GRIPPED
WITH FEAR
In
the conference recently organized by the Ethiopian Satellite
Television Service, one of the invited speakers, Graham Peebles,
diagnosed fear as the main cause of the Ethiopian political
deadlock. On the one hand, denouncing the total absence of democracy,
he characterized the situation as “bleak and harrowing.”
On the other, he attributed the lack of meaningful resistance
of the people to an “atmosphere of fear never seen in
Africa.” Ethiopians have no illusion about the regime,
but all their complaints and demands are so soaked in fear that
they fail to translate into action. He notes that “Ethiopians
love to talk endlessly, but there is little action.” Instead,
apathy prevails. Peebles also suggests action as the sole remedy.
Since fear debilitates, only action can dissolve it, for action
conquers fear by breeding confidence and giving strength.
What
Peebles failed to mention is that the fear of the people is
only a response to an even deeper and pernicious fear of the
Ethiopian ruling elite. If there is one factor that explains
the political behaviour of the dominant political party, the
Tigrayan People's Liberation Front (TPLF), notably its complete
disregard for the democratic provisions enshrined in its own
Constitution and its inexorable descent toward dictatorship
and barbarism, is its devouring fear of the people. This fear
has reached its peak since the 2005 election when the ruling
elite came close to being voted out by popular verdict. The
subsequent bloody repression of the government and its slide
toward repressive methods of ruling were just the early manifestations
of a tormenting anxiety triggered by the prospect of losing
power.
Unfortunately,
the choice of brutal domination does not appease the anxiety;
on the contrary, it only intensifies it, obvious as it is that
repression only aggravates the popular discontent. The fear
of the people urges a tightening of repression, which only further
exasperates popular animosity: such is the vicious circle of
fear driving the ruling elite into increasingly barbaric methods
of government. The paranoia has become so intense that the TPLF
felt obligated to establish a spying network whose ramifications
stretch to the cellular level of the Ethiopian society.
The
economic policy of the regime owes much to the need to quell
alternative and competing political movements. The fact that
economic activities are entirely under political control means
that the need to reward supporters and exclude opponents is
the engine that runs the economic machine. As such, it is just
an extension of the fear inspired policy of divide-and-rule:
all the ugly practices of the economic system, namely, nepotism,
ethnic favoritism, corruption, the enrichment of the few at
the expenses of the many, the absence of accountability, the
disdain for free competition, etc., are so many manifestations
of an economic system solely based on the promotion of client-patron
relationship.
What
needs to be added here is the extent to which the leaders of
the TPLF live in the constant fear of the Amhara ethnic group.
Nothing of what they have planned and implemented since the
overthrow of the Derg (the previous socialist military regime)
is intelligible without the deeply engrained fear of the Amhara
in the psyche of the TPLF since its inception. Let no one be
misled by the so-called TPLF’s hatred of the Amhara: that
hatred is actually fear, and nothing but fear. As Shakespeare
puts it, “in time we hate that which we often fear.”
Because of that fear, the TPLF adopted policies that are detrimental
to Ethiopia and its interests in the hope of preventing the
return of the Amhara to power once and for all. Take the federal
organization of Ethiopia along ethnic lines: its purpose is
not so much to promote self-rule -- since the TPLF ignores it
-- as to dismantle the legacy of nation-building implemented
by previous regimes, in addition to fomenting a culture of antagonism
between the Amhara and other ethnic groups.
THE
MANY FACES OF FEAR
It
is usually believed that one antidote to fear is anger, which
is often translated into hatred. Anger overcomes fear because
it is so powerful an emotional state that it overwhelms all
other concerns. However, it was also noticed that anger does
nothing to a soul already paralyzed by fear. Mix fear with anger,
and you obtain despair and resignation, which is none other
than the inability to be really angry. If fear has convinced
you in advance that there is nothing you can do against the
regime, then your anger simply dissolves into apathy.
