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Dutch resident dismisses death sentence
Lula Ahrens ǀ
December 23, 2009
A
resident of the Dutch town of Haarlem was sentenced to death by an Ethiopian
court on Tuesday. He was found guilty of disrespect for the Ethiopian
constitution and, along with four other people, for attempting a coup. But
Mesfin Aman is not worried about his safety. "I have an official refugee status,
and the Dutch government knows what's going on in my home country."
Four of the five people charged have been
convicted in absentia after fleeing abroad. Melaku Teffera, however, is being
held in Ethiopia. "I am very sorry to say that he will have to face his
sentence," Mesfin Aman told Radio Netherlands. "I've talked to the other four
convicts. They are safe, like me, because they have the same refugee status. One
of them is in the UK, the other three are in the US."
Mesfin has lived in the Netherlands as a
fugitive since 2006. He is currently finishing his MBA at the Amsterdam Business
School. "After the 2005 election protests, in which I took part, the UN High
Commissioner invited me to stay in the Netherlands as a political refugee. I
have an invited refugee status and a residence permit. I do not have the Dutch
nationality yet. For that I'll have to wait for another two years."
The 30-year-old student heard the news on
Tuesday when he was called by Andargachew Tsige, one of his fellow defendants.
He then checked the news on-line and realized it was true. Aman is confident
that he won’t have to face his sentence: “The Dutch government follows the
standard international rules and would never extradite me. They know what's
going on in Ethiopia."
Aman has been politically active since he was a
teenager. He chose to study political science and fight for democracy, despite
the obvious dangers. "The government considers all opinions different from their
own as disrespect for the constitution and a threat to their existence. They use
phrases like 'attempted coup' to justify their killing of opposition members."
In 2001, he spent several months in solitary
confinement after he took part in a protest against the regime of the Ethiopian
Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi. In the aftermath of the elections in 2005, he
again spent several weeks in solitary confinement, after which he was released
on bail. He escaped to Kenya, and then to the Netherlands.
"That same year, the Ethiopian government
sentenced me for life along with several other opposition leaders. The others
were later pardoned and were asked to sign a pardon letter. Because I was in the
Netherlands, I didn't know of the letter and couldn't sign. That's why I have
now been given this death sentence. It's a bizarre story."
The refugee has not yet spoken to the Dutch
government about his death sentence, but he is planning to contact the Foreign
Affairs Ministry to inform them.
The most important factor in the Ethiopian
government's behaviour, he says, is "ethnic domination".
"In Ethiopia, we have 80 million people from five ethnic groups. Political power
is concentrated in the hands of one ethnic group, which accounts for around 6
percent of the population. That causes a huge political imbalance.”
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Source:
Radio Netherlands
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