by Abebe Gellaw
ESAT’s decision to report that Prime Minister Meles Zenawi is dead, according to reliable sources, has never been easy.
It was two weeks ago that we received the news from highly credible
sources in Brussels. Our sources that want to remain anonymous as they
were not authorized to speak to the media on this sensitive matter told
us that the International Crisis Group (ICG) concluded that Mr. Zenawi
was deceased. Headquartered in Brussels, with offices around the world,
ICG is the leading independent think tank on conflict prevention and
resolution around the world. It was hard to ignore information from such
a highly reputable international organization.
As a responsible
media outlet, ESAT tried to investigate and verify the tip meticulously
before it decided to broadcast the news. To be fair to the facts, we
have also scrutinized the conflicting and contradictory information
coming out from the ruling TPLF clique. We have examined not only the
statements and stories put out for public consumption by the TPLF, but
also their conducts that tell their own stories.
As Meles Zenawi’s
21-year tyrannical rule has surely come to a screeching halt, the TPLF
proved to be a heap of mess without its chieftain. Ethiopia appeared to
be leaderless and cheerless. In the absence of its head, the regime
appeared to be decapitated, incapacitated, incoherent, disunited,
disorganized and disoriented. This is typical of a one-man regime unlike
institutionally sound democratic systems (like Ghana) that cannot be
easily shaken by the death or absence of one man. Like an untrained ship
crew with no captain in sight, the ruling elite seem to be at a loss
for direction in the face of a gathering storm.
Look no further
than the contradictory statements being issued by the high priests of
the ethnic front on the well-being and whereabouts of Mr. Zenawi. While
rumors are abounding on the death of the dictator, none of the officials
has come out with a convincing explanation where the big man is.
“He
is resting from exhaustion… He will be back in ten days…. He is in
hospital….No, he is on holiday…. He is in town…No, he is in Europe… No,
no, no…he is relaxing in America…,” TPLF officials told the public in
the past two weeks. But Zenawi is nowhere to be seen. He was neither in
the palace nor in his rubber-stamp parliament making and unmaking laws.
And yet, TPLF’s creative stories change within hours and each weird
story adds more fuel to wild speculations and rumors.
After the
May 18th incident that became a turning-point in the tyrannical life of
Mr. Zenawi, he was not seen in public for four weeks. On June 18th, he
finally surfaced in Mexico City where he flew to attend a G20 meeting.
Instead of quashing rumors about his well-being, the PR stunt
unwittingly started a more serious discussion. He significantly lost
weight and looked more like a ghost than the charismatic dictator he
once seemed. The Chinese state TV, CCTV, broadcast his emaciated image,
which was recorded during his meeting with Chinese president Hu Jintao,
proved the suspicion of so many people. That was followed by a photo
opportunity with Mexican president Felipe Calderon. It was another flop.
He looked haggard, tired and gravely ill. The effort led by Berhane
Gebrekirstos turned out to be a PR disaster.
On July 15th
the newly-formed Ethiopian National Transitional Council (ENTC) issued a
press release declaring the passing away of Mr. Zenawi. The news was
received suspiciously. Some people questioned the motive of ENTC to
declare the death of Zenawi. In fact, those of us in the news media also
felt that ENTC should have passed the information to the media for
further investigation. In any case, ENTC attracted more attention on the
mysteries surrounding Zenawi’s puzzling health and final destiny
spurred heated debate among Ethiopians across the world.
On July
14, 2012 Zenawi reportedly passed away after suffering a few weeks of
agony and pains at St-Luke University Hospital in Brussels. The news was
received with mixed emotions. While most Ethiopians welcomed the
departure of a brutal tyrant that has caused so much pain and suffering
on millions of Ethiopians, the news upset the TPLF camp. “Liars! Liars!
Liars!..,” cried out camp TPLF without producing any evidence to
disprove the news.
For a few days, TPLF chose to be quite.
Finally, it broke its silence via the Voice of America. On July 18,
Sebhat Nega appeared on VOA Amharic service and told the apprehensive
public that Zenawi only suffered a minor illness. He said he was
somewhere in Europe getting medical care. According to Nega, who was
widely believed to be the mentor of the former dictator, in the absence
of Zenawi the “democratic institutions” were working smoothly. Until the
chief comes back, according to him, the “deputy prime minister” is in
charge. As usual, the old guard’s answers were deliberately vague. They
raised more questions than providing any serious answers.
Crisis
communication management needs skills and some touch of professionalism.
So TPLF felt the need to bring out its topmost communication expert.
Unfortunately, the “expert” is the least trusted and one of the most
detested members of the ruling elite. It was unwise of TPLF to send out
the minister of miscommunication to convince the public that Zenawi is
still alive and kicking.
After cancelling his appointments with
journalists a couple of times, Bereket Simon, came on July 19th to meet
and greet local and foreign journalists. He was flanked by none other
than Shimelis Kemal, who insisted all along that news on the illness of
Mr. Zenawi was fabricated by ESAT.
