Civil Society, NGOs, and l Development in Ethiopia 21646 June 2000 A Snapshot View Jeffrey Clark F,C Iz.. Is vS~ ~ ~ ~~~FL COPY Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia A Snapshot View Jeffrey Clark The World Bank Washington, D.C. Copyright © 2000 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printingjune 2000 A free publication. This document was prepared by the NGO and Civil Society Unit of the World Bank's Social Development Department. It is not a formal publication of the World Bank. It is being published informally and circulated to encourage discussion and comment within the development community. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the author(s) and should not be attributed in any manner to the World Bank, to its affiliated organizations, or to members of its Board of Executive Directors or the countries they represent. Copies of this paper are available from: NGO and Civil Society Unit Social Development Department The World Bank 1818 H Street, N.W Washington, D.C. 20433 USA Fax: (202) 522-1669 E-mail: ngo@worldbank.org Intemet: wwwworldbank.org/ngos Cover designed by Melody Warford, Stone Soup, Inc. Cover photo credits: top and bottom photos, Curt Carnemark; middle photo, Melody Warford, Stone Soup, Inc. U* The text and cover are printed on recycled paper. Contents Acknowledgements v Executive Summary 1 Overview of the Emerging Civil Society 1 Purpose of the Paper 2 Portrait of the NGO Sector 4 Historical Brief 4 Emerging Civil Society 5 Relief-to-Development Shift 6 Critical Civil Society Actors 7 Building Capacity for NGOs 9 Networks and Coalitions 10 Code of Conduct for NGOs in Ethiopia 11 Legal and Regulatory Framework 12 The Public Policy Advocacy Role of NGOs 13 Challenges for the NGO Sector 13 The World Bank and NGOs 15 Civil Society, Development, and Democracy 15 NGO Priorities and Official Development Agendas 16 Dialogue on Partnerships in Development 16 Notes 18 Annex A: Timeline 19 Annex B: Selected Bibliography 21 iii Acknowledgments This paper was written by jefferey Clark, International Siddiqi for the management of the project, and Yumi Development Consultant, for the NGO and Civil Society Sera and Lina Abirafeh for their editorial support. Unit of the World Bank's Social Development Department. He relied on the support of countless persons who offered William Reuben their assistance by providing information and sugges- Coordinator tions. We would like to especially thank the Ethiopia NGO and Civil Society Unit Country Team for their encouragement and advice, Najrna v Executive Summary Overview of the Emerging Civil Society barely existed. Other civil society entities had fared no better as professional associations, trade unions, the media, academia, the private business sector, and the History of Ethiopian Civil Society like were ruthlessly suppressed by the Mengistu regime,3 Eightyears into Ethiopia's uneven but continuingmove and their leaders forced into exile, imprisoned, or toward representative democracy, the country's non- executed. governmental sector struggles for definition, operating space, and enhanced institutional capacity Civil soci- ety, traditionally weak in Ethiopia, remains underde- veloped and somewhat misunderstood in the current By any measurement, the progress realized since 1991 era of relative political liberalization. The historical cen- is impressive. Civil society is increasingly vibrant and tralization of power in Ethiopia has left long shadows, relevant to the nation's political and economic revital- and the impulse to extend strict and at times arbitrary ization. The private business sector is growing, acade- authority over various civil society entities remains mic freedom is returning to the institutions of higher embedded in the psychology of some officials. Many in learning, the media are slowly gaining credibility, and government seemingly see civil society actors by defi- professional associations are again forming. Most sig- nition as political opponents-indeed, as part of the nificantly for this study, the number of NGOs-specif- partisan opposition-despite a decidedly nonpartisan ically, the number of national, indigenous NGOs-is orientation by the vast majority. growing, and the capacity of those groups to play a serious role in addressing the country's complex devel- opment agenda is measurably expanding. By 1998, some Society is alive again in Ethiopia! 240 national and international NGOs were officially reg- -veteran Ethiopian observer istered with the government, and a large number of additional groups awaited the recognition status offered through the registration process. The pace of registra- Ethiopia's long history as a feudal monarchy and its tion continued to accelerate into 1999, with the best subjugation by a brutal and doctrinaire Marxist regime available count of registered NGOs now being 310. have left most structures of civil society stunted. Indeed, Further, there has been notable progress in the ability by the time the Dergt collapsed in 1991, virtually all of the national NGOs to strategically target and design civil society entities had been co-opted or barred from activities, credibly deliver critical services, and provide meaningful existence by the regime.2 The NGO (non- accountability on programming and expenditure of funds. governmental organization) sector then primarily com- prised two significant groupings: international relief Main Concerns agencies, tolerated by necessity by the government, and the humanitarian wings of the opposition groups oper- Problems remain. Compared with countries elsewhere ating beyond the government's reach. Authentic nation- in Africa, the NGO sector is small. Its operating capac- al NGOs (beyond small, church-affiliated agencies) ity, while expanding, remains too limited, and the geo- 1 2 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View graphical focus of NGO activities is noticeably confined by the government. The sophistication of sector lead- to Addis Ababa. The enabling environment in which ers as they strive to define NGOs' operating space and NGOs operate is replete with excessive regulation and improve the enabling environment for their members bureaucratic requirements that consume much valu- is notable. The more thoughtful and careful donor agen- able time. Too many international NGOs and donor cies are beginning to seek NGO inputs to national devel- agencies remain only rhetorically committed to serious opment schemes-and not just in implementing but efforts to build the institutional capacity of national conceptualizing aspects of proposed interventions. NGOs. The sector suffers from internal divisions and jealousy that at times preclude cohesion around impor- tant public policy issues. The public and the national Purpose of the Paper media remain somewhat vague on the whole concept of private and voluntary action by civil society actors. This paper provides a quick overview of the potential role of NGOs and other civil society actors in meeting Ethiopia's immense development challenges as the coun- Recently, I have noticed that civil society members, including try moves to institutionalize fundamental changes in NGOs, are being consulted on policy discussions on topics like governmental structure and economic orientation. Those human rights, family law, and ethics in government. These are changes frame the country's transition from absolute healthy signs that were unthinkable just afew years back. charianism the command econom absolv- authoritarianism and a command economy to an evolv- -Ethiopian NGO official ing democracy and economic liberalization. By defini- Positive Impact of Civil Society Box 1: A Quick View of Ethiopia Despite these difficulties and others, NGOs represent an important element in the political and economic Fficial namocoutRy Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia transformation of Ethiopia sought by its people and gov- Population emnment and supported by the international donor com- 60.1 million munity In an immediate sense, NGOs provide relatively Territory efficient mechanisms for addressing poverty allevia- 1,127,127 square kilometers tion through myriad programs and activities being Comparative area slightly less than twice the size of Texas launched in vital sectors of society. As important, they GNP provide channels for involving self-motivated groups US$6.6 billion and skillful individuals in the nation-building and soci- GNP per capita etal development processes. These are the actors who US$110 can serve as anchors for civil society in a pluralistic Population growth rate system of governance. 