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regions extensive self-determination rights, but these are in most cases defined
outside the constitutional framework.
Multiethnic federations like Spain and Canada have chosen to give
concessions to ethnically based regions, but these concessions are basically
defined elsewhere than in the constitution. This has made the arrangements
more flexible and it has thus been possible to adopt
them gradually to meet the
demands of the current political situation. A large change in the Canadian
political system, which took place when political forces in Québec sought to
secede from the Canadian federation, occurred outside of the formal
constitutional amending process. Parti Québecois governments asserted
Québec's right to declare itself to be a sovereign country if such a move were
approved in a referendum. The 1995 draft sovereignty bill was the legal
framework that would have been used to realise independence if the
government had won the referendum that year (Hechter 2000:196).
The Ethiopian constitution could be compared with the Spanish constitution
of 1978 (Brietzke 1995:37). Like Ethiopia, Spain has been facing the problems
of violent secession movements and an undemocratic past.
In order to solve
these problems, the Spanish government wanted to introduce some forms of
regional autonomy, but chose not to define member states and state boundaries
in any fixed way or to grant the contentious regions the right to secession
through constitutional provisions (Colomer 1998). Instead, the so-called
“autonomous communities” gained gradually broader powers of self-
government, more than what is common in other federal states, through
bargaining between political parties in the regional and central governments.
Yet the most important powers, such as military and economic security are
reserved to the central government. The autonomous
communities have been
granted different kinds of self-determination rights, all according to the
outcome of the bargaining. This asymmetry has some similarities to the
arrangements of the new Russian federation. In the first Russian federal treaty
of 1992, the various ethnorepublics were given the right to secede, which also
was a theoretically available option during the Soviet Union era, but this was
abandoned in a revised treaty of 1993. Instead, the federation entered a “post-
constitutional process” where the centre began to negotiate a series of bilateral
power sharing treaties with each ethnorepublic (Smith 2000: 350)
The Canadian, Spanish and Russian constitutions have thus chosen to
exclude the right of secession, but have in practice
granted quite extensive
“remedies for self-determination” through various areas of self-government for
the constituent units. The Ethiopian federation has to a large extent chosen to
do the opposite: asserting the most extreme right to self-determination, the
right to secession, at the same time as the powers given to the regions in the
administration of daily affairs are quite scanty in a comparative perspective.
Land and natural resources in the member states, for instance, are administered
under federal law. The regional governments have to follow national standards
in the conduct of day-to-day affairs. This means in practice that the five-year
plans adopted by the EPRDF in the House of Peoples’ Representatives have to
be followed by the regional governments in every aspect of administration. The
regional revenue sources are few and insubstantial
compared to those that are
left for the federal level, which means that the regional governments have to