Ethiopian News and Opinion Forum


(Breaking) The Terrorist Woyane Regime in Ethiopia Terrorizing Journalists

Postby revolutions » 20 Jun 2012, 02:54


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Ethiopia:
Journalists Live in Fear of 'Terror' Law


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By Charlayne Hunter-Gault, 19 June 2012


Nowhere across Africa is the message that its people want a way out of what I call "the four Ds" - death, disease, disaster and despair - more resounding than among the continent's journalists.

In nation after nation, they are attempting to inform their people of their rights and encourage them to hold their governments accountable. For that, many of them are being held accountable in the most draconian ways.

I have seen this first hand in Zimbabwe, where Robert Mugabe's regime has long attempted to conceal the repression of its people. Journalists have fought back and continue to yell truth to power, although they still face the prospect of jail as a consequence.

And most recently, I have seen it in Ethiopia, where Eskinder Nega, a journalist I visited seven years ago in Kalati Prison, along with his pregnant wife, Serkalem Fasil (who gave birth in prison) is back there on charges of terrorism. What appears to have been his crime is that he also continues to tell, if not yell, truth to power, although the government is actually prosecuting him for what they say is his membership in a terrorist network that advocates violence. As proof, during his trial they showed a video in which he questioned whether an Arab Spring-type uprising could ever happen in Ethiopia.

The government has empowered itself to prosecute what they see as dissent like this with a sweeping anti-terrorism law that is, effectively, a weapon that can be used against anyone daring to criticize the government in a way the government doesn't like.

One journalist who published Eskinder's statement in court was also convicted, but got a suspended four-month sentence. Dozens of journalists have fled into exile and six have been charged with terrorism in absentia, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).

When I visited Ethiopia earlier this month with a colleague from the CPJ and the continent-wide project called the African Media Initiative, journalists we met with told us they all live in fear, calling the terrorism law a "game changer." One foreigner working in Ethiopia told me: "There is a red line. The problem is, we don't know where it is."

When we met Simon Bereket, Ethiopia's Minister of Information, he defended the incarceration of Eskinder and the seven other journalists locked up with him on the grounds that they were involved in terrorism. In a polite but firm dissent, he said neither Eskinder nor any of the other journalists were in prison for what they wrote.

When we asked to see Eskinder and the others in prison, we were told that it was not likely and that turned out to be the case. But his wife, Serkalem, who was recently in New York receiving on Eskinder's behalf a prestigious freedom of the press award from PEN America, told us when we met her in Addis that Eskinder had asked her to tell us that he was in no way connected with any terrorist group-there or in the United States.

She also told us that he said that if the price of telling the truth was imprisonment, he could live with that. Of course, when the verdict is handed down - which is scheduled to happen Thursday - Eskinder could be sentenced to life in prison or death.

Part of the reason for my involvement with journalists and their issues in Ethiopia and other parts of the continent is to try to present a much-maligned continent in a light different to that in which it is often portrayed elsewhere in the world: in a light that makes it clear that Africans want as much as anyone else to make choices about themselves and their children in an informed way, and that they have the same hopes and aspirations for themselves, their families and their communities as do people in democracies the world over.

Imperfect as many democracies are, their governments do not put people in jail for words that come out of their mouths and the freedom-loving desires that live in their hearts. That's why, as an American, I hope that my countrymen and women who have that right should get on Ethiopia's case. They should insist that a U.S. government which is pledged to ensure those rights in America should also help ensure them in Ethiopia. And I hope they will be joined by freedom-loving people all over the world, including on the African continent.

But Ethiopia stands as a partner with the United States, in particular, in fighting REAL terrorists, including Al Qaeda, in a strategic part of the world. Surely the economic assistance the U.S. has provided Ethiopia in the past and the $350 million in assistance it is asking for in 2013 gives it some weight in pressing Addis Ababa to live up to the same principles enshrined in their constitution as in ours?

Freedom of speech is a crucial cornerstone of democracy. It should not be a death sentence.

http://allafrica.com/stories/201206191560.html

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Re: (Breaking) The Terrorist Woyane Regime in Ethiopia Terrorizing Journalists

Postby Awash » 20 Jun 2012, 03:27


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Re: (Breaking) The Terrorist Woyane Regime in Ethiopia Terrorizing Journalists

Postby revolutions » 23 Jun 2012, 05:36


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Ethiopia jails UN worker for terrorism links

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A court in Ethiopia has sentenced a United Nations guard to seven years in prison for communicating with what authorities say is a terrorist group.

Abdurahman Sheikh Hassan, who is Ethiopian, was earlier found guilty of participating in the banned Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF).

Hassan had been involved in negotiating the release of two UN workers kidnapped by the group.

While doing so, he passed information to terrorists, the judge said.

"Under the guise of his job, he has been passing information to a terrorist organisation with the aim to help them," Judge Mulugeta Kidane told the court before delivering his verdict.

The judge said Hassan, the UN's head of security in the Ogaden, or Somali, region, had failed to prove he did not have links to the ONLF.

He also said Hassan was guilty of collaborating with a man called Sherif Badio, who was sentenced in absentia to life in prison.

Badio was said to be a senior member of the ONLF, which has been fighting for the independence of the Ogaden region, which borders Somalia, since 1984.

Human rights groups have criticised Ethiopia's anti-terrorism legislation for being too far-reaching.

In December, two Swedish journalists were sentenced to 11 years in prison after an Ethiopian court found them guilty of supporting the ONLF.

Twenty-four people, including journalist Eskinder Nega and opposition member Andualem Arage, are currently on trial on charges of terrorism. They could all face the death penalty if found guilty.

Eskinder was arrested after publishing an article questioning arrests under the anti-terrorism legislation.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18548660



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