By Alemayehu G. Mariam
“Education
is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world,”
said Nelson Mandela. For the late Meles Zenawi and his apostles (the
Melesistas) in Ethiopia, the reverse is true: Ignorance is the most
powerful weapon you can use to prevent change and cling to power. They
have long adopted the motto of George Orwell’s Oceania: “Ignorance is
Strength”. Indeed, ignorance is a powerful weapon to manipulate,
emasculate and subjugate the masses. Keep ‘em ignorant and impoverished
and they won’t give you any trouble.
For the Melesistas education is indoctrination. They feed the youth a
propaganda diet rich in misinformation, disinformation, distortions,
misguided opinions, worn out slogans and sterile dogmas from a bygone
era. Long ago, Dr. Carter G. Woodson, “Father of African-American
History”, warned against such indoctrination and miseducation of the
oppressed: “When you control a man’s thinking you do not have to worry
about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go
yonder. He will find his proper place and will stay in it. You do not
need to send him to the back door. He will go without being told. In
fact, if there is no back door, he will cut one for his special benefit.
His education makes it necessary.” The rulers in Ethiopia continue to
use higher educational institutions not as places of learning, inquiry
and research but as diploma mills for a new breed of party hacks and
zombie ideologues doomed to blind and unquestioning servility. “Zombie
go… zombie stop… zombie turn… zombie think…,” sang the great African
musician Fela Kuti. I’d say, “zombie teach… zombie learn… zombie read…
zombie dumb… zombie dumber.”
“Land of Perpetual Darkness”.
But my commentary here is not about the Benighted Kingdom of Ethiopia
where ignoramuses are kings, queens, princes and princesses. I am
concerned about the systemic and rampant corruption in Ethiopia's
"education sector”. The most destructive and pernicious form of
corruption occurs in education. Educorruption steals the future of
youth. It permanently cripples them intellectually by denying them
opportunities to acquire knowledge and transform their lives and take
control of the destiny of their nation. As Malcom X perceptively
observed, “Without education, you are not going anywhere in this world.”
Could Ethiopia’s youth go anywhere in this world trapped and chained
deep in the belly of a corrupt educational system?
I will admit that in the hundreds of weekly commentaries I have
written over the last half dozen or so years, I have not given education
in Ethiopia the critical attention it deserved. I have no excuse for
not engaging the issue more intensely. In my own defense, I can only say
that when an entire generation of Ethiopian scholars, academics,
professors and learned elites stands silent as a bronze statute
witnessing the tyranny of ignorance in action, the burden on the few who
try to become the voices of the voiceless on every issue is enormous.
I have previously commented on the lack of academic freedom in Ethiopian
higher education and the politicization of education in Ethiopia. In my
February 2008 commentary “Tyranny in the Academy”, I called attention
to the lack of academic freedom at Mekelle Law School. I defended
Abigail Salisbury who was a visiting professor at that law school when
she was summarily fired by Meles after she published an academic
commentary on her experiences at that law school:
…I was absolutely shocked, then, when I started reading my students’
work. Out of the hundred third-year students I teach, probably forty of
them had inserted a special section, right after the cover page, warning
me of what might happen to them were their paper to leave my hands. A
number of students wrote that they would never give their real opinions
to an Ethiopian professor because they fear being turned in to the
government and punished. Others begged me to take their work back to
America with me so that people would know what was going on…
In my September 2010 commentary, “Indoctri-Nation”, I criticized the
Meles regime for politicizing education. The “Ministry of Education”
(reminds one of Orwell’s “Ministry of Truth” (Ignorance)) at the time
had issued a “directive” effectively outlawing distance learning
(education programs that are not delivered in the traditional university
classroom or campus) throughout the country. The regime had also
sought to corner the disciplines of law and teaching for
state-controlled universities, creating a monopoly and pipeline for the
training of party hacks to swarm the teaching and legal professions. I
demonstrated that "directive” was in flagrant violation and in willful
disregard of the procedural safeguards of the Higher Education
Proclamation No. 650/2009. It did not faze them. (It was time to mint a
new legal maxim: “The ignorant are entitled to ignore their own law and
invoke ignorance of their own law as a defense.”)
The “directive” was at odds with the recommendations of the World
Bank (which has been assisting the regime in improving education
administration and delivery of services) for increased emphasis on the
creation of a network of “tertiary educational” institutions (e.g.
distance learning centers, private colleges, vocational training
services, etc.,) to help support the “production of the higher-order
capacity” necessary for Ethiopia’s development. In its 2003 sector study
“Higher Education Development for Ethiopia", the World Bank had
recommended “a near term goal [of] doubl[ing] the share of private
enrollments from the current 21% to 40% by 2010.” By 2010, the Meles
regime had decided to reduce private tertiary institutions, particularly
the burgeoning distance learning sector, to zero!
