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Authors: Michela Wrong

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11
The Falasha episode, and the ultimately unsuccessful US attempt to broker a peace agreement between Mengistu and the EPLF and TPLF, is recounted in Herman J Cohen's
Intervening in Africa: Peacemaking in a Troubled Continent
, Palgrave, New York, 2000

12
Alex de Waal,
Evil Days
, Human Rights Watch, September 1991. In late 1989, Washington Jewish Week published a leaked US Congressional staff memo confirming that 100 cluster bombs had been supplied to the Ethiopians in late 1989

13
In May 2001, Russia President Vladimir Putin agreed to cancel 80 per cent of Ethiopia's outstanding debts and said the balance would be rescheduled through the Paris Club

14
The Promised Land proved a mixed experience for the Falashas. Shunted into isolated development towns in Israel, many ended up doing menial jobs. The community complains that its members are discriminated against because of its skin colour and are regarded as second-class Jews. In January 1996, the discovery that their blood donations were being routinely thrown away because of AIDS contamination fears triggered a wave of Falasha rioting. Nevertheless, the Israeli and Ethiopian governments agreed in January 2004 to complete the repatriation of Ethiopia's remaining Falashas

15
Author's interview

16
16 Interview on ‘The World at One', BBC Radio 4, June 4, 1991

Chapter 17 A Village of No Interest

1
Author's interview

2
Paul Henze,
Eritrea's War
, Shama Books, 2001, p 24

3
Dan Connell,
Against All Odds–A Chronicle of the Eritrean Revolution
, The Red Sea Press, 1997, p 272

4
Shabia
means ‘the masses' in Tigrinya, while
Woyane
translates as ‘popularly-based'. Depending on context and tone, the terms can be either matey or insulting, rather like the ‘Yank' Britons use to refer to Americans or the ‘Pom' Australians apply to Britons

5
Eritrea has since admitted that Bezabeh Petros died in custody

6
Patrick Gilkes and Martin Plaut, ‘War in the Horn. The Conflict
between Eritrea and Ethiopia', Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1999, p 22

7
Amnesty International: ‘Ethiopia/Eritrea. Amnesty International witness cruelty of mass deportations', January 29, 1999; ‘Ethiopia and Eritrea: Human rights issues in a year of conflict', May 21, 1999; Human Rights Watch: ‘The Horn of Africa War: Mass Expulsions and the Nationality Issue' June 1998–April 2002

8
Author's interview

9
On November 25, 2004, as this book was going to press, Ethiopia appeared to soften its position, saying it accepted the boundary commission finding, however ‘illegal and unjust'. But Prime Minister Meles Zenawi stressed the acceptance was ‘in principle' and Ethiopia expected ‘give and take' in implementation, suggesting his country has yet to recognise the binding nature of the border ruling.

10
Britain, for example, said in February 2004 that it would triple its bilateral aid to Ethiopia to £53m. Announcing the rise, Hillary Benn, international development secretary, specifically ruled out using the aid as a way of pressurizing Addis into accepting the boundary ruling, saying London hoped the stalemate could be resolved through dialogue

11
One notable example is Dan Connell, a journalist who covered the EPLF liberation campaign in impressive detail. ‘Enough! A Critique of Eritrea's Post-Liberation Politics', presented at African Studies Association in Boston in November 2003, summarized his disquiet over events

Chapter 18 ‘It's good to be normal'

1
For more details of the
manqa
episode,
see
David Pool,
From Guerrillas to Government–The Eritrean People's Liberation Front
, James Currey, 2001. Two years later, Isaias faced another challenge by a group of Christian highlanders pushing for greater democratic accountability. Over a dozen members of the ‘rightist movement', as it was known, were executed. Like the
manqa
affair, the episode has been air-brushed out of the leadership's memories of this period

2
David Strickland and Thomas Bowidowicz, two Americans working at Kagnew, were kidnapped in September 1975 by the ELF, which threatened to kill them unless the US halted arms supplies to Ethiopia and closed Kagnew. They were subsequently released

Bamford, James–
The Puzzle Palace
, Penguin, 1983

Bereket, Habte Selassie–
Eritrea and the United Nations
, The Red Sea Press, 1989

Connell, Dan–
Conversations with Eritrean Political Prisoners
, The Red Sea Press, 2005

Duncan, W Raymond and Ekedahl, Carolym McGiffert–
Moscow and the Third World under Gorbachev
, Westview Press, 1990

Erlich, Haggai–
The Struggle Over Eritrea 1962–1978
, Hoover Institution Press, 1983

ESFA–
The Federal Case of Eritrea with Ethiopia
, Mogadishu, 1979

Gandar Dower, Kenneth–
Abyssinian Patchwork, An Anthology
, Frederick Muller Ltd, 1949

