| Jan-Mar 09 | Apr-Jun 09 | Jul-Sept 09 | Oct-Dec 09 | Jan-May 10 | Jun-Dec 10 | Jan-May 11 | Jun-Dec 11 | Jan-May 12 | Jun-Dec 12 |

[dehai-news] Opendemocracy.net: The rise of Islamophobia in Ethiopia

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Fri, 26 Apr 2013 00:33:22 +0200

The rise of Islamophobia in Ethiopia


Francois Craig <http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/francois-craig> 25
April 2013

Recent demands have been the most vocal and the most sustained in the
history of Ethiopian Muslims. But if they have gone the least bit beyond the
scope of religion, then, ironically, they have been overtly secularist.

Many observers have documented the rise in Islamophobic sentiments in many
western lands, especially since 9/11. While any collective castigation of a
community is as stupid as it is immoral, sometimes it is not surprising.
When innocent people get confronted successively with the shocking facts of
sudden loss of life and property by through the actions of certain members
of a group of people, the suspicion towards the whole group gets amplified.

There are of course agents playing the 'Islamophobic' card for political
purposes, but they do so on the bases of an already charged psycho-social
environment, which they also help escalate in turn. At least in a society
already filled with prejudice towards Islam, such an untoward marriage
between terrorist destruction and political exploitation are bound to render
people even more defensive in their attitudes towards Muslims who are
construed as the 'dangerous others'.

Ethiopia's experience of this is both different and similar to the western
one. Like many political actors in the west, the government in Ethiopia has
been actively engaged, since the end of 2011, in colossal fear-mongering
about the threat of terrorists and extremists in the country: it has
released horror-inducing films, and broadcast bombastic news reports, on
"Islamic terrorism". It has also arrested, tortured and killed numerous
people, accusing them of the said crimes. But very much unlike places in the
west, no independent source during this period has ever identified an
organized Ethiopian Islamist group that aspired to either fight the
"unIslamic" order, or the "enemies of Islam" by waging jihad and conducting
terrorist acts.

We must then ask: is Islamophobia on the rise in Ethiopia as a result of
state-fabricated propaganda with no clear social and psychological bases for
it among the Muslims themselves?

The rise of a persistent campaign against "Islamic terrorism" coincided with
a rather bizarre anti-secularist move by the Ethiopian government. It
reportedly brought in some Lebanese preachers into Ethiopia, who immediately
seized the moment to spread the teachings of the Al-ahbash sect. It is by
now well-confirmed that the government proactively supported the forceful
spread of this sect through organizing conferences and workshops on its
behalf, making it mandatory for imams to attend them, and punishing any
absentees or detractors of the sect.

Ethiopian Muslims for their part reacted vocally and massively. The
government-controlled, but the independent-on-paper Muslim organization, the
Ethiopian Islamic Affairs Supreme Council, had already become notorious for
its corrupt, inefficient and, obviously, undemocratic actions and this now
exacerbated the already bitter reactions. Protests started to flare up in
the capital city, reaching the regions only gradually.

In the course of the last year-and-a-half-long series of uprisings,
government forces have reacted violently. But the most glaring and
persistent discourse of the government has harped on about "Islamic
terrorism" and "extremism". The protests have been declared to be such, and
the leaders have been made to face "terrorist" charges. The ruling party has
alleged that the protesters were simply aiming at establishing an Islamic
state and waging jihad. The propaganda work has been made to reach every
corner of the country, embracing indiscriminately thousands of people in the
category of the enemy "Other".

Do the politicians have a social or political basis for introducing such
inflammatory rhetoric into Ethiopia? The vast majority of Ethiopian Muslims
have always been known for their politically docile religious
self-expression. The age-long domination by a Christian state, among other
factos, has made their religious outlook decidedly quietist. Even the
infiltration of Muslim corners by some so-called fundamentalist schools of
thought from other lands has not disturbed the nature of this quietism.
Religious change has so far proved incapable of significantly encroaching on
the arena of social life.

The recent demands have been the most vocal and the most sustained in the
history of Ethiopian Muslims. But again, they have been strictly religious
demands couched in constitutional terms. If they have gone the least bit
beyond the scope of religion, then, ironically, they have been overtly
secularist. The call has been to end government interference in the
religious affairs of Muslims and their institutions. Such a call and the way
in which it has been framed have amazed many observers not least for their
role in "redefining protest" in authoritarian-led Ethiopia. While their
implications for the political development of the country would no doubt be
immense, the demands have at the same time been confined - strictly speaking
- to the religious arena.

The government has denied the "innocence" of these demands, and questioned
the intentions behind them. It has tried to associate the leaders of the
protests and those who have taken part in them with regional and continental
terrorist groups like Bokko Haram, Ansar As-sunna, and al shabab. But all
the evidence it has provided so far is considered as flimsy to say the least
by many people. It has consistently failed, local and international
observers would argue, to unequivocally establish any link between these
organizations and the current and ongoing protests. Nor has the Government
proved beyond any doubt that the leaders or the demonstrators have engaged
in any supra-religious activity - either in the long or the short terms.

The Government might have in mind securing some political and economic gains
in fuelling such a discourse. Political analysts have cited the local,
regional and international political and economic benefits of blowing the
"terrorist flute" in this age of ours. This makes more sense in Ethiopia-the
super-power in the Horn of Africa, a strong ally of the US and a regime with
a fast-dwindling internal legitimacy.

But this also indicates that there is an underlying psychological basis to
it. A global narrative with lots of negative connotations attached to it,
"Islamism" and "Islamist radicalism" can frighten masses of people in the
world today, especially in those regions and countries with some history of
entanglement with such ideologies. Such is the Horn region. Ethiopia is
located in what has been an Islamist-charged regional environment for some
years now. It wouldn't be difficult to instigate with some success a sense
of Islamophobia in the country, even when the country itself is not
meaningfully endangered by any internal Islamist ideology or action.

The secularist, non-violent Muslim rights movement has now been taken over
by the government as a spring-board for promoting this Islamophobic
environment in the whole country. The major effect of this turn of events
will be the deteriorating condition of religious rights in the country in
the name of fighting terrorism. But more significantly, such an environment
may create a tense inter-religious relationship between the otherwise
exemplary, long-standing, peaceful co-existence of Muslims and Christians in
Ethiopia.

 
Received on Thu Apr 25 2013 - 22:40:11 EDT

Dehai Admin
© Copyright DEHAI-Eritrea OnLine, 1993-2013
All rights reserved