Ethiopia,January
31, 2013
The sudden death in August 2012 of Ethiopia’s long-serving
and powerful prime minister, Meles Zenawi, provoked uncertainty over the
country’s political transition, both domestically and among Ethiopia’s
international partners.
Ethiopia’s human rights record has
sharply deteriorated, especially over the past few years, and although a new
prime minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, took office in September, it remains to be
seen whether the government under his leadership will undertake human rights
reforms.
Ethiopian
authorities continued to severely restrict basic rights of freedom of
expression, association, and assembly in 2012. Thirty journalists and opposition
members were convicted under the country’s vague Anti-Terrorism Proclamation of
2009.The security forces responded to protests by the Muslim community in Oromia
and Addis Ababa, the capital, with arbitrary arrests, detentions, and
beatings.
The
Ethiopian government continues to implement its “villagization” program:
the resettlement of 1.5 million rural villagers in five regions of Ethiopia
ostensibly to increase their access to basic services. Many villagers in
Gambella region have been forcibly displaced, causing considerable hardship. The
government is also forcibly displacing indigenous pastoral communities in
Ethiopia’s Lower Omo Valley to make way for state-run sugar plantations.
Freedom
of Expression, Association, and Assembly
Since
the promulgation in 2009 of the Charities and Societies Proclamation (CSO Law),
which regulates nongovernmental organizations, and the Anti-Terrorism
Proclamation, freedom of expression, assembly, and association have been
increasingly restricted in Ethiopia. The effect of these two laws, coupled with
the government’s widespread and persistent harassment, threats, and intimidation
of civil society activists, journalists, and others who comment on sensitive
issues or express views critical of government policy, has been severe.
Ethiopia’s
most important human rights groups have been compelled to dramatically
scale-down operations or remove human rights activities from their mandates, and
an unknown number of organizations have closed entirely. Several of the
country’s most experienced and reputable human rights activists have fled the
country due to threats. The environment is equally hostile for independent
media: more journalists have fled Ethiopia than any other country in the world
due to threats and intimidation in the last decade—at least 79, according to the
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).
The
Anti-Terrorism Proclamation is being used to target perceived opponents, stifle
dissent, and silence journalists. In 2012, 30 political activists, opposition
party members, and journalists were convicted on vaguely defined terrorism
offenses. Eleven journalists have been convicted under the law since 2011.
On
January 26, a court in Addis Ababa sentenced both deputy editor Woubshet Taye
and columnist Reeyot Alemu of the now-defunct weekly Awramaba Times to 14 years
in prison. Reeyot’s sentence was later reduced to five years
upon appeal and most of the charges were dropped.
On
July 13, veteran journalist and blogger Eskinder Nega, who won the prestigious
PEN America Freedom to Write Award in April, was sentenced to 18 years in prison
along with other journalists, opposition party members, and political activists.
Exiled journalists Abiye Teklemariam and Mesfin Negash were sentenced to eight
years each in absentia under a provision of the Anti-Terrorism Law that has so
far only been used against journalists. Andualem Arage, a member of the registeredopposition
party Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJ), was sentenced to life for
espionage, “disrupting the constitutional order,” and recruitment and training
to commit terrorist acts.
In
September, the Ethiopian Federal High Court ordered the property of Eskinder
Nega, exiledjournalist Abebe
Belew, and opposition member Andualem Arage to be confiscated. On July 20, after
the government claimed that reports by the newspaper Feteh on Muslim protests
and the prime minister’s health would endanger national security, it seized the
entire print run of the paper. On August 24, Feteh’s editor, Temesghen Desalegn
was arrested and denied bail. He was released on August 28, and all the charges
were withdrawn pending further investigation.
Police
on July 20 raided the home of journalist Yesuf Getachew, editor-in-chief of the
popular Muslim magazine Yemuslimoche Guday (Muslim Affairs), and arrested him
that night. The magazine has not been published since, and at this writing,
Yesuf remained in detention.
On
December 27, 2011, two Swedish journalists, Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson,
were found guilty of supporting a terrorist organization after being arrested
while traveling in eastern Ethiopia with the Ogaden National Liberation Front
(ONLF), an outlawed armed insurgent group. They were also convicted of entering
the country illegally. The court sentenced them to 11 years in prison. On
September 10, they were pardoned and released along with more than 1,950 other
prisoners as part of Ethiopia’s annual tradition of amnesty to celebrate the
Ethiopian New Year.
