awsm.nz: Eritrea: National Liberation? National
The world is divided into nation-states. These artificial constructs have either evolved
over an extended period, through the actions of people within particular areas or are
created by outside forces. There is nothing 'natural' about them, though this is harder to
see in cases where they have been in place for a long time. ---- In Africa the European
colonial powers drew up the political boundaries to suit themselves, in the latter half of
the 19th Century. Later wars of independence fought in Africa did not result in the
redrawing of colonial boundaries. Most of the anticolonial movements were essentially
united only by their hatred of the imperialist powers. Despite using the rhetoric of a
nation united regardless of ethnicity or tribe, the reality has been far more fractious,
with a large degree of favouritism given to certain groups. Upon gaining independence many
African countries, for example the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Burundi and
Nigeria, spawned separatist movements based along ethnic,
tribal and religious lines. They have fought each other just as bitterly as their former
rulers.
Eritrea is a place many people elsewhere probably haven't heard of. It is worth knowing a
bit about it because it is a textbook case of a war of national liberation that did not
work for the betterment of people and the consequences of that is seriously impacting on
events elsewhere right now. Eritrea is a small country in northeast Africa, with a
population of about 6.3 million. There are nine ethnic groups of whom the largest are the
Tigrinya who make up 55% of the population and the Tigre who make up about 30%. It is one
of the world's poorest and most autocratic countries, often coming at or near the bottom
of most human rights lists.
Eritrea was an Italian colony, then it was put under British administration. In 1962 it
was taken over by the feudal monarchy of Ethiopia. It would not be until 1993 before
Eritrea would become formally independent. For most of that time the two main rebel
factions the Eritrean People's Liberation Front and the Eritrean Liberation Front, fought
against the monarchy of Haile Selassie then the Soviet backed Mengistu Haile Mariam. After
'liberation' a one party state was established by the People's Front for Democracy and
Justice under Isaias Afwerki. As is all too common with states and political parties
labelling themselves with the words "democracy" and "justice", both are absent from Eritrea.
The devastation wrought by decades of war, which were marked by forced population
resettlements, famine and atrocities, ensured that Eritrea had a woefully inadequate
infrastructure and an economy in ruins when it finally gained independence. This made
economic growth very hard to achieve and matters have not been helped with at least two
border wars being fought with Ethiopia. To aggravate matters, there have been appalling
human rights abuses under the Afwerki regime. An aspect of his rule that has drawn
increasing attention has been the introduction of indefinite compulsory military
conscription. As a result, everyone under 50 is tied to the military, with the possibility
of release only at the whim of a commander. People spend years in a form of military
induced slavery and are used to build various projects for the ruler and his clique.
The situation has become so grim that thousands of Eritreans have fled abroad and made a
trek across northern Africa and crossed the Mediterranean Sea to Europe, along with
hundreds of thousands of Syrians fleeing the Syrian civil war. This has helped create one
of the greatest refugee crises since the Second World War. European countries, which are
the heirs to the colonial powers, have been pressured to help Syrian refugees to some
extent. In contrast, Eritreans have been treated as 'economic migrants', and therefore
unworthy of the same consideration.
So what went so horribly wrong?
In wars of national liberation the only thing that ultimately unites the various factions
is a hatred of those whom the nationalists blame for their problems. In the case of
Eritrea that was initially the Italians, then the Ethiopians. However, the defeat of the
Mengistu regime in 1991, did not bring about the liberation of the Eritrean people.
Rather, one tyranny was substituted for another and this replicates a common pattern in
many countries.
The removal of the hated foreign power and nationals of that group from a newly
independent country, exacerbates existing problems in the short term. One reason is
because the people who are expelled take their money, skills and expertise with them: the
unfortunate situation that happened in
many of the African countries such as the former Portuguese colonies of Angola and
Mozambique and in the Belgian Congo. After a grace period, what often then happens is the
return of these outside powers in the form of giant multinationals in search of raw
materials. The nationalist regime needs the expertise the companies bring, and offer
sweetheart deals in return. This leads to all sorts of corruption and kleptocracy. For
example, in Eritrea a multi-national minerals company called Nevsun is making profits from
mining there, with President Afwerki also personally picking up a huge percentage of that
money extracted from his slave labour force.
Another problem is that these wars of national liberation were usually led by people
trained in elitist schools in the West, the former Soviet Union or some other place of
exile. They often had little, or no, understanding of the real situation in their country.
Idi Amin was educated in the United Kingdom. Robert Mugabe was educated in apartheid era
South Africa and the UK. They also picked up the ideological or elitist hatred and
contempt for ordinary people. Thus, when they took over their respective countries, they
imposed the same repressive and autocratic rule that had previously been imposed by the
colonialists. In essence, a white colonial elite was replaced by a tribal or local ethnic
or other elite. Replacing one clique with another, either through wars of liberation such
as that which Eritrea endured, or through the ballot box, is not really changing much. It
is a problem that both liberals and certain brands of Marxists alike, fail to grasp or
under-emphasize.
Wars of national liberation can easily be made to sound romantic or noble. After all,
there have been a number of horrific regimes that have sorely needed replacing. That has
usually required organised resistance. Only a total cynic, right-wing racist or utterly
naïve person would argue otherwise. Psychologically there is also an unacknowledged
tendency on the Left to over focus on obscure struggles in faraway places. There's nothing
intrinsically wrong with looking at difficulties in other countries. It is essential in
fact. However, it is far easier to obsess over the plight of the workers and peasants of
wherever, than doing the hard work of trying to deal with problems in your own immediate
neighbourhoods or town. We need to get the balance right and keep our wits about us. The
sobering reality of such wars can be found in their legacy: a whole list of nations, like
Eritrea, ruled by autocrats in repressive one party states that use terror and repression
to silence any real or imaginary threats. Eritrea may be an extreme example, but it is one
within an overall pattern.
Anarchists do not oppose the state because of a belief that any form of rules or
organisation is wrong. It is because we recognise the state is a key means by which an
elite rules over everyone else. Whether the rulers are elected through the ballot box or
gains power via the bullet, they still think they know what is best for everyone else and
will use varying degrees of coercion, ideological indoctrination or brute force to impose
their will. National liberation struggles have succeeded in eliminating the scourge of
colonialism but not that of authoritarianism. One definition of insanity is knowing
something doesn't work but continuing to repeatedly do it. With decades of examples in
various parts of the world and contemporary disasters like that of Eritrea, the need for a
change of approach is compelling
http://www.awsm.nz/2015/11/13/eritrea-national-liberation-national-disaster/