Fromm Christian Science Monitor
Ethiopia's Muslims have been protesting 'state interference' in their affairs for the past six months. Could government accusations of Muslim extremism risk greater tension?
Since December, worshipers at Friday prayers nationwide have been criticizing the state's alleged attempts to impose the al Ahbash, a moderate sect of Islam, on the community via an unrepresentative, politicized Islamic Supreme Affairs Council. Officials deny any interference.
The protest movement in most major cities among the nation's 30 to 40 million Muslims – about one-third of Ethiopia's population – has been largely peaceful and contained to mosque compounds.
The government is trying to dominate influential mosques to gain wider political control of the country, says Ethiopian political analyst Jawar Mohammed. To solidify Western support, it’s playing up an Islamist threat – Ethiopia is widely perceived by strategists as a bulwark against Al Qaeda-affiliated Islamic terrorists across the border in Somalia and in the Middle East and North Africa.
"It is an unnecessary, unwise, and untimely intervention that will have severe repercussions both for the current regime as well as for the country in the long run, unless the government reverses its current approach," says Mr. Jawar.
The most serious incident occurred on April 27 in the southeast town of Asasa in the Oromia region, when four people died in clashes after police arrested a Muslim preacher. The government said the preacher had been trying to instigate jihad. Earlier in April, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi told parliament that an Al Qaeda cell containing "a few Salafist extremists" operated in the area, while at the beginning of May the government announced it deported two Arabs of unspecified nationalities for trying to incite violence outside Addis Ababa's largest mosque.
A focal point for the dispute has been at the community centered around the Awalia Mission School on the edge of the capital, where 50 Arabic teachers were removed via a letter from the Islamic council leaders, leading to the escalation of protests against the leaders' legitimacy and state interference.
The government has tightened security at mosques – it is difficult for Western journalist to report from those in the capital without police interference. The Ministry of Federal Affairs recently accused the protesters of being extremists engaged in violence and collaborating with foreign forces to instigate jihad.
Ethiopia's Muslims have been protesting 'state interference' in their affairs for the past six months. Could government accusations of Muslim extremism risk greater tension?
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Protests at mosques in
religiously-diverse Ethiopia have stretched into their sixth month as Muslims
object to what they see as unconstitutional government interference in their
affairs.Since December, worshipers at Friday prayers nationwide have been criticizing the state's alleged attempts to impose the al Ahbash, a moderate sect of Islam, on the community via an unrepresentative, politicized Islamic Supreme Affairs Council. Officials deny any interference.
The protest movement in most major cities among the nation's 30 to 40 million Muslims – about one-third of Ethiopia's population – has been largely peaceful and contained to mosque compounds.
The government is trying to dominate influential mosques to gain wider political control of the country, says Ethiopian political analyst Jawar Mohammed. To solidify Western support, it’s playing up an Islamist threat – Ethiopia is widely perceived by strategists as a bulwark against Al Qaeda-affiliated Islamic terrorists across the border in Somalia and in the Middle East and North Africa.
"It is an unnecessary, unwise, and untimely intervention that will have severe repercussions both for the current regime as well as for the country in the long run, unless the government reverses its current approach," says Mr. Jawar.
The most serious incident occurred on April 27 in the southeast town of Asasa in the Oromia region, when four people died in clashes after police arrested a Muslim preacher. The government said the preacher had been trying to instigate jihad. Earlier in April, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi told parliament that an Al Qaeda cell containing "a few Salafist extremists" operated in the area, while at the beginning of May the government announced it deported two Arabs of unspecified nationalities for trying to incite violence outside Addis Ababa's largest mosque.
A focal point for the dispute has been at the community centered around the Awalia Mission School on the edge of the capital, where 50 Arabic teachers were removed via a letter from the Islamic council leaders, leading to the escalation of protests against the leaders' legitimacy and state interference.
The government has tightened security at mosques – it is difficult for Western journalist to report from those in the capital without police interference. The Ministry of Federal Affairs recently accused the protesters of being extremists engaged in violence and collaborating with foreign forces to instigate jihad.
Growing radicalism?
The Ethiopian government has recently claimed that radicalism is growing in Ethiopia, citing austere Wahhabism promulgated by foreign preachers in mosques built by well-heeled Saudi organizations. Ahmedin Jebel, spokesman for a committee that says it's elected by Muslims to represent the movement, says these claims are way off the mark. Although there may be individual extremists, there are no communities sworn to conflict, he says. Conversely, according to Mr. Ahmedin, the government risks creating extremism where it doesn't exist with heavy-handed actions that many Muslims perceive as an attack on Islam.
"We are afraid that people will begin to
fight back," if the indoctrination and smear campaigns continue, he says.
"There is a concern that they may create more extremism than they
fear."