In my October 2010 commentary, “Ethiopia: Education Unbanned!”, I was pleasantly surprised but unconvinced by the Meles regime’s apparent change of strategy to abandon its decision to impose a blanket ban on distance learning and reach a negotiated resolution of instructional quality issues with distance learning providers. I pointed out a few lessons Meles and his crew could learn from the bureaucratic fiasco. (Is it really possible for the closed- and narrow-minded to learn?)
I focus on educational corruption in Ethiopia in this commentary for
four reasons: 1) I was appalled by the corruption findings in the recent
World Bank 448-page report “Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia”. That
report, with bureaucratic delicacy and hesitancy, demonstrates the
cancer of corruption which afflicts the Ethiopian body politic has
metastasized into the educational sector putting the nation’s youth at
grave risk. 2) There is widespread acknowledgement that education in
Ethiopia at all levels is in a pitiful condition. For instance, a 2010
Newsweek “study of health, education, economy, and politics” showed
Ethiopia with a population of 88 million had a literacy rate of 43.3
percent, and ranked 98 out of 100 countries on education. 3) Few
Ethiopian educators and scholars are examining the issue of educational
corruption and its implications for the future of the country and its
youth. Hopefully, this commentary could spur some of them to
investigate corruption in education (and other areas) and conduct
related policy research and analysis. 4) I had promised in my first
weekly commentary of 2013 to pay special attention to youth issues in
Ethiopia during the year. Nothing is more important to Ethiopia’s youth
than education. Youth without education are youth without a future and
without hope. Youth without education are emblematic of a nation in
despair.
World Bank findings on corruption in the Ethiopian education sectorThe WB report on the education sector alludes to an Ethiopian proverb
in assessing the culture of corruption and impunity: “Sishom Yalbela
Sishar Ykochewal” -- roughly translates into English as follows: “One
who does not exploit to the full his position when he is promoted will
lament when he no longer has the opportunity.”
Ethiopia’s education sector has become a haven and a refuge for
prebendalist (where those affiliated with the ruling regime feel
entitled to receive a share of the loot) party hacks and a bottomless
barrel of patronage. The Meles regime has used jobs, procurement and
other opportunities in the education sector to reward and sustain
loyalty in its support base. They have been handing out teaching jobs to
their supporters like candy and procurement opportunities to their
cronies like cake. “In Ethiopia’s decentralized yet authoritarian
system,considerable powers exist among senior officials at the federal,
regional, and woreda levels. Of particular relevance to this study is
the discretion exercised by politically appointed officials at the
woreda level, directly affecting the management of teachers.”
In “mapping corruption in the education sector in Ethiopia”, “the
World Bank report cautions that “corruption in education can be
multifaceted, ranging from large distortions in resource allocation and
significant procurement-related fraud to smaller amounts garnered
through daily opportunities for petty corruption and nontransparent
financial management.” Corruption in the education sector is
quadri-dimensional “affecting the selection of teachers for training,
recruitment, skills upgrading, or promotion; falsification of documents
to obtain qualifications, jobs, or promotions and fraud and related
bribery in examinations and conflict of interest in procurement.”
The “selection of candidates for technical training colleges (TTCs)”
is the fountainhead of educational corruption in Ethiopia. According to
the WB report, “students do not generally choose to become teachers but
are centrally selected from a pool of those who have failed to achieve
high grades.” In other words, the regime’s policy is to populate the
teaching profession with, for lack of a better word, the “dumber”
students. Such students also make the most servile party hacks. But it
is a spectacular revelation that the future of Ethiopia’s youth -- the
future of Ethiopia itself -- is in the hands of “those who have failed
to achieve high grades”. Ignorant teachers and ignorant students=
Ignorance is strength. Could a greater crime be committed against
Ethiopia’s youth and Ethiopia?
To add insult to injury, the selection of underachieving students to
pursue teacher training institutes is itself infected by “bribery,
favoritism and nepotism.” The most flagrant corrupt practices include
“manipulation of the points system for selection of students to higher
education.” The “allocate[on] of higher percentage points for results
from transcripts and national exams than for entrance exams” has
“enabled a large number of inadequately qualified students to join the
affected institutes, sometimes with forged transcripts. This practice
has affected the quality of students gaining entry to higher education
and eroded the quality of the training program.” In other words, even
among underachievers seeking to become teachers, it is the washouts, the
duds and flops that are likely to become teachers!
