Thursday 4 January 2018

Freeing Political Prisoners

Undoubtedly most of you have heard that the Ethiopian government is going to free all political prisoners, or pardon those who have broken laws concerning treason and terrorism, or some such thing. Anyway, it appears that many of the known political prisoners will be freed.

This is a great measure. I don't think anyone could say otherwise. A lot of these folks have been suffering cruelties at the hands of the security apparatus, cruelties unbecoming Ethiopia. The Ethiopian tradition is, as practiced in the past, honour and civility and magnanimity. Political prisoners, even those who were a grave threat to the ruling monarch, were imprisoned, preferably far away, on Mount Wehni for example, but given a comfortable imprisonment, if there is such a thing. Modern torture, or ancient torture for that matter, was unthinkable. If anyone even happened to hear of such a thing, they would have immediately thought it dishonourable and dismissed it out of hand.

So, this is a step that shows magnanimity, honour, and civility, it's good for the country, but most of all, it is good for the prisoners, who have been bearing on their shoulders the guilt of all of us Ethiopians.

Nevertheless, a note of caution. Remember what happened that last time several high-profile political prisoners were released. The opposition descended into a downward spiral from which it has not recovered to this day. And yes, I am not forgetting the release of Birtukan Mideksa, but I shudder to recall it and what she went through in the prison. All I can say is, may God bless her and keep her and may God forgive us for what we have done to her and all the unknown Birtukans out there.

I humbly urge all of us Ethiopians to keep in mind today that Rome was not built in a day, and when the EPRDF deigns to do something good and noble is not the time to shout and scream for it to step down from power. There is nobody to replace the EPRDF. Our past 50 years of history, including our elite's long suicide from 1960 to 1991 as well as the EPRDF's monopoly on power has made sure that the protests of the grassroots have no viable elite to lead them. Today is the time to renew our efforts to work on feasible, yes, feasible, politically realistic projects to improve our political and social environment. In our little small circles. We're not all kings and we're not meant to be. A good deed is worth a thousand good words. The line between good and evil cuts through all our hearts. Let's point our fingers at ourselves, particularly those of us in the diaspora who have betrayed our country by leaving it, and see how we can fix ourselves and our surroundings. Maybe then we can build a solid grassroots capable of growing and nurturing a political elite that is a viable foil and partner for the EPRDF.

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