በቃን አሉ ቤር ቤረስቦች
1. Association with historical inequality
Under emperors like Haile Selassie, Ethiopia had a highly centralized imperial system. Many groups—especially in the south and west—feel that:
* Power was concentrated among northern elites (mainly Amhara-Tigray ruling classes)
* Local cultures and languages were suppressed
* Land ownership systems favored elites while peasants had few rights
2. Ethnic federalism changed expectations
After the fall of the monarchy in 1974 (during the Ethiopian Revolution), Ethiopia gradually moved toward an ethnic federal system.
Today:
* Regions have constitutional rights tied to ethnicity
* Many groups value self-rule and local autonomy
3. The legacy of the Derg and political change
The monarchy was overthrown by the Derg, which framed imperial rule as:
* Feudal
* Oppressive
* Outdated
Even though the Derg itself was brutal, its narrative influenced generations.
4. Land and class grievances
Before 1974:
* Much land was controlled by the church, nobility, and imperial state
* Peasants often paid tribute or worked under exploitative systems
The revolution abolished this system.
5. Rise of ethnic nationalism
Groups like the Oromo Liberation Front and others have emphasized:
* Cultural recognition
* Political autonomy
* Historical grievances
6. Lack of a strong monarchist movement
Although descendants like Zera Yacob Amha Selassie exist, there is:
* No large, organized national push for restoration
* Limited grassroots demand compared to republican or federal systems
7. Modern political identity
Ethiopia today is:
* A republic
* Shaped by decades of revolutionary and post-revolutionary politics
Younger generations especially tend to view monarchy as:
* Irrelevant to current challenges (economy, conflict, governance)