Muslim Protests in Ethiopia Reveal Religious Fault Lines
VOA News
by Gabe Joselow
by Gabe Joselow
NAIROBI — An Ethiopian Muslim protest movement has quieted down since the arrests of key organizers two weeks ago in Addis Ababa. The government crackdown has aggravated tensions between Muslim and Ethiopian authorities.
A
small group of Muslims began organizing demonstrations at mosques in
the Ethiopian capital earlier this year to protest the perceived
interference by the Ethiopian government into religious affairs.
Among
their demands, the protesters called for new elections for the
country’s Islamic Affairs Supreme Council to be held in mosques, rather
than in government offices.
Tensions reached their peak on July
13, when the government raided a gathering at the Awalia Mosque in Addis
Ababa, where government officials said Muslim leaders were planning
further protests.
Ethiopian authorities said more than 70 people
were arrested in the operation, including the members of the mosque’s
central organizing committee.
A week later, thousands of Muslims
gathered at the Anwar Mosque to protest the arrests. More activists were
detained following clashes with police.
Federal Police Commissioner Workneh Gebeyehu, in a televised address, blamed the mosque’s committee for instigating the unrest.
He
said even before the arrests, the “members of the committee were urging
others to follow in their footsteps, therefore those arrested at Anwar
were organized by the committee.” He said the police investigation
“shows the whole movement is associated with extremism.”
The protests have dwindled since the arrests, but have not disappeared entirely.
A
VOA Amharic service reporter said demonstrators stood silently outside
the Anwar mosque following prayers last Friday with their arms crossed,
to mime the act of being arrested, or with their hands over their
mouths.
And now, the movement has taken on a political element with the backing of the opposition All Ethiopian Unity Party.
Party
Chairman Hailu Shawel was accused of instigating violent protests that
followed the controversial 2005 general elections, and was put under
house arrest. He sees similarities in the Muslim protest movement to
his party’s struggle against the Ethiopian authorities.
“So far,
we have not seen anything illegal. None,” said Hailu. “They [the
government] just want to control everything that moves, control
everything that sticks, control everything that tries to move in a
direction which they do not like.”
Ethiopia is a majority Christian nation; Muslims make up about one-third of the population.
The
government has earned praise in the West for promoting religious
diversity at home, while also battling Islamic extremism in the region.
Ethiopian troops have ventured deep into neighboring Somalia to take on
the al-Qaida-linked militant group al-Shabab.
It is that kind of foreign-fueled insurgency the Ethiopian government is concerned about taking hold on its own soil.
In
his televised remarks, police commissioner Workneh said the influence
of foreign elements in the Muslim protests is a national concern. “The
issue is not about religion,” he said, “our people, particularly those
peace-loving Muslims, should understand this.”
Hailu said he too
is concerned about the foreign influence, but said it is the
government’s crackdown on Muslims that will invite extremists from
abroad.
“The internationalists will walk in and create a situation
that we see today in many countries. We don’t want that,” said Hailu.
“We have enough problems.”
Ethiopia is most concerned about the influence of Salafist, or Wahbist Muslims, who practice a more conservative form of Islam.
To
combat this, the government has actively promoted the al-Abhash sect of
Islam, which is based on the teachings of an Ethiopian scholar who had
been living in exile in Lebanon.
In a recent interview with VOA,
Amnesty International Ethiopia researcher Claire Beston said the
government’s tendency to insert itself into people’s private lives has
fostered dissent.
“The government’s taken a number of measures to
control all aspects of life in the country, and that includes invasion
into religious practices and that has been a catalyst in protests of
excessive government interference in religious affairs and that’s been
systematic of the government’s interference in all aspects of life in
the country,” said Beston.
Amnesty International has expressed
concern about reports of widespread rights violations in the
government’s crackdown on the protests, including beatings and unlawful
detention.
In a statement last week, the U.S. Embassy in Addis
Ababa said it was “monitoring the situation closely,” and is urging “all
sides to remain calm, to respect the law and the right to freedom of
religion.”
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