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Human rights from bad to worse
Human Rights Watch: 2010 Report
Ethiopia is on a deteriorating human rights
trajectory as parliamentary elections approach in 2010. These will be the first
national elections since 2005, when post-election protests resulted in the
deaths of at least 200 protesters, many of them victims of excessive use of
force by the police. Broad patterns of government repression have prevented the
emergence of organized opposition in most of the country. In December 2008 the
government re-imprisoned opposition leader Birtukan Midekssa for life after she
made remarks that allegedly violated the terms of an earlier pardon.
In 2009 the government passed two pieces of legislation that codify some of the
worst aspects of the slide towards deeper repression and political intolerance.
A civil society law passed in January is one of the most restrictive of its
kind, and its provisions will make most independent human rights work
impossible. A new counterterrorism law passed in July permits the government and
security forces to prosecute political protesters and non-violent expressions of
dissent as acts of terrorism.
Political Repression and the 2010 Elections
As Ethiopia heads toward nationwide elections, the government continues to clamp
down on the already limited space for dissent or independent political activity.
Ordinary citizens who criticize government policies or officials frequently face
arrest on trumped-up accusations of belonging to illegal "anti-peace" groups,
including armed opposition movements. Officials sometimes bring criminal cases
in a manner that appears to selectively target government critics, as when in
June 2009 prominent human rights activist Abebe Worke was charged with illegal
importation of radio equipment and ultimately fled the country. In the
countryside government-supplied (and donor-funded) agricultural assistance and
other resources are often used as leverage to punish and prevent dissent, or to
compel individuals into joining the ruling party.
The opposition is in disarray, but the government has shown little willingness
to tolerate potential challengers. In December 2008 the security forces
re-arrested Birtukan Midekssa, leader of the Unity for Democracy and Justice
Party, which had begun to build a grassroots following in the capital. The
government announced that Birtukan would be jailed for life because she had made
public remarks that violated the terms of an earlier pardon for alleged acts of
treason surrounding the 2005 elections. The authorities stated that there was no
need for a trial as the move was a mere legal technicality.
In July the Ethiopian government passed a new anti-terrorism law. The law
provides broad powers to the police, and harsh criminal penalties can be applied
to political protesters and others who engage in acts of nonviolent political
dissent. Some of its provisions appear tailored less toward addressing terrorism
and more toward allowing for a heavy-handed response to mass public unrest, like
that which followed Ethiopia's 2005 elections.
Civil Society Activism and Media Freedom
The space for independent civil society activity in Ethiopia, already extremely
narrow, shrank dramatically in 2009. In January the government passed a new
civil society law whose provisions are among the most restrictive of any
comparable law anywhere in the world. The law makes any work that touches on
human rights or governance issues illegal if carried out by foreign
non-governmental organizations, and labels any Ethiopian organization that
receives more than 10 percent of its funding from sources outside of Ethiopia as
"foreign." The law makes most independent human rights work virtually
impossible, and human rights work deemed illegal under the law is punishable as
a criminal offense.
Ethiopia passed a new media law in 2008 that improved upon several repressive
aspects of the previous legal regime. The space for independent media activity
in Ethiopia remains severely constrained, however. In August two journalists
were jailed on charges derived partly from Ethiopia's old, and now defunct,
press proclamation. Ethiopia's new anti-terror law contains provisions that will
impact the media by making journalists and editors potential accomplices in acts
of terrorism if they publish statements seen as encouraging or supporting
terrorist acts, or even, simply, political protest.
Pretrial Detention and Torture
The Ethiopian government continues its longstanding practice of using lengthy
periods of pretrial and pre-charge detention to punish critics and opposition
activists, even where no criminal charges are ultimately pursued. Numerous
prominent ethnic Oromo Ethiopians have been detained in recent years on charges
of providing support to the outlawed Oromo Liberation Front (OLF); in almost
none of these cases have charges been pursued, but the accused, including
opposition activists, have remained in detention for long periods. Canadian
national Bashir Makhtal was convicted on charges of supporting the rebel Ogaden
National Liberation Front (ONLF) in July, after a trial that was widely
criticized as unfair; he was in detention for two-and-a-half years before his
sentence was handed down, and he was unable to access legal counsel and consular
representatives for much of that period.
