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Abolition of Slavery in Ethiopia

https://blogs.loc.gov/law/2012/02/abolition-of-slavery-in-ethiopia/
February 14, 2012 by Hanibal Goitom
In my January 31, 2012 post, Ethiopian Emperors and Slavery, I briefly discussed slavery in Ethiopia and
the unsuccessful attempts made by various Emperors to rid the country of the institution through the reign
of Emperor Menelik II (1889-1913). In this post I have highlighted effective measures that were put in
place, mainly during Emperor Haile Selassies reign, that have led to the eventual abolition of slavery in
1942.

Emperor Haile Selassie had a twofold diagnosis as to why his predecessors efforts to curb or end slavery
had failed: a combination of failure to put in place enforcement mechanisms to accompany numerous
laws issued over the years, and the enormity of the problem due to the fact that slavery was deeply
rooted in tradition (Haille Sellassie, Vol. I, p. 80; Vol. II, P. 175). He was convinced that it was
impossible to uproot such an ancient institution simply by writing laws. He also feared that a sudden
end to slavery would create an influx of a large underclass with no means to support itself; that would
have created two million destitute people overnight (Pankhurst, 1968, p. 118; Comyn-Platt p. 164). Thus,
his was going to be a deliberate process including substantive laws and tough enforcement mechanisms
that would gradually put the institution of slavery out of commission.

The most serious laws marking the beginning of the end for the institution of slavery in Ethiopia came in
the 1920s. It is true that by that time, Ethiopia had little choice but to effectively tackle the slavery
problem, which had remained endemic. By 1922, Ethiopia had come under unrelenting pressure to end
slavery from western news-media particularly the British press as well as anti-slavery groups such as
the Anti-Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society.

That wasnt all. Ethiopia also needed to show results in its fight to end slavery so as to deny European
powers an excuse they could use to take it over, particularly Britain, France and Italy, whose colonies at
the time surrounded it. After all, that was the motive (p. 603) behind the 1906 tripartite treaty signed
among these countries (Comyn-Platt p. 177). This was particularly true for Britain, whose opposition to
slavery in Ethiopia was based primarily on imperialist and strategic designs, and Italy, which in addition
to its territorial desires, was also itching for a payback for the thorough defeat it suffered in the hands of
the Ethiopians in 1896 in the battle of Adwa. More importantly though, Ethiopia had to start taking
concrete measures to end slavery because it was one of the conditions for its admission to the League of
Nations, a club of civilized nations, in September 1923 (Encyclpaedia Aethiopica p. 681; Comyn-Platt p.
164). As part of this arrangement, Ethiopia was required to phase out slavery over ten years period at the
end of which it had to abolish it completely (Comyn-Platt p. 164).

Fortunately, these continued pressures from outside coincided with suitable local conditions in which
slavery had become less economically tenable and unfashionable due to the changing life style of the
ruling class, making the task feasible if not easy (Zewde P. 94).
Although Emperor Haile Selassie had already taken various measures
to enforce existing anti-slavery laws, the first in a series of legislation issued during his reign came on
September 23, 1923. The Emperor, then Ras Teferi, issued a proclamation outlawing slave raiding and
imposing a duty on administrators to enforce the proclamation under the penalty of the law (Pankhurst,
1968, p. 113-114). This Proclamation made slave raiding a capital offense. It also imposed strict liability
on local authorities in which governors, chiefs and headmen would be liable to a steep fine for every
slave stolen from their area. In addition, this Proclamation stated that every slave taken from his country
would be eligible for a warrant of freedom and would maintain the right to return home.

This was followed by another law in March 1924, which was amended in July 1931, in which the Emperor
sought to gradually emancipate slaves in the country and abolish slavery (the Emancipation Law). Many
of the provisions in this law were not new. For instance, provisions on emancipation of slaves who had
become clerics, who had fought in wars or who had saved their masters lives were already part of
existing laws (The Fatha Nagast, 177). However, the lack of effective control of the central government in
many parts of the country, and the fact that people in places of authority including judges and village
chiefs were also slave owners, had made the enforcement of existing laws impossible. The Emancipation
Law sought to remedy that by putting in place strict enforcement mechanisms. To that end it introduced a
mandate for the registration of all slaves and the establishment of special slavery courts that would be
subject to supervision of central government inspectors. Fifty-six special judges were appointed in
different parts of the country and a department whose main function was to supervise the proper
implementation of laws was established in the capital, a sign of the Emperors determination to ensure the
effective enforcement of his laws (Goadby, p. 180, 202).

