Telling the Good and the Bad of Our Past
2025-02-24 09:30:51 Written by Woldeyesus Ammar Published in English Articles Read 1481 timesA week ago, a friend in North America shared with me a death announcement of another Eritrean. The name of the deceased is Mulugeta Giorgis who passed away recently at the age of 87 in Maryland, USA. His burial ceremony was scheduled to take place on 25 February 2025. I am not sure what his close friends in the Eritrean regime, like Hagos Kisha, will include in his life history, but what is sure is that what they will say about Mulugeta will be totally different from what I am going to tell you here.
Mulugeta Giorgis was the person who organized the arrest on 30.08.1965 of Seyoum Ogbamichael (Harestai), Woldedawit Temesghen, Ahmed Siraj, and my middle school class teacher, Memhir Seyoum Negassi. Ghirmai Yosief was also one of his victims at a different setting.
For the sake of those who know little about our past, Seyoum and Woldedawit were among the Asmara students who joined the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) in those early years. Ahmed Siraj was a tailor and urban ELF cell member in Asmara in whose house the arrest organized by Mulugeta Giorgis took place. The three languished in prison for 10 years until they were liberated by the ELF in 1975. Memhir Seyoum Negassi, who was in discussion with the two ELF envoys at the time of the arrest, was one of the active nationalist teachers of his time who influenced the Eritrean student movement.
Among victims of Mulugeta Giorgis: Seyoum ‘Harestai,’ Woldedawit Temesghen and Ahmed Siraj, the martry of Barentu/1978 whose photo could not be obtained.
Mulugeta in Kassala, 1964-65
Mulugeta Giorgis appears to be among the early recruits in the ELF. After a huge student demonstration in Asmara in March 1965, Seyoum Harestai and his close friend Woldedawit went to Kassala and were received by Mulugeta, Omar Jaber and others who were in the ELF Kassala office. When the Kassala leadership, that included Mulugeta, decided that Seyoum and Woldedawit should go back to Asmara and organize ELF cells in the city, Mulugeta was the one who arranged their trip and their potential supporters in Asmara. But soon, Mulugeta surrendered to the Ethiopian consulate in Kassala and flew to Asmara to organize their arrest.
A few months before the arrival of Seyoum and Woldedawit in Kassala, another Asmara student from the vocational school of Point IV, Ghirmai Yosief, was sent back to Asmara in a similar mission of organizing ELF cells. Mulugeta knew that Ghirmai Yosief was frequenting at the Asmara YMCA to do his ELF job. Therefore, Mulugeta could easily lead the Ethiopian security to arrest not only Ghirmai Yosief but although through him to Seyoum Harestai and Wodedawit.
The other day, I asked Ghirmai Yosief, who is the only person still alive from among those victims mentioned above, as to why Mulugeta betrayed them all. Ghirmai could not know why but said Mulugeta was a commercial school graduate and former worker at the Dutch Wonji Sugar Factory in Ethiopia.
Memhir Seyoum Negassi, Ghirmai Yosief, and the victimizer Mulugeta Giorgis.
Mulugeta in Addis Ababa, early 1970s
In the early years of the 1970s, one issue of the Ethiopian police newspaper (ፖሊስና እርምጃው) reported that Mulugeta Giorgis and a few accomplices were facing the law for a crime/arson that could have put Addis Ababa in flames.
The persons accused for the arson, including Mulugeta, were relatives of the owner of the Bowling Centre that was located near Harambee Hotel. The owner and his relatives conspired to put fire on the Bowling Centre so that the Bowling Centre owner could claim hundreds of thousands of insurance money for the damage. That owner also asked Mulugeta and other relatives to beat him, injure him with knives and leave him near his car in the outskirts of Addis on the way to Gondar.
According the police newspaper I read, the case was to be brought to the High Court in the Lideta zone of Addis. At that time, I was working as a journalist for the Ethiopian Herald. I decided to report every detail of the case as a revenge to what Mulugeta has done to my former schoolmates and school teacher whom I brought to the meeting with Seyoum and Woldedawit. The reports on the Ethiopian Herald sometimes appeared on the front page as banner headlines. I recall Baalu Ghirma, the then editor-in-chief of the Amharic Addis Zemen and author of ‘Oromai’, assigning Yohannes Disasa, a top Addis Zemen reporter, to go with me every day and cover the Bowling Centre story. Other Addis Ababa newspapers and the Ethiopian News Agency (ENA) also joined us in reporting the arson case of Mulugeta and his accomplices.
According to the final opinion of the presiding judge of the Lideta High Court, the sentences on Mulugeta and others were aggravated by several years due to the intensive press coverage, on top of them the Ethiopian Herald, that expressed the danger to public safety that the fire at the Bowling Centre could have caused if it were not put down on time.
This is part of Mulugeta’s story that will not appear in his obituary drafted by his regime friends. This could also indicate what kind of people are STILL standing on the side of the cold-hearted regime in Asmara.