Leaked
US
diplomatic cables from 2008 corroborate the Ethiopian government's concerns
about a "growing Wahhabi influence." In the cables, American
officials discuss programs to combat its influence, such as translating
"The Place of Tolerance in Islam" – a book by American Muslim scholar
Khaled
Abou el Fadl – into local languages.
Activists dismiss the dispatches as
hyperbolic, countering that the Islamic council was just fear-mongering to
embassy staff. "Money coming from Saudi
Arabia or any other country doesn't mean adopting that school of
thought," they argue. They claim that council leaders are using a
phony battle against extremism to cement their positions.
According to Ahmedin, the problems
began ten months ago when the Federal Affairs Ministry and the Islamic council
brought in Lebanese preachers from the Al Ahbash sect – which was founded by an
Ethiopian but became popular in Lebanon –
to deliver training to around 1,300 employees of the council's branches at
Haramaya University in eastern Ethiopia.
Following the training session, a
senior Lebanese teacher, Samir Kadi, thanked Meles and Federal affairs minister
Shiferaw Teklemariam at a recorded press conference for inviting them. That,
Ahmedin says, proves that the government is behind the campaign.
In response, Meles said to lawmakers
the training program had nothing to do with al Ahbash, but was
about the rights and duties of religions in Ethiopia under the
constitution.
Since the Haramaya conference, the
Islamic council – which opponents say has been co-opted by the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front for almost
two decades – has coerced 50,000 people to undergo the training, which aims to
incorporate teachings from Al Ahbash into religious schools across the nation
and attacks all other doctrines as anti-Islamic, they say.
Non-participation results in
punishment: Imams have been sacked and many Muslim youths arrested for not
participating in trainings, critics allege. The community is rife with rumors
that the US bankrolled the campaign, which offers per diems of up to 500 birr
($28) to attendees.
"Even if we agree of the threat
of Islamic extremism in Ethiopia, this is not the correct way to solve the
problem," said Ahmedin.
The government rejects the
allegations, also saying that protesters want them to unconstitutionally ban al
Ahbash. The allegation of imposing the sect "ignores the fact
that the government has no right to invite, allow or forbid any religion
or sect, provided that the exercise is within the framework
of the constitution," said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on
April 27. In eight letters to the government, the committee never asked for the
sect to be banned, Ahmedin responds.
Why
the resistance to al Ahbash?
According to the constitution, the
government has no business interfering in religious affairs; Ahmedin says the
Al Ahbash sect is alien to Ethiopian Muslims despite its origins; and some
doctrines of al Ahbash are unacceptable to many followers. For example, it
permits believers to receive interest in transactions with non-Muslims;
fornication with non-Muslims is also accepted.
Analyst Jawar suggests al Ahbash's
controversial history is reason enough for people to object to its promotion.
Its pro-Israel
leanings and its founder's attacks on "well-respected" Islamic
scholars created furious opposition, he says.
"I think what aroused the
Muslim population at large is al Ahbash's aggressive 'moderation' approach that
emphasizes assimilation," he says. "But let's say the sect is
moderate as it claims – still it is not wise to drag its huge controversy into
the country."
Since a democratic constitution was
adopted in 1995, Ethiopian Muslims have been asserting their independence, and
the government is reacting poorly to that, say activists. Prior to the modern
era that enshrined religious freedom, Muslims had to accommodate their beliefs
during imperial times when Christian emperors ruled the land, or suppress them
during the Marxist totalitarianism of Mengistu Hailemariam's military Derg
regime in the 1980s.
In decades past, followers of the Prophet
Muhammed's teachings in Ethiopia would engage in processions of Orthodox
Christians – the most populous faith in the country – and assist in building
churches. Some Muslims in Ethiopia's northern Wollo region still get crosses
tattooed on their forehead, an indicator of centuries of cultural assimilation.
Salafism has grown in Ethiopia, but
there is "zero influence from foreign extremists" on an almost
exclusively moderate community, according to the pair of activists. Even
"hard-liner" Ethiopian Salafi preachers denounce Al Qaeda's former
leader Osama Bin Laden as an unbeliever, they say.
Ethiopia's protesting Muslims want
to practice their religion and select their new leaders without interference,
in line with the country's constitution, the activists say. "Let us be
free," they argue. "Let us have our own organization that is led by
ourselves, not government cadres." New government plans to hold
non-transparent elections for council leaders controlled by the authorities
will not be accepted by the community, Ahmedin says.
Because of Ethiopia's proximity to
hotbeds of extreme Islam, "it is rather understandable that the Ethiopian
government would be concerned about who is engaging in religious activities and
what these individuals may be preaching," says J.
Peter Pham, director of the Michael S. Ansari Africa Center at the Atlantic
Council in Washington.
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