In
memoriam of Ethiopia’s man for all seasons
Dilwenberu
Nega
London
12th August 2013
A
year ago this month, Ethiopians from far and near paid their last respects to
the “Man of the People” with rivers of tears. Today, preparations are at their
final stages to commemorate the first year of the death of the first Prime
Minister of FDRE, H.E. Meles Zenawi MP with various activities which are aimed
at reflecting and honouring his extraordinary legacy. But as former UK Prime
Minister, The Rt. Hon. Gordon MP who spoke at a London memorial service for
Meles rightly pointed out, “There will be many memorials to Prime Minister
Meles...There will be statutes, there will be streets and schools named after
him, there will be institutes, there will be scholarships, but the memorial
that he would welcome most, in my view, is that millions of people who will
never have met him, millions of people who never know his name perhaps,
millions of people in Ethiopia have opportunities, options, choices and chances
that they never could have had without him. That is the memorial that he and
his family would value.”
I
had the good fortune and, indeed, honour of meeting Prime Minister Meles Zenawi
for the first time at a meeting organized by the Embassy of the FDRE in London
on the 25th February 2003. Meles was in town on his first official
visit to the UK, and the Brits had rolled out the red carpet for an Ethiopian
whom Tony Blair had described as “a man to do business with.” The seed of mutual
respect and trust which Meles had sowed at that visit has today produced
bilateral relations unheard of in annals of Ethiopia and the United Kingdom.
Ethiopia stands out as the largest recipient of UK aid which currently stands
at £1.3 billion over five years.
There
was, of course, a sense of great excitement and anticipation among the
participants as Meles took centre stage flanked by the then Minister of Foreign
Affairs and his confidante since the inception of TPLF, Seyoum Mesfin, and the
then Ambassador of Ethiopia to the UK, Fisseha Adugna. For the great majority
of attendees, it was their first time to be under one roof with an Ethiopia
prime minister.
At
the meeting, not only did Meles appear the picture of good health, but he also
had his wits about him. He was at his elements as he reminded the audience that
“now the Ethiopia which the Derg had left for dead, has conquered death by ushering
in durable peace, equality, fraternity, justice and democracy on the embers of
a brutal military dictatorship, its time for you to return home.” A decade on,
thousands of Ethiopians from Birmingham in England to Birmingham in Alabama,
from Australia to Austria and from Cape Town to Cairo are firmly ensconced in
an Ethiopia which – to borrow Sir Bob Geldof’s description – “has changed
beyond recognition.”
And
by the time the Q&A kicked off, I jumped to my feet to ask something which
had bothered me for a while: “Why did the outcome of EPRDF’s 2002 prolonged
Gimgema fail to allay public fear and concern of a ruling party that had lost
its campus? Has the EPRDF run-out of steam? Is your party – for want of a
better word – decaffeinated?”
After
a broad smile and sipping a glass of Ambo Water, Meles grabbed the Ambo water
bottle and said: “It would be wrong to liken the EPRDF to coffee, but if
people insist on using a drink analogy to describe EPRDF, then one should liken
us to wine – the older the wine the better.” Today the EPRDF which Meles
had led from its inception to his death is seen ploughing ahead by delivering
its promises to the people. So the older the EPRDF the better!
Incidentally,
I feel one aspect of the legacy of Meles which had not attracted enough
attention which it warrants, is the pivotal role Meles had played in first
making EPRDF - which was portrayed by Derg’s 24/7/365 propaganda machinery as “
ragtag and bobtail” – electable; and secondly by securing three consecutive
election wins for his party.
It
is not my intention here to indulge into an argument on who created who: did
EPRDF produce Meles or was EPRDF Meles’ handiwork? Yet, when we sift through the
histories of China, Russia and Cuba, we find out to our surprise that the star
of the leader of a ruling party seems to shine brighter than the torch of the
Party. There again, to portray Meles larger than EPRDF would be an insult to
the memory of Meles, for we must not lose sight of the fact that the Meles
Ethiopians know all too well not only eschewed publicity, but was a leader who
avoided the penchant for imposing a cult of personality like a plague. This,
however, does not prevent us to acknowledge the near-to-indispensable-role
Meles had played in winning elections.
At Election
2015, EPRDF will go to the polls with Meles no longer in the party, and no
longer on planet Earth. Hence, the challenge for both EPRDF and Prime Minister
Haile Mariam Desalgn would be not to give in to complacency especially now the
talk is that Ethiopia's fractured opposition parties will be drowned by the
anticipated tsunami of sympathy votes at the next election.
R.I.P. Meles Zenawi!