One
of the consequences of the disabling effect of fear is the tendency
to rationalize. People gripped by fear always find a lot of
reasons for not doing anything. Unfortunately, more thinking
cannot defeat the tendency to rationalize. Yet, this is what
most Ethiopians are apparently trying to do. In presenting the
TPLF in the most despicable terms, Ethiopians hope to ignite
the will to fight back. The right knowledge, it is believed,
especially the one that refutes the discourse of the government,
should trigger action. Because we know that no regime falls
except by action, we believe that if we talk a lot, it will
drive us to action. Sadly, the finest description, the most
accurate theory can do nothing against apathy: it falls on deaf
ears. Discourses do not defeat fear.
Another
damaging effect of fear is the propensity of the oppressed to
constantly quarrel among themselves. Since I cannot direct my
anger against the oppressor, I find an outlet by venting it
against my fellow oppressed. Ethiopians constantly complain
about the lack of unity among opposition parties. What is more,
numerous efforts to overcome divisions and create a united front
have invariably failed, even though the parties have a lot more
in common than what divided them. Why is it so? For the obvious
reason that disunity prevents action, which in turn feeds on
fear. If you assume for one second that there is only one united
opposition, what else remains but the deployment of collective
action? Whereas where unity prevails there is no excuse for
postponing action, for a divided opposition action is not really
an option, since it has no chance of success. The determination
to act drastically diminishes if I suspect that others are not
likely to follow. Fear advises and nourishes divisions.
One
question intriguing many observers is that young Ethiopians
are defying all sorts of danger, including loss of life, to
reach the shores of Europe and America. Indeed, not only is
the number of young Ethiopians who want to migrate staggering,
but also most of them ascribe their plight to the incompetence
and segregationist economic policy of the regime. Nonetheless,
they prefer the perils of clandestine immigration to the alternative
of fighting by all means to change the existing regime. How
does one explain this preference, which is no less dangerous
than the confrontation with the TPLF? The obvious answer is
that clandestine immigration, however risky it may be, still
harbors the promise of success, whereas the fight against the
TPLF seems to be devoid of such hope. We catch here the most
pernicious effect of fear, to wit, the erosion of confidence.
The
other factor blocking the course of change in Ethiopia is, of
course, the fear of the ruling elite. As we saw, in addition
to increasing the recourse to repressive methods, fear advocates
exclusionary economic policies. Even though the actual government
knows that its policies cause mounting discontent, it cannot
contemplate for one second the formulation and implementation
of reforms for fear that they would encourage popular unrest
and galvanize opposition parties. Reform is perceived as a sign
of weakness, whereas the continuation of the same policy is
interpreted as a display of strength. Once fear has convinced
you that any concession to the people or opposition parties
means weakness, you have nowhere to go but in the precipice
of self-destruction, unfortunately by taking the whole country
with you. Fear blocks reforms because it blocks wisdom, even
to the point of jeopardizing self-interest. Like Plato said,
“we can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark;
the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light.”
FIGHTING
FEAR
We
need to reverse the commonly accepted order of things: instead
of going from ideas to action, we should try the reverse order
of going from action to ideas. This means that ideas are supposed
to support, enhance action; they do not cause action. Action
is not trigger by representation, but by will. The French philosopher,
Henri Bergson, wrote: “we can’t make will out of
thought; we can, by an effort of will, think. Volition, not
thought, is the basis of conscious life.” In other words,
consciousness is not primarily a thinking and, secondarily,
a willing activity. How could it be so when we perfectly know
that thought, however galvanizing it may be, does not generate
volition? Thus, when you succumb to an evil act, it is not that
you do not know what is right; it is simply the will to resist
that is failing you.
Let
us take a more concrete example. Suppose that I fall into a
deep crack. While I am in the crack, the knowledge of what surrounds
me would not generate the will to come out of the hole. But
if I have the will to come out, I will find the means, the way
to do so. In this case, thinking, that is, finding the way,
is wholly inspired by the will. From the representation of the
surrounding a will cannot arise, but the practical representation
of what I need to do can emerge from the will. Here is another
example. Suppose that I want to lift a heavy stone. If I simply
speculate intellectually on how I would lift the stone, I will
never be able to do it, since any idea that I might have appears
feasible for the simple reason it is not confronted with the
given reality. However, if instead of believing that the idea
will inspire me to act, I try to lift the stone, I will quickly
know what support or means I need to lift it effectively. Action
inspires practical ideas.
