By Bantii Qixxeessaa
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In the calculus of liberation movements, silence is never neutral. When
a people’s fundamental aspiration is omitted from official discourse - whether
deliberately or by omission - it sends a message not only to adversaries, but
also to allies, sympathizers, and future generations. For the Oromo liberation
movement, the continued silence around the demand for independence is not
merely a tactical pause; it is a strategic error with far-reaching
consequences. The Power of the Maximalist Position In negotiation theory, one of the most fundamental principles is clear: you never start with your minimum demand. Instead, you assert your maximalist position, allowing room to negotiate downward while still protecting core interests. |
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The case of the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) in the
Tanzania peace talks of 2023 is illustrative. According to credible sources
close to both rounds of talks - in April and November - independence was never
raised as a principle or even as a fallback negotiating position. In fact,
there is no evidence that even the right to self-determination was demanded.
For an armed movement born from a history of resistance, whose very origins
were tied to the vision of an independent Oromia, this omission is not just puzzling
- it is alarming. According to news sources, the Oromo Liberation Army’s (OLA)
proposal to establish a transitional government was the main point of
contention in the week-long peace talks with the Ethiopian government held on
the Tanzanian island of Zanzibar ((See "Transitional Government proposal
divided OLA and Ethiopian government in the Tanzania talks", May 11, 2023,
on Curate
Oromia website.
The OLA is not alone. Peaceful Oromo political
organizations such as the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) and the Oromo Federalist
Congress (OFC) also avoid invoking Article 39 of the Ethiopian constitution,
which explicitly guarantees the right of nations and nationalities to
self-determination, including secession. While its enforceability may be
questionable under current political conditions, the article itself is a
symbolic and legal instrument of immense potential. For any organization in the
Oromo liberation movement - whether its chosen path is armed resistance or
non-violent political engagement - to avoid demanding even what the Ethiopian
constitution allows, albeit on paper, is inconceivable. It not only weakens the
legitimacy of their claim but also undermines the seriousness with which the
Oromo cause is projected to both domestic and international audiences.
What makes this even more troubling is the dissonance
between internal and external messaging. Nearly all Oromo organizations
continue to claim that they are fighting for the right to self-determination
when speaking to the Oromo public. They invoke it in speeches, slogans, and
declarations. But when they stand before the Ethiopian state or the
international community, they fall silent. The very demand they claim to defend
is whispered in private and abandoned in public. This duplicity not only erodes
credibility but signals a lack of conviction at the most critical moments of
engagement.
What Is Lost When We Stay Silent?
1. Loss of Bargaining
Power: Without a bold and clearly stated
maximalist goal, all negotiations begin from a compromised position. The Oromo
cause is immediately placed on the defensive - seeking rights within a system
that has historically denied those rights - rather than demanding the full
scope of justice and negotiating from there.
2. Demoralization
of the Base: When organizations fail to voice what many in the
grassroots believe, a gap emerges between leadership and people. Oromo youth
and public, who have led uprisings, filled prisons, and buried their comrades,
did not risk everything for ambiguous reforms. They deserve clarity and
boldness in return.
3. Loss of
Moral Clarity: Framing the struggle merely around rights within the
current system dilutes the historical, cultural, and moral foundation of the
Oromo national question. This struggle was never just about equitable
governance - it was, and still is, about reclaiming stolen sovereignty.
4. Strategic
Ambiguity Encourages Fragmentation: When leadership fails to
articulate a clear destination, multiple factions emerge, each interpreting the
path differently. Confusion replaces unity, and energy is spent on internal
debates rather than external gains.
Global View: Territorial Integrity vs.
Political Reality
While international law - including the UN Charter and
the African Union’s Constitutive Act - formally emphasizes territorial
integrity and colonial borders, in practice, independence outcomes have been
accepted under specific political, legal, and humanitarian conditions. The
principle is restrictive, but exceptions are possible and have been repeatedly
exercised.
Post–Cold War examples such as Eritrea (1993), South
Sudan (2011), Kosovo (2008), Slovenia, and Croatia demonstrate this reality.
All of these cases have the following in common - some of which Oromia already
shares and others it must work to achieve:
- A
prolonged history of marginalization or violence.
- Collapse
or major weakening of the central state.
- International
sympathy rooted in humanitarian or geopolitical concerns.
- Strong
internal cohesion and defined leadership in the liberated
territories.
Implications for the Oromo Movement
Independence Is
Not Illegal - But Conditional: The global system does not ban
decolonization or secession. It discourages them under “normal” conditions, but
often accepts them when:
·
It
results from a negotiated political settlement, or
·
It
arises in the aftermath of state collapse, genocide, or unresolvable
conflict.
Leverage,
Not Silence: This reinforces the strategic value of keeping the demand
for independence alive - even if not immediately actionable:
- · It
strengthens bargaining positions in any political settlement.
- ·
It
ensures that structural injustice is not normalized within the federalist
status quo.
- ·
It
signals that Oromo aspirations extend beyond token inclusion or symbolic
reforms.
C. The Oromo Case
Has Many Preconditions for Independence: The Oromo people meet several
criteria evident in other successful liberation cases:
- Historical
conquest and forced incorporation into the Ethiopian empire.
- Repeated
massacres, such as the Bishoftu Irreecha Massacre (2016) and the Guji and
Borana Massacres (2018–2022).
- Militarized
repression and sustained denial of meaningful autonomy.
- A
weak, discredited federal state unable to deliver justice or sustained
peace.
What’s still missing:
- Strong
internal cohesion and a unified political front with a clearly articulated
roadmap.
- Sustained
international visibility and diplomatic engagement to garner global
sympathy.
- Strategic
alliances with other marginalized nationalities to broaden the legitimacy
and regional weight of the demand.
Silence Is Not Strategy. It Is Surrender.
To lead a people with dignity, one must articulate
their deepest aspirations - even when doing so is inconvenient. The Oromo
struggle cannot afford ambiguity. The absence of a clearly voiced demand for
independence - or even for the foundational right to self-determination -
undermines the movement’s leverage, alienates its base, and confuses the
broader public.
Whether one ultimately envisions independence or not,
keeping it on the table - loudly and unapologetically - is both principled and
strategic. It is time for Oromo political and military leaders to reclaim this
demand, not just as a long-term vision, but as an essential pillar of
negotiation and resistance.
Power concedes nothing without a demand. The Oromo
people deserve nothing less than the full expression of their rightful claim.
Have your say!
Well articulated. I could not agree more. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteYou never start with minimum demand - specially in negotiations
ReplyDeleteHow true
DeleteIndependence was accepted as the best option among Oromo nationalists especially in diaspora till end of 90s. It was assumed the leaders of OLF were on the same page until some of them start whispering about Democratizing Ethiopia later on. They pushed the agenda underground but they became lauder as they convinced more Oromos, the agenda became public in early 2000s slowly replacing independence by self determination. It's important to recognize that self-determination is not an end in itself but a means to achieve a broader political objective. They might have used self determination to obscure the true intention of Democratizing Ethiopia. I hope and believe OLA is not and should not sacrifice their life to democratize Ethiopia. OLA should clearly articulate their objective which I hope is creating an Independent state of Oromia, nothing less.
ReplyDelete