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Oromo People's Democratic Organization

Oromo Peoples' Democratic Organization
Chairman Lema Megersa
Deputy Chairman Vacant
Founded March 1982
Headquarters Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Youth wing OPDO Youth League
Ideology Marxism,
Socialism,
Oromo self-determination
National affiliation Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front
Party flag
Flag of the Oromo Peoples' Democratic Organization.png
Website
http://www.opdo.org.et/

The Oromo Peoples' Democratic Organization (OPDO) is a political party in Ethiopia, and part of the alliance with the Amhara National Democratic Movement, the South Ethiopian Peoples' Democratic Front and the Tigrayan Peoples' Liberation Front that forms the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). At the last legislative elections, 15 May 2005, the party was part of the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front, that won 327 out of 527 seats.

In the August 2005 Regional assembly elections, the party won 387 out of 537 seats in the Oromia Region, and 14 out of 36 seats in the Harari Region.

The OPDO was created in 1990 after the relations of the existing Oromo Liberation Front with TPLF soured while they were fighting against the Derg regime. In a recent book authored by Gebru Asrat (ሉዓላዊነትና ዴሞክራሲ በኢትዮጵያ ገብሩ አስራት 2006 ዓ.ም), a veteran TPLF leader who was one of those that masterminded the creation of OPDO, the author said that TPLF had to resort to its Oromo speaking war captives to recruit members for the organization once Oromos living abroad including those refugees in the Sudan and the wider Oromo diaspora in North America & Europe rejected TPLF's call to join the organization to be formed anew. Citing the role of elites in articulating political, economic & cultural problems in any society, Mr. Gebru argued, in his book, that since these members of the Oromo speaking war captives who formed OPDO had neither that capability nor sociopolitical know-how to understand & articulate Oromo problems at the time, it was clear from the very outset that the OPDO will live with deficiency of legitimacy among the Oromo society. At first a weak organization, according to Paul B. Henze, the OPDO attracted defectors from Derg military units and gained supporters when in 1991 the EPRDF occupied parts of the provinces of Wollo and Shewa which had significant Oromo majorities. Yet generally, it is now a well established understanding among all Ethiopians that OPDO was created to serve as the instrument for limiting Oromo role in Ethiopia’s political and economic life while claiming to represent Oromo interest in the EPRDF coalision. It is this contradictory mission of the OPDO that has been the cause of wreaking havoc in Oromia region over the last quarter a century.


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