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TPLF blocked food aid during Tigray's 1984 famine in Ethiopia - BBC
Credit - bbc
Gebremedhin Araya (L) says he posed as a merchant, but was in fact a rebel

  • According to the BBC, Senior TPLF officials and America's CIA sources have admitted that Meles Zenawi's TPLF blocked and diverted food aid and millions of dollars donated to the 1984 famine victims in Tigray, in order to buy weapons and recruits against the Soviet backed Mengistu regime.  TPLF rebels posed as merchants and officials of NGOs like the Relief Society of Tigray (R.E.S.T.)  to deceive western NGOs. Today, TPLF's ngos and civilian organizations like E.F.F.O.R.T. and R.E.S.T. continue to monopolize the Ethiopian economy and the transfer of aid to millions of Ethiopians. The TPLF and EPLF rebels were also known to use terrorist tactics to rob Ethiopian government owned NGOs and bomb civilian targets but they were supported as "freedom fighters" by anti-Soviet UK and US officials. While anti-Soviet western governments and western groups like HRW blamed the pro-Soviet Mengistu regime for the crisis, most Ethiopians hold the TPLF and Eritrea's EPLF rebels responsible for the majority of deaths during the 1980s famines and wars as the rebels diverted food aid as well as used innocent Tigray people as human shield at several battles with the Mengistu regime, including at the Hawzen market of Tigray.

(By Martin Plaut / Africa editor, BBC World Service) Millions of dollars in Western aid for victims of the Ethiopian famine of 1984-85 was siphoned off by rebels to buy weapons, a BBC investigation finds.

Former rebel leaders told the BBC that they posed as merchants in meetings with charity workers to get aid money.

They used the cash to fund attempts to overthrow the government of the time. One rebel leader estimated $95m (£63m) - from Western governments and charities including Band Aid - was channelled into the rebel fight.

The CIA, in a 1985 assessment entitled Ethiopia: Political and Security Impact of the Drought, also alleged aid money was being misused.

Its report concluded: "Some funds that insurgent organisations are raising for relief operations, as a result of increased world publicity, are almost certainly being diverted for military purposes."

Multiple rebellions

The crisis in 1984 prompted a huge Western relief effort, spearheaded by pop star Bob Geldof's Band Aid campaign and Live Aid concerts.
Although millions of people were saved by the aid that poured into the country, evidence suggests not all of the aid went to the most needy.

At the time, the Ethiopian government was fighting rebellions in the northern provinces of Eritrea and Tigray.

Much of the countryside was outside of government control, so relief agencies brought aid in from neighbouring Sudan.

Some was in the form of food, some as cash, to buy grain from Ethiopian farmers in areas that were still in surplus.

Max Peberdy, an aid worker from Christian Aid, carried nearly $500,000 in Ethiopian currency across the border in 1984.

He used it to buy grain from merchants and believes that none of the aid was diverted.

"It's 25 years since this happened, and in the 25 years it's the first time anybody has claimed such a thing," he says.

He insists that to the best of his knowledge, the food went to feed the starving.

But the merchant Mr Peberdy dealt with in that transaction claims he was, in fact, a senior member of the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF).

"I was given clothes to make me look like a Muslim merchant. This was a trick for the NGOs," says Gebremedhin Araya.

Underneath the sacks of grain he sold, he says, were sacks filled with sand.

He says he handed over the money he received to TPLF leaders, including Meles Zenawi - the man who went on to become Ethiopia's prime minister in 1991.

Mr Meles, who is still in office, has declined to comment on the allegations.

But Mr Gebremedhin's version of events is supported by the TPLF's former commander, Aregawi Berhe.

Now living in exile in the Netherlands, he says the rebels put on what he describes as a "drama" to get the money.

"The aid workers were fooled," he says.

He says that some $100m went through the hands of the TPLF and affiliated groups.

Some 95% of it was allocated to buying weapons and building up a hard-line Marxist political party within the rebel movement.

Both Mr Aregawi and Mr Gebremedhin fell out with the TPLF leadership and fled the country.

Much of the money that ended up in the TPLF's hands was channelled through affiliated groups such as the Relief Society of Tigray.

Band Aid's accounts show that it gave almost $11m to the society and other groups close to the rebels, but the charity has declined to comment.

Soviet confrontation

It should not be forgotten that this all took place at the height of the Cold War.

