Call for an
All-Oromo Constituent Assembly
Dr.
Muhammad Shamsaddin
Megalommatis
Following the recent
developments among
the Oromo
leadership, the
context of the Oromo
National Struggle
for Independence got
more confused and
more disorientated.
At the same time, it
became far clearer.
I will start my
approach with the
latter; clearer?
How?
This situation made
clear that the
Oromos simply cannot
afford to continue
multi-divided like
that. This is the
only way to
guarantee that
Oromia will never be
free, and as
consequence, the
existence of the
real Oromo Nation
will be endangered
by the false, forged
concept of the –
absolutely
inexistent –
´Ethiopian´
pseudo-nation.
At the same time,
many critical
problems that are
able to definitely
prevent the Oromos
from achieving their
objectives came to
surface. The nature
of these problems is
such that they
contribute to
multi-division,
communication
interruption, and
mutual
incomprehension –
all constituting the
principal hindrances
in the path to Free
and Independent
Oromia.
These critical
problems can be
easily noted in the
arguments of the two
opposite parts (in
the latest
scission); those
panegyrizing for the
´takeover´ accused
the ´Old Guard´ for
inactivity,
lethargy, apathy.
Those sticking to
legitimacy
reproached to the
aforementioned group
their
unconstitutional
acts. The dialogue
of the deaf can
continue for years.
And Oromia will be
an even weaker, an
even farther dream.
A distant illusion.
The simplest answer
to all these
factions is this:
If the problems of
the other part are
precisely as you
describe them, why
don´t you meet the
other guys and
deliberate about all
these pending
issues?
Of course, all these
formations are not
political parties
properly speaking.
They are liberation
fronts and
movements. There is
a big difference in
the source of
legitimacy for
either.
Issues of Legitimacy
What is legitimacy
for a political
party? Public vote
expressed and
registered at all
levels, internal and
external. The latter
level involves free
elections for the
parliament and the
municipal and
regional
administrations. The
former level
concerns internal
party elections that
should not be
limited to the
elected
parliamentary
deputies only but
engage all party
members. 20th
century parties were
usually launched by
a political leader
risen under critical
circumstances and
evolved consequently
around him. Then,
criticism helped
societies understand
that an undemocratic
party, used by a
leader for
undeclared policies
(f. i. peremptorily
decided entrance
into alliances, like
the NATO, and
adhesion to
international
bodies, like the UN,
OECD or EU, namely
decisions which
critically affects
the nation´s
destiny), can hardly
promote the
democratic
organization of the
society. Democracy
in a country hinges
on democracy within
a party.
One has to admit
that the
undeservedly
evangelized as
democratic Western
countries are an
embodiment of fraud,
corruption,
embezzlement of the
people´s property,
and political bias;
the foreign policy –
in particular – has
been conducted in a
most undemocratic,
unapproved and
disapproved manner.
There cannot be
proper democracy,
when the public
opinion on a
specific subject is
misguided, biased,
cheated and
disregarded.
Democracy does not
mean mere election
of an uncontrolled
government. How many
English would have
agreed with their
country´s
participation in the
2003 War against
Iraq´s Saddam
Hussein?
Liberation Fronts
and Legitimacy
On the other hand,
liberation fronts
and movements are
not the property of
some small groups
that can
uncontrolled pursue
their own policies;
this concept would
rather be closer to
that of a Mafia gang
or a terrorist group
– for which there
are no legitimacy
issues as their
existence is
absolutely
illegitimate (not
because a tyrannical
or democratic regime
decided so, but
because they are
morally unacceptable
as threat for the
Humanity).
Legitimacy issues
exist for liberation
fronts and
movements; they are
compelling indeed.
Failure to
understand this
reality leads
leaderships to
extinction for lack
of (or disregard
for) legitimacy
drives the
liberation fronts
and movements to
national margin and
insignificance.
A liberation front
dissolved or
marginalized is a
liberation front
that first lost its
legitimacy; the real
legitimacy of a
liberation front or
movement hinges
precisely on the
political and moral
consensus of an
oppressed,
subjugated nation.
The objectives set
by a liberation
front or movement,
which are relevant
to the struggle for
national
independence,
freedom, national
affirmation,
self-determination,
and nation-building
process, are the
measure of its own
legitimacy.
When a liberation
front or movement
fails to carry out
the promised
struggle, it
automatically loses
its legitimacy; it
represents a name, a
title, a past, a
stamp, a memory,
having no real face
value anymore.
Public support
certainly attributes
legitimacy to a
liberation front or
movement; but this
cannot be
demonstrated or
corroborated easily
as there are no
elections or other
confirmed ways to
prove it. Public
support is what I
mentioned earlier as
´political and moral
consensus of an
oppressed,
subjugated nation´.
