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Zmeselo
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Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Zmeselo » 31 Oct 2023, 17:38



CONFLICT & CRISIS
Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

BY MOHAMED KHEIR OMER

https://africanarguments.org/2023/10/wi ... ian-state/

OCTOBER 31, 2023

Ethiopian PM Abiy Ahmed is grappling with a new rebellion in Amhara, simmering conflicts in several regions and a major economic crisis. His response? To take careful aim at his old pal, Isaias Afwerki.


Graphic courtesy: Zephania Alemu

The Amhara are not only the second largest ethnic group in Ethiopia comprising about 28 % (30 million) of the population; but their historical, cultural, religious, political, and economic significance makes them an integral part of the Ethiopian socio-political fabric. They occupy an important fertile geographical region; and for historical reasons, they are spread out more widely around the country than any other ethnic group. They have played a dominant role in the development of the country. Up to 1991 when the Derg fell https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_of_the_Derg_regime and for some time after, they were overrepresented in the educational sector, civil service and the military at the national level and within state structures. Firearms have been in widespread use since the 16th century; militancy has long been a sine qua non of politics and ambition in the Amhara region. As such – and unlike the Tigray war and the insurgency in Oromia – the conflict in Amhara could have devastating consequences in unravelling the country.

Abiy’s main support base

Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s drew the bulk of his support from the Amhara during his first years in office. During the Tigray war, Abiy mobilized their intellectual, military, religious, artistic, linguistic, and economic resources, coupled with a vibrant media in the diaspora. Responding to a call by Abiy, militias were trained and organised with the Amhara state special forces. For many Amhara intellectuals, Abiy Ahmed was a messianic figure sent to dismantle their bitter enemy, the TPLF. https://www.crisisgroup.org/africa/horn ... pias-north

The Amhara hoped to regain territory they believe was unjustly seized from them during the 27-year TPLF-dominated EPRDF rule. https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2018 ... ling-eprdf

Amhara militias were also used https://www.facebook.com/OromoFederalis ... 4772800496 in the war against the Oromo Liberation Front, aggravating the potential conflict between the two most populous regions. Both the Amhara and the Eritrean regime that supports them felt betrayed by Abiy, after Abiy signed a peace agreement https://igad.int/wp-content/uploads/202 ... t-here.pdf with the TPLF in November 2022 and started disarming https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/et ... 023-04-06/ the Amhara forces. Both Amhara and Eritrea want the TPLF finished off. The Amhara militia are determined not to give up the regions – called Wolkait-Tegede by Amhara https://www.hornafricainsight.org/post/ ... on-by-tplf and western Tigray by the Tigrayans – they had retaken during the Tigray war. If the TPLF regains that region, it will gain access to Sudan, a scenario which the Eritreans regard as threatening.

The Eritrean connection

The involvement of the Eritrean regime in the Amhara region conflict echoes wider regional tensions. Eritrea’s Isaias Afwerki allegedly backs the Amhara with training and arms, according to internal military sources. Relations between Eritrea and Ethiopia rapidly deteriorating, Abiy’s jingoism on the issue of Ethiopia’s right to a seaport may well lead to open warfare.

Abiy recently told Ethiopia’s parliament that the country has legitimate rights to the Red Sea.


The Eritrean government gave a muted response. https://shabait.com/2023/10/16/press-release-93/

The antagonistic rhetoric between the Eritrean and Ethiopian regimes has been on the rise in the past two years. Behind closed doors, Abiy is alleged to have said that he will crush the Eritrean regime and bring back not only the Port of Assab but the whole of Eritrea into Ethiopia. Ethiopia’s chief of staff is reported to have said,
We need to designate Eritrea as an enemy.
An Eritrean Facebook https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=310837884980504 page associated with Eritrea’s intelligence has stated that Abiy is leading a government that is on the verge of collapse, with a weak army that is unable to fight the FANO militants, and a country that is eating itself like a cancer. Getachew Reda, one of the leaders of the TPLF had predicted in 2021 https://x.com/mkheirom/status/1713490807729041490?s=20 that Abiy’s next war will be with Eritrea. The Amhara conflict could likely result in a new war between the two countries, with destructive consequences for the whole region.

