conditions. So, what in the world
have we expected them to treat us like other than in indignity?
There are many more questions that any Ethiopian worthy of
self respect should ask. How many times have you heard epidemic levels of
Ethiopian suicides in the Middle East? How many of us have heard Ethiopian girls
throwing themselves from the top floors of buildings to end their misery in
these countries? Haven’t you heard that the Ethiopian embassies in these
countries routinely tell our slave sisters to go to hell whenever they ask for
help? How many times have we heard that boatloads of Ethiopians travelling from
Bosaso in Somaliland sink in the Red Sea while attempting to reach the cost of
the Arabian Peninsula where they were treated like animals? Have you wondered
why hours after the first boat capsized with all Ethiopians on board others keep
riding the next ramshackle boat taking a chance on their lives? Haven’t we seen
pictures of Ethiopian women beaten, sometimes even burnt by their masters in
this region? How often have we heard women thrown into jail, or their passports
confiscated and thrown out on the streets for voulchers to play with them? Have
we not heard that many are often denied their slave salaries by their masters
and thrown out on streets? Have we not heard that many dead Ethiopians are
simply buried in the sands and vanish like the wind? How many of us have heard
Ethiopian maidservants calling the voice of America or Ethiopian community radio
stations in the West to tell us harrowing stories of mistreatment and racism
pleading with us for help? An Ethiopian airline crew member I met recently told
me that it is not unusual to travel from the Middle East to Addis Ababa with
many young Ethiopian girls who suffer from extreme forms of depression and
trauma, some who lost their minds and behave strangely. Yes, there is some
awful thing happening to us as a people and we seem to be lost. If there is
anything strange in this particular case, it is our attempt to treat it as an
isolated case, a self deception that borders on stupidity. Rather than blame
ourselves for letting this happen to us we tend to project it elsewhere.
The first job of any government anywhere is to protect its
citizens, so we hear in nearly all countries. In that case we have no
government. We have allowed robber barons to rule over us. The anger should be
directed at us for letting our country be run by a slave trading oligarchy – the
government of Meles Zenawi that turned selling young Ethiopian girls in the
Middle East into a huge industry. I hear that this slave trade is now becoming
one of Meles Zenawi’s most important hard currency earning businesses in the
country.
From time to time I meet some pigs who feed at Meles Zenawi’s
trough. They tell me something I already know very well. They tell me the
economy in Ethiopia is growing. Nobody is contesting that other than the
inflated statistics cooked-up in Meles Zenawi’s office for propaganda purposes.
This is not even a secret. I have heard it from people who work on analyzing
and reporting the data. These pigs, like any pig, hardly understand the
meaning of economic growth and development as it relates to social welfare and
how to measure it and account for the source of the growth and who benefits out
of it. If they see buildings and asphalted roads and bridges and a few people
in Addis Ababa and elsewhere striking it rich overnight, that’s it- economy is
growing. They seem to have very little clue that the TPLF is expected to do
something for a living or that it is supposed to show us something in the form
of growth for being one of the world’s most important destinations of billions
of dollars of foreign aid in the world and the huge remittance from millions of
Ethiopians abroad, including from the slave labor its sells to the Middle East
and the massive number of children it sells for adoption? By the way, have you
stood by at major terminals of Ethiopian Airlines? The most common scene is a
parade of people carrying small Ethiopian children. I once saw an old Ethiopian
woman crying profusely at the site of the little children at Dulles Airport in
Virginia. These adopters say they pay a fortune to Mr. Zenawi’s government to
get these children. Did you hear that the government of Australia saw the
obscenity and was forced to stop it recently? Is this a proud thing to do for
a people and a country which boasts “unheard of” economic growth?
The naming of the Abay Bridge by Meles Zenawi is an
interesting illustration of how Meles himself and the pigs at his trough
perceive economic growth and development. According to the local media reported
at the time of the inauguration of the bridge, Meles Zenawi named the bridge “Hidasse
dildiy” – meaning the “bridge of renaissance”. What makes this interesting
is that the construction of the bridge was 100% funded by the Japanese
government! Silu semta doro tanqa motech!
Whatever its source, what is economic growth or development
anyway if it is not meant to improve the life of people? Why is it that our
loss of pride and dignity and humiliation so positively correlated with this
reported growth? I mean, how is it that the more the country grows
economically, the more people live in humiliation and desperation, and the
number of the poor increases exponentially? Who is getting rich any way? What
the pigs and the TPLF officials don’t tell you is that the number of the
absolute poor and the perennially aid dependent population more than tripled
since TPLF arrived in Addis Ababa almost two decades ago? Beggary is no more a
humiliating exercise in Ethiopia. It used to be. If you happen to meet any of
these pigs, or any of the government officials who brag about economic growth in
Ethiopia, ask them to show you what the country manufactures and sells to the
world other than good old coffee and other agricultural products that we began
exporting a century ago. Ask them how many extractive industries like mining are
operating.
And lo and behold, a slavery of epic proportions is hovering
at your door steps. If you are not redirecting the anger and rise up to make
changes as any people worthy of dignity and respect must do now, wait until the
Middle East tycoons begin operating the land Meles Zenawi is selling them at
bargain prices now. If you think the current land grab in Ethiopia is
traditional investment and not colonialism, just wait until your relatives begin
working in the Egyptian, Arabian and Asian plantations. I am not sure if it
will be too late by then. If you are angry that you are despised outside of your
country, you will see what it looks like when they come home to take the land
our fathers fought hard to leave for us. But when are we going to say enough is
enough! Ehhhhhhhhhhh!
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Fekadeshewakena@yahoo.com
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