2.1 percent Life expectancy at birth 50 years Recent Improvements Infant mortality rate 107 per 1,000 live births There is a sense that the overall operating climate for Child malnutrition rate NGOs is improving. Relations with the central and 48 percent of children under 5 years regional governments are better, if still uneven. The Illiteracy emergence of a coherent NGO sector is now more appar- 65 percent of population above 15 years emergence of a coherent NGO sector 1S now more appar- Number of NGOs officially registered (1999) ent. Measurable improvements in the capacity of its 310, of which 120 are international entities members are manifest. The shift in emphasis from relief Note: All figures (except NGO count) are for 1997. to long-term development on the part of NGOs has Source: World Bank 1998, Ethiopia at a Glance. increased their relevance and, significantly, acceptance Executive Summary 3 tion, this overview cannot explore all of the complica- Terminology tions and factors that effect the growth of civil society The terms civil society and the NGO sector are not inter- and the NGO sector during this transitional era. It is changeable. Civil society refers to the large universe of meant to help suggest some approaches to a Dialogue nongovernmental entities found in virtually every soci- on Partnership to be organized by the World Bank and ety-labor unions and trade guilds, professional asso- the Ethiopian NGO community and provide background ciations, grassroots community organizations, cultural orientation to participants engaged in the dialogue.4 affiliations, and other voluntary associations. Significant among subsets of actors within civil society are the NGOs Sources broadly engaged in poverty alleviation and civic edu- cation. The focus of this study is on the NGO sector of A sizable collection of documents was reviewed before Ethiopian civil society, though it is obvious that some the drafting of this study Those documents provide descriptions and analyses apply across the board. ample detail on various aspects of the political and economic profile of Ethiopia today and on the history, operations, and orientation of its major civil society and NGO actors. They are listed in the bibliography and available in the NGO Unit offices at the World Bank. Portrait of the NGO Sector Historical Brief entities. Local church-affiliated agencies also played a very significant role in these operations. NGOs were Somewhat modem civil associations began to emerge instrumental in preventing even greater loss of life in Ethiopia during the 1930s as a factor of urbaniza- during both catastrophic episodes as,6 for various rea- tion and economic development. A law meant to rec- sons, neither the emperor's government nor the Derg ognize and codify these groups was passed in 1960. was well prepared to respond to the convulsions spread- Civil society entities in general, however, were slow to ing across the country. During the famine crisis of take root under the empire and then severely restrict- 1984-85, many international donors insisted upon ed during the Derg period (1974-91). During the last channeling relief aid through nongovernmental groups decade and a half of Emperor Haile Selassie's reign,5 because of well-founded suspicions of the policies of professional groups such as the Chamber of Commerce the Mengistu regime. Some donors were also involved and National Bar Association formed, played somewhat in cross-border operations,7 despite bitter resistance credible roles, and enjoyed relative autonomy That and resentment by the Derg authorities. autonomy completely evaporated under Mengistu's long During these crises, NGOs were catapulted into high- reign of terror, however, and virtually all these organi- ly prominent roles-a prominence harshly resented by zations effectively became tools of the state or ceased Derg authorities-as they visibly provided hundreds operations entirely. Many of those remaining in exis- of thousands of people with the means of survival. tence lost credibility, professionalism, and, ultimately, Mengistu's government struggled to keep these groups much claim to legitimacy under tight control because the NGOs reflected Western NGOs themselves-both national and internation- values and economic abundance. By 1984, control was al-began to appear around 1960, when neither the harder to maintain as the number of NGOs increased various self-help groups found in all levels of Ethiopian dramatically, their expanded operations became ever society nor the government were able to meet the grow- more critical, and their presence became the clear key ing demands of the population. The then current efforts to securing international assistance. The government of the emperor to "modernize" the national education was forced to allow an increasing number of NGOs to system had resulted in a more widespread awareness operate more broadly. This was particularly important that his government was failing to provide what peo- because the government was attempting to curb the ple needed for advancement and development. NGOs spread of the famine to retain a semblance of legitima- began in a small way to help fill the perceived void. cy and order at a time when it was under increasing pressure from armed resistance groups. During the initial famine of 1973-74, various groups NGOs Focus on Relief Operations engaged in relief operations formed what became known International NGOs trace their Ethiopian roots to the as CRDA (Christian Relief and Development Association), catastrophic famine crises of 1973-74 and 1984-85. the first NGO umbrella organization in Ethiopia. CRDA The NGOs of those years were overwhelmingly focused was organized by a coalition of Catholic charities, other on emergency relief operations and were largely foreign religious affiliates, and a few outside, secular NGOs. 4 Portrait of the NGO Sector 5 Its formation also marked the first organized coopera- Cross-border operations refer to the direct provision tion between the government (that of Haile Selassie) of relief assistance to the humanitarian wings of rebel and the NGO sector in the country That cooperation groups then engaged in pitched struggle against Mengistu was channeled through the Relief and Rehabilitation and the Derg. This assistance was largely channeled to Commission (RRC), established in March 1974 to coor- REST and ERA. Lesser amounts went through ORA. The dinate the response to the crisis. The original RRC is size and the critical nature of these cross-border oper- now known as the Disaster Prevention and Preparedness ations effectively forced internal capacity building and Commission. CRDA also played a pivotal role in coor- self-reliance upon these groups at a critical early stage dinating relief activities during the more acute crisis in their development. Also, important and lasting bonds of 1984-85. It continues its operations in Ethiopia with the local population were forged. Thus, today, a today, as discussed below, and now lists more than group such as REST (ERA is no longer relevant to this 140 members. discussion, and ORA is a much smaller and marginal The experience of the NGOs in the dual crises of operation) displays advantages stemming from its his- 1973-74 and 1984-85 resulted in an overwhelming torical legacy, including its lack of operational depen- focus on relief operations. The sheer size and critical dence on external partners. REST's early autonomy from nature of NGO relief operations created a momentum international counterparts sets it apart from other nation- that carried forward when some involved saw the need al NGOs-as well, perhaps, as do its seemingly close for a shift to long-term development priorities and a ties with political leaders in Mekelle (a city in northern more balanced relationship between local counter- Ethiopia) and Addis Ababa. parts and the international NGOs. A significant result is the dominance of the sector by international entities that have lingered well into the current period and frame Emerging Civil Society some of the tensions found within the sector, and between the sector and the government. When the Derg rather precipitously collapsed in 1991, Another dynamic in effect during this period stems civil society groups and NGOs emerging from the wreck- from the radically different experiences of NGOs oper- age left behind were weak, disorganized, and without ating on opposing sides of the preexisting lines of mil- either significant resources or constituent bases. The itary control as civil war raged across Ethiopia. Within pronounced emphasis on relief activities demonstrat- government-controlled (Derg) sections of the country ed by international and local NGOs as the national tran- during the 1984-85 famine, relief operations were basi- sition of 1991 began was nothing other than an accurate cally the province of large and resource-rich interna- reflection of the dire circumstances of the country dur- tional NGOs (some working in collaboration with local ing the Derg era: recurring food emergencies, involun- church-affiliated entities) and United Nations (UN) relief tary displacement of large numbers of