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Many Nations, One Name
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11638 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1986 |
2,469 Words |
| Author
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Anthony Shaw Anthony Shaw is a free-lance journalist in journalist in
African affairs, based in London, and specializing in the Horn
of Africa. He has written extensively for African magazines
both in the United States and the United Kingdom. |
Ideological rhetoric in Ethiopia normally divides problems and policies into two categories - temporary, sort term; and long range, final objectives.
Into the first category fit most current problems, including drought and famine, opposition from the various nationalities and guerrilla movements, the economy, and resettlement.
The second category covers the installation of the Marxist-Leninist state, under the Workers Party of Ethiopia (WPE). Steps toward this latter objective has included the creation of the WPE in September 1984, a new constitution (the draft version of which was finally published in June this year), and the formal creation of the Peoples Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (PDRE), expected in September, though it may now be delayed.
In this scheme there is the expectation that the steps taken on the way to the Marxist-Leninist state will play a large part in solving the current temporary problems. The creation of an enlarged state sector, for example, and the spread of cooperatives are seen as part of the answer to food shortages and to the economic problems consequent upon drought and war.
Most important perhaps, the organization of the party and the establishment of the new constitution are seen as the answer to the regime's most visible difficulty, that of tribalism, or, as the Ethiopians prefer to call it, the issue of the nationalities.
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