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particularly against article 39 of the constitution,
which allows national groups
to secede:
“EDUP strongly opposes the “right of nations, nationalities and peoples
to self-determination including secession”. EDUP advocates that Ethiopia
should be a unitary state with a strong central government and that the
various nationalities should have representation at the centre. ”
(Interview, EDUP’s Guish Gebre Selassie, Mekelle May 2000)
“The All Amhara People’s Organisation does not accept the 1995
Ethiopian
Constitution as a whole, and particularly not Article 39, sub-
article 1.[…] A weakness of the constitution, as legal and political experts
have commented on, is that a country must not include in its constitution
an article that instigates people to secede. Ethiopia is a nation of one
people of different ethnic groups. [The fact that] people [belong to]
different ethnicities does not mean that they are different countries. […]
So AAPO’s view on Article 39 is that it disintegrates
the Ethiopian state
into different mini states and one people into many people.” (AAPO’s
written response to questions that I submitted to the vice-chairman Ali
Idris, Addis Ababa May 2000)
In order to understand these statements, it is important to take into account
that the AAPO and particularly the EDUP are supported by representatives of
the former Amhara elite and the old nobility. Both parties stress the idea of
Ethiopian unity
and see Ethiopia as one nation, despite its various ethnic
groups. But despite the AAPO’s stress on “Ethiopianness”, people tend to see
the party as advocates of the Amhara group, and not of Ethiopians in general.
It is to be expected that these parties would be hostile to any kind of political
reconstruction, particularly a reconstruction which attempts to dismantle the
centralised
state government, which has been the power base of these groups
for centuries. But this does not imply that the EDUP and the AAPO’s critique of
the EPRDF’s federal project should be disqualified. It indicates rather that it is
less likely to get constructive criticism from these parties. Since a large part of
the parties’ electorate have vested interest in maintaining the state as it was
before
the regime change, they would defend the restoration of the centralised
state rather than suggest reform.
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