Mr. Simon said that Zenawi was
exhausted after working restlessly for over thirty years. So an unnamed
doctor forced him to go on sick leave. He dismissed reports that he was
gravely ill. According to Mr. Simon, the big boss suffered no serious
illness but exhaustion that needed a break. He assured us that he would
soon be in office after enjoying his holiday. He also contradicted Mr.
Nega by saying that Zenawi is in charge of running the country. It
appeared that the deputy was not the task of ruling the nation even if
the boss is exhausted and took a sick leave.
Mr. Simon was also
asked why the Prime Minister’s health and whereabouts have been shrouded
in secrecy. According to the communication expert, this is something to
do with the culture of the ruling party. He explained that since its
days in the jungle, the ethnic front does not dwell on such matters. He
gave little weight to rights of the public to know about the health or
death of a ruler. Mr. Simon, who was visibly nervous and sipping a glass
of water quite frequently, gave inconclusive and bizarre statements
that failed to convince us that Zenawi was indeed enjoying his holiday
in an unknown tourist resort.
Addis Fortune is a newspaper close
to the ruling elite. It is an open secret that the publisher, Tamrat
Gebre-Giorgis, is a close associate of the minister of miscommunication
and other officials. On June 22, it published a front page interview
with a screaming headline: “Meles back in town.” The story, which the
paper run as breaking news claimed: “A day after the Ethiopian
government officially announced his ailment, Prime Minster Meles Zenawi
came back to Addis Abeba, according to a credible source. The Premier
came back to town on Friday evening, July 20, 2012, and he is recovering
well, the source revealed to Fortune.”
Fortune’s publisher also
told everyone that Zenawi is expected to surprise the public by
appearing at a press conference. Apparently, the credible source feeding
false information is none other than Bereket Simon, who probably
thought that disinformation may work to manipulate public opinion. But
the widely expected press conference where Zenawi would take center
stage never materialized.
Former TPLF propaganda chief and
publisher of Ethiopian Reporter, Amare Aregawi, is also very close to
the ruling elite. He is widely believed to be a privy to TPLF’s top guns
including security chief Getachew Assefa. He too had breaking news for
us. Contradicting Addis Fortune’s “big story”, he had a different
headline: “Meles on vacation abroad”.
The story dated 25th July
declared: “Following the prescribed sick leave, Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi is currently on vacation outside Ethiopia, The Reporter learnt.
Sources told The Reporter that Meles is enjoying the sick leave after he
was ordered to take time outside office to recover from his illness
resulted from “over workloads for more than three decades.” What was
even bizarre was the fact that Reporter told us that Zenawi was enjoying
his “holiday” in the United States.
That was not the end of the
story coming from officials sources. On July 28, Addis Admas, another
paper linked to the ruling elite published an interesting interview with
none other than the famous TPLF veteran, Sebhat Nega. The stories keep
on changing. But this time, it came to a full circle. He told the paper
that Zenawi is having a speedy recovery. “Where is the Prime Minister,”
asked the journalist.
“He is in Europe,” he answered. “Where exactly in Europe?” queried the journalist.
“I don’t know exactly ,” says Sebhat Nega, who was supposed to be in the know.
Tyrants
are supposed to be seen in full control. How is it that the most
visible and domineering man in the last 21 year vanishes into thin air?
He is Europe, he is back in town…No, no, no…he is on holiday in the
U.S. Who should the public trust? This must be one of the worst
disappearance cases ever known in the history of tyranny.
As a
journalist who tried to sift fiction from facts, Meles Zenawi is not
back in town, nor is he on holiday in America. As far as I am concerned,
our sources at ICG are more credible. I admit that I have not
personally seen a death certificate or the dead body of Ethiopia’s
former dictator.
Based on the credible information we have
received from Brussels, I am convinced that Meles Zenawi is dead. I do
not believe that such reputable think tanks like ICG will get this
wrong. For the record, ESAT never quoted ICG. It quoted anonymous but
credible sources working at ICG in Brussels. We are aware of ICG’s Twit.
Unlike
Aigaforum and Tigraionline’s claim’s ICG statement does not disprove
the story that Zenawi is gone. The Twit in question reads: “Crisis Group
is not in a position to speculate about the fate of PM Meles Zenawi,
nor have we commented on it to date.” ESAT never relied on a speculation
or comment from ICG. We only had privilege to access confidential
information held by ICG that conclusively claimed Zenawi was dead.
I
personally challenge the TPLF high command to disprove this fact
instead of fabricating conflicting and contradictory stories to convince
us that he was alive and kicking. Though some TPLF officials may
believe that Zenawi is a superman who can be in Addis Ababa, Europe and
America at the same time most Ethiopians do no buy such a fantasy.
The
Ethiopian people has a right to know the whereabouts of its ruler. This
will help the people of Ethiopia to make critical decisions on the
future of the country. Bring Meles Zenawi out alive or in a coffin for a
final farewell. Then we will stand corrected.
Whatever the case,
Meles Zenawi’s grip on power is over. The political dynamics has changed
permanently with his long absence and the rise of competing forces for
power and control. A vicious power struggle has already begun in earnest
within the TPLF clique and its servant parties.
It is fair to say good riddance to a brutal tyrant that has tortured our people for over two decades…
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