Goodman, Melvin–
Gorbachev's Retreat
, Praeger Publishers, 1991

Harding, Jeremy–
Small Wars, Small Mercies: Journeys in Africa's Disputed Nations
, Viking, 1993

Henze, Paul B–
Horn of Africa: From War to Peace
, Macmillan, 1991

Henze, Paul B–‘Arming the Horn 1960–1980', Wilson Centre Working Paper No 43, Washington DC, Smithsonian Institution, December 1982

Killion, Tom–
Historical Dictionary of Eritrea
, Scarecrow Press, 1998

Lefebvre, Jeffrey–
Arms for the Horn: US Security Policy in Ethiopia and Somalia 1953–1991
, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1991

Levine, Donald–
Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multi-Ethnic Society
, University of Chicago Press, 1974

Lewis, Jon (editor)–
The Mammoth Book of Battles: The Art and Science of Modern Warfare
, Robinson Publishing, 1995

Longrigg, Stephen–
A Short History of Eritrea
, Clarendon Press, 1945

Luard, Evan–
A History of the United Nations. Volume 2 The Age of Decolonisation 1955–1965
, The Macmillan Press Ltd, 1989

Lyons, Terrence–‘The United States and Ethiopia: The Politics of a Patron–Client Relationship',
Northeast African Studies
Volume 8, Numbers 2–3, 1986

Mack Smith, Denis–
Italy, A Modern History
, University of Michigan Press, 1969

Mack Smith, Denis–
Mussolini
, Granada, 1981

Mack Smith, Denis–
Mussolini's Roman Empire
, Longman, 1976

Martini, Ferdinando–
L'Eritrea Economica
, Istituto Geografico de Agostini, 1913

McGiffert Ekedahl, Carolym and Goodman, Melvin–
The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze
, C. Hurst and Co, 1997

Mockler, Anthony–
Haile Selassie's War: The Italian–Ethiopian Campaign 1935–1941
, Random House, 1984

Negash, Tekeste and Tronvoll, Kjetil–
Brothers at War: Making Sense of the Eritrean–Ethiopian War
, James Currey Ltd, 2000

Negassi, Amina Habte–‘The Massacre of Besik-Dira and Ona', University of Asmara, Department of History, July 2001

Ottaway, Marina–
Soviet and American Influence in the Horn of Africa
, Praeger Publishers, 1982

Pankhurst, E. Sylvia and Pankhurst, Richard–
Ethiopia and Eritrea: the last phase of the Reunion Struggle 1941–1952
, The Walthamstow Press Ltd, 1953

Pateman, Roy–
Eritrea: Even the Stones are Burning
, The Red Sea Press, 1988

Prouty, Chris and Rosenfeld, Eugene–
Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia and Eritrea
, Scarecrow Press, 1993

Pugh, Martin–
The Pankhursts
, Penguin, 2001

Romandini, Massimo–
Visita a Dogali
, L'Universo LXI 3, 1981

Romandini, Massimo–
Le Comunicazioni Stradali, Ferroviarie e Marittime dell'Eritrea durante il Governatorato Martini
, Africa (Rivista Trimestrale di Studi e Documentazion dell'Istituto Italo-Africano), Anno XXXVIII–No 1

Sbacchi, Alberto–
Legacy of Bitterness, Ethiopia and Fascist Italy, 1935–1941
, The Red Sea Press, 1997

Segre, Vittorio–
La guerra privata di tenente Guillet
, TEA, 1997

Tesfagiorgis, Abeba–
A Painful Season and a Stubbon Hope: The Odyssey of an Eritrean Mother
, The Red Sea Press, 1992

Ullendorff, Edward–
The Ethiopians
, Oxford University Press, 1965

Discretion is a quality dear to Eritreans. Few, I know, would want to be publicly thanked in these pages. But those who welcomed me into their homes, accompanied me on my trips, pointed me in interesting directions and alerted me to my errors know who they are. I am enormously grateful.

Apart from my editor, Mitzi Angel, and literary agents Pat Kavanagh and Joy Harris, I owe special thanks to Clive Priddle, who originally commissioned the book and maintained his interest in the project long after moving on. My mother helped by reading through all of Martini's Eritrean diaries, my father meticulously edited the text, my sister Jessica provided weekend respite, my brother-in-law Julian kept my computer running.

I have tapped the intellectual riches of many experts. In Addis Ababa, Richard and Rita Pankhurst were generous with their insights and Teshome Bokan Gabre Mariam was kind enough to offer detailed comments on an early draft. Professor Massimo Romandini, probably the world's leading expert on Martini, was a wonderful correspondent, Martin Plaut kept me up-to-date with current events on the Horn, Nick Lera and Jennie Street told me what was what on the railway.

