Seid Hassan- Murray State UniversityA. Introduction
The
Amharic version of the Voice of America (journalist Solomon Abate
serving as moderator) entertained a discussion on corruption which was
broadcast on May 17 and 18, 2013. Participants included Messrs. Mulugeta
Aragawi of Addis Ababa University, Abebe Gutta (attorney at law in
Addis Ababa), Berhanu Assefa (Ethical Education and Communication
Affairs Director of the Federal Ethics and Anti Corruption
Commission-FEACC) and I. The first two gentlemen who really knew the
sources, extent and potential solution to the rampant Ethiopian
corruption politely provided their views, including the approaches that
the government has to take to fight the corruption that the government
has admitted to be rampant. As expected and is customary of the members
of the EPRDF, Mr. Berhanu Assefa of the FEACC was on the defensive and
mostly on the attack mode, instead of listening to the complaints and
suggestions of the two citizens. As those who listened to the debate
can easily attest, Mr. Assefa spent most of his time talking about
unrelated to the topic of discussion –yes, you guessed it right: the
same old and tired double digit growth rates that all EPRDFites like to
parrot each other ad nauseam. He also suggested that the current
decision to fight against corruption is for real and the arrest of
Minister Melaku Fenta, director general of the revenue and customs
authority and his deputy Gebrewahed Woldegiorgis along with several
officials and businessmen merchants should serve as proof and we ought
not to discourage it. I partially agreed with Mr. Assefa’s suggestion
in that all of us have to encourage the fight against corruption, if
indeed it is for real while at the same time expressing my serious
doubts.
I will perhaps address this issue (whether Prime Minister
Hailemariam Desalegn’s government is both serious and capable of
fighting the rampant corruption in the country) with a separate short
write-up. Delay such a commentary also allow us to give the current
authorities a little more time and the benefits of doubt to show it to
the world, as promised, that they have ended embarked on fighting
against the debilitating corruption in the country. This and the next
two (probably more) series of short commentaries instead focus on my
soon to be published research findings related to the
foreign-aid–corruption-nexus as applied to Ethiopia. These two
forthcoming articles are included in the upcoming Ethiopian e-Journal for Research and Innovation Foresight-Vol.5,
no.1-Special issue on the Ethiopian Economy which incorporates seven
professionally written manuscripts. The contributors include Professors
Abu Girma Moges (two articles: one on federalism and the second one on
the extent of and the sham nature of calculating and indexing of poverty
in the country), Minga Negash (on the peculiar nature of corporate
governance in Ethiopia and the way forward), Getachew Begashaw (on the
effects of landlockedness), Zeleke Worku (on Traditional Financial
Structures such as Iqub, etc.) and I (two articles on the foreign
aid-corruption nexus). Both of my research articles are related but the
first one tries to exclusively focus on the humanitarian aid-corruption
nexus (that is, corruption when the TPLF was a rebel front) while the
second one focuses on the development aid-corruption nexus (that is,
corruption after the TPLF seized political power). They both are
byproducts of many years of my extensive research and fact
documentations regarding the nature and causes of corruption in
Ethiopia. I expect readers of these articles to find the extensive
literature, testimonials and interviews that I consulted to be highly
beneficial to them.
B. The State Capture Onset in Ethiopia: Humanitarian Aid and Corruption. Forthcoming: Ethiopian e-Journal for Research and Innovation Foresight-Vol.5, no.1-Special issue on the Ethiopian Economy.
1. Abstract:
The first part of this paper shows that a substantial part of the money
that aid agencies gave to feed the 1984-5 Ethiopian famine victims,
including those raised by Band Aid and Live Aid were siphoned off by the
Tigrayan Peoples’ Liberation Front (TPLF) to buy military weapons. I
also use newly found evidences, interviews and testimonials accumulated
over many years to show that famine aid scamming by the TPLF had gone
beyond using humanitarian aid to purchase military weapons and feed the
rebel Front’s red army. I show how humanitarian aid, as a resource in
the midst of extreme scarcity, has enriched some quarters, fuelled
corruption and intensified and prolonged conflicts among the warring
factions of Ethiopia and legitimized the rebel fronts’ operations.
