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Brig. Gen. Musa Raba The Fair-Weather Friend of the G15

Assenna.Com Commentary Brig. Gen. Musa Rab’A passed away on 14 Aug 2017 at the age of 70. During the time of his death he was serving as Chief of Staff of the Ministry of Defence Eastern

Assenna.Com Commentary

Brig. Gen. Musa Rab’A passed away on 14 Aug 2017 at the age of 70. During the time of his death he was serving as Chief of Staff of the Ministry of Defence Eastern Command.  Government media stated that Musa diligently served his country and people of Eritrea until the time of his death.  It is to be remembered that he also served as regional administrator and Eritrean Police Chief.  However, Eritreans know that Musa Raba has another story which he took to his grave.

Musa Raba was there when a schism emerged within the leadership of the PFDJ in 2001.  Musa, with 15 members of the ruling People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ)’s Central Committee, and the National Assembly, including several generals and ministers, appealed to the President for internal party reform, the implementation of the 1997 constitution, and the holding of national elections.  It did not take him long to retract his support for reforms as soon as the president began to push back.  Following a brief period of public discussion, the dissidents, who came to be known as the G-15, were accused of being ‘engaged in unlawful acts against the sovereignty and national security of the country’.  Those in Asmara were detained without access to lawyers or their families in September 2001.  Musa Raba survived the ordeal by changing his allegiance; he then became the Commander of the Eritrean Police Force.

Did Musa think he would live an honourable life after he betrayed Mahmoud Ahmed Sheriffo, Saleh Kekkia, Germano Nati,  Ogbe Abraha,  and the rest of the group who challenged the president to introduce reforms in 2001?  Musa committed an act of self-deception.   He simply proved to his companions that he was just a fair-weather friend to them.  He betrayed them in order to receive a little bit of spotlight and a few glimpses from his master.  In the process, rather strangely, he ended up betraying himself.  He must have known that betrayal is worse than death … that he had to deal with his conscience every day knowing his friends were rotting in jail.

Perhaps Musa did not have much conscience.   They say that betrayal is easy for men with no conscience.  Who knows whether his betrayal threw him down into deeper recesses of fear and doubt?  Anyway, for 16 years, although he lived a life of a government official, deep down he lived a life of a traitor.  His story became synonymous to dashed hopes and dreams, reversals, resignation, and most of all, duplicity.

Those who knew Musa well say that he did not have an exciting and inspiring life after he betrayed his friends.  One can surmise that he lived with loud noises in his mind; he could not step over the guilt, doubt, fear, shame, insecurity and heaviness of the past he carried around with him.

Now that Musa has passed away we can say that he is enjoying unanimity in the Martyrs’ Cemetery.   What will he say when his graveyard companions ask him for updates?  Will he make a confession how he ruined his conscience by betraying his friends and how he ruined his life by living with that conscience?   Will he admit that he did not live his life as he saw fit; that he simply lived a life under his boss, for his boss, heart and soul – a life filled with humiliating experiences?

One wonders if Musa Raba had any thoughts about his former comrades on his death bed.   May his soul rest in peace.

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14 COMMENTS
  • Danilo August 18, 2017

    Nasty mens life goes on for a while but short living live aside un audible noisy record. I am referring to the player of DAMMA iseyas. Who will be his next victim? Let’s wait and see.

  • Berhe Tensea August 18, 2017

    What, a shameful history a sad and shameful legacy is that.. History will judge officials who betray the country and their comrades .

  • Sol August 18, 2017

    The irony is that Rab”a betrayed his comrades for a nominal position.

  • WOLDU August 18, 2017

    I know Musa Raba in the field. I am saddened of death. I am not surprised that he did not have the courage to stand on the reform side. To me, Musa was never a serious person. He was not evil person compared to his comrades in the leadership. He was relaxed and tried to enjoy whenever he could. He used to try to find meat instead of eating lentil and KICHA and he used to sleep with different women when we were threatened by the large enemy army. At that time Mesfin Hagos told me that his wish was for him (Mesfin) and me to die while fighting rather than being alive and defeated.. I spoke to Mesfin encouraging words, but deep in my heart, I had the same feeling of desperation. But Musa at that time was only taking care of himself. Still I respect Musa, but he was not serious enough to lead let alone to be ready to sacrifice his life or materia.l.