Within the context of the Sudan conflict, Isaias is openly supporting the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) led by Al Burhan over the Rapid Support Forces (SAF) led by Hemedti. He invited 41 representatives from the Democratic Bloc of the Forces of Freedom and Change, a splinter faction that supports Al Burhan, in mid-September, to witness the signing of the Asmara Declaration. https://sudantribune.net/article277241/

Close relations with Sudan’s army give Isaias leverage in assisting the Amhara, even through Sudan’s border. Abiy is supported by the UAE https://www.fanabc.com/english/pm-abiy- ... nger-ties/ and according to informed sources, he supports the RSF.

Genuine grievances

Fighting in the Amhara region is the culmination of grievances dating back to 1991. The Amhara have genuine grievances against the state. Hundreds of Amhara have been killed, injured, and displaced, mostly in Oromia https://www.hrw.org/news/2022/08/31/eth ... nprotected and Benishangul Gumuz https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/press ... inorities/ Regional State, since Abiy took power. Since the military confrontation between the Amhara militia (Fano) erupted in April this year, hundreds of Amhara have been arrested indiscriminately including National and regional MPs for suspicion that they support the militants. Even before the clashes, Amhara had been banned https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-66496137 from entering Addis Ababa. Amhara regard the Oromo as their major competitor for power and resources, replacing the TPLF, and view the current conflict as a confrontation with an Oromo-dominated state, even though the regime practises widespread repression in Oromia and suffers general hostility among Oromo.

From its inception, the Amhara have been wary of ethnic federalism, weakening their political, economic, and cultural hegemony, as they are treated like second-class citizens in non-Amhara regional states. Since the promulgation of the 1995 federal constitution that codified ethnic federalism, the Amhara have struggled to come to terms with their loss of historical privileges. Ironically it was Walelegn Mekonen, https://www.marxists.org/history/erol/e ... lities.pdf an Amhara, university student leader, who was among the first to write about nations and nationalities in Ethiopia, The Amhara feel they lost many privileges after 1991.

A region at war with itself


Ethiopia PM, Abiy Ahmed Ali at a military passing-out parade in August 2023. Eritrean intelligence considers his army “too weak…to fight the FANO militants”. Photo courtesy: Abiy Ahmed Ali.

Since Abiy assumed power in 2018, the Amhara region stands out from all other regional states as the only one in which several high-ranking officials were killed, including a president, an Amhara PP chief, a security chief, police commissioners, at least four Bureau chiefs, several district administrators, and several junior officials. If the conflict continues, those killings may target senior national officials. The killings continue unabated.

The region is also accused of orchestrating a coup https://www.voanews.com/a/africa_ethiop ... 70475.html against its government. The region has had six presidents in five years; Abiy frequently reshuffles them, deploying those he does not trust to federal institutions outside Amhara, replacing them with loyalists. Many Amhara see this as a deliberate strategy https://africanarguments.org/2023/08/ho ... e-surface/ to prevent strong Amhara leadership capable of addressing people’s needs and challenging the Oromo regional Prosperity Party.

Economic consequences

The previous civil war in Tigray and the bordering states cost the country $28.7bn. https://www.ft.com/content/33a91728-c23 ... ebb4dc506e

The Amhara region is also a popular tourist attraction area and accounts for 22% https://addisstandard.com/news-recent-c ... industries. of the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The losses incurred due to the recent conflict in the region is estimated at 2.5 billion birr ($ 45 million). https://addisstandard.com/news-recent-c ... industries.

Flower, vegetable, and fruit cultivation and marketing were the most hard-hit investments. In the fiscal year just ended, the regional government invested 464 million birr ($ 8,4 million) https://www.facebook.com/AmharaCommunic ... YZjaeKXQ6l in revitalizing defunct industries. Those investments may be at risk. Amhara region is also one of the major breadbaskets of the country. It produces 39% of the stable crop, Teff. https://agricultureandfoodsecurity.biom ... 21-00329-2

With WFP suspension of food aid in the country due to food diversion, and with people dying of hunger in Tigray and other areas, the conflict will further jeopardize food security.

The Fano

The Fano, the Amhara militia fighting the government are no match for the Ethiopian army. They lack a central command structure, and are poorly armed, even though Eritrea allegedly supports and trains them. They committed crimes https://www.state.gov/war-crimes-crimes ... -ethiopia/ against humanity in Tigray.