people, civil agencies. Local NGOs were decidedly junior partners war, a totally dysfunctional economy, and massive star- in these operations. On the other side of the lines of vation. People perished in large numbers, and without control, however, the humanitarian wings of the rebel the work of the NGOs, the calamity would have been movements were for all practical purposes the only relief considerably more widespread and severe than it was. agencies operating. Thus, the Relief Society of Tigray Local NGOs functioned mostly in the wake of savvy (REST) and Eritrean Relief Association (ERA) and, to a international relief groups who had been waging war- lesser extent, Oromo Relief Association (ORA)8 were like efforts against famine and massive population dis- managing increasingly large volumes of food and other location for almost 20 years. Humanitarian wings of the emergency assistance in sophisticated operations not various political opposition movements stand apart from being orchestrated by either the central government or this assessment. international agencies. And they were doing so in regions For the most part, NGOs that formed or surfaced where the famine was most acute and the business of immediately after the Derg overthrow were ill pre- delivering relief commodities most complex. pared to have much impact. With few resources, 6 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View untrained staff, and limited exposure to the nonprofit agenda and implement strategies. It viewed the inter- world, many demonstrated minimal comprehension national NGOs in particular as loose and unregulated of their proper role. Despite sometimes marginal effec- power centers that steered valuable resources into activ- tiveness, however, the new NGOs were led by honest ities either contradictory or irrelevant to the strategies men and women sincere in their efforts to address the being put into place. Further, the government saw a vast social needs of the country. While there were excep- number of NGO activities as fostering a dependence it tions to this characterization, examples of credible charges abhorred. One government survey from 1994 declared of fraudulent behavior were extremely rare. that only a little more than one-fifth of NGO activities Donor organizations found working with local NGOs in the country were centered on long-term development to be slow and difficult because of limited capacity in objectives.9 strategic conceptualization, service delivery, and finan- cial accountability. Many NGO leaders acknowledged cial ccounabilty May NG leadrs aknowldged For a long time, the NGO community was dominated by a the deficits and sought training and technical assistance. y relief agenda. But following the government's policy to steer The sector as a whole, however, suffered from divisions this focus to development, a number of NGOs are going into along social, political, and ethnic lines and encouraged education and skill training, credit and saving, environmental a perception of NGOs as extraneous to the daunting devel- protection, health, child welfare and advocacy ... opment agenda facing the nation. Most attempts to nudge -Ethiopian NGO official the international NGOs into capacity-building partner- ships with the emerging local groups were fruitless. Soon, the new government began to exercise greater The government also seemed to harbor a belief that control over national and international NGOs and to NGOs were somehow capturing official development lob accusations that the groups, primarily the interna- assistance funds that might otherwise be coming direct- tional ones, were spending too much on overhead, lyintoitsowncoffers.Atthispoint,theGuidelinesforNGO that their efficiency was overrated, and that they were Operations were put into place and the government began bloated and out of control. Fears of "briefcase NGOs" to more closely monitor and direct the work of NGOs. were also raised, as were concerns over created depen- By 1995, the government provided Guidelines for dency on the part of targeted populations. The regis- NGO Operations to classify groups and provide guid- tration process was restructured and became more ance on the priority areas for NGO programming. The complicated as the government began to squeeze out areas designated were broad and included agriculture, those it considered questionable or marginal-or both- environment, education, health, women's empower- ersome, it appeared. In particular, advocacy groups, ment, infrastructure, and the like. Relief and rehabili- such as the Ethiopian Human Rights Council, were tation remained areas of sanctioned operations for NGOs, singled out and denied registration status. but the provision of relief commodities was subject to Increasingly, the government became critical of what control. Regardless of the underlying intent, many in it saw as the welfare orientation of many groups and the NGO community perceived the guidelines to be their lack of a long-term development focus or strate- little more than a manifestation of the government's gy. It was determined to break the country's famine cycle intent to control them. and saw some NGO activities as perpetuating an unnat- Regardless of the motivations one ascribes to the gov- ural dependency on relief assistance. ernment for imposing the guidelines and tightening the registration process, the wisdom of steering efforts toward sustainable development activities seems logical and Relief-to-Development Shift beneficial in its impact. The shift appears to be genuine, and there is now little resistance to this direction from Altering the mind-set of NGOs away from emergency the NGO community. Most observers applaud the evo- relief operations was an early priority of the new gov- lution-and wonder aloud at the slowness throughout ernment as it began to outline a national development the 1990s of many UN agencies to make a similar move. Portrait of the NGO Sector 7 Further pressure on the NGO community to demon- but primarily exist to provide self-reliance for individ- strate relevance and greater effectiveness was mount- uals, households, and the larger local community. Many ing by the mid-1990s. That pressure came from its are ethnic-specific. Detailed information on these groups own leadership, the government, and the donor com- and an understanding of exactly how they operate is munity. In response, the first tentative sector capacity- hard to uncover and thus to describe, but their basic building interventions were witnessed. A series of profiles are known. workshops and seminars that addressed issues of con- cern to broad groupings within the NGO sector was NGOs in Ethiopia enjoy afar greater degree of respectfrom convened by CRDA, IAG (the InterAfrica Group, an government at both thefederal and regional levels. One reason Addis Ababa-based Horn of Africa regional NGO and is the professional upgrading seen in the sector networking group), and others. The United Nations Development Programme sent a group of Ethiopian - NGO officials to Zimbabwe, the Philippines, and South Africa to gain perspectives on government-NGO rela- Debo is one such self-help system, and its role is to tions. The first NGO coalition groups beyond CRDA provide mutual aid to member farmers. Ekzub is similar were being formed, such as CEVO (Council of Ethiopian to a savings and credit association, with a lottery com- Voluntary Organizations, which no longer functions) ponent providing periodic rewards to participants. Some and SPADE (Society for Participatory Development). ekub are established for particular groups of individu- Various ad hoc training sessions were being conducted als, such as women and merchants. An ezen is a self-help by donor agencies and others. Indicators of a new seri- group that assists families after the death of a member. ousness, strength, and quest for relevance were emerg- An idir is a larger group within this system that serves ing from the sector. as a local neighborhood association, taking on various The renewed food shortages arising from drought functions, depending upon the community. For exam- conditions in parts of northem Ethiopia at present under- ple, an idir may provide emergency insurance assistance score the reality that relief operations are not necessar- to its members. On occasion, it might take on func- ily in the country's past. The evolution of NGOs to tions that are usually political. Some idirs, for exam- implementors of long-term development has clearly ple, provided fuel to the revolutionary passions sweeping increased their reach, impact, and value in the eyes of through Ethiopia in 1974. Idirs are known as mutual government. These efforts and others collectively associations to many outside observers, who are provided the impetus for a maturing of the NGO sec- impressed with their level of support in the local com- tor that quickly accelerated and