In recent years, many Somali residents of Ethiopia’s Somali Region have raised concerns about the increasing appointment of non Somali ethnic groups to leadership and staffing positions across essential institutions such as banks, schools, airports, universities, hospitals, and public offices.
Federal authorities often justify this trend as part of “merit-based staffing” or “national integration.” However, Somali communities argue that the current pattern is unequal and one-sided, and may gradually undermine their economic, cultural, and political position in the country.
A central grievance repeatedly voiced by Somalis is that while non-Somali groups are heavily represented in Somali Region institutions, Somalis themselves are almost entirely absent from equivalent positions in other regional states. Many community members argue that there is not even a single Somali-origin employee holding similar roles in other regions, raising concerns about fairness and equal representation.
This imbalance, whether intentional or systemic, carries significant long-term consequences.
1. Reduced Employment and Economic Opportunities for Somali Youth
When key sectors in the Somali Region are dominated by non-local employees:
- Local Somali graduates lose access to job opportunities in their own homeland
- Money that should circulate within Somali communities flows outward to other regions
- The region becomes economically dependent, not self-reliant
Meanwhile, the absence of Somali employees in other regions highlights the unequal mobility and opportunity within Ethiopia’s multiethnic system.
2. Weakening of Local Governance and Representation
Effective governance requires leaders who understand:
- Local language
- Local culture
- Local context
When leadership is dominated by people from outside the region:
- Communication gaps widen
- Public trust declines
- Local communities feel disconnected from their own institutions
- Decision-making shifts away from the people the institutions are meant to serve
This makes the Somali Region appear governed from the outside rather than from within.
3. Cultural and Linguistic Erosion
Educational and administrative institutions serve as pillars of cultural continuity.
But when they are led and staffed primarily by non-Somalis:
- The Somali language receives less institutional respect
- Somali cultural values may be misunderstood or sidelined
- Young people may feel disconnected from their identity
Over generations, this can contribute to cultural dilution and loss of heritage.
4. Political Imbalance and Unfair Power Distribution
Somali citizens argue that the imbalance in staffing between regions creates a structural political disadvantage:
- Non-Somali groups gain influence inside Somali institutions
- Somalis lack equivalent influence in other regions
- Local autonomy weakens
- Representation in federal decision-making is distorted
This contradicts the spirit of Ethiopia’s federal arrangement, which is supposed to guarantee equal rights and regional self-governance.
5. Public Distrust and Social Tension
When a community feels outnumbered or replaced within its own institutions, predictable consequences follow:
- Growing distrust of government
- Increased frustration and political anxiety
- A sense of being marginalized within one’s own regional state
- Rising social tension between communities
These dynamics can hinder peace, development, and cooperation.
Conclusion
The issue is not simply about job positions. It is fundamentally about fairness, identity, and equal citizenship.
Somalis in Ethiopia are demanding:
- Fair representation at all levels of regional institutions
- Equal access to opportunities across all regions not just their own
- Protection of their cultural and linguistic identity
- Respect for the federal principles that guarantee each region autonomy
For Ethiopia to remain stable and genuinely inclusive, representation must be balanced, reciprocal, and fair across all regions not just in the Somali Region.