Humanitarian aid lured the Fronts, particularly the TPLF, to parade
hundreds of thousands of peasants to Sudan, which led to the deaths of
tens of thousands of them (due to overcrowding, disease epidemics, lack
of regular food supplies, poor water and sanitation problems, and from
being exposed to targets for bombing). The documents I examined, the
interviews that I conducted and the testimonials I have gathered over
many years indicate that the refugees were abused by the TPLF both
during their trek to the Ethio-Sudanese border which took 4-6 weeks and
within the refugee camps. According to some ex-TPLF veterans, (and their
claims to be indirectly proved by the written work of foreign
nationals), a good portion of the humanitarian food aid was not made
available to the starving peasants of Tigray. Their statements regarding
this issue are indirectly corroborated by the field and research work
of foreign nationals. By all these three counts, according to them, the
TPLF has committed crimes against humanity (and, the International
Committee of the Red Cross –ICRC agrees with them on this front). The
documents I examined and the interviews and testimonials I gathered
indicate that donors and aid agencies knew that the Relief Society of
Tigray (REST) was the flip-side of the same coin- the TPLF and aid
agency personnel knew a portion of the humanitarian aid that they were
providing was being diverted for military purposes by the Fronts,
indicating a violation of the principle of neutrality and impartiality
on the part of aid agencies. There are also indications suggesting that
the cross-border interventions by donors and aid agencies were against
the multilateral agreements such as the Lomé conventions (Duffield and
Prendergast, 1994). This shows that the provisions and delivery of
humanitarian aid have been used to violate and perhaps diminish the
sovereignty of Ethiopia. Looked in a different way, a good portion of
the humanitarian aid provided by donor countries to the TPLF and other
fronts fighting the Derg regime was in part for the advancement of the
diplomatic and foreign policy goals as well as political and military
tools of donor nations and aid agencies. It may be for this reason why
they cared less about how humanitarian aid was spent or abused. The
literature that I examined also provides reasons why the abuse of
humanitarian aid would be inevitable in conflict ridden countries such
as Ethiopia. The evidence gathered have allowed me to inductively test
one of my fundamental hypotheses: that humanitarian aid resources were
and still are the sources of predation and capture in Ethiopia and that
the culture of corruption and political malaise that we observe in
today’s Ethiopia is a byproduct of what the TPLF/EPRDF learned and
adopted when it was a rebel front and such a culture of corruption was
aided and abetted by humanitarian aid.
2. Summary, Implication and Conclusion (abridged)
The
accounts of several donor agency personnel and the testimonials of
ex-TPLF combatants indicate that humanitarian aid has showered the TPLF
with more hard currency than the $100 million it received from Band Aid
and similar activities. They include, for example, the millions of
dollars that REST and its “employees” and supporters received for
providing their services (transporting the donated food and related aid,
as guides, etc.), from selling of “excess” humanitarian aid into the
Sudanese and Middle Eastern markets, from scamming and defrauding
humanitarian agencies such as the $500,000 that Mr. Max Peberdy of Christian Aid was seen passing to Mr. Araya and others
and the $2 million the Australians gave in cash to purchase food from
local merchants, etc.) However, my investigation is unable to determine
the exact amount of money that the TPLF made from selling humanitarian
aid. Both the fungibility of funds and the secretive nature of the Front
also played and would continue to play as huge obstacles in
ascertaining if and how much of those funds which have been allocated as
described and as decided by the Front’s leadership were actually
implemented I am further convinced that no one, including top leaders of
the TPLF would be able to ascertain the exact allocations, expenditures
and conversions of humanitarian aid for military purposes.
The
second part of this article presented an abridged version of both the
theoretical and practical case for aid to be a source for corruption and
for prolonging conflicts among warring nations. I examined documents
and the information obtained from various credible voices already aired
by ex-TPLF veterans. I cross-examined previous testimonies provided by
high level donor aid officials and aid agencies’ personnel who were
deeply involved in the delivery of humanitarian aid at the time. I also
sought out and investigated documents written by journalists who happen
to report the extent of donor aid flow and to whom they were given. This
led me to uncover one of the hard to find non-classified CIA documents,
thanks to Google’s search engine, which in turn reinforced the claims
made by donor aid officials and aid agency personnel who attested that
humanitarian aid was indeed siphoned off to military uses by the TPLF.
The examination of the facts also indicates that both donor nations and
aid agencies took a blind eye to the misuse and diversion of
humanitarian aid to military uses. Some attribute this to the fact of
channeling of humanitarian assistance along the Ethio-Sudanese border in
the 1980s being partly political (see, Evil Days, pp. 356-62, for example).
The
cross-examination of the documents that I gathered along with the
testimonials of individuals also indicates that the TPLF skillfully
captured humanitarian aid resources, with full intent. The desire to
capture and use humanitarian aid resources motivated the Front to (in
large part forcefully) parade already weakened peasants to trek to
Sudan, which led to the death of tens of thousands of them (to the tune
of 25,000 by some humanitarian agencies’ estimates and calculations and a
lot more by ex-TPLF combatants) and to their increased suffering. This
article has also presented the case in which the provision of
humanitarian aid could have the opposite and damaging (largely
unintended) effects on the recipient country and its people using
Ethiopia as an example. To the extent that the desire to access
humanitarian aid resources lured organized groups such as the TPLF to
commit crimes against humanity, and to the extent that these same
resources have benefitted the elites and have enabled the TPLF establish
a highly corruptive and oligarchic system that we observe in today’s
Ethiopia, we conclude that humanitarian aid resources were the basis for
the onset of state capture that reigns supreme currently in Ethiopia.
source: http://ecadforum.com/2013/06/21/the-humanitarian-aid-corruption-nexus-in-ethiopia/
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