The British plan to partition Eritrea and the
situation and position of the Eritrean Muslim movement in the 1940s
During the occupation, the British opinion had been
coming round the view that the best solution for Eritrea would be its partition
between Ethiopia and the Sudan in such a way as to allow the Eritrean Abyssinians
to join their kinsmen in Ethiopia and the Moslem tribes of western Eritrea to
be incorporated into the Sudan; Sir Douglas Newbold, the Civil Secretary of the
Sudan, visited Eritrea during 1943 and came to the conclusion that;
“It would be happier for them (the Moslem
tribes of Western Eritrea) and no trouble for us (the Sudan Government) to take
these two or three districts into Sudan, and let the Christian and Tigrinya
speaking districts be reunited to their kinsfolk in Ethiopia.”
Brigadier Longrigg held that
“Moslem tribal areas adjoining the
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan should be included into that country. The Central
Highlands with the Port of Massawa and the Semher and Saho tribes should form
part of a united Tigrai State or province, which should be placed under the
nominal sovereignty of the Emperor and administered in (The Emperor’s name) by
a European power for either a stated or unstated term of years. The Danakil
country with Assab should be assigned unconditionally to the emperor.”
Views of this kind were expressed by many others. The
partition of Eritrea was also formally proposed by the British representatives
at the London and Paris in 1945 and 1946.
The weakness of the partitionist argument was that there
was no evidence of what Moslem opinion was. Unlike the Christian Abyssinians
most Moslems lived tolerably well after the Italian defeat. On the plateau the
Jeberti traders had prospered, and elsewhere rising prices had been offset by the
better opportunities in the pastoral tribesmen had found for marketing their
livestock and milk. And although there was some unemployment in Massawa after
the Royal Navy’s base and a cement factory had closed down in 1945, the Moslems
in the other towns were little affected by the changing economic climate. Comparative
contentment had bred a political apathy which was furthered favoured by the isolation in which
the scattered nomadic tribal groups mostly lived, their obsession with parochial
tribal affairs, and their lack of educated leaders.
No significant Moslem movement could develop without the
Tigre tribes (meaning Tigrait speaking), who accounted for three-fifths of
Eritrea’s 520,000 Moslems, then. Before 1946, they had been too preoccupied with
their own affairs to take any interest in territorial politics. The Beni Amer
of the Barka Lowlands have been engaged in a bitter conflict with the
neighbouring Hadendewa of the Sudan and in fighting on a less serious scale
with the Nilotic tribes of the Gash-Setit. The Semhar clans near Massawa had
been concerned to resist claims that the Na’ibs (A family in Masswa had been
charged with the administration of the Semhar by the Turks. Its two senior members
had been given the title of Na’ib or agent. The Italians had limited their
authority to Masswa), or traditional chiefs of Massawa had raised since the British
occupation to regain authority over them. In the Northern Highlands, the Shumagulle
families were threatened by an uprising of their serfs. The peculiar feudal
structure of the Tigre tribes, was anachronism which began to disintegrate in
the climate of Italian defeat and British liberalism. The standard of the
revolt was first raised by the Tigre serfs of a small tribe called Ad Taklais. Parochial
though these questions were, it was through them and their interplay that the
Tigre tribes acquired political consciousness and an Eritrean Moslem movement
emerged.
It was under such circumstances that the Muslim League
was formed. Though the Moslems were firmly opposed to the union with Ethiopia,
opinion amongst the various Moslem groups was otherwise divided. The Tigre and
Baria favoured some form of British administration as the best insurance of
their interests. The few chiefs and Shumagulle of the Tigre tribes who
had entered the Muslim League had no reason to favour a British regime.
The Jiberti and the townsfolk of Massawa, who at this
time were suffering from acute unemployment, looked back with frank regret to
the golden days of the Italian regime. The Saho grumbled that the British had
done nothing to restrain Abyssinian aggression, and the Kunama complained that they had never
suffered such damage and injury as during the British Occupation. And finally,
the Danakil, who felt aggrieved that the British had done nothing to save their
traditional though unofficial leader Muhammed Yahya, the Sultan of Ausa, from
arrest by the Ethiopian during 1944 and subsequent death in Addis Abeba, spoke
quite in favour of the Italian Regime.
And so while the Tigre serfs favoured some form of British regime, the others did not. Some hankered after a restoration of Italian authority, though at this stage it was doubted whether Italy, having renounced all right and title to her colonies, could return to Eritrea. The majority vaguely favoured independence after a limited period of international trusteeship. Partition found no supporters. The Beni Amer clans opposed it believing the Sudan Government would favour the Hadendewa; and the Saho, Danakil, Semhar, and Jiberti followed suit, because it would include them within Ethiopia.
In the event it was unanimously resolved at the Muslim League Congress that "the territorial unity of Eritrea, as it was was before 1935, be maintained," since the League 'does not accept nor adhere to any decision aiming to partition Eritrea.' The resolution added 'that the independence of Eritrea should be recognized or, in case this is held to be impossible,...that she should be placed under an international trusteeship ... for 10 years... with British control or such control as may be directed by the trusteeship Council of the U.N.O.'
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Source: ERITREA - A COLONY IN TRANSITION: 1941 – 52 By
G. K. N. TREVASKIS, pp. 69 - 75
Source: ERITREA - A COLONY IN TRANSITION: 1941 – 52 By
G. K. N. TREVASKIS, pp. 69 - 75
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