Source: Human Rights Watch
(Nairobi) – The Ethiopian authorities should immediately release six
bloggers and three journalists arrested on April 25 and 26, 2014, unless
credible charges are promptly brought.
United States Secretary of State John Kerry, who is scheduled to visit Ethiopia beginning
April 29, should urge Ethiopian officials to unconditionally release
all activists and journalists who have been arbitrarily detained or
convicted in unfair trials. The arrests also came days before Ethiopia
is scheduled to have its human rights record assessed at the United Nations Human Rights Council’s universal periodic review in Geneva on May 6.
“The nine arrests signal, once again, that anyone who criticizes the Ethiopian government will be silenced,” said Leslie Lefkow,
deputy Africa director. “The timing of the arrests – just days before
the US secretary of state’s visit – speaks volumes about Ethiopia’s
disregard for free speech.”
On the afternoon of April 25, police in uniform and civilian clothes
conducted what appeared to be a coordinated operation of
near-simultaneous arrests. Six members of a group known as the “Zone9”
bloggers – Befekadu Hailu, Atnaf Berahane, Natnael Feleke, Mahlet
Fantahun, Zelalem Kibret, and Abel Wabela – were arrested at their
offices and in the streets. Tesfalem Weldeyes, a freelance journalist,
was also arrested during the operation. Edom Kassaye, a second freelance
journalist, was arrested on either April 25 or 26; the circumstances of
her arrest are unclear but all eight individuals were apparently taken
to Maekelawi Police Station, the federal detention center in Addis
Ababa, the capital.
The police searched the bloggers and journalists’ offices and homes,
reportedly with search warrants, and confiscated private laptops and
literature. On April 26, another journalist, Asmamaw Hailegeorgis of Addis Guday newspaper, was also arrested and is reportedly detained in Maekelawi.
The detainees are currently being held incommunicado. On the morning of
April 26, relatives were denied access to the detainees by Maekelawi
guards, and only allowed to deposit food.
Human Rights Watch released a report in October 2013 documenting serious human rights abuses,
including torture and other ill-treatment,unlawful interrogation
tactics, and poor detention conditions in Maekelawi against political
detainees, including journalists. Detainees at Maekelawi are seldom
granted access to legal counsel or their relatives during the initial
investigation phase.
The Zone9 bloggers have faced increasing harassment by the authorities
over the last six months. Sources told Human Rights Watch that one of
the bloggers and one of the journalists have been regularly approached,
including at home, by alleged intelligence agents and asked about the
work of the group and their alleged links to political opposition
parties and human rights groups. The blogger was asked a week before
their arrest of the names and personal information of all the Zone9
members. The arrests on April 25, 2014, came two days after Zone9 posted
a statement on social media saying they planned to increase their
activism after a period of laying low because of ongoing intimidation.
A Human Rights Watch report in
March described the technologies used by the Ethiopian government to
conduct surveillance of perceived political opponents, activists, and
journalists inside the country and among the diaspora. It highlights how
the government’s monopoly over all mobile and Internet services through
its sole, state-owned telecom operator, Ethio Telecom, facilitates
abuse of surveillance powers.
Kerry is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and
Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom in Addis Ababa “to discuss efforts to
advance peace and democracy in the region.” Kerry should strongly urge
the Ethiopian government to end arbitrary arrests, release all activists
and journalists unjustly detained or convicted, and promptly amend draconian laws
on freedom of association and terrorism that have frequently been used
to justify arbitrary arrests and political prosecutions. The Obama
administration has said very little about the need for human rights
reforms in Ethiopia.
“Secretary Kerry should be clear that the Ethiopian government’s
crackdown on media and civil society harms ties with the US,” Lefkow
said. “Continued repression in Ethiopia cannot mean business as usual
for Ethiopia-US relations.”