Similarly,
politics is primarily a matter of will and secondarily of discourse.
Since it is about action, what is decisive is the connection
between action and will. In order to be brave, Aristotle said,
one must practice acts of bravery. To quote him, “by doing
the acts that we do in the presence of danger, and being habituated
to feel fear or confidence, we become brave or cowardly.”
But how can we acquire a virtue that we do not originally possess?
For Aristotle, like any virtue, courage is potentially innate,
and like any virtue, it needs practice to become actual and
develop, just as I need practice to ride a bicycle or to learn
how to play piano. What all this means is that action brings
success, which, however small it may be, has the propensity
to build confidence. When confidence is restored, fear regresses.
It
would be wrong to assume that this analysis does not apply to
the Ethiopian diaspora. Such an assumption simply forgets that
decades of unbridled state terror have profoundly transformed
the Ethiopian psyche. How else could one explain the frequency
of apathy and divisions as well as the prevalence of discourse
over action among the Ethiopian diaspora, even as most Ethiopians
enjoy the full protection of democratic rights in Western countries?
The
good news is that even in Ethiopia the walls of fear are starting
to show some cracks, especially among younger generations. The
defying activism of some of the members of the Blue Party and
the amazing courage of journalists like Eskinder Nega, Reeyot
Alemu, and others, are glaring examples of receding fear. Moreover,
a growing number of young people are now agreeing with the necessity
of armed struggle, which of course constitutes the highest level
of political action and hence the ultimate remedy against fear.
Speaking
of the necessity of violent confrontation against colonial occupation,
Fanon wrote: “violence is a cleansing force. It frees
the native from his inferiority complex and from his despair
and inaction; it makes him fearless and restores his self-respect.”
The similitude of the existential situation of natives under
colonial rule with that of Ethiopians under the domination of
the TPLF calls for the therapeutic virtue of violence, be it
in the form of popular revolution or armed uprising. Be it noted
that nothing would encourage more nonviolent movement in Ethiopia
than the background of armed and fighting partners. In other
words, nonviolent struggle itself is in dire need of armed uprising,
given the crackdown of the government against the use of peaceful
means.
Let
no one conclude that citing Gandhi, the prophet of nonviolence,
together with Fanon, the champion of violent struggle, constitutes
a flagrant contradiction. For me, the present situation of Ethiopia
equally calls for nonviolent and violent forms of struggle.
Without the pressure of armed struggle, the TPLF will not open
up the political field, as fear rather than rational concern
dictates its behavior. The proof is that, while the regime has
forcefully rejected all the suggestions of opposition parties
to democratize political competition and refuses to release
even one political prisoner, it has recently set free two senior
members of the Ogaden National Liberation Front as a token for
its readiness to negotiate. The explanation for the governmental
change of attitude is that, unlike the opposition parties and
the political prisoners, the ONLF is an armed force. Stated
otherwise, to liberate the TPLF from its fear, the condition
is that it be forced to face the nearness of its demise: when
fear reaches its maximum level, there grows the readiness to
negotiate.
Clearly,
the pressure of arms is necessary for the regime to come to
the table of negotiation. Equally necessary for the success
of negotiations and the guarantee of a democratic future is
the presence of a strong nonviolent movement in Ethiopia. In
other words, Ethiopia needs both Gandhi and Fanon, for what
works for the survival and prosperity of the country is not
merely the military defeat of the TPLF, but also the initiation
of a process toward national reconciliation and the subsequent
building of democratic institutions. What Ethiopia needs is
not this or that, but this and that, not nonviolence or violence,
but both.
also by Messay Kebede:
What's
Wrong with Africa