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ID119116
Title ProperAlem Bekagn
Other Title Informationthe African Union's accidental human rights memorial
LanguageENG
AuthorWaal, Alex de ;  Ibreck, Rachel
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The African Union's new offices in Addis Ababa stand upon the site of the city's former central prison, known as Alem Bekagn, where thousands of people suffered and died. This article traces the history of the prison and examines efforts to create a memorial at the site. These initiatives illustrate the African Union (AU) in transition. They echo AU commitments to act against atrocities and in support of rights and justice and suggest a distinct vision of pan-African community and a corresponding institutional culture. But, much like the AU itself, the meaning of the planned memorial is ambivalent and contested. The fact that the AU bulldozed Ethiopia's most notorious prison in order to establish its new offices and a conference hall is richly symbolic of 'buried memory' - the tendency of post-colonial elites to suppress the memory of victims of state violence while celebrating chosen heroes. The AU still venerates leaders and is quiet about current violations, but the organization's promise and process to remember the ordinary victims of state violence indicate a political opening and may contribute a novel space for the recounting of human rights abuses.
`In' analytical NoteAfrican Affairs Vol. 112, No.447; Apr 2013: p.191-215
Journal SourceAfrican Affairs Vol. 112, No.447; Apr 2013: p.191-215
Key WordsAlem Bekagn ;  African Union ;  Human Rights ;  Pan - African Community ;  Ethiopia ;  Addis Ababa


 
 
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