On
several occasions in July, federal police used excessive force, including
beatings, to disperse largely Muslim protesters opposing the government’s
interference with the country’s Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs. On July 13,
police forcibly entered the Awalia mosque in Addis Ababa, smashing windows and
firing tear gas inside the mosque. On July 21, they forcibly broke up a sit-in
at the mosque. From July 19 to 21, dozens of people were rounded up and 17
prominent leaders were held without charge for over a week. Many of the
detainees complained of mistreatment in detention.
Forced
Displacement
The
Ethiopian government plans to relocate up to 1.5 million people under its
“villagization” program, purportedly designed to improve access to basic
services by moving people to new villages in Ethiopia’s five lowland regions:
Gambella, Benishangul-Gumuz, Afar, Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples’
Region (SNNPR), and Somali Region.
In
Gambella and in the South Omo Valley, forced displacement is taking place
without adequate consultation and compensation. In Gambella, Human Rights Watch
found that relocations were often forced and that villagers were being moved
from fertile to unfertile areas. People sent to the new villages frequently have
to clear the land and build their own huts under military supervision, while the
promised services (schools, clinics, water pumps) often have not been put in
place.
In
South Omo, around 200,000 indigenous peoples are being relocated and their land
expropriated to make way for state-run sugar plantations. Residents reported
being moved by force, seeing their grazing lands flooded or ploughed up, and
their access to the Omo River, essential for their survival and way of life,
curtailed.
Extrajudicial
Executions, Torture and other Abuses in Detention
An
Ethiopian government-backed paramilitary force known as the “Liyu Police”
executed at least 10 men who were in their custody and killed 9 other villagers
in Ethiopia’s Somali Region on March 16 and 17 following a confrontation over an
incident in Raqda village, Gashaamo district.
In
April, unknown gunmen attacked a commercial farm owned by the Saudi Star company
in Gambella that was close to areas that had suffered a high proportion of
abuses during the villagization process. In responding to the attack, Ethiopian
soldiers went house to house looking for suspected perpetrators and threatening
villagers to disclose the whereabouts of the “rebels.” The military arbitrarily
arrested many young men and committed torture, rape, and other abuses against
scores of villagers while attempting to extract information.
Human
Rights Watch continues to document torture at the federal police investigation
center known as Maekelawi in Addis Ababa, as well as at regional detention
centers and military barracks in Somali Region, Oromia, and Gambella. There is
erratic access to legal counsel and insufficient respect for other due process
guarantees during detention, pre-trial detention, and trial phases of
politically sensitive cases, placing detainees at risk of abuse.
Treatment
of Ethiopian Migrant Domestic Workers
The
videotaped beating and subsequent suicide on March 14 of Alem Dechasa Desisa, an
Ethiopian domestic worker in Lebanon, brought increased scrutiny to the plight
of tens of thousands of Ethiopian women working in the Middle East.
Many
migrant domestic workers incur heavy debts and face recruitment-related abuses
in Ethiopia prior to employment abroad, where they risk a wide range of abuses
from long hours of work to slavery-like conditions (see chapters on the United
Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Lebanon).
Key
International Actors
Under
Meles Zenawi’s leadership, Ethiopia played an important role in regional
affairs: deploying UN peacekeepers to Sudan’s disputed Abyei area, mediating
between Sudan and South Sudan, and sending troops into Somalia as part of the
international effort to combat al-Shabaab. Ethiopia’s relations with its
neighbor Eritrea remain poor following the costly border war of 1998-2000.
Eritrea accepted the ruling of an independent boundary commission that awarded
it disputed territory; Ethiopia did not.
Ethiopia
is an important strategic and security ally for Western governments, and the
biggest recipient of development aid in Africa. It now receives approximately
US$3.5 billion in long-term development assistance each year. Donor policies do
not appear to have been significantly affected by the deteriorating human rights
situation in the country.
The
World Bank approved a new Country Partnership Strategy in September that takes
little account of the human rights or good governance principles that it and
other development agencies say are essential for sustainable development. It
also approved a third phase of the Protection of Basic Services program (PBS
III) without triggering safeguards on involuntary resettlement and indigenous
peoples.
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