Global Journal of Politics and Law Research Vol.7, No.7, pp.1-52, November 2019 Published by ECRTD-UK ISSN: ISSN 2053-6321(Print), ISSN: ISSN 2053-6593(Online) THE QUEST FOR REGIONAL STATEHOOD AND ITS PRACTICABILITY UNDER THE POST-1991 ETHIOPIAN FEDERATION: THE DISCONTENTS AND EXPERIENCE OF SIDAMA NATION Kinkino Kia Legide (LLB; LLM; Advanced MSc in Development and Governance Cand. at the University of Antwerp, Belgium) Lecturer, Hawassa University School of Law Email:
[email protected]; Address: P.O.Box: 2018 Antwerpen, Antwerp, Belgium ABSTRACT: This paper examines the constitutional and alongside political dynamics associated with the Sidama nation’s official and sustained demand to exercise the right to establish their own regional state and the repressive response of the ruling regime in post-1991 Ethiopia’s federal system. The 1995 Ethiopian constitution defines Ethiopia as a federal polity and provides for the unconditional right to self-determination including secession for the various ethnonational groups as an organizing principle. The most important component of this right is the right to self-administration, and the central precept of this right is exercised through the establishment of one’s regional state. After promising this right to every ethnonational groups, the constitution, however, established only nine ethno- linguistically demarcated regions most of which are delineated based on predominant ethnic identity. The constitution also allowed for other groups who do not have their region to establish their own regional state at “any time”. The most explicit exception to regional arrangement based on ethno- linguistic identity has been the case of Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Regional State (SNNPRS) which is comprised of over 56 extremely different ethnic groups and formed by a forced merger of five previously autonomous regions.