continues today They munities. There are believed to be in excess of 3,000 also laid the groundwork for the gradual shift in the such groups officially registered in Addis Ababa alone. government's view of the value of NGOs, which also Some observers see these self-help groups as a logi- continues at present. cal starting point for various development interventions and as counterparts for intemational NGOs and donor organizations. Others, however, fear that such associa- Critical Civil Society Actors tion would eventually corrupt and destroy these impor- tant social units. They underscore the point that the focus of such groups is not poverty alleviation, but social interaction, and believe that the self-help groups should There are different categories of civil society organiza- basically be left alone. tions relevant to understanding NGOs and develop- ment in contemporary Ethiopia. First is a cluster of National NGOs various self-help networks that have existed in its tra- ditional society for generations. These groups operate More traditional national NGOs first formed in Ethiopia in multiple strata of society and perform different roles, in the 1960s, but emerged as potentially significant 8 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View players in the nation's development only after the 1991 prise credit schemes are increasingly numerous. A num- fall of Mengistu and the Derg. After a slow start, the ber of NGOs have gender issues on their priority lists, NGO community has of late demonstrated expansion in though the effectiveness of such efforts is often hard to size and impact, as well as sector coherence. Of the 310 discern. NGOs now registered with the government, more than half are indigenous entities. It is important to note that Intemational NGOs the number of NGOs registered does not constitute the total number of NGOs existing; any number of groups There are approximately 120 international NGOs func- could be functioning to some extent while awaiting tioning in the country today The groups, from the United formal registration or appealing a rejected application. States, Canada, and the European countries for the most part, were critical in the spasms of famine and food emergencies sweeping across Ethiopia in the 1970s and Compared with Sudan, Erntrea, Djihouti, Somalia and 1980s. Most have increasingly focused on long-term Somaliland, the NGO sector in Ethiopia is large. Compared develop t sategiesrasarelt ofute changer- with countries elsewhere in Africa it is small.... Due to the hostile policy environment during the previous regime most cumstances in the country and steady government pres- [NGOs] have limited capacity. Afew national NGOs, however, sure. The international NGOs vary widely in their interest can easily match with sister organizations elsewhere. in and in skill at constructing mutually beneficial part- -Jos van Beurden, editor, Ethiopia: nerships with local counterparts. CARE, Catholic Relief NGO Country Profle, 1998 Services, World Vision, and Save the Children are United States-based examples of the larger international relief and development groups carrying out programs in the A majority of overall NGO projects in the country country. Many are increasingly forging partnerships with are rural-based, with a general focus on health and inte- various national NGOs and supporting efforts to increase grated rural development, though that balance is in part the institutional capacity of these partner groups. They a reflection of the work of the international groups. At are perhaps mindful of the words of Prime Minister present, national NGOs are more likely to be found Meles Zenawi: "The government expects them to part- operating in Addis Ababa or other urban centers. Areas ner with local grassroots organizations to develop local such as the Afar, Gambella, and Benishagul regions are capacity. They have to understand they are here to work particularly underserved by NGOs. There are no reli- themselves out a job someday. They must have an exit able data that can accurately portray the geographic and strategy."'I0 programmatic spread of NGOs in Ethiopia. The infor- mation available is kept in somewhat random and dif- fering databases by local government authorities; it is D seldom complete and does not differentiate between In Ethiopia today, the various development associations, national and international NGOs. CRDA has informa- formed with encouragement from the government and tion on the operations of its members, but that mem- occupying a niche somewhere between governmental bership includes only about half the sector and relatively and nongovernmental in their essential makeup, are few-though now an increasing number-of the Muslim operating with a substantially different profile from groups, which are particularly important in the eastern traditional NGOs. The more established development regions of Ethiopia and the Ogaden. associations are the Amhara Development Association A large bloc of local NGOs deal with the problems (ADA), Tigrayan Development Association (TDA), of street children, women, and youth. There are also a Southern Ethiopian Peoples' Development Association number that center on democracy and governance issues, (SEPDA), and Oromo Development Association (ODA). such as civic education. Food security, health, and These entities are supported by contributions from large education are the common objectives of many Vocational membership bases and also receive project funds from training is a common priority as well, and microenter- the government to carry out various development Portrait of the NGO Sector 9 schemes. Their activities sharply reflect central and DIDAC's ability to raise significant sums of money, this regional government development strategies. In addi- organization could become increasingly important. tion, the groups are ethnic-based. The scale of operations undertaken by these associ- ations is impressive. In some cases, they act as umbrel- Building Capacity for NGOs la organizations for local development associations and organizations. They also promote rather sophisti- The modern history of Ethiopia-the lack of develop- cated fund-raising drives, including telethons, and gen- ment under the empire, the role played by international erate publicity for their activities on a scale not remotely relief agencies in recurring national emergencies, the realized by the smaller NGOs. Operational linkages squashing of civil society under the Derg-dictated that between the development associations and local NGOs- its national NGO sector would evolve from a decided- in some cases, with the right safeguards put into place- ly modest starting point. But forward movement is could be explored as a means of expanding the reach now readily apparent, and the determination within the of the smaller groups as part of the ongoing dialogue sector for increasing capacity is palpable. Capacity build- within the NGO community and between it and the ing for the Ethiopian NGO sector is central to realizing government. its potential to contribute to the country's long-term development. The NGO sector is vigorously and effec- Relief Society of Tigray (REST) tively pursuing that goal. Institutional capacity building refers, of course, to In between the traditional NGOs and the development training and technical assistance, but also, ultimately, associations is REST, identified above as the humani- to much more. Capacity building in this context implies tarian wing of the TPLF during the armed struggle against an accretion of skills, knowledge, and authority on the the Derg. Today, the group occupies a unique position part of national NGOs and other civil society actors that in the country due to the long-standing personal and will allow them to move front and center as the coun- political ties between its leaders and those of the nation- try strives to meet its development goals. It means tak- al government. REST, however, underscores its non- ing the steps necessary to empower them to participate governmental nature and independence and is quite in all phases of the development process and, on occa- active in the NGO community. REST is considered the sion, to fail along the way-like all the other contrib- largest NGO in Africa. It employs more than 1,000 peo- utors to the process. ple in three main departments: environment and agri- Building the capacity of local NGOs to play such a culture, water management, and emergency aid. It engages role means facilitating a gradual transfer of skills, trust, more than half a million people in its various programs. and authority to them to conceptualize, implement, Last year, REST's massive microenterprise credit pro- monitor, and evaluate various development interven- gram spun off to become a free-standing entity. tions-and welcoming a corresponding devolution of roles for international counterparts. This