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indirectly through affiliate parties. These largely centralised party structures
appear to contradict with the devolved power structures of a federal system. In
the following sections, I will try to substantiate the argument that the party
structure in Ethiopia undermines the federal division of power and
subordinates the regional governments to the central government. Firstly, the
network of EPRDF members and affiliate parties in the country will be
described. Secondly, I will explore the inner party
structures of the ruling party,
which essentially follow a centralised pattern. Thirdly, I will describe methods
how the EPRDF is controlling regional affairs.
EPRDF and its allies in the regional administrations
According to the formal structures of the political parties in Ethiopia, it seems
like party power in the country does not appear to undermine or endanger the
federal division of power. The ERPDF coalition is in power on the federal level,
and
regionally based parties, either members of ERPDF or independent, run the
regional governments. On the surface, this structure might seem similar to the
Canadian party structure, where the central government is controlled by parties
with
national bases, while the regions are governed by regionally based parties
without a national base. This structure enhances a decentralised federal system,
where the central government is unable to impose centrally decided policies in
the regions without negotiating and consulting with the regional parties.
But a closer look reveals the party structures in Ethiopia are not as
decentralised as the Canadian ones. The four member parties of the EPRDF,
the Oromo People’s Democratic Organisation (OPDO), the Amhara National
Democratic Movement (ANDM), the Southern Ethiopian People’s
Democratic
Front (SEPDF) and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) operate only in
the four regions of Oromiya, Amhara, SNNPRS and Tigray respectively.
Although they formally are equal coalition partners on national level, the TPLF
is the senior. It was the creator of the other parties and is the strongest political
organisation. A member of the TPLF central committee explains the TPLF’s
dominance like this: “It is natural that the TPLF is the strongest political force
and that its leader Meles Zenawi is the national leader.
TPLF has many senior
cadres, well-trained and experienced fighters, and in the beginning the largest
numbers of members in the EPRDF coalition” (Interview Gebre’ab Barnabas,
August 2000).
Figure 6.2 ERPDF party structures
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