Confederation is much more realistic for Tigray than outright independence—and it fits both international law and African political realities better. Let’s break it down cleanly.
What is a confederation?
A confederation is a voluntary union of self-governing states or regions that:
keep sovereignty over internal affairs, and
delegate limited powers (defense, currency, foreign policy coordination) to a central body.
Think: maximum self-rule, minimum central control.
How a confederation would apply to Tigray
Powers Tigray would control
Internal security & police
Taxation & budget
Land and natural resources
Language, education, culture
Local courts and administration
Powers shared at confederal level
International borders & passports
Macro-defense coordination
Monetary policy / currency (optional)
Select foreign relations
This is far beyond Ethiopia’s current federalism.
Why confederation is legally stronger than secession
✔ No violation of territorial integrity
✔ Compatible with African Union norms
✔ Easier to sell to neighbors and donors
✔ Can be reversible if abused (exit clauses)
Genocide allegations strengthen the case for deep self-rule and safeguards, even if they don’t grant independence.
Global precedents (useful comparisons)
Bosnia and Herzegovina
After mass atrocities → weak central state, strong entities.
Iraqi Kurdistan
Near-state autonomy without formal independence.
Switzerland (historically)
Confederation evolving into a federal state.
These models show survival + self-rule without isolation.
What a Tigray-style confederation would require
Constitutional rewrite (not cosmetic amendments)
Security guarantees (regional forces protected from central override)
Fiscal autonomy (own revenues, own budget)
External guarantors (AU, IGAD, UN, or key states)
Clear dispute-resolution & exit clauses
Without these, “confederation” becomes just a word.
Risks:
Central government may resist or later recentralize
Other regions may demand the same (chain reaction)
Requires elite unity inside Tigray
Needs long-term international attention (not guaranteed)
Bottom line
Independence → low probability, high cost
Confederation → highest leverage, lowest isolation
Status quo federalism → unstable and unsafe
If your aim is “never again” + self-protection + economic survival, confederation is the strongest realistic option.
https://r.search.yahoo.com/_ylt=AwrjYda ... whr5srhXA-