is a process Development and Interchurch Aid Commission that is more easily described than implemented, and (DIDAC) more gradual than immediate, but it is ultimately required if development strategies are going to achieve their most Another player of note and increasing potential is the fundamental goals. The process has to be transparent, Development and Interchurch Aid Commission (DIDAC), with the objective of local ownership of the develop- the development and relief arm of the Ethiopian Orthodox ment agenda being clearly and consistently followed. Church, which was established in 1972. Its focus is Central to this objective are the training, technical largely on integrated rural development, food produc- assistance, exposure, access to funding, and network- tion, reforestation, water, and health. Due to the immense ing required to give the concept traction in the practi- position of power and influence of the Economic cal world. An effort along these lines is Pact's Ethiopian Opportunity Commission (EOC) in the country and NGO Sector Enhancement Initiative. (Pact is a US-based 10 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View NGO funded by USAID.) The initiative has included a was waning. It should be noted that international series of organizational capacity assessment exercises donors-primarily European, but also from the United to establish baselines of strength for individual NGOs, States and Canada-contribute significantly to CRDAs and thus provide a basis for evaluating the impact of budget, supplementing the funds raised through mem- training and other inputs. Pact has also structured train- bership dues. ing and technical assistance components for partner CRDAs transition during the 1 990s was not unstruc- NGOs and has provided a pool of funds for subgrants tured or unintentional. The collapse of the Derg and the to partner NGOs. change of government in 1991 were followed by sev- eral years of improved grain harvests in the country and the easing of food shortages. The new government was Networks and Coalitions strongly stressing self-reliance programs and attempt- ing to break the cycle of famine and chaos. It clearly Though there is no encompassing national umbrella expected international NGOs and others to commence organization for NGOs in Ethiopia, there is an impres- a shift in emphasis from relief to recovery and long-term sive number of NGO networks, alliances, and forums development. Further, the government expected the reflective of the growing sophistication of the sector. international groups to make room for emerging local Traditional divisions and suspicions reflective of the counterparts. larger society initially hampered the emergence of net- CRDA, at the end of a long process, emerged as a works, and government policies have not been con- body increasingly interested in the national NGOs as ducive to their growth. But as the sector grows in size the core of its membership and in an improved enabling and strength, the capacity to work collaboratively on a environment for all its members. Thus, CRDA has devot- common agenda is clearly expanding. ed considerable resources to capacity-building programs (that is, training and technical assistance) for its mem- bers and effectively abandoned the concept of a direct Christian Relief and Development Associationy (CRDA) operational role such as it undertook in the mid- 1 980s. With new local leadership and a new strategic plan, CRDA, mentioned previously, is the oldest and largest CRDA is poised to increasingly become an indigenous NGO membership association in the country, dating to grouping of nongovernmental groups seeking to coor- 1973. Its history is largely that of a coordinating mech- dinate activities and interaction with international NGOs, anism for international NGOs and local church-affili- an approach applauded by the government. ated groups. CRDAs role in facilitating the relief activities of member groups in the 1973-74 and 1984-85 crises CIVITAS has been well documented and is an important chap- ter in the evolution of today's NGO sector. The latter During the national election cycle a few years ago, a crisis saw the evolution of CRDA into a major player, global network of democracy-related NGOs known as generally coordinating the operations of a growing mem- CIVITAS was active in Ethiopia with support from the bership and undertaking a direct role itself in imple- U.S. government. CIVITAS collaborated with Ad- menting relief activities (running feeding centers and Net/E95, which was a consortium of five Ethiopian fielding medical teams, for example). Its logistical sup- NGOs organized to conduct monitoring and voter port to members was a critical element in the massive education in connection with the 1995 elections. famine response operation. Members of the consortium were IAG, ABUGIDA, APAP, CRDA began with 13 members. By 1998, its ranks the Ad Hoc Committee for Peace and Development, and totaled some 140 NGOs, virtually half of all those offi- the Ethiopian Women Lawyers' Association. The goal cially registered in the country. Also by 1998, approx- was to mobilize human rights activists and educate cit- imately half of CRDA membership was indigenous and izens on their rights and responsibilities in a democra- the historical domination by the international groups tic system. Ad-Net/E95 received direct support from Portrait of the NGO Sector I 1 the donor community in addition to the support through symbol that it is capable of self-regulation, monitoring, CIVITAS. and evaluation. It was formally adopted in March 1999, when the overwhelming majority of NGOs operating Other Networks in the country swore to uphold its principles. The Code of Conductfor NGOs was modeled on a sim- Other umbrella organizations have been launched over ilar pact formulated by the Kenyan NGO community a the past eight years. Some have survived and show some number of years ago, and it provides basic guidance on life while others have disappeared. For example, CEVO acceptable and expected behavior of signatory parties. boasted 27 members at one point, and SPADE had 50. The impetus to adopt the measure in Ethiopia was There is an increasing number of rather loose net- twofold: to separate the less than straightforward NGOs works of NGOs functioning. A pastoralist forum was from honorable ones, and to signal to the government formed recently and is now organizing a conference on that the community could provide its own standards pastoralist development in the country. A forum for dis- and policing. It was also hoped that the Code would cussion on gender issues incorporating many NGOs help alter the government's somewhat inconsistent stance meets monthly. An environmental network, supported on the formation of umbrella organizations. "Associations by the Dutch Embassy, provides a setting for discus- of associations" are not explicitly authorized under the sions on containing environmental devastation and pro- law, and the registration of umbrella groups has been tecting the natural resource base. problematic. CRDA is exempt from this interpretation, The formation of an Orphans Networking Group, com- but even in that case, registration has been a difficult posed of NGOs and community-based organizations that issue in the past. work with orphans and street children, is indicative of the gradual change in relationship between government The big decision was to merge the discussion on the Code of and NGOs. Government officials are included in its ses- Conduct initiated by various groups. It was a strategic decision sions. One group of note active in this area is the Forum and it paid off. We really had huge, hard, and long struggles to on Street Children, an indigenous NGO. Microenterprise find ways to work it out together The power struggles were real, and education networks of NGOs have also evolved. and at times it seemed like the thing wouldfall apart. I now Further, an NGO family planning forum exists. feel a great sense of achievement. There is some conversation at present on the for- -Ad Hoc Committee for Code of Conduct member mation of an umbrella group separate and apart from CRDA. The role and mandate of such a group is under discussion by some in the NGO community. Presumably, While many observers credit the adoption of the Code one aspect of its formation would be the inclusion of with a notable improvement in NGO-government rela- Muslim community NGOs, which do not participate in tions, others are more cautious, suggesting it is too early CRDA. A pronounced interest is to engage in a dialogue to evaluate the real impact of the Code. What seems with the Ministry of Justice (where government regula- unarguable, however, is the beneficial impact on the tion of NGOs is housed) on various civil society topics. NGO sector that stems from the very process of forg- ing a coalition around the drafting, vetting, and