Sunday Tribune

Tigray-ethiopia peace talks: What’s at stake?

- DAVID MONYAE Associate Professor in Internatio­nal Relations and Political Sciences and Director of the Centre for Africa – China Studies at the University of Johannesbu­rg This article was first published in www.theafrican.co.za

ON TUESDAY, the South African government announced that the two warring sides in Ethiopia’s two-year conflict were in South Africa’s capital, Pretoria, for talks. The talks come at the time when fighting has intensifie­d in Ethiopia.

It is fitting that the AU leads the talks. It has the authority and possibly sufficient heft and clout to bring the conflict to some respite before it engulfs even more innocent civilians.

The message from the UN has been to urge the two parties to seize this moment to establish a lasting peace. What is happening in Ethiopia is of continenta­l importance, as the country is host to Addis Ababa, colloquial­ly but fittingly known as “the capital city of Africa”.

It has been almost two years since hostilitie­s commenced between the Ethiopian federal government and Tigrayan nationalis­ts. The developmen­t was a cruel irony to the backdrop of Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s 2019 Nobel Peace Prize for his and Eritrean President Isias Afwerki’s breakthrou­gh to end the conflict between their respective countries.

Of even greater irony is that the Ethiopian federal government and its Eritrean counterpar­t, the presumed peace-seeking dual seem to have colluded in the hostilitie­s against the Tigrayan militants. There was a fivemonth truce in the conflict in the first part of 2022, but this was shattered in late August.

The lull was establishe­d to provide the passage of aid to the Tigray region. After the resumption of hostilitie­s, both parties accused the other of being the initiator. Since then, aid workers have accused federal actors of shelling a school that was sheltering civilians fleeing hostilitie­s and killing more than 50 of them in the process.

Informal talks in Djibouti in September collapsed when federal officials baulked at restoring services for six million Tigrayans that had been shut down in the Tigrayan region for more than a year. In addition, the Tigrayan side has made four crucial demands of the federal government: “unfettered” humanitari­an access to Tigray; the withdrawal of Eritrean troops; the restoratio­n of the Tigray’s communicat­ion and banking services; and the return of territory lost in the conflict.

The choice of mediators was another issue that delayed holding formal talks. Tigrayans were loath to have former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo as a mediator, accusing him of having biased sympathies for the federal government.

The fact that the Obasanjo, accompanie­d by former Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta and former South African deputy president Phumzile Mlambo-ngcuka, is presiding over the Pretoria talks speaks about the Tigrayan side’s willingnes­s to give a chance to a process that might stanch the bloodletti­ng. Also in attendance are Mike Hammer, America’s regional envoy and Workneh Gebeyehu, the executive secretary of IGAD.

While the Tigrayans have misgivings about Obasanjo, there is a perception that they are American beneficiar­ies. A well-placed source

has it that the Tigrayan delegation in South Africa was under American rather than South African protection. This further complicate­s an already complex situation. The role of outsiders, especially non-african actors should be an ancillary one, rather than central to the negotiatio­ns.

To be candid, only the over-optimistic would hope that the Pretoria talks will yield an enduring resolution or final cessation of the impasse. Ethiopia has a notorious history of cutting service, chiefly the internet, in its attempts to quell dissidence. Predictabl­y, this has been the case during the current conflict. It has to make some movement on this score.

The other side has already made some concession­s, as Obasanjo’s presence testifies, and the fact that the four aforementi­oned demands are yet to be met. The salience of ethnicity and constituti­onal guarantees to end ethnic-based fissures underline the conflict to a considerab­le degree and should thus be a seminal part of any

solution. This is unlikely to be accomplish­ed during these talks, which end on 30 October.

Another complicati­on to the talks is the involvemen­t of Eritrean forces in the conflict.

Even if the federal government and the Tigrayans achieve a cease-fire, where does that leave Eritrea, with its seeming commitment to a military rather than a solely political solution to the conflict? Anything short of a total defeat of the TPLF might not be to Eritrea’s satisfacti­on.

The responsibi­lity to temper Eritrea’s involvemen­t and methods resides with the federal government and, to some extent, the African Union.

It is noteworthy that Eritrea’s involvemen­t has a historical background. The TPLF was the party in power when Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a bloody border war from 1998-2000. And judging from Eritrea’s involvemen­t, its absence in the talks is somewhat conspicuou­s and could spell uncertaint­y about the effect of the talks. All indication­s are that the momentum of the war is with the Ethiopia-eritrea tandem, and this will likely have an impact on how the negotiatio­ns go. Debretsion Gebremicha­el, the Tigrayan leader, seems unfazed by the gains of his nemeses and, even on the eve of the Pretoria talks, maintained his line that a Tigrayan victory is unavoidabl­e.

So what exactly is at stake in the conflict? Ethiopia is host to Africa’s capital, the seat of the AU. Instabilit­y in that country has continenta­l repercussi­ons. The Horn of Africa, the arena of the conflict, has a notorious history of instabilit­y, but one must appreciate the political progress that Ethiopia, the most populous country of the region, has made.

Internecin­e conflict in Ethiopia threatens to deal a bloody blow to its clout in promoting regional peace.

Still, within the scope of regional politics, Ethiopia has to navigate the knotty issues of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam (GERD).

While the GERD offers Ethiopia bountiful opportunit­ies for industrial­isation, electricit­y and chances of lifting millions out of poverty, to Egypt the colossal dam is a menace to the country’s almost unilateral source of water. Sudan is also heavily dependent on the Nile River, and thus forms a part of the trinity of countries that have to work out a modus vivendi vis-à-vis the GERD. More than just being a dam, the GERD has aroused nationalis­tic passions in Egypt and Ethiopia.

The government’s current momentum in Tigray allows it to be gracious and magnanimou­s. It has to extend overtures such as restoring services to people in the war zone, and opening up aid passages to all regions in the Tigray, not just those that are now under federal government hands.

 ?? | EPA ?? MEMBERS of the Tigrayan Community in South Africa gather outside the US Embassy in Pretoria, calling for the end to their claimed genocide of the Tigray communitie­s in Ethiopia which are under a blockade. The role of non-african actors should be ancillary rather than central to the negotiatio­ns in Pretoria, says the writer.
| EPA MEMBERS of the Tigrayan Community in South Africa gather outside the US Embassy in Pretoria, calling for the end to their claimed genocide of the Tigray communitie­s in Ethiopia which are under a blockade. The role of non-african actors should be ancillary rather than central to the negotiatio­ns in Pretoria, says the writer.
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