U -6 0 CO0 V E R . Chad good stewardship-such as soil conser- Population in need: 800,00() vation-although Wagaw believes it Popuatin i ner: Y 1''would be possible under a Marxist million system. E v il 6.rPoulatiP ige)a. Et op in neej: wFuel for cooking is also a problem. (Continued from Page 3) anThe need for firewood has reduced during this period of social upheaval. Ethiopia's forested land from 40% at the In their book Ethopia: Empire in _ . _ "turn of the century to a rapidly dwin- Revolution, they argue that rural land 6 x'Djibouti dling 2% now, according to Wagaw. nationalization largely failed because it """o ""io iRapid deforestation alters watersheds, happened too quickly ("change was not -7 diverts rivers, and further erodes the result of carefully guided reform") 2Ethiopia's soils. and because it ignited ethnic conflicts. - 3 The destruction of habitat sometimes Peasants were charged with setting I -' causes wild animals to become up cooperative farm associations, but <. senegal 10 agricultural pests. Wagaw recalled the ambiguity surrounding their P" tn4.that bands of monkeys often ravaged autonomy created massive confusion. 5 Mali _- Ethiopian cornfields and "multiplied stdetslhoofeka4.ned. 8Kenya University students, who often spoke a Ppuaton in ned:1)0 Population in ned: like rats. different language, were sent to 12 Unknown West African countries that border educate and implement these changes . Sao Tone Principe 1the Saharan desert in a region known as but were largely unsuccessful. .",'f","12""Tananaa the Sehel face the additional ecological The former landlords, dispossessed 10- v' 7 Poulaton in'need: 3000 problem of desertification. In this and often of yet another ethnic origin, lo. Zamia f ti 11iv\ process, chronic overgrazing by cattle formed roving bands of terrorists and Ppul'tion i nce 90),000 ,. Mozambique transforms valuable pasturelands into created more chaos. Lack of price sup- "r"' """"pt a " rmiio" barren deserts. ports, credit, and distribution systems ; Macklem noted that Western agen- further frustrated agricultural im- "".uaionned,000 cies have often contributed to deser- provements. tification through well-intentioned but Amartya Sen, author of Poverty and ill-conceived development projects. He Famine, argues that the Ethiopian cited deep tube wells built to provide economy continues to be an appendage Source: Red Cross, October 1, 1984 water to West African herdsmen and of international capital in spite of land their cattle as one example. nationalization. Sen notes that cotton, Initially, the steady supply of water sugar, and coffee, all sold as exports, down of their churches have made con- grown in the settlements, give the from the wells allowed the herdsmen of are still planted on Ethiopia's most fer- ditions intolerable for them according Dergue (Ethiopia's government) cash the region to increase their herds, but tile soils. to Teferi Fufa. to pay for its arms purchases-to carry higher grazing pressure quickly And, according to Ethiopian studen- Clearly all this internal strife has on the hostilities, thus creating more degraded the fragile grasslands and ts and relief workers, the peasants still siphoned money and energy away from refugees." forced herdsman to move their cattle to do not reap the profits from the land. agricultural development and famine Swenson also said she believes the more distant pastures, perpetuating the Amleset Tedla claims, "the money relief. Recent media reports, for exam- Ethiopian armies have repeatedly destruction. Macklem estimated that goes to Mengistu" (Ethiopia's military ple, repeatedly note that Ethiopia owes diverted food aid from rebel-held areas. land in a 75 mile radius from these tube ruler). Lois Swenson, a relief worker in the Soviet Union $2 billion for weaponry "Defectors from the military main- wells is now desert. Sudan, said that Ethiopian refugees and devotes a huge portion of its GNP tained (that) food assistance was con- who had worked on a coffee co- (variously cited at 11 and 50%) to the tinuously used by the 1 EEDING THE starving is the im- operative told her they were threatened military. military....Freedom fighters told me mediate necessary step toward with imprisonment if caught possessing Most of the Ethiopian students and they often saw famine relief food when ending famine in Africa, maintains more than 2 lbs. of coffee. relief workers claimed to agree with they raided the Ethiopian army camps. Julie Prohaska, a representative of the In the northern province of Tigrai, these contentions, but some went a step Others maintained that they had Ann Arbor chapter of the Red Cross. subsistence crops-such as wheat, further and accused the Ethiopian worked in loading docks where the gift Cash donations to private relief agen- beans, sorghum, and millet-are also military of using famine as a weapon to food was shipped to the Soviet Union." cies working in Africa are desperately exported, according to Yared Berhg, a starve out the resistance. In addition to direct destruction and needed throughout the upcoming year representative of the Relief Society of Amleset Tedla waved away diversion of food resources, the to ensure a steady supply of food to af- Tigrai (R.S.T.) who left Ethiopia six suggestions that drought and military indirectly stifles food produc- fected areas. The good news for years ago. Now after four years of inadequate agricultural methods were tion in rebellious regions through University students is that a little drought, 90% of