But for a
disoriented
liberation front or
movement, public
support matters
truly little; sooner
or later, the
distance from the
originally set
objectives will be
felt and the
legitimacy will be
removed from the
disoriented
liberation front or
movement – and this
will be shown to
all.
What happens if
disoriented
liberation front or
movement continues
influencing the
largest part of (or
the entire)
subjugated nation?
This situation
reaches the level of
national tragedy and
extinction.
Extinction of
nations is a common
phenomenon in the
History of the
Mankind.
At the present stage
of the Oromo
Nation´s struggle
for National
Independence, the
legitimacy issue –
which is key to the
final success –
hinges firstly on
dialogue.
Unbiased Dialogue
among All Oromos
Dialogue will give
to a specific
liberation front or
movement the much
needed legitimacy
because it will
highlight among the
oppressed Oromos its
potentiality to
represent their
passionate desire
for liberation,
self-affirmation,
independence, and
self-determination
successfully.
How can a liberation
front or movement
possibly suggest
that it can
represent an entire
nation – which is
subjugated and
tyrannized – when it
fails to be in
speaking terms with
any other opponent
of the oppressive
regime?
When a liberation
struggle is carried
out, the effort is
by definition
unanimous and
all-inclusive. There
cannot be
exclusions,
distinctions,
segregations,
efforts to bar and
ban other voices
which may reflect a
different viewpoint;
there cannot be any
personal interests,
prevarication,
animosity.
Eliminating the
Berlin Wall among
the various OLF
factions would
consist in a first
great step for Oromo
Unity and Struggle
for Independence.
There have recently
been published many
illuminating
articles about the
possible way Oromos
should act while
engaging themselves
in a liberation
movement; there can
be no doubt that the
traditions and the
principles derived
from the Gadaa
system can help
tremendously the
Oromo liberation
fronts and movements
function
successfully. Above
all the rest, there
is one clear point:
all-inclusiveness is
a prerequisite for
an open dialogue,
wide analysis,
innovative
approaches,
discussion of plans
of action, and
subsequent
conclusion and
decision-making.
The past concerns
only the past; what
happened - happened.
As I said in the
beginning, there
will always be those
ready to say "this
is not the correct
method" and the
others who will
refuse the statement
by saying "and you
did nothing for the
objectives set by
all of us".
Were the former guys
essentially un-Oromo
in their rush?
Were the latter guys
nonchalant sleepers
instead of being
vigorous fighters?
There can be no
other way to offer
all the Oromos the
chance to judge who
is right and who is
wrong than an
All-Oromo
Constituent
Assembly.
A Meeting to setup
the All-Oromo
Constituent Assembly
A venue must be
found, the correct
time must be
selected, and the
first to extend the
invitation to all
the rest will have
the advantage.
The organization of
a meeting to setup
the All-Oromo
Constituent Assembly
is the only urgent,
imperative and
substantive need of
the Oromo Nation in
August 2008.
No one can know what
the exit will be;
perhaps they will
all unite, and
re-launch the
liberation struggle.
It is also possible
that they were
depart divided and
in dispute. But this
is their right;
every leadership has
the right to
demonstrate in
public their
inaptness and
unsuitability. The
Oromo Nation will
sort it out.
But the Oromo Nation
deserves to know who
their leaders are,
what they think
about one another,
and what they
believe about the
Oromos´ chances to
ever be liberated
and honored as one
of the most ancient
and most noble
nations of the
world.
Rejection to
organize a meeting
to setup the
All-Oromo
Constituent Assembly
would mean total
disregard for the
Oromo Nation, proven
inability to lead
the tyrannized
nation, and
seclusion due to
bribery by any
element alien to the
Oromo Nation.
Rejection to invite
all, properly
speaking all, all
the prominent Oromo
statesmen and
politicians,
liberation front
leaders, eminent
academia and
intellectuals,
leading activists
and visionaries will
simply reconfirm the
factionist attitude
of the organizers.
Little matters
whether some will
not come. A meeting
with historical
significance must be
attended by all; by
overtly dodging it,
one would only
demonstrate
untrustworthiness,
bias and guilt.
And those who can
lead the Oromo
Nation will go
ahead; the Oromoness,
the openness and the
frankness they will
exhibit will qualify
them to go ahead.
They will then have
to address the
problems that came
to surface during
the recent
developments; the
worst among them is
a sort of tribalism
that jeopardizes the
Oromo Nation´s
future. About this
we will focus in a
forthcoming article.
For the time being,
I want to underscore
the gravity of the
current situation;
those in a position
to convene this
meeting must act
immediately. The
time wasted since
the recent
developments has
been very critical
for the Oromo
Nation.
To some, it has been
just a period of 25
days. This is so
because they are
blind.
To others, it has
been a span of 25
centuries; this is
so because they are
farsighted.
Note
Picture: An Oromo
shoveling orange
lentils in the same
way Oromo leaders
must shovel Oromo
souls. From: http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5572644
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