When Your Bluff Is Called, Change The Subject
Saleh AA Younis
August 26, 1999


The most marketable commodity Ethiopia has is not its coffee, which is subject to fluctuating prices. It is the Ethiopian Myth. In a world that likes to believe that, surely, there is one Black African nation that has a civilization that rivals that of any European power--in literature, in architecture, in medicine--Ethiopia says, "here I am, look at me..." Guilt-ridden multiculturalist Europeans the world over have suspended their critical thinking and said, "oh, yes, such greatness."

This isn't a problem for Eritrea. Whatever brings the tourists to Ethiopia will eventually result in them trekking to Eritrea to find out the real genius behind the Axum Civilization...Besides, Eritreans are so optimistic, they believe that whatever is good for Ethiopia is probably good for Eritrea.

The European multiculturalist blind spot is Ethiopia. So when the Ethiopian Government, its self-serving NGOs and spooks-turned-propagandists sell Ethiopia as a country that is flourishing under the enlightened leadership of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, those who value politeness more than the truth nod their heads and say, 'oh, yes, such development. Send in more quintals of wheat, please'.

Recently, the ever-busy Spokesperson of the FDRE, who is trying desperately to change the subject from the obvious question of "Why won't Ethiopia accept the peace treaty it has been presented by the OAU?" decided to compare and contrast the government in Eritrea and Ethiopia. The purpose of this exercise is unknown. If the point is to say, "we can't accept a peace treaty with the Eritrean Government because we don't trust them" then why did Ethiopia claim to have accepted the Framework Agreement in November and the Modalities just last month? The Government in Eritrea, as far as I know, hasn't changed since July 1999. Could it be that Ethiopia really never accepted the Framework and the Modalities and was merely paying lip service to paint itself as a peace-loving government?

In any event, here is a true "compare and contrast" between Ethiopia and Eritrea--written in the format of the Spokesperson. We hope this will help the Spokesperson diffuse the stress of having its government's bluff called and being exposed for the war-mongering power that it is. This time, there is no Salim, no Aptidon, no Campore to run to...It is just Eritrea, Ethiopia and honest brokers.

Sit back, relax, enjoy a cup of Ethiopian coffee and wonder why the birr and nakfa, whose one-to-one exchange rate request by Eritrea was considered so rude by Ethiopia that it waged war on Eritrea, is exchanging, a year and half later, at 1 to 1.

  1. Political Parties

  2. Elections

  3. How Government Power Is Derived

  4. Decentralization

  5. Freedom of The Press

  6. Transparency

  7. Signing Treaties vs Implementing Treaties

  8. Makeup of Armed Forces

  9. Treaties and their meaning

This is what separates truly free nations from neo-colonial empires that subjugate their people.