By
Tesfa-Alem Tekle
May
10, 2016 (ADDIS ABABA) – Human Rights Watch (HRW) has accused the government in
Ethiopia of using the country’s courts as a tool to crush dissent.
Activists’ poster protesting about
the detention of Olbana Lelisa, a leader in the Oromo People’s Congress party
(OPC), and Bekele Gerba, the deputy Chairman of the Oromo Federalist Democratic
Movement (OFDM)
In
a report released on Monday, the US-based rights enity said the Ethiopian
government is inexorably closing off ways for Ethiopians to peacefully express
their grievances, not just with bullets but also through the courts.
Citing
last week’s charges pressed against a prominent opposition politician, HRW said
Ethiopian authorities have lodged new, politically motivated charges against
prominent opposition politicians and others, accusing them of crimes under
Ethiopia’s draconian counterterrorism law.
“Just
last week, Yonatan Tesfaye Regassa, the head of public relations for the
opposition Semayawi Party (the Blue Party), was charged with planning,
preparation, conspiracy, incitement and attempt of a terrorist act” HRW said.
Yonatan
was arrested last year after posting anti-government comments on Facebook.
In
his comments, Yonatan accused the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary
Democratic Front (EPRDF) of using “force against the people instead of using
peaceful discussion with the public”
The
opposition politician was referring to government’s response to the deadly
protests that have rocked larger parts of the Oromia region in protest to
government’s plan to expand boundary of the capital, Addis Ababa, to parts of
the Oromia region.
Ethiopian
authorities argue that Yonatan’s Facebook comments were in pursuit of the
objectives of a banned opposition movement Oromo Liberation Front (OLF).
According
to HRW the Ethiopian authorities brought the Febook posts as evidence and he
could face 15 years to life in prison, if convicted.
Last
week, Amnesty international said the Facebook activist is facing a possible
death sentence on trumped-up terrorism charges and urged the government to
immediately and unconditionally release him.
The
latest HRW report also stated how Bekele Gerba, deputy chairman of the Oromo
Federalist Congress (OFC), Oromia’s largest registered political party, and 21
others, including many senior OFC members, were charged under the
counterterrorism law in April, four months after their arrest on December 2015.
“Bekele
is accused of having links with the banned Oromo Liberation Front, a charge
frequently used by the government to target ethnic Oromo dissidents and others”
it said.
The rights group said “Deeply committed to nonviolence, Bekele has consistently urged the OFC to participate in elections despite the ruling party’s iron grip on the polls”.
The rights group said “Deeply committed to nonviolence, Bekele has consistently urged the OFC to participate in elections despite the ruling party’s iron grip on the polls”.
The
rights group alleged that Bekele and the others have described horrible
conditions during their detention, including at the notorious Maekelawi prison,
where “torture and other ill-treatment are routine”
The
report added that “The Ethiopian government is sending a clear message when it
charges peaceful protesters and opposition politicians like Bekele Gerba with
terrorism.
The
Ethiopian government had long been under fire by a number of international
human right groups for using the broadly defined anti-terrorism law as a tool
to curb freedom of expression and silence opposition voices.
Opposition
groups have also accused the government of using the terrorism law to punish
critical journalists, opposition leaders, their members and supporters.
Source:
Sudan Tribune
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