During my research trips I relied on the hospitality of many: Caroline Lees and Alan Macdonald in Asmara, Judith Matloff in New York, Peter Whaley in Washington and the Ostrovskys and Frys in Moscow deserve particular mention. Thanks are also due to the Kagnew veterans who welcomed me to one of their reunions in Florida and to Zazz, Zio Bob and Tom Indelicato for their running commentary on early drafts and life in general.

John Caveney, researcher at the
Financial Times
, was a wonderful asset and Olga Shevtsova, the
Times
' fixer in Moscow, saved me from confusion. The Society of Authors helped by paying for one of my many trips to Eritrea.

Having already dedicated one book to Michael Holman, I won't repeat myself, but he was the reason why, Against All Odds and Never Kneeling Down, I finished the book.

Abyssinia,
see
Ethiopia

Ad Shirum pass

Adamishin, Anatoly

Adua, battle of

Adulis

Afabet, battle of

Afwerki, Isaias 9, 15, 19–21, 360; and border war

crackdown on opponents

EPLF leader

OAU address

personality

as President

UN address

unpopularity

Aklilou Habte Wold 158; execution

as Foreign Minister

Prime Minister

Alula, Ras

Aman Andom, Gen

Andropov, Yuri

Annan, Kofi

Arab-Israeli War

Arabs

Ark of the Covenant

Army Security Agency

Ascari

Asfa Wohen, Crown Prince of Ethiopia

Asmara x, 1–7, 11, 13, 57, 216; architecture

in Badme war

British administration

cemetery

Ethiopian brutality in

Italians in

GIs in

guerrilla operations in

liberation

political riots

racial segregation

reconstruction

University

Western consulates closed

in World War II

Asmerom

Assab

Axum

Axumite empire

Badme

Bairu, Tedla

Baldissera, Gen. Antonio

Banda, Hastings

Barre, Siad

Belgium

Berakis, John

Berhe, Solomon

Berlin Manifesto

Besik Dira

Bono, Gen. Emilio de

Brezhnev, Leonid

Britain 64, 65, 103, 149; aid 420n;

Army

asset-stripping

colonies

Foreign Office

Military Administration

and postwar Eritrea

recognises Italian Ethiopia

World War II

Boundary Commission

Cagnassi, Eteocle

Carnimeo, Gen. Nicola

Carter, Jimmy

Churchill, Winston

Cicoria, Filippo

Cochrane, Peter

Cohen, Herman

Cold War

Congo

Cordier, Andrew 163, 168, 190–1,

Corio, Silvio

Cornaggia, Count Gherardo

Crispi, Francesco

Crocker, Chester

Cuba

Dahlak Islands

Danakil 2, 103–5, 149

Derg

civilian government

end of

Eritrean war

military committee

purges

relations with Soviet Union

relations with US

Dimbleby, Richard

Di Rudini, Antonio

Djibouti

Dogali

Dulles, John Foster

Dymond, Bob

Eden, Anthony

Egypt

Eisenhower, Dwight D 270

ELF (Eritrean Liberation Front)

civil war with EPLF

fedayeen operations

hit men

Isaias in

liberation struggle

supporters

EPLF (Eritrean People's LiberationFront)

authoritarianism

Christians in

and coup attempt

democracy in

dissolution

Fighters

finances

guerrilla operations

liberation struggle

manqa
episode

medical facilities

and OAU

peace talks

purges

relations with ELF

relations with superpowers

relations with TPLF

in Sahel

supporters

and UN

women in

Ergetu, Major Gen. Teshome

Eritrea: annexation 153, 181, 182–6; anti-Unionists

army

Badme war

Baito (Assembly)

constitution

currency

economy

Ethiopian atrocities in

as Ethiopian province

exiles

Federation

foreign relations

geography

independence proposal

as Italian colony

naming of

national character

national identity

partition proposal

political parties

post-independence

postwar destiny

railway

referendum

ropeway

Utopian vision of

in World War II

Eritrean Peoples Legal

Representatives Abroad

Ethiopia

aid

air force

annexes Eritrea

asset-stripping in Eritrea

Badme war

British administration

Christianity

claim to Eritrea

constitution

coup attemps

deports Eritreans

Derg regime

emperors

Eritrean war of independence

famines

Federation with Eritrea

foundation myth

history

isolation

as Italian colony

Marxist state

military aid

military significance

nationalism

peace

Ethiopia–
cont.

talks with Eritrea

peace treaty with Somalia

and postwar Eritrea

postwar future of

relations with Eritrea

relations with Israel

relations with Soviets

relations with US

TPLF government

UN Commission in

in World War II

Ethiopian Airlines

Ethiopian Army

atrocities in Eritrea

attempted coups

in Eritrean war

demoralisation

Derg officers

medievalism

modernization and expansion

Soviet advisers

Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF)

