Source: Human Rights Watch
Security Forces Arrest Hundreds of Peaceful Protesters; Detainees at Risk
(Nairobi) – The Ethiopian government should immediately release 17
prominent Muslim leaders arrested as part of a brutal crackdown on
peaceful Muslim protesters in Addis Ababa, Human Rights Watch said
today. A court is expected to rule during the week of August 13, 2012,
on whether to bring charges against the detainees who have been held for
almost three weeks in a notorious prison without access to lawyers.
Since July 13, Ethiopian police and security services have harassed,
assaulted, and arbitrarily arrested hundreds of Muslims at Addis Ababa’s
Awalia and Anwar mosques who were protesting government interference in
religious affairs, Human Rights Watch said. Many have been released but
at least 17 prominent members of the community arrested between July 19
and 21 remain in detention. A number of protesters who have been
released told Human Rights Watch that they were mistreated in custody.
“The Ethiopian government should address the grievances of its Muslim community through dialogue, not violence,” said Ben Rawlence, senior Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The security forces should be upholding the law, not breaking it.”
According to official figures, Muslims make up approximately 30 percent of Ethiopia’s population, the second largest religion in this historically Christian country.
The crackdown followed months of widespread peaceful protests,
petitions, and appeals by the Muslim community in response to what they
considered to be unconstitutional government interference in Muslim
affairs. This included government attempts to determine the makeup of
the Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs by imposing members of and the
teachings of an Islamic sect known as al Ahbash on the community, and
seeking to control the operations of Awalia mosque.
The Muslim community created a committee in January to represent it in
discussions with the government. The 17 prominent Muslims currently
detained include seven of the committee members, along with nine other
religious leaders and activists, and at least one journalist. An
additional six people, all members of the Awalia Student Council, were
arrested the previous week.
The Muslim leaders and student council members are being held in
pre-trial detention without charge at the notorious Federal Police Crime
Investigation Department, known as Maekelawi prison, in Addis Ababa.
They have had no access to legal counsel or, in several cases, their
relatives. Their lack of access to lawyers while detained in a prison
known for torture heightens concerns about their safety, Human Rights
Watch said.
It is unclear what the detainees will be charged with. According to
unconfirmed reports, they are under investigation on unspecified charges
under the country’s overly broad anti-terrorism law. This week, the
28-day remand period that is stipulated only under the anti-terrorism
law expires, and the detainees are therefore expected to appear before
the court.
“The arrest of 17 prominent Muslims for exercising their basic rights
to free speech is just the latest misuse of Ethiopia’s laws, and notably
its anti-terrorism law,” Rawlence said. “All those held should be
immediately released unless the government can promptly produce credible
evidence of unlawful activity.”
Excessive Use of Force
Several witnesses told Human Rights Watch that on July 13, as
hundreds of worshippers gathered at Addis Ababa’s Awalia mosque to
prepare for a July 15 awareness-raising event, federal police forcibly
entered the mosque, breaking doors and windows, and fired teargas
inside. They beat people gathered there, including women and children,
and made numerous arrests. A witness said that police beat a disabled
woman, forcing her to the ground and then continuing to beat her. One
man said teargas was fired directly at him inside the mosque before the
police beat him.
People at the mosque sent out an appeal for help, leading scores of
people to converge on the mosque in the Gullele financial district.
Police forces encircling the mosque and its compound assaulted the
people approaching the mosque, beating and arresting many of them.
A witness described seeing blood-soaked victims by the roadside on the
way to the mosque. Several witnesses told Human Rights Watch that they
saw scores of men and women being loaded into separate trucks. Many
appeared to have broken bones and other serious injuries, apparently
inflicted by the police, the witnesses said.
On July 21, police broke up a sit-in at the Anwar mosque in response to
the arrests of the committee members. The police entered the compound,
then beat and arrested large numbers of people, witnesses told Human
Rights Watch. One man told Human Rights Watch that he was beaten until
he lost consciousness. The government said publicly that the protesters
had started throwing stones at the police.
Arbitrary Detention and Mistreatment of Detainees
The Ethiopian government told the media that 74 people were
arrested on July 13, though witnesses and members of the Muslim
community said that hundreds had been detained.
Those rounded up on July 13 were taken to police stations across Addis
Ababa, notably Kolfe Keraneyo and Gullele, and to Maekelawi Prison.
Many released detainees told Human Rights Watch that the police mistreated them.
A witness told Human Rights Watch that in Kolfe Keraneyo, the police
forced at least two women to take off their hijab (head covering) and
that they spat on one when she refused. The second, a young woman who
was detained with her young son, was sexually assaulted by a policeman,
who pulled the hijab off and grabbed her breast. Detainees, even some
who already had been injured, described being beaten with sticks and the
butt of a gun when they arrived at various police stations.
About two dozen of the people initially detained at Maekelawi were
subsequently taken to Sendafa police training camp, several kilometers
outside of Addis Ababa, where they allege they were mistreated. People
who were detained at both Maekelawi and Sendefa described being forced
to run barefoot on sharp stones. Two protesters detained at Sendafa for
10 days were beaten and made to carry out harsh physical labor, they
told Human Rights Watch.
The majority of those arrested between July 13 and 21 have since been
released, in several cases after having been made to sign a document.
Some said they were made to sign the document without being allowed to
read the content.
Reports that the police and other security services beat and otherwise
mistreated the 17 prominent Muslim leaders and others while in custody
should be thoroughly and impartially investigated, Human Rights Watch
said.
Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that on July 20, police came to the
home of Yusuf Getachew, the editor-in-chief of a popular Muslim magazine
Yemuslimoch Guday(Muslim Affairs), intimidated his
family, looted cash and phones, and arrested Getachew. His relatives
were subsequently informed that he was at Maekelawi, but they have been
repeatedly refused permission to visit him.
A witness said that Ahmedin Jebel, the spokesman for the Muslim
committee, was arrested that evening and badly beaten by police.
In addition to the 17 prominent community members in Maekelawi, other
prominent members of the Muslim community have been under house arrest
since July 21. The families of two journalists from Yemuslimoch Guday, Akemel
Negash and Isaac Eshetu,wereheld under house arrest for at least 10
days. The police reportedly searched the houses of many Muslim leaders,
activists, and journalists.
Muslim leaders in Ethiopia have faced ongoing harassment during the
last eight months. Ahmedin Jebel and the same two journalists from Yemuslimoch Gudaywere
detained for four days at Maekelawi in mid-December. The crackdown on
Muslim dissidents has extended beyond the capital. On August 5, three
imams were arrested in the town of Gelemesso in East Harerge. And on
August 10, according to a credible source, the police used teargas and
beat protesters outside the Areb Genda mosque in the north-central town
of Dessie.
Since 2011 the Ethiopian government has convicted at least 34
opposition members, journalists, and others on similar offenses under
the country’s Anti-Terrorism Proclamation. Human Rights Watch has
strongly criticized the law itself and its use, calling for the release
of political prisoners sentenced under the law and for amendments of the
law’s most abusive provisions. This includes its broad definition of
terrorist acts, which can include peaceful protests that result in the
“disruption of any public services,” and its vague provisions that
proscribe support or encouragement of terrorism, which can include
public reporting on banned terrorist groups.
The anti-terrorism law also contains provisions that violate
fundamental due process rights. For instance, the provision on pre-trial
detention allows suspects to be held in custody for up to four months
without charge, one of the longest periods in anti-terrorism legislation
worldwide.
“In the hands of the Ethiopian government, the anti-terrorism law is
becoming a multi-purpose tool used against any kind of dissent,”
Rawlence said.