INDEPENDENT NEWS

Cablegate: Party-Hack Anointed Mayor of Addis Ababa

Published: Thu 22 May 2008 05:15 AM
VZCZCXRO0462
RR RUEHLMC
DE RUEHDS #1416/01 1430515
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 220515Z MAY 08
FM AMEMBASSY ADDIS ABABA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0714
INFO RUEHNR/AMEMBASSY NAIROBI 3496
RUEHAE/AMEMBASSY ASMARA 2729
RUEHDJ/AMEMBASSY DJIBOUTI 8992
RUEHLMC/MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORP WASHINGTON DC 0117
RHMFISS/CJTF HOA
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 ADDIS ABABA 001416
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS
E.O.12958: N/A
TAGS: KDEM PINR PGOV PREL PHUM ET
SUBJECT: PARTY-HACK ANOINTED MAYOR OF ADDIS ABABA
SUMMARY
-------
1. (SBU) Following its landslide victory in the April 2008 local
elections, the ruling Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic
Front (EPRDF) appointed Defense Minister Kuma Demeksa, an
opportunistic 50-year old party loyalist, as mayor of Addis Ababa.
In a conference held at the City Hall on May 20, the EPRDF also
selected the Deputy Mayor, as well as the Secretary General, the
Speaker and the Deputy Speaker of the City Council.
2. (U) The 137 EPRDF city council members-elect appointed Kuma
Demeksa Mayor of Addis Ababa in a ceremony held at the City Hall on
May 20. Other EPRDF members selected for office include: Kefyalew
Azeze--Deputy Mayor; Woizero Sinkinesh Atale--Speaker of the Addis
Ababa Council; Elias Seid--Deputy Speaker of the Council; and
Woizero Negede Lema--Secretary General of Addis Ababa Council. The
EPRDF also selected ten heads of the various bureaus in the city
administration: Abate Setotaw, Youth and Sports; Dulamo Otore,
Education, Tsegaye H/Mariam, Justice and Security; Belaynesh Teklai,
Finance and Economic Development, Fikru Merga, Trade and Industry;
Getachew H/Mariam, Works and Urban Development; Daba Debele,
Capacity Building; Dr. Hussein Mohammed, Health; Gebretsadik Hagos,
Culture and Tourism; Ejigayehu Akberot, Women's Affairs. END
SUMMARY.
BIO ON THE MAYOR
----------------
3. (U) The newly-elected mayor, Kuma Demeksa, a.k.a. Taye
Teklehaimanot, was born in Oromiya Region of Amhara parents in 1958.
He completed his elementary and secondary education in Gore town,
Illubabor Zone of Oromiya Region. Kuma joined an elite police force
in the early 1970's and was promoted to the rank of captain after
the 1974 revolution that brought the "Dergue" military regime of
Mengistu Hailemariam to power. As a member of the elite police
force, Kuma served in Eritrea, where he was captured and made a
prisoner of war by the Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF)
guerilla forces.
4. (SBU) In an agreement reached between Tigrayan People's
Liberation Front (TPLF) and EPLF in 1981, the guerilla forces handed
Kuma over to TPLF. TPLF "re-educated" Kuma and allowed him to join
the Ethiopian Peoples' Democratic Movement, EPDM (the non-Tigrayan,
junior partner of TPLF). In 1990, Kuma Demeksa quit EPDM to form
the Oromo Peoples' Democratic Organization (OPDO), the Oromo wing of
EPRDF. When the EPRDF coalition came to power in 1991, Kuma was
appointed as Minister of Interior in the Transitional Government of
Ethiopia (1991-1995). Kuma's leverage at the helm of the Interior
Ministry was overshadowed by the effective control held by Tigrayan
security chief Kinfe Gebre Medhin (assassinated in May 2001). When
Ethiopia's federal government was established in 1995, Kuma was
elected head of the executive committee of Oromiya Region. Kuma
remained President of Oromiya region until July 2001.
5. (SBU) Kuma temporarily fell out of favor following the split
within TPLF in the Spring of 2001 because he supported the dissident
TPLF group led by Seeye Abraha, who was later jailed for six years
for corruption. In July 2001, Kuma was officially removed from his
position as president of Oromiya region and Secretary General of
OPDO because of allegations of corruption, abuse of power and
anti-democratic practices. He laid low for more than a year.
6. (SBU) In late 2002, Kuma re-emerged and was appointed as one of
the three State Ministers at the Ministry of Capacity Building under
the supervision of the austere party ideologue, Tefera Waliwa. He
served as state minister until October 2005. Embassy contacts say
that Kuma convinced the TPLF leadership that he had been "reformed"
and demonstrated unconditional loyalty to the party while serving as
State Minister under the watchful eyes of Tefera Waliwa. Kuma was
subsequently appointed as Minister of Defense in October 2005 when
Prime Minister Meles reshuffled his cabinet in the wake of the 2005
national election.
7. (U) Kuma has been married twice and is a father of seven, with
three children from his first wife and four from his current wife.
Kuma received his first and second degrees from the London-based UK
Open University while working as State Minister at the Ministry of
Capacity building.
COMMENT
-------
8. (SBU) Kuma's critics describe him as a colorless party-hack who
has "been everywhere and has reached nowhere." Kuma is quite and
reclusive and rarely meets with non-party members. However, he is
ADDIS ABAB 00001416 002 OF 002
committed to the party and very loyal to Prime Minister Meles. Kuma
is said to be a survivor because he respects authority, is reclusive
and keeps a low profile. He is not well regarded in Oromiya region,
where he served as President for over six years, and has been
labelled indecisive and ineffective. Kuma's appointment as Mayor
has puzzled many residents of Addis Ababa. Observers expected that
the EPRDF would appoint a sharper and more apt Mayor to address the
multi-faceted social, political and economic problems of the city in
order to win the hearts and minds of residents who voted
overwhelmingly in favor of the opposition in 2005, and largely
stayed home during the 2008 local elections. END COMMENT.
YAMAMOTO
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media