Issue 382
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Saturday, May
16, 2009 – Africa Confidential: You’ve gone on record
as saying that an effect of the financial downturn could be increased
political unrest in Africa. That was three months ago. Is that point of
view still valid and are there particular areas that you are more
concerned about?
Meles Zenawi:
Well, soon after I said that, in the context of preparation for the G-20
summit, I got in touch with a number of African leaders and my worst
fears were confirmed. The President of Liberia [Ellen
Johnson-Sirleaf] was in a preparatory meeting for the summit
and she said that one of the sources of instability in Liberia has been
the very high rate of unemployment among the youth and the fragile peace
that they have in Liberia was too fragile for it to withstand massive
layoffs among the youth; and that is what she feared would happen as
much of the investment that they had been promised had simply
disappeared.
Later on, the President of Southern Sudan and Vice-President of Sudan [Salva
Kiir Mayardit] got in touch with me and indicated to me that
because oil prices had collapsed and because oil was the primary source
of revenue for his government, he may not be able to pay the salaries of
his armed men and he felt that that was a rather dangerous thing to do.
And, thirdly, in the DRC [Congo-Kinshasa], I heard
reports that in the mining areas of the country, which are the most
economically vibrant areas of the DRC, something like 300,000 people had
been laid off since the recession began. That is 300,000 mostly young
people who are no longer employed and that is a very dangerous thing in
an environment of a very fragile peace. So I think that while,
initially, that appeared to be a sort of pessimistic assessment of what
could happen, since then it appears that that prognosis was not all that
pessimistic.
AC: Do you think that enough is being done by the
international community? You had a trillion dollar summit but only 20
billion goes to Africa. Is that going to be enough?
Meles: Well, the hope was that something like US$50
million would be allocated to the least developed countries and
naturally the bulk of that would go to Africa, because that is where the
least developed countries are. In the past, there was much more promise
than delivery of those promises and the hope was that this time it would
be different. The early indications are that some of the promises are
beginning to be delivered, particularly the monies that were supposed to
be delivered through the IMF seem to be firm promises.
There was a recent meeting between the IMF and the World Bank and our
ministers tried to follow up on the promises of the G-20 and it appears
that something like roughly $20 billion, $17-18 billion of money, was
going to be made available very soon from the IMF. It was through
special drawing rights and through increased lending procedures. The
rest we had hoped would come through the AfricanDevelopment Bank and the
World Bank. I understand that they are making progress in terms of
delivering but because of the complications related to their funding
arrangements, they have not been as swift as the IMF so far. But on
balance, I am very happily surprised that substantial money was promised
and delivery has been better than I had expected to be the case.
AC: What can African countries do themselves to counter
the effects of the economic slowdown?
Meles:
Well,
in the end no amount of money that comes in from abroad is going to do
the task for us. We have to devise our own strategies of not only
overcoming the current economic difficulties but also engaging in a
process of economic transformation so that we would be able to withstand
any future shocks of a similar kind. That means that we have to have a
proper development strategy that works for Africa. As you may have
noticed, the Prime Minister of the UK [Gordon Brown],
in a meeting in New York prior to the G-20 summit, declared that the
so-called Washington consensus was over and we needed a new development
consensus. Now, I doubt whether any African would quibble with that,
indeed, many would question whether there was such a consensus, in the
sense that it was more of an imposition that a consensus. Therefore, it
is now up to us as Africans to come up with alternative strategies of
development; it is up to our development partners in the G-20 and the
G-8 to follow the lead of the Prime Minister of the UK and to recognise
that the policy orthodoxy that has been imposed over the past three
decades in Africa has not delivered and it is time to look for other
alternatives. If this was combined with a permissive global environment
and ownership of Africans of their development strategy, then I think we
could reverse the current trend.
AC: Inflation has been a particular problem in
Ethiopia. What steps are being taken to bring it down?
Meles: Inflationary pressure is partly a result of the
global inflationary pressure that was felt mostly in Africa in 2008. It
also has domestic reasons, as our inflation was much higher than the
African average. It has to do with what economists call overheating of
the economy, so we need to cool it down without cutting back on
development. It’s a very tricky exercise to try to manage. We have tried
to intervene using various instruments, policy instruments, and we have
succeeded in stabilizing inflation and it has been coming down
continuously. We hope that over the next 5 or 6 months, it will come
down to single digits. We have intervened in various areas, we have
reduced our budget deficit to zero. We have tried to control the growth
of money supply in the economy, we have tried to dampen the inflationary
expectations
among the various economic actors and so on. But I think, given the
benign global environment, from the point of view of inflation and the
steps that we have taken domestically, I think that we can deal with
this issue.
AC: Is a shortage of foreign exchange still a problem?
Meles: Yes, this is a key and binding constraint as far
as growth in Ethiopia is concerned and doesn’t have an easy solution.