the livestock-in- leading causes of famine in Eritrea, her military conscription. With able-bodied money can feed a lot of people. cluding oxen used for plowing-is dead native province. Tedla insisted that farmers removed from their homelan- Because milk, grain, and oil are simple and the seed for next year's crop has Eritrea is rich in resources, has a well- ds, old people and children are left to non-processed foods, Prohaska em- long been consumed. "The people," developed transportation system to work the fields. Amleset Tedla said phasized, "you can feed a child for a Berhg states, "have nothing." distribute food, and could have an that anyone in Eritrea-male or week with the money you spend on a adequate system of irrigation to female-between the ages of 18 and 40 hamburger and french fries." mitigate the effects of drought, but could be forcefully enlisted by a late- Insisting that the U.S. government W hile growing and distributing "People are working on war night knock on the door. Refusal to release aid to all suffering countries more food has not been high on instead. . . Mengista always puts war comply brings imprisonment or death. regardless of their political stance is a the Ethiopian government's list of first. War is hunger....People need the In 1979, fears of military conscription second way individuals can help get priorities, increasing military strength peace." forced Tedla herself to leave her family food to the famished; according to and suppressing ethnic liberation Comparing people's suffering under in Asmara and flee to Sudan-a 10 day Thiemann. The director of Publc Af- movements has been, Tedla and Swen- Mengistu and as subjects in Selassie's trip by foot and camel. From there she fairs for Lutheran World Relief, son said. empire, Tedla said, "Both them the made her way to the United States. Had Thiemann said he was not convinced the When the dethroned Emperor same. They have the same game." she stayed in Ethiopia, she said she is Reagan administration has been living Selassie was driven out of town in a This game, Tedla explained, is an at- sure she would have been imprisoned, up to its professed policy-"Hunger Volkswagon on September 12, 1974, he tempt to destroy Eritrean resistance by "The innocent people in prison, they knows no politics"-in its reaction to left behind him a hungry nation torn by depriving them of food. She said, have a lot...without reason...they don't the African crisis. He noted that half of civil war. Initially it was thought that "Mengistu says, 'I need the Eritrean know how many." the long term economic aid allocated to his Marxist successor might grant in- land, but not the people.' Africa has gone to only four nationsall dependence to successionist provinces According to Tedla, the government's NDEPENDENT of drought, with pro-Western leanings. which had been forcefully annexed into armies bomb fields and villages and economics, and war, "use without Because there is no African con- the empire. Instead, Col. Mengistu burn storage bins of grain. She recalls concern for conservation," said stituency, Congress has also been slow redoubled efforts to put down these in- that the people of her village could walk Wagaw, can explain why the land in his to respond, Theimann added. In his ad- surgencies and consolidate his power. and plant their crops only at night for native Ethiopia cannot feed its people. dress to members of Concordia College, Mengistu faces opposition from many fear of aerial bombing. Dr. Wagaw said he believes that he called on the American people to fronts. In the north, Eritrean and Fufa and Tedla's accounts echo those Ethiopian peasants have never ex- become "sophisticated Samaritans" Tigrean liberation armies continue to told to Lois Swenson during her resear- perienced "a feeling that it is their who act politically for those who have battle government forces. Another ch mission to Sudan last spring. Swen- land." Always at the brink of no political voice. "Let your hands do movement among the Oromo people son said she learned from Oromo desperation, they strive to maximize the talking," he said. has gained momentum in the south. refugees coming out of central-western short-term profits and cannot afford to Purchasing food for politically- Under the current regime, governm- Ethiopia that "the region continues to practice techniques of land preser- corrupt Ethiopia may be easier than ent resettlement plans that forcefully be terrorized by the military, arrests of vation that might ensure long-term ensuring that it gets distributed to the displace many Oromos, the outlawing church people and imprisonment and yields. Neither system of government people who need it, many relief workers of their language, and the shutting torture continue....Cash crops, now has provided advice or incentives for See EVIL, Page 11 4 Weekend/Friday; November 30, 1984' R E C 0 R I 11 II AI IIII AIIIIII Frail1 Brittania Waking Up With the House on Fire Culture Club Epic Hysteria! Human League A&M How Men Are Heaven 17 Arista Wish Thing Torch Song I.R.S. By Dennis Harvey T HE PREDICTABLE backlash against the Second British Invasion is at full throttle, with everyone eager to extol rugged American virtues of R.E.M. and their like at the easy expense of downy punchbags like Duran Duran. To be sure, much of the music that's crossed the Atlantic with significant commercial success has been a lot higher in teen-media appeal and MTV grooming than the stuff that makes a good record. While some newer bands