Falashas

Fascism

Ford, Gerald

Four Powers Commission

France

colonies

Freeman, Peter

Frusci, Gen. Luigi

Gander Dower, Kenneth

Garcia Bauer, Carlos

Gebreyohannes,
see
Tesfamariam Germany

Ghinda

Gonder

Gorbachev, Mikhail

Gromyko, Andrei

Group of

Gura

Hagos, Mesfin

Haile Selassie, Emperor

absolutism

annexation of Eritrea

coup and assassination attempts

death

exile

ethnic origins

and Federation

and OAU

in old age

personality and appearance

and postwar Eritrea

as reactionary

relations with Soviet
Union

relations with US

tomb

white advisers

Hamasien plateau

Hitler, Adolf

Horn of Africa

British policy

Cold War in

Italy and

Soviet military aid

Howe, Robert

Imperial Federal Council

Indelicato, Tom

Independence Bloc

International Ethiopian Council

Isaias Afwerki,
see
Afwerki

Islam

Israel

Italy: Abyssinian war (1896)

army

colonies

Fascism

inquiry into Eritrean atrocities

invades Ethiopia

invades

Libya

Italian Eritrea

Italian Ethiopia

and postwar Eritrea

racial laws

Risorgimento

Treaty of

Peace (1946)

World Wars

Kagnew Station

EPLF move into

function of

guerrilla actions against

personnel

run-down and closure

Kamchiwa

Kassala

Kaunda, Kenneth

Kebra Negast

Kenyatta, Jomo

Keren

battle of

Kerr, Colin

Kissinger, Henry

Korean War

League of Nations

Leopold, King of the Belgians

Libya

Live Aid

Livraghi, Dario

Longrigg, Brig. Stephen

Lorenzini, Gen. Orlando

Lumumba, Patrice

McKay, Lawrence D ‘Spook'

manqa
episode 385–6, 420n

Martini, Ferdinando

Il Diario Eritreo

and Eritrean railway

governor of Eritrea

Nell'Affrica Italiana

racism

vice-chairman of royal inquiry

Massawa

asset-stripping

atrocities in

as Italian capital

in liberation war

modernization of

port

reconstruction

World War II

Matienzo, Eduardo Anze

Mbeki, Moeletsi

Mekelle

Meles Zenawi,
see
Zenawi Menelik I, Emperor of Ethiopia

Menelik II, Emperor of Ethiopia

treaty with Italy

Mengistu Haile Mariam: agricultural reform

and armed forces

character

coup attempt against

as Derg officer

and Eritrean war

ethnic origins

flees Ethiopia

personality cult

Mengistu Haile Mariam–
cont.

purges

relations with Israel

relations with Soviet

Union

relations with US

socialism

treatment of Emperor's remains

Messai, Andargachew

Metras, Mike

Mobutu, Sese Seko

Moslem League

Munzinger, Werner

Mussolini, Benito

Nakfa

National Security Agency (US)

New Times and Ethiopia News

Nixon, Richard

Nkrumah, Kwame

Ogaden

Organisation of African Unity

Orota

Palestine

Pankhurst, Christabel

Pankhurst, Emmeline

Pankhurst, Richard

Pankhurst, Sylvia xi

People's Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ)

Platt, Lt-Gen. Sir William

Provisional Military Administrative Council,
see
Derg

Qvale, Erling

Ras Tafari,
see
Haile Selassie Reagan, Ronald

Red Sea

Red Terror

Rommel, Erwin

Roosevelt, Franklin D

Rora mountains

Royal Air Force (RAF)

Rwanda

Sabaeans

Sahel

Sanchil, Mount

Sapeto, Giuseppe

Schmidt, Petrus

Selassie, Dr Bereket 123, 381, 385,

Seyoum, Melles

Shamir, Yitzhak

Sheba, Queen of

Sherifo, Mahmoud

Shevardnadze, Eduard

Shubin, Vladimir

Sinitsyn, Sergei

Sokurov, Major Yevgeny

Solomon, King

Solomon, Petros

Somalia

Greater Somalia

Italian

Ogaden

war

relations with superpowers

threat to Ethiopia

Somaliland

Soviet Union

diplomatic overtures to EPLF

economic decline

military advisers

military aid

relations with Ethiopia

and Somalia

urges political settlement in

Eritrea

Spencer, John

and Federation

on US–Ethiopian relations

Stafford, Frank

Stalin, Joseph 320

Stanley, Henry

Strand, Dave

Sudan

Suez Canal

Tariku Ayne, Gen

Tekle, Abraham

Tesfagiorgis, Paulos

Tesfai, Alemseged

Tesfamariam, Gebreyohannes

Tewodros II, Emperor of Ethiopia

Thesiger, Wilfred

Tigray

Tigrayan People's Liberation Front (TPLF)

in government

relations with EPLF

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