There are structural reasons for the problem, so we’ll have to learn to
live in an environment of foreign exchange constraint, while at the same
time trying to mitigate its impact.
AC: We are coming up to an election next year. Are you
worried that economic problems are going to create difficulties in this
respect?
Meles: Well, the trends are first that the fast
economic growth that we have achieved in the past five years has been
sustained in spite of the global crisis, and that is key. The
expectation is, and the most recent trends bear this expectation out,
that inflation will come down to single digits before the election. We
may have some foreign exchange constraints but those constraints are
already beginning to ease. So in balance, we hope and expect that it
will be a permissive economic environment for a peaceful and successful
election.
AC: How much of a problem do you anticipate from groups
like Ginbot 7?
Meles: At this stage, the expectation is that they will
be a significant irritant but not necessarily more than that.
AC: There have been reports of military figures
involved. Does that indicate that it was an attempted coup rather than a
terrorist effort?
Meles: The issue was that, as part of a government
reform programme across the various departments of government, including
the defense sector, people who for one reason or another were thought to
be unfit for the purpose that we have in mind, either because of
physical disability or lack of commitment or so on, were asked to leave
the army, or demoted within the army. Understandably, those people are
unhappy with what happened to them and the only surprise in this is that
their unhappiness was expressed in a form that took them to extremes of
trying to kill actors in the reform programme in the defense sector and
other government officials. So, while it would have been expected for
them to be disgruntled and to express their dissatisfaction in some
fashion, it came as a surprise that they decided to express it in such a
destructive manner. Nonetheless, this was a very small group and they
knew what was possible and not possible, so they didn’t even try to
organize a coup. What they tried to organize was a series of
assassinations to destabilize the government. Now, the fact that our
security services were on top of it more or less from the very beginning
– and it was the choice of our security services, the timing of the
detention was made by our security services, based on fears that some
lives, either on the part of the perpetrators or potential victims, were
at risk, otherwise they could have waited and followed the development,
as they did over the past few months. On both counts, I think, there is
no change in the situation, indeed, from the point of view of terrorism,
we have been dealing with real professionals in the past, like Al
Shabaab and Al Ittihad, these are serious people with the necessary
professionalism in that sense. This group is not as serious a challenge
as the Shabaabs and the Ittihads are. So I don’t think
it changes the game, it just adds some unwelcome spice to it.
AC: What is the EPRDF [the ruling Ethiopian People’s
Revolutionary Democratic Front] doing to prepare for the elections? Are
there any new strategies?
Meles: We have developed a draft strategy which was
discussed by the committee of the leadership. The expectation is that
the larger body of the leadership would discuss it sometime in August,
possibly endorse it with modifications, which would then make it
possible for us to start preparing for the elections in perhaps
September or October. The draft strategy is available and, as I said, we
hope that by September or October we will start seriously to prepare for
the elections.
AC: It’s been 18 years, which is a long time to be in
power. Would you say that this length of time is due to the successes of
the EPRDF or to the weakness of the opposition?
Meles: That is a very difficult question, the fact that
the EPRDF has been in power [for this long] is both a reflection of its
strength and the weakness of the opposition. The fact that the same
group of leaders, including myself, have been in leadership positions of
the EPRDF is also both a reflection of its strength and weaknesses. So
you have two different questions: why the EPRDF has been in power for so
long, that is not necessarily something bad. I know, for example, that
the social democracy in Sweden [Swedish Social
Democratic Party] have been in power for 80-90 % of the time since the
thirties. The Labour Party has been in power since the end of the Second
World War. Now, what is perhaps more of a concern is that within the
same party, the same people have been in positions of leadership
throughout the period. This needs to be tackled and I am sure that the
EPRDF is aware of it and is trying to address it.
AC: Who in particular are you referring to?
Meles: The old leadership which was leading the EPRDF
during the armed struggle and up to now, myself included. That, to some
extent is a sign of strength and it is also a sign of weakness that
needs to be addressed and, as I said, the EPRDF is aware of it and is
trying to address it. It is not just about X, Y or Z, it is about the
whole group of leadership which has been in very senior leadership
positions for a bit too long for the health of the party.
AC: Are you expecting a collective transition?
Meles: Yes, I think that the next crucial step needs to
be taken.
AC: It’s been more than a year since the Boundary
Commission closed itself down and we had virtual demarcation and
Eritrea moved into the Temporary Security Zone. What’s been
happening since then?
Meles: With regard to Eritrea, everything has been
frozen, no movement forward, fortunately no movement backward. The word
that comes to mind is ‘frozen’.
AC: Does this stalemate cause any problems for
Ethiopia?
Meles: Well, we would have preferred to have a more
healthy relationship with Eritrea. We believe that there is every reason
to move for such a relationship. But, if we must have what we have now,
we can live with it, more or less indefinitely.
