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Ethiopia journalists face hardship, jail and abuse
Published in Bikya Masr on 03 - 05 - 2013

ADDIS ABABA: Ethiopia's terrorism law is a bill that is killing the local media and its workers, New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a new report. It comes on World Press Freedom Day, but where Ethiopian journalists and activists are lamenting the jailing of top blogger Eskinder Nega.
The court on Thursday dismissed the appeal from the blogger and opposition leader Andualem Arage, who were imprisoned last year on what supporters say are trumped-up terrorism charges.
“The sentencing is still correct so there is no reduction," said Supreme Court judge Dagne Melaku, confirming the blogger's jail term of 18 years and Arage's life sentence.
One of the charges – serving as a leader of a terrorist organization – was dropped, but had no affect on sentencing.
After the ruling, Nega made an emotional appeal to the court which was crowded with family, friends and diplomats.
“The truth will set us free," he said. “We want the Ethiopian public to know that the truth will reveal itself, it's only a matter of time." Both men are accused of links to the outlawed opposition group Ginbot 7.
Activists close by the court told Bikyanews.com that they were “angry beyond belief.
“I just want to over to the court and burn it down," said one activist, a 24-year-old university student. “We are supposed to become a better country and more open and tolerant, but we are not really. It is horrible."
Eleven journalists have been convicted and sentenced since 2011 under Ethiopia's repressive anti-terrorism law, including six in absentia. Three of the eleven are currently in prison. Two other journalists are currently on trial under the anti-terrorism law. Another journalist, Temesgen Desalegn, the editor of the now defunct independent magazine Feteh, is on trial for three offenses under the criminal code.
“Ethiopia's journalists shouldn't be spending World Press Freedom Day in jail on trumped-up terrorism charges," said Leslie Lefkow, deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Freeing these journalists would be an important step toward improving Ethiopia's deteriorating record on press freedom."
Since Ethiopia's anti-terrorism law was adopted in 2009, the independent media have been decimated by politically motivated prosecutions under the law. The government has systematically thwarted attempts by journalists to establish new publications. Blogs and Internet pages critical of the government are regularly blocked, and in 2012 printing houses came under threat for printing publications that criticized the authorities. Mastewal Birhanu, the manager of Mastewal Publishing, for example, was charged under the criminal code for printing the editions of Feteh that were the basis for the charges against Temesgen.
Human Rights Watch has repeatedly raised concerns about the anti-terrorism law's overly broad definition of “terrorist acts." The law's provisions on support for terrorism contain a vague prohibition on “moral support" under which only journalists have been convicted.
One of the three journalists sentenced under the law who remain in prison is Eskinder Nega Fenta, a veteran Ethiopian journalist. He had been detained numerous times, and was sentenced in July 2012 to 18 years in prison for conspiracy to commit terrorist acts, as well as participation in a terrorist organization. Eskinder's sentence was upheld on appeal on May 2, 2013. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, a panel of independent experts, concluded in November that Eskinder's imprisonment was arbitrary and “a result of his peaceful exercise of the right to freedom of expression."
Woubshet Taye Abebe, who is serving a 14-year sentence under the anti-terrorism law, was a winner of the 2012 Hellman-Hammett Award, administered by Human Rights Watch. Woubshet was the deputy editor of the Awramba Times prior to his arrest in 2011.He alleged in court that he was tortured in pretrial detention, as have other defendants detained on terrorism charges. The court did not investigate his complaint.
Reeyot Alemu Gobebo, a journalist for Feteh, was convicted on three counts under the terrorism law for her writings. Her sentence was reduced from 14 years to 5 years on appeal, and she remains in prison. Reeyot was recently awarded the prestigious 2013 UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize. She will miss the May 3 award ceremony in Costa Rica.
Members of the international media have also been charged under the anti-terrorism law. In December 2009, two Swedish journalists, Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson, were convicted for “rendering support to terrorism" and entering the country illegally “to commit an act that is a threat to the well-being of the people of Ethiopia." They had entered the country without a visa and were arrested while investigating the situation in Ethiopia's eastern Somali region, site of a longstanding insurgency. They were pardoned and released in September 2012 after more than a year in prison.
“The journalists who have been detained and convicted have one thing in common – they were all exercising their right to freedom of expression, a right guaranteed by the Ethiopian constitution and international law," Lefkow said.
In 2012 Hailemariam Desalegn became Ethiopia's prime minister following the death of Meles Zenawi, under whose leadership the country experienced a sharp decline in civil and political rights – including freedom of expression. Hopes that Hailemariam's government would improve Ethiopia's record on free expression have been dashed by ongoingarbitrary arrests and detentions of journalists and others.
Since January 2012, members of Ethiopia's Muslim community have held regular protests in the capital, Addis Ababa, and other towns over alleged government interference in religious affairs. The government has harassed and detained journalists who have reported on these protests. Yusuf Getachew, former editor of the now-defunct Islamic magazine Yemuslimoch Guday, was charged under the anti-terrorism law and is on trial, though the trial is closed to the public. Solomon Kebede, Getachew's successor at the magazine, was arrested on January 17 and has also been charged under the anti-terrorism law. Prior to charges being bought, Solomon spent more than two months in pre-trial detention at Maekelawi prison in Addis Ababa, which is notorious for torture, without access to legal counsel.
The right to freedom of expression is guaranteed in the Ethiopian constitution, and in numerous African and international conventions, including the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights, which Ethiopia has ratified. In November, Ethiopia was appointed to the United Nations Human Rights Council and as such has made a commitment to uphold “the highest standards of human rights as enshrined in the constitution of the country and in the international and regional human rights treaties that Ethiopia has ratified" – including rights to freedom of expression.
“As a recently appointed member of the UN's Human Rights Council, Ethiopia should take swift steps to improve the media environment in the country," Lefkow said. “These include immediately releasing all journalists imprisoned under the anti-terrorism law, amending the law's worst provisions, and ending the harassment of what little independent media remains in the country."
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