Editing Provisional Military Government of Socialist Ethiopia (1974–1987)

From ProleWiki, the proletarian encyclopedia
Warning: You are not logged in, comrade. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be instead attributed to your username.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 255: Line 255:
The existence of POMOA was publicly revealed on April 21, 1976 following the announcement of the National Democratic Revolution Programme. Initially the organization was known as the People's Organizing Provisional Office.  The Yekatit '66 Political School, an institution under the supervision of POMOA, trained political cadres.<ref name=":72" /> POMOA functioned as a government department, and received allocations from the state treasury. POMOA's leading organ was directed to organize themselves into four permanent subcommittees in the areas of philosophy dissemination and information, political education, current affairs, and organizational affairs. Also, POMOA was to have branch offices at the provincial, ''Awrajja'' and ''Woreda'' levels, for which the commission was to review periodic reports on their activities and to which it had to assign cadres. Further mandates of POMOA included: preparing articles and directives on the philosophy of socialism in the languages of various nationalities and disseminating the same; and preparing directives and plans for training of cadres at home and abroad. The developments which were not specifically envisaged by the legislation but which followed in the wake of POMOA's establishment were the launching of its paper (called [[Revolutionary Ethiopia (Party Paper)|Revolutionary Ethiopia, Amharic: ''Abiyotawit Ityopya'']]) and a weekly discussion meeting lasting two hours in all governmental and non-governmental organizations in the country.<ref>{{Citation|author=Andargachew Tiruneh|year=1993|title=The Ethiopian revolution (1974-1987): A transformation from an aristocratic to a totalitarian autocracy|page=162|city=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press, LSE Monographs in International Studies|lg=http://library.lol/main/07AB981C0BB1A834AA0C044FD02450F9}}</ref> POMOA had an annual budget of 7 million Birr (3.5 million Dollars at the time).<ref>{{Citation|author=Kiflu Tadesse|year=1998|title=Ethiopia: Transformation and Conflict|page=58|publisher=Silver Spring, Md: K & S Distributors}}</ref>
The existence of POMOA was publicly revealed on April 21, 1976 following the announcement of the National Democratic Revolution Programme. Initially the organization was known as the People's Organizing Provisional Office.  The Yekatit '66 Political School, an institution under the supervision of POMOA, trained political cadres.<ref name=":72" /> POMOA functioned as a government department, and received allocations from the state treasury. POMOA's leading organ was directed to organize themselves into four permanent subcommittees in the areas of philosophy dissemination and information, political education, current affairs, and organizational affairs. Also, POMOA was to have branch offices at the provincial, ''Awrajja'' and ''Woreda'' levels, for which the commission was to review periodic reports on their activities and to which it had to assign cadres. Further mandates of POMOA included: preparing articles and directives on the philosophy of socialism in the languages of various nationalities and disseminating the same; and preparing directives and plans for training of cadres at home and abroad. The developments which were not specifically envisaged by the legislation but which followed in the wake of POMOA's establishment were the launching of its paper (called [[Revolutionary Ethiopia (Party Paper)|Revolutionary Ethiopia, Amharic: ''Abiyotawit Ityopya'']]) and a weekly discussion meeting lasting two hours in all governmental and non-governmental organizations in the country.<ref>{{Citation|author=Andargachew Tiruneh|year=1993|title=The Ethiopian revolution (1974-1987): A transformation from an aristocratic to a totalitarian autocracy|page=162|city=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press, LSE Monographs in International Studies|lg=http://library.lol/main/07AB981C0BB1A834AA0C044FD02450F9}}</ref> POMOA had an annual budget of 7 million Birr (3.5 million Dollars at the time).<ref>{{Citation|author=Kiflu Tadesse|year=1998|title=Ethiopia: Transformation and Conflict|page=58|publisher=Silver Spring, Md: K & S Distributors}}</ref>


[[Haile Fida]], the leader of [[MEISON|Meison]], was the chairman of [[POMOA]]. [[Sennai Likkai]] of the [[Waz League]] served as the vice chairman of the organization.<ref name=":10" />
[[Haile Fida]], the leader of [[MEISON|Meison]], was the chairman of [[POMOA]]. [[Sennai Likkai]] of the [[Waz League]] served as the vice chairman of the organization.


=== Union of Ethiopian Marxist–Leninist Organizations (1977-1979) ===
=== Union of Ethiopian Marxist–Leninist Organizations (1977-1979) ===
ProleWiki upholds the abolition of private property, including intellectual property, so feel free to publish any work at will.
Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)