AC: Are there any practical steps that are planned to
break the deadlock?
Meles: We tried our best. The problem is that the other
side says that there is no dialogue until A, B, C happens. Our argument
is that dialogue is always useful, there is no harm to dialogue and that
therefore we should engage each other in dialogue, so that we have a
lasting solution to the problem. And it’s not just about the boundary.
The boundary was a symptom of an underlying sickness and you do not cure
a sickness by treating its symptoms only. You need to address both the
symptoms and the underlying causes. So we are in need of dialogue. Had
they been prepared to engage us in dialogue, then that would still be
one step forward. The problem now is that they are not engaging us in
dialogue and we are stuck where we are.
AC: Are there any prospects for third-party mediation?
Meles: I doubt whether it’s a problem for a third
party. I think it is the frame of mind in Asmara. They have not yet made
their mind to engage us in constructive dialogue. It is more of a frame
of mind than a specific problem over a specific issue. More or less the
same thing has happened with regards to Djibouti. They
had a problem over their border with Djibouti. The rest of the world
believes that the Eritreans have trespassed, the Eritreans don’t agree.
The rest of the world thinks that since they have trespassed, they need
to remove their troops; the Eritreans don’t agree. The rest of the world
thinks that dialogue is the way forward, the Eritreans don’t agree. So
there is nothing unique in their refusal to engage in dialogue with us.
That is the same approach that they are following in Djibouti and
elsewhere. So I think that that needs to change and it can only change
from inside. But as soon as it does change, then I am sure that the
window will be opened.
AC: Do you see any prospect of this change?
Meles: One can never say never. People think that the
leadership there is headstrong and all the rest. That may well be true
but I also believe that that leadership is not suicidal and he is able
to read the writing on the wall when such writing is visible. And so the
possibilities of changing direction are not zero. But one can never be
sure.
AC: What do you think of the return of Sheikh
Hassan Dahir ‘Aweys’ to Mogadishu? Do you
think that Eritrean involvement could be damaging to a fragile situation
in Somalia?
Meles: I think that it is a reflection of desperation
and a desire to destabilize a fragile government. For me, it is a sign
of desperation for two reasons. Firstly, I think that Dahir Aweys and
his team are beginning to feel that they are losing the game in
Mogadishu among the Islamists. There are moderate elements of the
Islamic movement that are more and more disassociating themselves from
his hard-line group and they appear to be eager to stem the tide in that
sense. Secondly, the presence of Dahir Aweys in Asmara did nothing to
improve the standing of Eritrea in the international community and it
appears that they wanted to be relieved of his presence in Asmara as
soon as possible. So that, I think, is indicative of desperation as part
of the equation. At the same time, I think that Dahir Aweys and his team
might think that all is not
lost in Somalia and if they strike in time and strike hard, they could
stabilize the situation. So it is both expectation and frustration that
has pushed them to go to Mogadishu. Potentially, they could destabilize
the government, both from Asmara and from Mogadishu. But I believe that
some of the fundamental political changes that have occurred over the
past three years in terms of division between the Islamic movement as a
whole and more moderates drifting their position. I think that is
unlikely to change because of Dahir Aweys’s position in Mogadishu.
AC: Do you think there is any chance that his presence
is an attempt to reunite the ARS? [Alliance for the Re-liberation of
Somalia].
Meles: Well that cannot be ruled out though I think it
is unlikely.
AC: Do you think that the Brussels meeting was a step
in the right direction for Somalia?
Meles: I am not privy to the details but from what I
heard from the media, substantial amounts of money have been promised
and a substantial part of it is to finance Amisom [African Union Mission
in Somalia]. I don’t know how much of it is going to be given to the
Somali government. There have been two problems with regard to this in
the past. Firstly, there was not enough money to support the government,
lots of promises but very little delivery. Secondly, whatever money was
being delivered was being delivered by third-party organizations: NGOs,
international organizations. This continued to exacerbate the weakness
of the government because whatever assistance was coming was not being
channeled through government institutions and was weakening them. So I
hope, whatever the decision was in Brussels, it will address those
problems and the money involved is substantial enough to make a
difference. The key issue will be whether the promises are kept and,
assuming that they are, whether they will be put through proper
channels.
AC: In your opinion, is Sheikh Sharif Sheikh
Ahmed [Somalia’s new President] able to succeed? Do you look
forward to a positive outcome in Somalia?
Meles: I look forward to a positive outcome but not
because of particular like or dislike for any particular individual. I
think that the trends in Somalia are moving in the right direction. I
think that the current president is part of that positive trend and I
think that he needs and deserves support. But I believe that this is not
about individuals but about general trends within the society in
Somalia.
Source: Africa
Confidential, May 16, 2009
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