Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
The Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF), and by extension the Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), the multi-ethnic coalition that it established and still dominates, is frequently considered to be a creation of, and beholden to, the Eritrean Peoples Liberation Front (EPLF). From this perspective the foreign loyalties of the TPLF made it an unsuitable, if not illegitimate, movement to lead the Transitional Government of Ethiopia (TGE) in 1991, and since 1995, the newly created Federal Democratic Republic. By way of contrast, this article attempts to demonstrate that the developing relationship between the TPLF and the EPLF during the course of their respective revolutionary struggles has been far more problematic and beset with tensions than critics are either aware of, or acknowledge, and that an understanding of their nature casts light on present and possible future differences between the respective regimes of Ethiopia and Eritrea.
1 See Young, John, ‘Peasants and Revolution in Ethiopia: Tigray, 1974–1989’, Ph.D. dissertation, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, 09 1994. Funding for this research was received from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada during 1992–1994.Google Scholar
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4 According to the New Statesmen (London), 28 05 1982, p. 15, as many as 4,000 TPLF fighters were sent to the Eritrean Peoples Liberation Front (EPLF), but my informants believe this figure to be too high.Google Scholar
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12 EPLF, Adulis, 1, 9, 03 1985, p. 7.Google Scholar See also, de Waal, Alex, Evil Days: 30 years of war and famine in Ethiopia (New York, Human Rights Watch, 1991), p. 311.Google Scholar
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18 ‘A Great Leap Forward’, in Ibid. p. 6.
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21 ‘A Great Leap Forward’, loc. cit. p. 7.
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24 Interview with Tamrat Layne, Mihanse, Tigray, 2 May 1988. He became Ethiopia's Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister in 1995.
25 For example, the Association of Eritrean Students and Women in North America broke from the EPLF in August 1978 in opposition to the Front's policy with regard to the Soviet Union. See Connell, Dan, Against All Odds: a chronicle of the Eritrean revolution (Trenton, NJ, 1994), p. 169.Google Scholar
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27 Interview with Meles Zenzawi, Dejene, 29 April 1988. He became Ethiopia's Prime Minister in 1995.
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30 At a conference in early 1990 a DMLE delegation led by its vice-chairman, Salah Ayay, met with a delegation from the TPLF led by two Politburo members, Seyum Musa and Awalom Wolde, and reached agreement on a set of principles. DMLE and TPLF Joint Statement, 24–31 Janvary 1990.
31 Meles Zenawi, op. cit.
32 Interview with Sebhat Nega, Wolkait, 27 April 1988.
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34 ‘EPLF and TPLF Joint Statement’, in Ibid. pp. 16–17.
35 In the aforementioned DMLE—TPLF Joint Statement 17 months later, the two parties agreed in January 1990 to condemn the Soviet Union, but pointedly omitted any reference to the United States.