However, they are popular in the region. Some Amhara may not see them as their representative, but all are unified in their grievances against the state. The Fano have withdrawn from the big cities they occupied, not through fighting but by defection of their supporters in the regional government, early in the fighting. However, clashes continue in the outskirts of towns and countryside and regularly ambush federal troops.

Urgent need for peace

The region has a high number of firearms, and a culture and history of militancy, and is suitable for guerilla warfare. With Amarigna the country’s lingua franca, prominent artists promoting the Amhara cause, Amhara federal officials leaking state secrets, a well-organised diaspora financing the rebellion, and Eritrea’s alleged involvement, PM Abiy is confronted with a formidable new enemy. It is also unclear how long the large number of Amhara army officials and soldiers in the ENDF, the national army, will continue to kill their kinsmen. Added to these threats, the risk of escalating Amhara-Oromo tensions gives the conflict a major destabilising effect on the Ethiopian state. It does not help that the Abiy government is struggling to manage an economic poly-crisis: the losses incurred from the Tigray war, the the lingering undertow of COVID and the global economic recession. There is an urgent need to resolve this conflict peacefully. As the Forum for Social Studies in Ethiopia presented three possible scenarios https://www.fssethiopia.org/download/qu ... dy-report/ for the country, the worst being the disintegration of the country into separate units. It is not beyond the realm of possibility.


_______


Mohamed Kheir Omer is an African-Norwegian researcher and writer based in Oslo, Norway. He is a former member of the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).

eritrea
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by eritrea » 31 Oct 2023, 18:14

Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38


Mohamed Kheir Omer is an African-Norwegian researcher and writer based in Oslo, Norway. He is a former member of the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).
Hmm........???

Zmeselo
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Zmeselo » 31 Oct 2023, 18:24

eritrea wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 18:14
Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38


Mohamed Kheir Omer is an African-Norwegian researcher and writer based in Oslo, Norway. He is a former member of the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).
Hmm........???

Za-Ilmaknun
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Za-Ilmaknun » 31 Oct 2023, 18:37

"The Fano, the Amhara militia fighting the government are no match for the Ethiopian army. They lack a central command structure, and are poorly armed, even though Eritrea allegedly supports and trains them. They committed crimes https://www.state.gov/war-crimes-crimes ... -ethiopia/ against humanity in Tigray." :mrgreen: He seems to have been injected with so much "truth". Interesting to see things from "their' angle.

Zmeselo
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Zmeselo » 31 Oct 2023, 20:03

This guy, is crazy!

To begin with, as an oromo, the Axumite kingdom doesn't concern him. He's a Kushite, not a Semite.

Secondly, he talks about it as if it was a century ago. That kingdom came to its end, in the 9th century. More than 1000 years ago.

Both Eritrea & Ethiopia, were constituted in the 1890's. Abissinia, conquered his people after the era of the princes (a chaotic era of small fiefdoms).





አማሮቼ፣

እቡይ አህመድ ለውሳኔ አቅልሎልናል። ጉዳዩ በቃል ጠባቂና በቃልአባይ፣ ልሙትልህ በሚልና በደምህ ልዋኝ በሚል መካከል ነው።

ጀርመኖች “መከራ ሲጋሩት ይቀላል” እንደሚሉ ለወደዱት ሟች ለጠላታቸው ደግሞ ኮሶ የሆኑት ኤርትራውያንም የእኛው እጣ ደርሷቸዋል። ቃል ጠባቂነታቸው በአሳዳጃቸው በአሉላ አባነጋም የተመሰከረላቸው ነው። አጋር ከሆንናቸው ጥብቅ አጋር እንደሚሆኑን የታመነ ነው።

በነገራችን ላይ ሁሉን አልፈን ቤተመንግሥት ስንደርስ አበሳችን ይጀምራል እንጂ አያልቅም። እናም አስተማማኝ አጋር ያኔ ነው ይበልጥ የሚያስፈልግ። አደራ ስንታመን ታምነን እንገኝ።






eritrea
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by eritrea » 31 Oct 2023, 20:43

Za-Ilmaknun wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 18:37
"The Fano, the Amhara militia fighting the government are no match for the Ethiopian army. They lack a central command structure, and are poorly armed, even though Eritrea allegedly supports and trains them. They committed crimes https://www.state.gov/war-crimes-crimes ... -ethiopia/ against humanity in Tigray." :mrgreen: He seems to have been injected with so much "truth". Interesting to see things from "their' angle.
Are you a wannabe Oromo Ugume or a blindfolded Oromo is the question that comes to mind at first. Nevertheless, the current Ethiopian government is taking every step that TPLF took when it came to power. By now, it is supposed to be well understood what the result of that step has become.