adop- tion of the Code. An often fragmented and even Code of Conduct for NGOs in Ethiopia adversarial grouping of sector leaders came together during the process, determined to find consensus and A clear indicator of a more sophisticated stance on the collective action on the Code. Participants agreed that part of the NGO community in Ethiopia is provided by they would either reach that consensus or abandon the the adoption of the Code of Conduct for NGOs at the objective, and speak in public about the process only culmination of a collaborative effort on the part of diverse as a group. leaders of the sector. The code is meant as a proactive Participants kept key government officials informed statement of principles by the sector and serves as a of their work. The press and the diplomatic and the 12 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View donor communities were briefed. Striving for a trans- Many agree upon the necessity for a new, updated parent process, the group invited the larger NGO basic law, outlining NGO rights and responsibilities in community, government officials, private sector lead- the country, and a more streamlined regulatory frame- ers, professional associations, academics, and the media work in which they can operate. Indeed, there is seem- to a public event for the presentation of the Code's ini- ing awareness of the necessity for action to be taken in tial draft." this regard at the highest levels of government, and draft The Code will have an observance-compliance infra- NGO legislation is believed to be under internal review structure staffed by representatives from the NGO com- there at present. Earlier momentum to introduce legis- munity. Its formulation is considered one of the major lation-and to have the draft law vetted by members achievements for the sector since the onset of the con- of the NGO community-seems to have slowed, for temporary era for NGOs in 1991. whatever reasons. Informed observers assume, howev- er, that the draft bill will be ready for consideration in the relatively near future. Legal and Regulatory Framework What is less unanimous than concurrence on the need for new legislation, however, are the expectations NGOs operating in Ethiopia do so under the original on what it might bring-or what it should. Clarification law authorizing and recognizing them that was put of the fiscal rules under which NGOs and other civil into place by Haile Selassie's regime in 1960. That law society entities operate is needed. At present, no spe- provided the basis for the regulation procedures detailed cific regulations guarantee their tax exemption, though by the Ministry of Internal Affairs in 1966 with the in fact income and profit taxes are imposed only on issuance of "Regulations Issued Pursuant to the Control trade and business organizations. NGO exemptions of Associations Provision of the Civil Code of 1960." for tariffs and other user fees need to be clarified and The govermment's 1995 Guidelinesfor NGO Operations standardized. updates those procedures, outlines major classifications The precise purposes and requirements of the regis- for the sector, and defines areas for programmatic activ- tration process-and the rights of NGOs to be regis- ities. Registration of NGOs is under the authority of tered without undue delay-need to be made transparent the national Ministry ofJustice. Before 1995, this respon- and less subject to the stops and starts of the recent past. sibility rested with the Disaster Prevention and Also of importance is detailing the right of NGOs to Preparedness Commission (DPPC). Once registered, form associations, coalitions, and networks, which is NGOs' operations are then under the supervision of an area of considerable confusion and inconsistency at the DPPC and the Bureaus for Disaster Prevention and present. The rights of advocacy, public policy lobby- Preparedness (BDPP) at the regional level. ing, and civic education groups need similar clarity Most fundamental, of course, is whether the law serves to underscore the rights of NGOs to operate freely with- Much has been written about the Code already in a positive light, and the effort of the NGO sector to put its house in order in a respected and protected civil society environment is well taken among government circles and the public. This, we or if it effectively strengthens governmental controls. are sure, is one step to strengthen relations with government. There is some apprehension over the real versus the -veteran NGO sector leader pronounced goals of officials as the law is being con- ceptualized. And the dearth of capacity in many gov- emmental agencies, particularly at the regional and local Each separate project activity by an NGO requires a levels, gives some sector leaders pause as they ponder specific agreement with the appropriate line ministry the impact of complying with yet another round of at the regional level. The time and effort required to new regulations and procedures, whatever their intent. reach such agreements varies widely However, the sparse It is hard to predict when the NGO legislation will level of technical knowledge and capacity in the region- be introduced and what it will bring. If the process of al governments' bureaucracies can often result in numb- its consideration is a participatory one in which the non- ing delays of several months. governmental sector is involved, then the potential for Portrait of the NGO Sector 13 clarifying many of the ambiguities surrounding NGO As the space for NGOs to operate in general expands, operations could be relatively high. the concept of public policy advocates is now slowly advancing as well. Several factors have contributed to this: the Code of Conductfor NGOs adoption, generally The Public Policy Advocacy Role of NGOs improved press coverage of NGOs and their work, expanded institutional capacity within the sector, and A solid understanding of an advocacy role for NGOs support from the diplomatic community. Most signifi- has been slow to evolve in Ethiopia. Neither govern- cant, however, is simply the increase in communication ment officials nor the would-be advocates demonstrat- and collaboration between government and NGO offi- ed much grasp of the concept in the initial post-1991 cials. Exposure has dimmed suspicions, and the value period, and the art of effective lobbying on public pol- of NGO contributions to the country's development chal- icy issues did not exist in the country. Several factors lenge is now more apparent. Groups such as Pact have contributed to this, including the weakness of the contributed to this evolution by including government news media and academic institutions, and the absolute officials in delegations sent on exposure visits to view dearth of public debate in the Derg years. Further, the the functioning of NGOs in other developing countries. polarization of the political process witnessed during The view afforded by such exercises has largely been the early 1990s did not encourage the emergence of one of beneficial collaboration between government and public advocates. Such actors were seen as highly polit- NGOs, and this is resulting in a change of attitude. ical and, in fact, partisan, if not absolute opponents of The frequency of governmrent-NGO consultation has the government's legitimacy The reality that some, clearly increased in the country over the past two years. particularly on human rights issues, were in fact quite Also, some observers predict that the establishment of partisan and shrill in their narrative of political events a Human Rights Council and a Human Rights only served to further skew the perception. Ombudsman will expand the sense of a fair playing field for various actors.12 NGOs and other civil society entities have some dis- Civil society is the backbone of democracy and the exercise of tance to traverse before they will be described as effec- public policy formulation. This is being appreciated increasing- ly, and the participation of various actors from civil society is tive public policy advocates in any large sense. There beginning to be shown. is need for additional skills and experience in this area, -NGO official and a need for the sector to present a united front on important issues. But the general environment for NGOs to develop those skills and obtain that experience is an The government's ambivalent stance toward inde- improving one. Skills are being honed through train- pendent groups voicing criticism of its policies did lit- ing and practice, and collaboration within the sector is tle to encourage the emergence of effective advocates, becoming stronger as the forging of various networks nor did its tendency to want to tightly direct the efforts and forums and the adoption of the Code of Conductfor of NGOs. As a result of these dynamics, NGOs tended NGOs indicate. to shy away from activities or even