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The process of drafting a new constitution started in 1983, with the
establishment of the Institute for the Study of the Ethiopian Nationalities. This
institute should be providing the Ethiopian government with more knowledge
about the country’s national groups and projecting the process of constitutional
drafting. It did obtain some information about the nationalities, but this was of
little practical use in the drafting process. A preliminary draft was presented in
1984, but this was later amended by higher authorities. The Constitutional
Commission established in 1986 was serving to give the impression that the
drafting had a nation-wide participation, but it was otherwise nothing more
than a “rubber stamp body” and was totally dominated by Mengistu’s WPE
(Clapham 1988:92).
Although the new constitution did not lead to any fundamental change in
the way Ethiopia was ruled, the document provided for some administrative
rearrangements. During Haile Selassie, there was a uniform hierarchy of
administrative units. The country was divided into 14 regions (
kifle hager), and
these were subdivided into 102 provinces (
awraja) and at the lowest level, 600
districts (
woreda). All the regional leaders were appointed by the centre. With
the Derg’s new constitution, five out of thirty administrative regions, including
Eritrea, Dire Dawa, Tigray, Assab and Ogaden, gained the status as
autonomous (Ofcansky and Berry 1991: 223). But the powers enjoyed by these
regions were strictly delegated and did not have any constitutional guarantees.
Despite the stress on “the realisation of autonomy”, the constitution stated
unequivocally that Ethiopia “is a unitary state in which all the nationalities live
in equality” (Harbeson 1988: 190). Although the regional administrators that
were appointed originated from the regions themselves, the new administration
as a whole remained centralised due to the fact that the bureaucracy in the
regions was still centrally assigned. The regional parliaments were
subordinated to the national parliament (
shengo) (Clapham 1988: 204). The
1987 constitution formally ended the military rule, but the power of the WPE,
which operated according to the Leninist principle of “democratic centralism”,
remained unchallenged by the constitutional provisions (Harbeson 1988:191).
The transfer of power from military to civilian rule was therefore “cosmetic”,
because the people on the top remained largely in the same positions and
maintained the same amount of power after the constitutional change
(Clapham 1998: 92). Formally, some of the regions obtained autonomy, but
the national groups became gradually more suppressed and less empowered
than before.
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