Not only are periods of pretrial detention punitively long, but detainees and
convicted prisoners alike face torture and other ill-treatment. Human Rights
Watch and other organizations have documented consistent patterns of torture in
police and military custody for many years. The Ethiopian government regularly
responds that these abuses do not exist, but even the government's own Human
Rights Commission acknowledged in its 2009 annual report that torture and other
abuses had taken place in several detention facilities, including in Ambo and
Nekemte.
Impunity for Military Abuses
The Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) has committed serious abuses, in
some cases amounting to war crimes or crimes against humanity, in several
different conflicts in recent years. Human Rights Watch is not aware of any
meaningful efforts to hold the officers or government officials most responsible
for those abuses to account. The only government response to crimes against
humanity and other serious abuses committed by the military during a brutal
counterinsurgency campaign in Gambella in late 2003 and 2004 was an inquiry that
prosecuted a handful of junior personnel for deliberate and widespread patterns
of abuse. No one has been investigated or held to account for war crimes and
other widespread violations of the laws of war during Ethiopia's bloody military
intervention in neighboring Somalia from 2006 to 2008.
In August 2008 the Ethiopian government did purport to launch an inquiry into
allegations of serious crimes in Somali Regional State, where the armed forces
have been fighting a campaign against the rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front
for many years. The inquiry was sponsored by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
lacked independence, and concluded that no serious abuses took place. To date
the government continues to restrict access of independent investigators into
the area.
Relations in the Horn of Africa
In August the Eritrea-Ethiopia Claims Commission issued its final rulings on
monetary damages stemming from the bloody 1998-2000 border war between Ethiopia
and Eritrea. Nonetheless the two countries remain locked in an intractable
dispute about the demarcation of the heavily militarized frontier. Eritrea
continues to play a destabilizing role throughout the Horn of Africa through its
efforts to undermine and attack the government of Ethiopia wherever possible.
The government of President Isayas Afewerki hosts and materially supports
fighters from Ethiopian rebel movements, including the Oromo Liberation Front.
Eritrea has also pursued a policy of supporting armed opposition groups in
Somalia as a way of undermining Ethiopia's support for the country's weak
Transitional Federal Government.
Key International Actors
Ethiopia is one of the most aid-dependant countries in the world and received
more than US$2 billion in 2009, but its major donors have been unwilling to
confront the government over its worsening human rights record. Even as the
country slides deeper into repression, the Ethiopian government uses development
aid funding as leverage against the donors who provide it-many donors fear that
the government would discontinue or scale back their aid programs should they
speak out on human rights concerns. This trend is perhaps best exemplified by
the United Kingdom, whose government has consistently chosen to remain silent in
order to protect its annual £130 million worth of bilateral aid and development
programs.
Donors are also fearful of jeopardizing access for humanitarian organizations to
respond to the drought and worsening food crisis. Millions of Ethiopians depend
on food aid, and the government has sought to minimize the scale of the crisis
and restrict access for independent surveys and response.
While Ethiopia's government puts in place measures to control the elections in
2010, many donors have ignored the larger trends and focused instead on
negotiating with the government to allow them to send election observers.
A significant shift in donor policy toward Ethiopia would likely have to be led
by the US government, Ethiopia's largest donor and most important political ally
on the world stage. But President Barack Obama's administration has yet to
depart from the policies of the Bush administration, which consistently refused
to speak out against abuses in Ethiopia. While the reasons may be different-the
current government is not as narrowly focused on security cooperation with
Ethiopia as was the Bush administration- thus far the practical results have
been the same. The events described above attracted little public protest from
the US government in 2009.
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