discussions that might be perceived as political by the government. During the mid-1990s in particular, problems with Challenges for the NGO Sector NGOs gaining registration, work permits, or import licenses were largely dealt with by maneuvering to get Achieving the financial stability required to consistent- exceptions made or paperwork facilitated through friend- ly implement quality projects and activities, and to serve ships and personal connections, rather than via sector as advocates for the interests of constituents, is the major advocacy of more lenient and transparent policies. While challenge facing NGOs in Ethiopia. A small cluster of such steps worked on an irregular basis for individual groups-mostly Orthodox Church affiliates, plus a groups, they did little to strengthen the collective stance few other religious NGOs, and REST-operate inde- of the sector or advance the idea of its autonomy. pendently of external donors. All other NGOs in the 14 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View country are partially to totally dependent upon donors the hesitation of donor agencies to provide funding for and sponsors from abroad or, in the case of the region- the very work that they claim is important for them to al development associations, at least partially on gov- be doing. Other observers counter that the funding ernment support. Generally speaking, there is no available is not necessarily limited in relation to the significant domestic support for the work of NGOs, and absorptive capacity of the sector, and they point to the it is not realistic to assume that there will be in the near central and fundamental need for ongoing capacity term. The viability and sustainability of the NGO sec- building work. tor is consequently quite fragile because of the scarcity While growing, intersectoral linkages remain under- of resources and the ongoing struggle for operating funds. developed. The capacity of the sector to effectively advo- cate views or positions on public policy issues is weak. The intense competition for limited program funds avail- The problem of capacity in the local NGO community, I believe, able to NGOs is one explanation of the slow develop- is overplayed and is an excuse to passfunds to smart interna- ment of sector cohesion. A rather suspicious and envious tional NGOs. Capacity can only increase if a partnership of a v real type is engaged ... . Capacity building without trust and view of the motivations and activities of others is per- even a willingness to riskfailure will not succeed. haps another. However, the plethora of forums and net- -NGO official works emerging provide evidence that these linkages are expanding. Great sustainability for the NGO sector is clearly The number of NGOs operating in Ethiopia is rela- linked to enhanced institutional capacity within it. Yet tively small. There are several reasons for that reality, many leaders of the sector would argue that if donors as suggested throughout this paper; one major factor, see capacity building merely as a mechanical process however, is clearly the sparse landscape when it comes of training and technical assistance, it will not take and to generating the revenue required to operate. There is sustainability will not be achieved. They would pose little societal tradition of giving funds to NGOs, the gov- the argument that without a perspective that incorpo- ernment has sent decidedly mixed signals, and the emerg- rates an equality of status, mutual trust, and a willing- ing private sector is struggling for buoyancy itself. That ness to give local partners a chance to succeed or fail, equation puts the spotlight on international donors, those capacity-building inputs will fall short of their and, here again, the record is spotty Beyond positive potential. rhetoric, most donors have been slow to deliver tangi- What seemingly is at the heart of this ongoing debate ble support for the work of national NGOs. Most of the is the search for respect and mutual regard on the part support delivered has been project specific, which offers of the national NGO community. The view of some little funding for the institutional capacity building, seems to be that without the means to be more than strategic planning, and securing of managerial exper- marginal players in the country's development process, tise cited as essential by donors and NGO officials alike. then NGOs will indeed face daunting questions of Many local NGO leaders are increasingly agitated at sustainability The World Bank and NGOs Civil Society, Development, and Ethiopia, but a general assessment. NGOs can mobi- Democracy lize citizens' involvement in ways that government cannot. While some in government tend to see NGOs Economic arguments for more fully incorporating NGOs as competitors for donor resources, it can be argued and other civil society actors into Ethiopia's national that many donors view them as additional and par- development strategy stem from the notion that it is an ticularly desirable conduits for both private and offi- extremely poor country and that there are no natural cial development funds from the home country. Further, monopolies for addressing its needs and problems. some see the engagement of NGOs in the development Ethiopia has "an estimated 1997 per capita GNP of process itself as an indicator of the proper alignment US$110andthelowestprimaryschoolenrollmentratio, of development strategies: an exclusion of non- highest incidence of malnutrition, and lowest road den- governmental entities from the process can be seen as sity in Africa."13 It is a country with chronic food secu- a reflection of a nonparticipatory process that is less rity problems and major structural problems in the likely to succeed. public health and education sectors. The environmen- A more vigorous civil society and an NGO sector tal problems facing the nation are staggering; food pro- engaged in the country's development process can speak duction, while up significantly, lags considerably behind directly about Ethiopia's evolution into a representa- the potential. Vast numbers of people remain uproot- tive democracy. And, it can be argued, without a demo- ed from various conflicts and tensions of the past two cratic evolution, economic progress is not ultimately decades. AIDS is a major threat. The number of orphans sustainable. A more effective and independent Ethiopian and abandoned children is extremely high. In short, the civil society, coupled with a more active NGO sector, country faces major developmental needs that will require will be receptive to greater contributions to the coun- the best efforts of a comprehensive partnership of effec- try's political development. Civil society counterbal- tive players to counter. NGOs are increasingly poised ances Ethiopia's historic tendency to concentrate authority to be serious contributors to that partnership. in too few hands. There are many different profiles for NGOs in Ethiopia A more pluralistic and diverse civil society enlarges today. A wide range of competence, focus, size, program participation in national life by reflecting the interests approach, and leadership styles exists among the vari- of diverse groups of people. The broader the participa- ous members of the community; most are tackling issues tion in the political process, the more legitimate the that are highly germane to the country's development system of governance becomes in the eyes of the gov- challenge. NGOs also enjoy considerable support with- erned. Effective civic action is the key to that partici- in the donor community, where they are largely seen as pation. Finally, it can argued that a more pluralistic proper channels for providing assistance. This almost and diverse civil society will incorporate vastly more certainly results in a net increase in international donor people in the development process and thereby decrease assistance to the country. their dependence on the government. NGOs sometimes offer more efficient and more These assertions are universal, but aptly apply to focused attention to particular problems-that of Ethiopia during this critical and transforming stage of orphaned or abandoned children, for example-than national development. The process of creating space for government bureaucracies. This is not particular to civil society actors is in reality going to be slow and grad- 15 16 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View ual in the country. But the requirement to do so is ulti- tured series of dialogues on development in the coun- mately central to the Ethiopian development challenge. try between its members and the World Bank now exists. Indicators reveal that a shift in the government's atti- tude regarding NGOs is underway The sector is demon- NGO Priorities and Official Development strating increased institutional capacity and efficiency Agendas as a result