Fraud and related corrupt practices in matriculation are commonplace. According to the WB report, there is
a significant risk of corruption in examinations…The types of fraudulent
practices in examinations include forged admission cards enable
students to pay other students to sit exams for them, collusion allowing
both individual and group cheating in examinations, assistance from
invigilators (exam monitors) and school and local officials (during
exams), higher-level interference [in which] regional officials
overturned the disqualification of cheaters, fraudulent overscoring of
examination papers [by] teachers are bribed by parents and students,
fraudulent certification of transcripts and certificates to help
students graduate.
Although there are public officials who have considered reporting
corrupt practices, they have refrained from doing so because there was
“a strong sense that there is no protection to guard against possible
reprisals directed at those who report malpractice.” There is no place
for whistle blowers in Ethiopia's edu-corruptocracy.
What is shocking is not only the culture of corruption in education
but also the culture of impunity -- the belief that there are no
consequences for practicing corruption. The WB report shows not only the
“prevalence of fraud and falsification of teaching qualifications and
other documents, reflecting weak controls, poor-quality documents (that
are easily falsified), [but also] the widespread belief that such a
practice would not be detected… For such falsification to go unnoticed,
there is a related risk of the officials supporting or approving the
application being implicated in the corrupt practice.”
The types of corrupt practices that occur at the management level are
stunning. Managers manipulate access to “program of enhancing teacher
qualifications through in-service training during holiday periods by
using their positions to influence the selection of candidates. Hidden
relationships are used in teacher upgrading, with officials at the zonal
or woreda level taking the first option on upgradation programs.” The
appointment of local education officials is not “competitive” but
“politically assigned”. Collusion between local managers and teachers
over noncompliance with curriculum, academic calendar, and similar
practices is a relatively common practice and “reduces the provision of
educational services.” This situation is made worse by “teacher
absenteeism [which] is tolerated by head teachers, within the context of
staff perceiving a need to supplement their income through private
tutoring or other forms of income generation.” Poorly paid teachers
supplement their incomes by “private tutoring [which] is widespread,
with 40 percent of school officials reporting it as a practice.”
Corruption also extends to “teachers paying bribes or kickbacks to
management, mostly school directors, to allocate shorter work hours in
schools so that they can use the freed-up time to earn fees as teachers
in private schools.” The payola is hierarchically distributed: “Bribes
received are likely to be shared first with superiors, then with a
political party, and then with colleagues, in that order.”
Falsification of documents including forged transcripts and
certificates occurs on an “industrial” scale and is “most prevalent in
the provision of certification for completing the primary or secondary
school cycles” and in generating bogus “documents in support of
applications for promotion”.
Procurement (official purchases of goods and services from private
sources) is the low hanging fruit. “In the education sector, a number of
public actors maybe involved [in procurement], depending on the size
and type of the task. These include national and local government
politicians and managers.” Some people have a lock on the procurement
system. Successful “tendering companies” are likely to have “family or
other connections with officials responsible for procurement”.
Procurement corruption also takes the forms of “uncompetitive practices”
“including the formation of a cartel, obstruction of potential new
entrants to the market, or other forms of uncompetitive practices that
may or may not include a conspiratorial role on the part of those
responsible for procurement.” Other procurement related corruption
includes “favoritism, nepotism, or bribery in the short-listing of
consultants or contractors or the provision of tender information.”
There are some “favored contractors and consultants” who have a
“dominant market position” and are “awarded contracts for which they
were not eligible to bid.” Corruption also occurs in the form of
defective construction, substandard materials and overclaims of
quantities.
Construction quality issues are considered a significant problem in
the construction of educational facilities, particularly in the case of
small, remote facilities where high standards of construction
supervision can be difficult to achieve. For example, a toilet block in a
school collapsed a month after completion. The contractor responsible
for building the facility was not required to make the work good or
repay the amount paid, nor was the contractor sanctioned. The matter was
not investigated. Such problems are a significant indicator of corrupt
practices, particularly when the contractor is not ultimately held to
account for its failures…
There is corruption in the “purchase of substandard or defective
supplies or equipment. For this to go unchallenged by those responsible
for procurement strongly suggests either a lack of capacity, corrupt
practices, or both.” According to an example cited in the WB report, “a
large fleet of buses purchased by the MOE [“Ministry of Education”]
using Teacher Development Program funds and distributed to TTCs were
found to be defective. The TTCs complained that the MOE had dumped the
buses on them. The MOE subsequently sent auditors to determine whether
the complaint was genuine.”