  • Abel August 18, 2017

    Rest in peace! Are you joking? Rest in hell is the right word.

    • Mohamed Azbetu August 20, 2017

      Wow, it is …

  • Kalighe August 18, 2017

    Musa Rab just did what is a common practice in EPLF/HIGDEF world since early seventies:
    when a concerned group criticizes Iseyas’ dictatorship, they quickly realize that they are alone. They are left alone to face death at the hands of a merciless megalomaniac and his system. Hence, in the absence of support from others, not everyone is ready to take the risk.
    So who is to blame ?.
    The blame goes to those who wanted to take risk but then realized they were alone ?, or to those who support a system that brutalizes it’s people in the name Shabiya/Eritrea ?.
    It’s easy to create a god out of a devil when your political outlook doesn’t go beyond tribe,region, religion and narrow group interests.
    Iseyas is a product of our social ills.
    To get rid of him we first need to transform our selves. We need to learn to stand in solidarity with each other. Then, only then, a revolt by discontented citizens will gain a popular support, and those who stand for justice will not die alone.

  • k.tewolde August 19, 2017

    The article is the definition and make up of the HGDEF enterprise,it is not only a biography of one dead former liberation fighter.The party is made up by cross elimination and internal purging,distrust and paranoia…it is destined for self consumption by the large phagocytes at the top.The sad thing is,it is contaminating and poisoning the innocent with its toxic excretions.

  • mussie August 19, 2017

    As a witness, I agree with two things in the above article.
    1. Musa Raba just wanted to drink “areki” at Bar Torino, and Warsai, with anybody who could dare to buy him a drink while working in the so called “immigration” office.
    2.. He never challenges seriously anyone who dares. Wedi Gerewegna used to send his “cronies” for exist visa.
    Then, he gives you what is a “promotion” in the Higidef/Shaebia organization. Anyone, semi-literate, willing to obey orders, and who has no conscience gets to be a general, or administrator. He was one of the best petty books written by Isaias depicting the organization. Others like him include Wuchu, and the like!

  • muzit r August 19, 2017

    ሙሳ መዓስ ሕጂ ሞይቱ። ቀደም ብጾቱ ምስ ጠለመ ቀስ ኢሉ ሕልናኡ ቀቲሉዎ። ተሸቝሪሩ፡ ከም ሓደ ሕማቕ ሰብ ብሕንከት ተኸዲኑ እዩ ዝነብር ነይሩ። ሞትን ሕይወትን ሓደ ምዃኖም ረሲዑ፡ ደይ ሕልና’ዩ ዝፈልዮም!
    The story of Musa Rabba epitomises the case when vice overtakes virtue.
    Musa lost his purpose in life when he betrayed his fellow tegadelti who demanded the implementation of the constitution and the rule of law. After he turned his back on them Isaias turned him into a puppy. Musa knew that; that he was a disgraced puppy. He knew they were being buried alive – in actual fact he helped to see them burried. He distanced himself from them because he lacked courage. Is it possible for a ex-combatant to chicken out? He did not want to listen to the voice of conscience; he did not want to know the rule of law; he did not want to reflect on the promises of yesteryears (the armed struggle); he did not want to feel the engraved writing in his heart of hearts; he did not want to look the brave men and women in the eye. On the other hand one can say he did have a bit of conscience allright – that of a traitor. That is why his guilty conscience consumed him while he was alive. Musa, poor old Musa, simply turned against his fellow combatants and fellow citizens for nothing. Let’s leave the rest to history.
    Muzit

  • Elsa August 21, 2017

    Was this guy head of security in Dekemhare when the town was under EPLF in the 70’s?

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