of a series of interventions and the simple accretion of experience. Donor agencies, especially the Overviews of the official development strategies adopt- European ones, are at last moving in the direction of ed and being implemented in Ethiopia with support direct funding of national NGOs. Though limited, media from the World Bank and the larger donor communi- coverage of the NGO is increasing and increasingly pos- ty are readily available within the Bank and will not be itive. Furthermore, the public view appears to be less summarized here. What is clear in reviewing these cynical. Adoption of the Code of Conductfor NGOs and documents is the natural complementarity of the pri- the accelerating forging of networks and forums are orities of the various NGOs engaged in the country indicative of a maturing NGO sector. Political events- and the strategies being pursued by the government of specifically, the impact of the border war between Ethiopia Ethiopia and by the official international development and Eritrea-have indirectly and unexpectedly result- agencies, including the World Bank. ed in a lowering of suspicions and tensions between Poverty alleviation and human development are cen- NGOs and the government. tral in the official development strategies and to those NGO projects complement Bank-supported devel- of the NGOs. Whatever arguments exist about the effi- opment strategies. A widening of the operational space ciency of NGO work, it is virtually impossible to refute for civil society actors would underscore support for the basic orientation of their efforts around these objec- continued democratic evolution in the country. Thus tives. The World Bank Country Assistance Strategy pro- lies the rationale for an expanded partnership between poses a strategy focusing on investments in education the Bank and the NGO sector. and health, with additional emphases on population, gender, food security, water supply, nutrition, early Necessary Elements of a World Bank-NGO Dialogue childhood development, and urban poverty These areas, in essence, largely summarize the programmatic If a World Bank-NGO dialogue were to be structured, portfolio of the NGO sector operating in Ethiopia today. several elements would be paramount in its design if Recognizing this overlap does not even begin to imply maximum utility were to be realized. NGOs first and that NGOs hold the key to the successful realization of foremost seek a collaborative process with the Bank that the adopted development strategies. It is simply an is transparent and mutually respectful. They want a assessment that the programs and projects NGOs are process that will allow the sector's potential value to striving to deliver in Ethiopia are immediately com- the Bank's poverty alleviation agenda to be fully pre- plementary to those strategies, and that NGOs offer an sented and understood. NGOs seek to explore the impor- additional channel for their implementation. The ways tance of a vigorous civil society to an expanded democracy and means for maximizing the contribution of the and better governance. nongovernmental sector to the national development A number of NGO networks, forums, and associa- strategies is not the subject of this paper, but rather of tions now exist in Ethiopia, and it would be important a series of dialogues now feasible and advantageous. for the dialogue to support these groupings as it is being structured. These groups serve as preexisting strategic partners who should be strengthened during the process. Dialogue on Partnerships in Development To maximize its impact, the effort should incorporate opportunities for expanding the basis of dialogue not The concluding thrust of this snapshot view of the simply with World Bank officials, but among the NGO Ethiopian NGO sector is that a strong basis for a struc- sector, the government, and the larger donor commu- T1he World Bank and NGOs 17 nity. Central to the agenda would be identification of the Bank and the NGOs. And it appears unarguable that both opportunities and modalities for cooperation both the Bank and the NGOs have the potential of between the Bank and the NGO community Dialogue considerable gain from the envisioned Dialogue on that does not ultimately lead to action is going to be Partnership. less useful than a process that advances the agenda of Notes 1. The Derg ("Committee" in Amharic) was the Armed Forces Derg. See "Cross-Border Operations" below for further infor- Coordinating Committee that came to power in 1975. The mation. Derg abolished the monarchy and proclaimed a republic. 8. REST is the Tigrayan People's Liberation Front affiliate, 2. See the timeline inAnnexA for further significant events and ERA is the affiliate of the Eritrean People's Liberation in Ethiopian history. Front. ORA is associated with the Oromo Liberation Front. 3. Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam was in power from ORAs operations were largely concentrated in refugee cen- December 1977 until May 1991, when he unexpectedly fled ters in Sudan. the country, 9. See Van Beurden 1998. 4. An examination of the impact of the past year's serious 10. USAID officials quoted the prime minister making food shortages in northern Ethiopia on government-NGO these remarks in 1998. relations would be useful for the proposed Dialogue. However, 11. For a more detailed discussion of this process, see Pact time and space considerations prevented a serious look at 1998. this topic here. 12. A topic of considerable interest not covered in this 5. Haile Selassie reigned during two separate periods: brief is the impact of the Ethiopian-Eritrean border war on 1930-36 and 1941-74. Italy occupied Ethiopia during the the NGO-govemment relationship in Ethiopia. Several well- interim years. Haile Selassie was overthrown in 1974. placed observers comment that as a result of the rathernation- 6. The toll of famine in Ethiopia in this period can never alistic rallying of civil society and NGO leaders behind the be known with accuracy It is probable that more than 200,000 government after the conflict erupted, government officials people died in the 1973-74 crisis and that close to 1 million have experienced a new confidence in the relationship and perished in the 1984-85 catastrophe. appear ready for an enhanced partnership. Additional research 7. Cross-border operations refer to the direct provision of is warranted, however, before conclusions can be reached. relief assistance to the humanitarian wings of the rebel groups 13. World Bank, March 1999, "Ethiopia-CountryAssistance then engaged in pitched struggle against Mengistu and the Note" (draft). World Bank, OED, Washington, D.C. 18 Annex A: Timeline Major historical event Year Civil society activities Haile Selassie crowned emperor 1930 First civil society entities begin to form Italian invasion; emperor flees 1936 British expel Italians, emperor restored 1941 British complete restoration of Ethiopian sovereignty 1948 Emperor's "modernization" of country 1950 Federation of Eritrea with Ethiopia 1952 UN Economic Commission for Africa established in 1960 First international and indigenous NGOs begin Addis Ababa operations Eritrea annexed; 1961 30-year war for liberation commences Organization for African Unity established in 1963 Addis Ababa Social protests and unrest develop 1965 Famine strikes Welo & Tigray provinces; 200,000 die 1973 NGOs become major players in relief operations; CRDA formed Haile Selassie overthrown; 1974 Derg reign commences Mengistu consolidates power; 1977-78 "Red Terror" claims thousands of lives Tigray People's Liberation Front formed 1977 Ogaden war; 1979 Soviet bloc military Assistance begins People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia proclaimed 1984 Drought, catastrophic famines hit; 1 million die 1984-85 NGOs pivotal in relief operations; REST and others carry out cross-border operations Resistance movements gain initiative 1989 Derg defeated; Mengistu exiled; 1991 New national NGOs form, multiply transitional government formed (Annex A continued on next page) 19 20 Civil Society, NGOs, and Development in Ethiopia: A Snapshot View (Annex A continued) Major historical event Year Civil society activities Eritrea achieves independence 1993 Regional development associations formed; government requires NGOs to reregister New constitution ratified, governing structures 1994 realigned; Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia proclaimed Meles Zenowi elected prime minister 1995 Guidelinesfor NGO Operations established by government 1996 Pact launches Ethiopian NGO Sector Enhancement Initiative Border war with Eritrea begins 1998 CRDA officially registered as NGO umbrella organization Peace negotiations between Ethiopia and Eritrea begin 1999 Code of Conductfor NGOs adopted Annex B: Selected Bibliography Asrat, Kebede. 1999. 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