A policeman attempts to control protesters chanting slogans during a demonstration over what they say is unfair distribution of wealth in the country at Meskel Square in Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa, Aug. 6, 2016.
BRUSSELS/ADDIS ABABA —
A state-backed news
agency in Ethiopia reports that about 2,000 people detained during recent
protests have been released after receiving what the report called education
and counseling services.
According to the Fana
Broadcasting Network, Ethiopia’s Minister of Defense Siraj Fegessa told
reporters that rehabilitation services for about 2,000 people detained over
recent violence have concluded and those people have been released.
Government spokesman
Getachew Reda told reporters last week that the rehabilitation programs help
the government deal with the large amount of people in detention.
“Probably this is the
only government in the world that metes out punishment in the form of
constitutional classes. Some fitness exercise maybe. It’s only the most
dangerous criminals who will have to face the consequences. Otherwise, this is
going to be rehabilitation programs, three weeks, a month. You teach them
constitution. You teach them some values and the ABC of basic decency,” he
said.
But international
human rights groups have a different take.
Human Rights Watch said in a statement Monday that
rehabilitation is a “euphemism for short-term detention” and that these
programs “typically involve ill-treatment and sometimes torture.”
HRW says there is no
due process or formal record of these detentions. The rights group says tens of
thousands of people have been detained since anti-government protests began in
November 2015.
A deadly stampede and
violent attacks on government buildings and foreign businesses prompted the
declaration of a six-month state of emergency October 9.
There are no
independently verified reports on exactly how many people have been detained
since then.
Opposition leader
Merera Gudina of the Oromo People’s Congress says hundreds of his party members
have been arrested.
“Mostly they don’t
have legal advice, lawyers and so on. In fact, sometimes we don’t know where
they are detained. It’s not normal prison, you know. In Shashamane, we heard
that they were detained in cinema house. So they were detained anywhere. Not in
normal prison house," said Gudina.
The protests started in the Oromia region last year over a plan
to expand the capital city but have since expanded to other parts of the
country and to include issues of economic marginalization and political
freedom.
Source: VOA
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