The Soviet Union had poured $4bn into Ethiopia, and provided Soviet officers to direct Ethiopia battles against the rebels.
In January 1983, President Ronald Reagan issued National Security Directive 75, which aimed to confront the Soviet Union across the developing world.

"US policy will seek to limit and destabilise activities of Soviet Third World allies and clients," it said.

In a November 2009 speech, US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates - who was deputy head of the CIA during Mr Reagan's time in office - said that the president's approach was to "impose ever stiffer costs on the Soviet Union for its Third World adventurism".

He included Ethiopia among the states in which "Soviet surrogates soon faced their own lethal insurgencies".

Mr Gates was unwilling to expand on whether the US backed the Ethiopian insurgents.

But since there were only a limited number of rebel movements, the suggestion cannot be ruled out that the CIA not only knew about, but supported, the diversion of aid funds to the TPLF.

Post A Comment
Comments 15 comments for this article
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Added: March 03, 2010. 03:28 PM GMT
thank you BBC
FINALLLY THE OLD BBC IS BACK!!!!

SHAME ON TPLF!!!
Tekle
Added: March 03, 2010. 03:58 PM GMT
nazi zenawi is exposed once again
Tigray people have been fooled on this time by Woyane propaganda
Anonymous
Added: March 03, 2010. 04:43 PM GMT
CIA was suporting TPLF on purprose
so what hapen to all VOA lies????? they said they didnt support wayane? we can NEVERtrust or depend on any western racist governments
please let us unite against this mercenary dictatorship
Warso
Added: March 03, 2010. 06:49 PM GMT
Meles should be charged for genocide, NOT MENGISTU!!
the tigres are very very funny people

our people in OROMIA contribute 90% of natural resources, coffee and revenue but oromo people have been made poor by amara regimes the last 200 years

but the poor and dry TIGRAY

- has no fertile land

- has no natural resources except cactus and stones

- has no rivers

- no contribution to ethiopian empire

But the tigres are the first people to complain about the amara empire

why?

what a bunch of hypocrisy!!

tigres have never been treated badly by amara empires like Oromos have
so ther was no reason for TPLF to be born so meles killed and meles fabricated the humanitarian crisis to brainwash innocent tigres

Kumsaa
Added: March 03, 2010. 07:19 PM GMT
no surprise here!

unfortunately, the rest of aid is used for adminstration cost of NGOs so NGO is one big profitable business scheme for the corrupt and evil people of the world
Anonymous
Added: March 03, 2010. 07:26 PM GMT
Is this news? Jimmawoch....minew
This may be true but I don't see why it matters now. Ato Gebremedhin is a dissatisfied ex tplf law level member and I expect him to say all the wrong things. Honestly, this is just a joke. Why can't we focus on the future and now than the past?
Anonymous
Added: March 04, 2010. 12:09 AM GMT
If every accusation is taken as a fact, then we would all be 2nd graders. First we have to look in to who the accusers are and what their motives is before we make any conclusions. These two guys are former gorilla fighters who were expelled from the organization for corruption. So anything that comes out of a corrupt individual should be taken with a grain of salt. Second, this happened 25 years ago! why were these individuals so silent for all this years and now saying it just before a couple of months into an election? Is this another sabotage they come up? Last but not least, One the accusers was actually the top commander at the time and the buck stops with him. If aid was diverted to by weapon under his command, he was ultimately responsible not the current leaders.
Anonymous
Added: March 04, 2010. 02:06 AM GMT
TPLFs are ruthless savages
Anonymous
Added: March 04, 2010. 03:49 PM GMT
do the hayenas really care about Zibras?Hmm
TPLF are the childern of Tigrayan ppl so how can one forgot thoes reaiality and belive Poor propaganda? come on ppl there was NO one except TPLF who was helping Tigrayan ppl as that Time lol. so STOP Blha Blha and Try to change your poor life losers. VIVA TPLF GOD Bless Ethiopia DOWN With fake Ethiopians and their puppets.
Mekelle-Adey
Added: March 04, 2010. 06:00 PM GMT
What brutal TPLF
One can never expect mercy from these elite who use the money donated for such desperate and hopeless people dying of famine. Today, these merciless individuals are calling themselves a leader. Shame on the other democratic nations, those support evil people like Meles.
Madda
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