A cause and common goal is the central command structure that is enough to make wonder.

eritrea
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by eritrea » 31 Oct 2023, 21:04

Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38

CONFLICT & CRISIS

BY MOHAMED KHEIR OMER



The Eritrean connection

............The antagonistic rhetoric between the Eritrean and Ethiopian regimes has been on the rise in the past two years. Behind closed doors, Abiy is alleged to have said that he will crush the Eritrean regime and bring back not only the Port of Assab but the whole of Eritrea into Ethiopia. Ethiopia’s chief of staff is reported to have said,
We need to designate Eritrea as an enemy.
.........................

Within the context of the Sudan conflict, Isaias is openly supporting the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) led by Al Burhan over the Rapid Support Forces (SAF) led by Hemedti. He invited 41 representatives from the Democratic Bloc of the Forces of Freedom and Change, a splinter faction that supports Al Burhan, in mid-September, to witness the signing of the Asmara Declaration. https://sudantribune.net/article277241/

Close relations with Sudan’s army give Isaias leverage in assisting the Amhara, even through Sudan’s border. Abiy is supported by the UAE https://www.fanabc.com/english/pm-abiy- ... nger-ties/ and according to informed sources, he supports the RSF.
...............
He failed to mention his sources.

Right
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Right » 31 Oct 2023, 22:02

Z and Eris boys,
You will be better off to commit a fraction of your time on the dying banana republic of Eritrea than wasting your time 24/7 on Ethiopian issues.
That is the problem when you put all your survival in one Ethiopian basket.
Clowns.

Zmeselo
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Zmeselo » 31 Oct 2023, 22:42

You sound, hurt! :lol:

Right wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 22:02
Z and Eris boys,
You will be better off to commit a fraction of your time on the dying banana republic of Eritrea than wasting your time 24/7 on Ethiopian issues.
That is the problem when you put all your survival in one Ethiopian basket.
Clowns.

TesfaNews
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by TesfaNews » 31 Oct 2023, 22:44

ELF hates Amhara


Abdisa
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Abdisa » 31 Oct 2023, 23:14

Ethiopia’s estimated damages and losses in one year from November 2020 to December 2021 due to conflicts in 6 regions stands at 28.7billion dollars.
In a recent study that was launched on Monday June 12, 2023, courtesy of a collaboration done by the government, World Bank and development partners, a comprehensive assessment has been deduced on the inventory of damage losses resulting from the several conflicts across the country.


TPLF's overthrow happened outside the Neo-colonial powers knowledge, and in their attempt to reverse course and restore their full control over the country, they secretly armed the TPLF terror group and waged war against the Ethiopian people to further add to the country's debt burden. In other words, they inflict heavy damage on a country with weapons they provided to its weakest link, then they appear as debt collectors dictating their own terms and conditions to bring the country in to the fold. DEBT!
"In many ways, it is like a colonial war. The difference is, these days the Ethiopian people and their resources are controlled, not by viceroys or an occupying army, but by other more sophisticated means, of which the principal weapon is DEBT" (John Pilger)

Wedi
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Wedi » 01 Nov 2023, 02:26

Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 18:24
eritrea wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 18:14
Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38


Mohamed Kheir Omer is an African-Norwegian researcher and writer based in Oslo, Norway. He is a former member of the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).
Hmm........???
Hummmmm when did a somalian Mohamed Kheir Omer become a Norwegian? :lol: :lol: :lol:

Za-Ilmaknun
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Za-Ilmaknun » 01 Nov 2023, 11:33

eritrea wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 20:43
Za-Ilmaknun wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 18:37
"The Fano, the Amhara militia fighting the government are no match for the Ethiopian army. They lack a central command structure, and are poorly armed, even though Eritrea allegedly supports and trains them. They committed crimes https://www.state.gov/war-crimes-crimes ... -ethiopia/ against humanity in Tigray." :mrgreen: He seems to have been injected with so much "truth". Interesting to see things from "their' angle.
Are you a wannabe Oromo Ugume or a blindfolded Oromo is the question that comes to mind at first. Nevertheless, the current Ethiopian government is taking every step that TPLF took when it came to power. By now, it is supposed to be well understood what the result of that step has become.