The Emancipation Law also included provisions that made it easy for slaves to seek emancipation
immediately. It did this in part by stacking procedural hurdles against slave owners. For instance, it
provided that if a slave escaped, he/she could only be legally captured by their master or by authorized
customs officials at the border. If a master failed to claim a runaway slave captured by authorized officials
within eight days, the slave would be emancipated. If a master captured a runaway slave, he/she could
not take the slave back directly; rather he/she had to go through a court process where an inquiry would
be made as to the reasons that led the slave to attempt escape. In addition, it gave slaves legal standing
to sue their masters for maltreatment. If it was found that a master had indeed mistreated his/her slave,
the master would get one warning; a finding of a second offense would result in the emancipation of the
slave (Pankhurst, 1968, p. 114).
More notable were, however, the three provisions in the Emancipation Law that sought to gradually
abolish slavery within one generation. One of these provisions banned the transfer of slaves from one
person to another including among relatives. Another mandated that slaves be emancipated within a year
after the death of their master. Although the initial language of the Law allowed for slaves to be inherited
for a maximum of seven years after the death of their master, this was eliminated by the 1931 amendment
leaving only one year as a transition period before a slave whose master had died could be freed. Finally,
the law mandated that all children born to slaves, who in the past automatically became slaves, were free.

The law also included provisions on welfare of emancipated slaves. It extended to emancipated slaves a
seven year tax holiday, an attempt designed to give freed slaves the opportunity to get on their feet. It
also gave emancipated slaves the right to education and the right to work including the rights to join the
military and the civil service.

All these reforms were apparently not enough to prevent Italy from using the issue as one of its
justifications for its second Ethiopian invasion in 1935. The issue proved a reliable propaganda tool to
convince the world that Ethiopia was indeed not a civilized nation and therefore did not deserve to be
treated like one. It did not help its case that Ethiopia had not abolished slavery twelve years into its
membership in the League, two years past the agreed term. Italy invaded Ethiopia in October 1935 and
issued two laws in October 1935 and in April 1936 emancipating slaves in the country (Encyclopaedia
Aethiopica, p. 681). According to Italys accounts, during its brief occupation of Ethiopia, it freed 420,000
slaves.

After Italys defeat in World War II and his return from exile in Britain, Emperor Haile Selassie changed
gears and abandoned his plan to phase out slavery over an extended period of time in favor of one that
resembled Italys, immediate and complete abrogation. It seems that the lack of any significant backlash
from the passage of laws against slavery by Italy during its brief occupation of Ethiopia had
convinced Haile Selassie that his fear of possible negative impact that may result from an immediate
abolition was unfounded. The Emperor, therefore, issued the Slavery (Abolition) Proclamation No. 22 of
1942 in August of that year.

The 1942 Proclamation declared that the legal status of slavery is abolished and imposed harsh penalty
on persons who: participated in transporting of a persons out of Ethiopia so that they could be sold as
slaves; participated in slave dealing; prevented slaves from asserting their freedom; or participated in the
pawning of people.

The 1942 Proclamation was later replaced by the Penal Code No. 158 of 1957, which was then repealed
by the law currently in force, The Criminal Code of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia No. 414
of 2004, both of which include a provision banning slavery and imposing harsh penalties for its violation.

The following materials from the Library of Congresss collection were used in preparing this post:

Sir Thomas Comyn-Platt, The Abyssinian Storm (Jarrolds Limited, 1935);

Richard Pankhurst, Economic History of Ethiopia (Haile Selassie I University Press, 1968);

F.M. Goadby, The Law of Slavery in Abyssinia, in Journal of Comparative Legislation and
International Law, 180-202 (Hazell, Watson & Viney, Ltd., 1933);

Encyclopaedia Aethiopica (Siegbert Uhliged ed., Harrassowitz, 2010);


Haile Selassie I, My life and Ethiopias Progress, 1892-1937 : The Autobiography of Emperor
Haile Sellassie I(Edward Ullendorff, trans., Oxford University Press, 1976);

Haile Selassie I, My Life and Ethiopias Progress, Vol. II (Harold Marcus et al., eds., Michigan
State University Press, 1994);

Bahru Zewde, A History of Modern Ethiopia, 1855-1991 (Addis Ababa University Press, 2nd ed.,
2001); and

The Fetha Nagast (Paulos Tzadua, trans., Faculty of Law Haile Selassie I University, 1968)

Posted in: Global Law

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