The amazing fact is that the regime reflexively decided to
investigate those who filed the complaint, and not the reported crooks.
They automatically assumed the technical training colleges were lying
and sent their auditors to investigate them for possible false reporting
of defective buses!! (Orwelliana: The criminals are the victims and the
victims are the criminals.) There is evidence of theft and resale of
school supplies or equipment. “One such indication relates to the
alleged illegal sale of education facilities, with related allegations
of nepotism. A city education office is alleged to have sold valuable
heritage buildings in a secondary school to a private developer and then
to have requested land to rebuild the school facilities.”
Changing the culture of corruption and impunity
The culture of corruption and impunity in Ethiopia must be changed. The WB report observes,
In Ethiopia, the pattern of perception suggests that outright bribery is
perceived to be more corrupt than, for example, favoritism or the
falsification of documentation. There is also a sense that some
practices, such as expressing gratitude to a client through the giving
of a small gift, are normal business practice and not necessarily
corrupt. Finally, there is an underlying acceptance among many that the
state has the right to intervene in the market if that is considered to
be in the national interest, and there is little sense that such
interventions could be at variance with ongoing efforts to promote the
level playing field needed for effective privatization of service
provision, including in the education sector.
It is unlikely that a corrupt regime has the will, capacity or
interest to change its own modus operandi. As I have argued elsewhere,
having the “Federal Ethics and Anti-corruption Commission” (FEAC)
investigate the architects and beneficiaries of corruption in Ethiopia
is like having Tweedle Dee investigate Tweedle Dum. It is an exercise in
futility and an absurdity. FEAC is a toothless, clawless and feckless
make-believe do-nothing bureaucratic shell incapable of investigating
corruption in its own offices let alone systemic corruption in the
country.
Pressures for accountability and transparency could come from
domestic civil society institutions, but as the WB report points out, a
2009 “civil societies law” has decimated such institutions. The only
practical and effective mechanism for accountability and transparency in
the education sector is the institutionalization of an independent and
energetic teachers’ union. But the regime has destroyed the real
teachers’ union. According to the WB report,
The mis-edcuation of Ethiopia’s youth and stolen futures
Education of Ethiopia’s youth is a human rights issue for me and not
just a matter of professional concern as an educator. Corruption in the
education sector is so severe that the future of Ethiopia’s youth is at
grave risk. As Transparency International admonishes,
Stolen resources from education budgets mean overcrowded classrooms
and crumbling schools, or no schools at all. Books and supplies are
sometimes sold instead of being given out freely. Schools and
universities also ‘sell’ school places or charge unauthorised fees,
forcing students (usually girls) to drop out. Teachers and lecturers are
appointed through family connections, without qualifications. Grades
can be bought, while teachers force students to pay for tuition outside
of class. In higher education, undue government and private sector
influence can skew research agendas.
It is true “ignorance is strength”. The Meles regime seeks to create
an army of ignorant youth zombie clones who will march lockstep and
follow their orders: “Zombie go, zombie stop, zombie think… zombie
learn... zombie dumb... zombie dumber...” If ignorance is strength, then
knowledge is power. When “ignorant” youth gain knowledge, they become
an unstoppable force.
It may not be manifest to many but Ethiopia’s mis-educated youth are
on the rise. A quiet riot is raging among the youth debilitated by
overwhelming despair and anguish. The youth look at themselves and their
lost futures under a corrupt tyranny. They know things are not going to
get better. For now the despair simmers but it will reach a boiling
point. Mohamed Bouazizi was a 26 year old Tunisian street vendor who set
himself on fire in December 2010. Dictator Ben Ali did not see it
coming, but the fire that consumed Bouazizi also consumed and
transformed not only Tunisia but also led to an Arab Spring. Moamar
Gadhafi, the great “Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution of
Libya” died at the hands of youth he miseducated for 42 years. Informed,
enlightened and interconnected Egyptian youth brought down the Mubarak
regime in less than two weeks!
Ethiopia's youth will rise because there is no force that can keep
them down. The only question is when not if. That is the immutable of
law of history. In the end, I believe Ethiopia’s youth will remember not
the deeds and misdeeds of those who miseducated them and robbed them of
their futures, but the silence of the scholars, intellectuals,
academics, professors and learned men and women who watched the tyranny
of ignorance like bronze statutes. I am confident in my conviction that
there will come a time when Ethiopia’s youth will stand up collectively,
and each one pointing an index finger, shout out, “J’accuse!”
Ignorance is strength but knowledge is power! Fight the tyranny of ignorance. Educate yourself!
Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.
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