like Big Country have managed to gain nothing but critical/sales approval (with the help, it ought to be noted, of a very FM- rock-influenced sound), the synth- dance outfits are currently viewed as dinosaurs ripe for extinction. There are a few new hopes, like Frankie Goes to Hollywood and Bron- ski Beat, but it's questionable how long some of the currently established, high-visibility act - Eurythmics, Spandau Ballet, Wham!, Duran Duran, the Thompson Twins, etc. - can hold out with their limited talents in an overpopulated market. Along with Heaven 17 (see below), only Depech Mode and The The have really demonstrated an ability to create entire albums of excellent material - it probably helps that those bands have kept a com- paratively low but steady profile amid all the media darlings and one-shot chart kings. Here's a view of a few of the recent imports from the land where (it sometimes seems) hair- styles, not Queen Elizabeth, rule. B OY GEORGE is a flawless singer in an unfortunate category - vacuously facile white-boy soul - and his silvery smoothness tends to undercut any hints of real funk or emotion in Culture Club's glib imitation of various musical forms. The watered charm of previous C.C. hits like "I'll Tumble 4 Ya" is laid bare on a sugar-coated carcass of Culture Club: Boy George gets old Waking Up With the House On Fire, the British group's third U.S. LP. Gutless in the extreme, Boy George always seems more concerned with smoothing to a fine surfin'-heaven curl his one-dimensionally sweet vocals than lending any credence to the barely acceptable songs, all of which arereduced to personality vehicles. There's no sense of a band here - House on Fire is as much a gilded setting for a teen idol as any past LP idiocy by a TV fave. The horrible slickness of the production (LOTS of female backups, shimmering bells, et al) only em- phasizes how frail yet dictatorial Boy George's media appeal has become. The other three members of Culture Club stand out from the mix about as much as a scoop of plain vanilla ice- cream would in a sea of french- vanilla. And B.G.'s vocals have become a compilation of the dullest of Stevie Wonder - impressively streamlined, but about as emotional as Dionne Warwick on an intensive diet of quaaludes. A few songs strike out with some determination toward raggae ("The Medal Song") or vague funk (most of 'em), but the heartlessness of the ef- fort is an instant turn-off. The songs might have been unexceptionally OK genre efforts if there had been a genuine personality punching them across, but Boy George is a living, singing, thank-god-not-dancing doll of neutrality, with the approximate ex- citement level of the New Christey Minstrels. "I love my mannequin," he sings at one point. How convenient to allow the performer the last derogatory word. Wash all that makeup off and you get a rather sad void in search of something to identify itself by. Culture Club had its marketing moment, but the thrill of yet another calculated androgene seems to have worn off, thank god. The Human League's long- overdue Hysteria! failed to create a whole lot of excitement this' past summer. The problem was probably that the excellent initial "Lebanon" single was too dark- sounding for both the commercial air- waves and for the new potential teenybopper-League fans. The LP's "I'm Coming Back," another of the band's cheerful Motown facelifts and a good one, would certainly have been a better choice. The League has certainly struggled with the rigors of success and failure lately, taking nearly three years to release this first LP of original material after their breakthrough Dare. Dare looked, at a first glance 'way back in '81, like the ultimate insult to punk/wave: a record of shamelessly danceable, inanely simple electronic hit-type tunes with swoony croonboy and nymphet-girl vocals. Ugh. Now it looks more like what it really is-a completely unpretentious set of nice, dumb post-disco songs by a band that didn't know any better at the time than to gamble on what seemed a sure com- mercial loser. The chart takeoff of "Don't You Want Me" revived the League (whose prior members had by then split off into the more ambitious B.E.F./Heaven 17 cor- poration). in Britain, and eventually revolutionized American radio play. No 'new wave' group had ever climbed remotely so high on the charts, or paved the path for so many legitimate and/or imitational follow-ups. The League, in one oblivious sweep, basically changed the orientation of American Top 40 radio with one silly lit- tle song. No wonder Phil Oakley's revamped, unpracticed group retreated from a disasterous first American tour to one evasion after another-the superb remix EP Love and Dancing (which upgraded my opinion of the band from subzero to some appreciation), a series of singles and scanty excuses for EPs (most bolstered by that delightful brainless anthem, "Fascination"). Now, finally, a real record, a long- play. One can practically feel Oakley and the rest of the League cringing un- der the anticipated weight of critical smirks an struck, es nearly now dismissed man. As lig perfectly C Let's fac songwritinj complexit3 elementary usually on simplicity ingenuousr the appeall sweetly fo Sign." A "Rock Me and Again has the righ Other so search of "Betrayal, You Know rather emb to "Don't restates all in colorles session wi mixed frui Coming Ba BUY W( with MEDIC 2007 ANN ARE Gifts Checks s CAPP S1 NI -. ... .~. ~...... ..... .... .. .. .. ..... _. . . . . . . . . . .W e ndIri y,