A cause and common goal is the central command structure that is enough to make wonder.
You must be asking the writer those questions.. Clearly he said he is a former ELF member and a Norwegian :mrgreen: Or you are in a self induced comma :lol:

Misraq
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Misraq » 01 Nov 2023, 12:16

total garbage written by irrelevant an skunnni. he is still in the 1970s ideology.
eritrea wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 18:14
The Fano, the Amhara militia fighting the government are no match for the Ethiopian army. They lack a central command structure, and are poorly armed, even though Eritrea allegedly supports and trains them. They committed crimes https://www.state.gov/war-crimes-crimes ... -ethiopia/ against humanity in Tigray.
skunnis themselves need to oppose this old f^gget. he pointed his finger on Fano for war crime freeing Abiy Ahmed's Army and Eritrean Army. is that fair now? should we hit back with the same allegation? much of the engagement Fano had with TDF is in Amhara region, not in tigray.
Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38
Hundreds of Amhara have been killed, injured, and displaced, mostly in Oromia
Are you kidding? only hundreds? In one day alone OLF and OPDO forces killed 2,500 amhara civilians in wellega. minimizing our loss to hundreds only is disinguinity and dishonesty. The EU released its conservative estimate that says 10,000 but we all know it is upwards of 50,000 civilian deaths in Wellega. this all is by bullets together with starvation and deseases as a result of displacement
Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38
Since the military confrontation between the Amhara militia (Fano) erupted in April this year, hundreds of Amhara have been arrested indiscriminately including National and regional MPs for suspicion that they support the militants.
Well, the ekekam skunni seams to be in love with 'hundreds'. almost 40,000 amharas are in concentration comps in Addis and Oromia region. the f^gget skunnni surely has something with us and we take duly notes on that.

I won't waste my time pulling every factual and intentional errors in the article. but knowing that our undisputed fate is sealed through our will, nothing to worry on idiots misinformation that enamates from their fear that they will have to stand against us one day.

Zmeselo
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Re: Will the rebellion in Amhara unravel the Ethiopian state?

Post by Zmeselo » 01 Nov 2023, 12:40

Chill botraq, he's a former ELF who hates the Eritrean gov't & writing in some obscure periodical.

You can alledge whatever you like, but it won't stick. I brought it here, so emotional wrecks like you can at least learn what's being written about them behind their backs.

Is it the thanx I get?

The personal view of Eritreans here, is well known. If you haven't gotten that yet, I don't know what to tell you.


Misraq wrote:
01 Nov 2023, 12:16
total garbage written by irrelevant an skunnni. he is still in the 1970s ideology.
eritrea wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 18:14
The Fano, the Amhara militia fighting the government are no match for the Ethiopian army. They lack a central command structure, and are poorly armed, even though Eritrea allegedly supports and trains them. They committed crimes https://www.state.gov/war-crimes-crimes ... -ethiopia/ against humanity in Tigray.
skunnis themselves need to oppose this old f^gget. he pointed his finger on Fano for war crime freeing Abiy Ahmed's Army and Eritrean Army. is that fair now? should we hit back with the same allegation? much of the engagement Fano had with TDF is in Amhara region, not in tigray.
Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38
Hundreds of Amhara have been killed, injured, and displaced, mostly in Oromia
Are you kidding? only hundreds? In one day alone OLF and OPDO forces killed 2,500 amhara civilians in wellega. minimizing our loss to hundreds only is disinguinity and dishonesty. The EU released its conservative estimate that says 10,000 but we all know it is upwards of 50,000 civilian deaths in Wellega. this all is by bullets together with starvation and deseases as a result of displacement
Zmeselo wrote:
31 Oct 2023, 17:38
Since the military confrontation between the Amhara militia (Fano) erupted in April this year, hundreds of Amhara have been arrested indiscriminately including National and regional MPs for suspicion that they support the militants.
Well, the ekekam skunni seams to be in love with 'hundreds'. almost 40,000 amharas are in concentration comps in Addis and Oromia region. the f^gget skunnni surely has something with us and we take duly notes on that.

I won't waste my time pulling every factual and intentional errors in the article. but knowing that our undisputed fate is sealed through our will, nothing to worry on idiots misinformation that enamates from their fear that they will have to stand against us one day.

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