Document #1151638
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
The Ethiopian government has not disclosed
officially the identities, legal status or whereabouts of the
people arrested following the May 1989 abortive coup attempt.
New African quoted the Ethiopian President as publicly
stating on 7 June 1989 that altogether 24 generals and 176 senior
officers had been held by the security police. [
ENDNOTES
"Ethiopia in Turmoil", New African, July 1989, pp. 9-10.] New African was able to publish the names of only 17 generals either killed or detained as a result of the coup attempt.According to The Washington Post,
Maj. Gen. Kumlachew Dejene is believed to be the only participant
of the coup attempt known to have escaped, whereby "almost all of
the other officers involved were killed or captured or committed
suicide". In an interview with The Washington Post, Maj.
Gen. Kumlachew said "680 officers have been removed, arrested or
executed since the coup attempt, including 40 generals." [ David
Ottaway, "Escaped Officer Urges U.S. to Shun Mengistu", The
Washington Post, 8 October 1989, p. 56.]
IRBDC is unable to obtain the names of all
the officers involved in the failed coup attempt. Equally,
information on the background of the thousands of Ethiopian
military officers, including Colonel Dessalegne Teguegne Egegou, is
not currently available to the IRBDC.
As for information regarding Ethiopian
authorities' attitude and treatment of the "Gojam tribe", please
note that Gojam is an administrative region and its population,
like those of neighbouring Gondar, Wollo and northern Shoa regions,
belongs to the Amhara ethnic group. Gojam has historically been a
dominant part of Ethiopia's political framework and culture. Up
until the 1974 Revolution, Ethiopia was a feudal society whose
history was characterized by conflicts and wars among regional
feudal lords. During that period, while the emperors continually
fought to extend the authority of their central government, local
feudal lords periodically rebelled against emperors either in
attempts to seize absolute power themselves or to maintain a degree
of regional independence.
Following the 1974 Revolution and the
superimposition of Soviet-style socialism onto a nation of old
history and tradition, many Ethiopians, including those from the
Gojam region, had rejected to abandon the traditional, cultural and
social values they cherished for generations. From the outset, the
opposition to the revolutionary government had cut across the
ethnic and regional spectra. The new Ethiopian society which
emerged from feudalism became regimented into "revolutionary" and
"counter-revolutionary" camps, and no one could have been in a
neutral position. Citizens were either persecuted or rewarded based
on their political opposition or allegiance to the regime. It is in
these terms that the Ethiopian authorities' treatment of the people
in the Gojam region should be analyzed. With the exception of the
secessionist movement in Eritrea, the Ethiopian government is not
known to have a wholesale political view of the people living in
each of the country's administrative regions.
The above information is based on the views
shared by many knowledgeable Ethiopians. However, IRBDC is unable
to corroborate with other literature on the subject.