One Ethiopia

This is a log of the lonely thoughts of a man who has grown old in a foreign land.

November 27, 2005

The Parable of Two Cheetah Cubs and 77 Million Ethiopians

For a country such as Ethiopia, it is always tough to be noticed by the West. It is not a Thailand or a Tahiti with white sands and tropical resorts to which the affluent hordes from the North come for some sun and fun in the din of winter. Nor is it an oil rich Saudi Arabia or a Venezuela whose every move is monitored by nervous bankers and commodity traders in New York and Zurich. So, it was a surprise and a nice change of pace to see so many Western news outlets carrying an AP wire story datelined from Ethiopia this Thanksgiving weekend.

For a change, a country that had suffered so much over the last six months, nearly out of sight of Western media, was being written about by great city papers and talked about by small town radio and TV stations. This Thanksgiving weekend, this ancient land of 77 million people was finally getting its share of publicity. All sorts of papers from Europe to North America and from Australia to South Africa, French and Spanish wire services, online specialty journals and trade publications carried reports on Ethiopia.

Like millions of Ethiopians that immigrated to the West over the last three decades, I find the lack of reliable news coverage of Ethiopia during times of crises to be disconcerting. I spend hours every day trying to find news on developments in my homeland where so many of my family still live. Often, I have to settle for press releases issued by one contender or the other – reading between the lines to finagle the small credible nuggets of truth from the pile of partisan spin. So, I was ecstatic when my news search engine returned several pages of listings of news items on Ethiopia on the morning of November 26, 2005. I poured a nice big cup of coffee and sat on my comfortable chair in front of my computer and anxiously clicked the first Item of note.

It was a report from eitb24 (http://www.eitb24.com/noticia_en.php?id=107926), a website which proclaims to be The Basque Information Channel. It carried a news curiosity about a pair of cheetah cubs discovered by U.S. troops scouring the Ogaden region of Ethiopia for the trails of Al Qaeda. It seems that a small town innkeeper in the tiny eastern town of Gode is raising two cheetah cubs for the amusement of his patrons. The GIs, candidates for PETA membership back home or just properly raised Midwestern boys, were upset by the sight of two hungry young cheetah cubs and sought to persuade the innkeeper to free the cubs only to be told that he had invested some $2000 to acquire them from a poacher and would not relinquish them without due compensation. That is the Somali equivalent of “Joe, let Uncle Sam rescue them for a measly $2000”. These poor souls patrolling the Ogaden were touched by the incredible cruelty of it all and reported the story to the wild life offices in Addis Ababa which in turn leaked the news to the AP scribe in the area.

The rest as they say is history. For the period beginning 12:00PM on November 25 and ending 6:50AM on the 27th (EST), my news search engine picked 182 separate html links about this story. No other news event pertaining to Ethiopia this weekend or, as best as I recall, during any other 43 hour period garnered even half of 182 English language reports on the internet.

The historic election of May 15, 2005 where more than 90% of Ethiopia’s registered electorate waited in line for up 24 hours to cast its vote did not merit reporting on 182 independent occasions. The suspension of the vote counting when it appeared that the ruling party of Meles Zenawi was loosing and loosing badly did not merit 182 independent English language reports. Not even when the EU election observer team rang the alarm bell on May 22nd that the government of Ethiopia was in the process of stealing the vote did 182 English language news outlets in the West find the event worthy of their web space or airtime. When 42 protesters were shot dead by the government’s security forces on June 8 following Mr. Meles’ decision to extend Marshall law for another month, western media did not find it interesting news – at least not as interesting as two cheetah cubs held for the entertainment of bar patrons in a far away border town known for illegal guns and other contraband. During the first week of November, when the government resumed its murderous ways killing to the tune of hundreds, when all of the leaders of the main opposition party were arrested, when elected parliamentarians were killed by police, when the elected mayor of the city of Addis was arrested, when boys as young as six and mothers trying to shield their husbands from beatings were killed by the security forces with the aim of intimidating the population, when tens of thousands of citizens were rounded up and barricaded in malaria infested open air concentration camps (in actuality holding pens reminiscent of cattle stockades except these are made of razor wire high fences) western media did not find any of it worthy of its efforts or of its readers time.

The media sure enough got word of these lovable cheetahs holed up in the remote eastern town of Gode and of the GI’s heroic act of rescue. As it so happens, only a week earlier more than 30 political prisoners were killed purportedly trying to break out of prison in the town of Kebridehar, some 100 miles away. When that story was not carried even by a single news outlet (recorded on the internet) save for a few Ethiopian websites, I thought that it was perhaps on account of the inaccessibility of the region. Now, of course, I know better.

I have lived most of my life in the West. Yet, I still don’t know what it is a nation must do to get a little attention. Over the years, I have heard comments made in jest (or so I believed) about Africa’s best hope. The best thing going for Africa, the comment goes, is the wild beast which lives there -- the lion, the elephant, the giraffe, the great ape and of course the loveable cheetah, that sleek model of efficient locomotion. The people, they say, only get in the way of our enjoyment of those great creatures of the savanna and of the jungle. Perhaps that comment is not too far removed from mainstream opinion, at least as perceived by the media which must seek to select the news that is worthy of circulation in the mainstream.

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sorry to disappoint you, Mr. Ethiopia, by far, is the most popular country in the west if only due to sad reports on its endless famines, human trajedies on biblical scale and the murderous nature of its leaders.

Report on the way Ethiopians treat- rather MISTREAT their animals is relatively a new piece of news to outsiders, though, not to actual Ethiopians or those that have some knowledge of the Ethiopian pyche and habits.

In fact, the way Ethiopians treat their beasts of burden mirrors the way they have treated each other for millenia. Just think of the life - if we can call it life- of Addis donkies. Then, compare that with the way Ethiopian despots treat members of those deemed their 'enemy tribes' in Ethiopia.

Thus, lets leave the good Faranjii report on the sad, unethical and evil habit of the Ethiopians as far as their treatment of God's creatures is concerned. Personally, I believe that Ethiopians are condemend to remain such a miserable lot due to God's retribution for their inhuman treatment of the beasts in that god-for-saken country we call home.

Nagaatti,
Liban Digalu

7:18 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great observation and well ariculated writing...

1:07 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you for writing what has ached my Ethiopian heart for many weeks. Screw Andrew Mitchel, that faggot who wrote about the freaking cheetahs and rarely utters the atrocitie sin teh country.

Liben

11:33 AM  

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