Background The Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission completed
its mandate in October, despite Ethiopia failing to
implement its ruling, and the UN Security Council
withdrew the UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE)
in the wake of Eritrean obstruction of its operations
along the Eritrea/Ethiopia border. Thousands of Ethiopian armed forces remained in Somalia
to support the TFG in armed conflict against insurgents
throughout most of the year. Accusations of human
rights violations committed by Ethiopian forces continued
in 2008. Insurgent factions stated that they were
fighting to force Ethiopia´s withdrawal from
Somalia. A phased plan for Ethiopian withdrawal was
included in a peace agreement signed by the Alliance
for the Re-Liberation of Somalia-Djibouti and TFG
representatives in late October. Ethiopian forces
began to withdraw late in the year, but had not withdrawn
from Somalia completely by the end of the year. The government faced sporadic armed conflict in the
Oromo and Somali regions, with ONLF members also implicated
in human rights abuses against civilians. Ethiopian
opposition parties in exile remained active in Eritrea
and in other countries in Africa and Europe. "Ethiopian forces attacked the al-Hidya mosque
in Mogadishu killing 21 men..." Divisions split the opposition Coalition for Unity
and Democracy (CUD) party, leading to the emergence
of new opposition parties, including the Unity for
Democracy and Justice Party (UDJP) led by former judge
Birtukan Mideksa. She was one of more than 70 CUD
leaders, journalists and civil society activists convicted,
then pardoned and released in 2007. Suicide bombers attacked Ethiopia´s trade mission
in Hargeisa, Somaliland, on 29 October killing several
Ethiopian and Somali civilians. Prisoners of conscience and other political prisoners
A number of political prisoners, detained in previous
years in the context of internal armed conflicts or
following contested elections in 2005, remained in
detention. Bekele Jirata, General Secretary of the Oromo Federalist
Democratic Movement party, Asefa Tefera Dibaba, a
lecturer at Addis Ababa University and dozens of others
from the Oromo ethnic group were arrested in Addis
Ababa and parts of the Oromo Region from 30 October
onwards. Some of those detained were accused of financially
supporting the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF). Sultan Fowsi Mohamed Ali, an independent mediator,
who was arrested in Jijiga in August 2007 reportedly
to prevent him from giving evidence to a UN fact-finding
mission, remained in detention. Tried for alleged
involvement in two hand grenade attacks in 2007, he
was sentenced to 22 years´ imprisonment in May
2008. On 15 January Birtukan Mideksa, Gizachew Shiferaw
and Alemayehu Yeneneh, then senior members of the
CUD, were briefly detained by police after holding
party meetings in southern Ethiopia. Birtukan Mideksa
was rearrested on 28 December after she issued a public
statement regarding the negotiations that led to her
2007 pardon. Her pardon was revoked and the sentence
of life imprisonment reinstated. Prisoner releases Many released prisoners faced harassment and intimidation,
with some choosing to leave the country. Human rights defenders and lawyers Daniel Bekele
and Netsanet Demissie were released on 28 March. They
had been detained since November 2005 together with
hundreds of opposition parliamentarians, CUD members
and journalists. Unlike their co-defendants in the
trial who were pardoned and released in 2007, Daniel
Bekele and Netsanet Demissie remained in detention,
having refused to sign a document negotiated by local
elders. They mounted a defence and were convicted
by the Federal High Court of criminal incitement (although
the presiding judge dissented) and sentenced to 30
months´ imprisonment. When it became evident
they would not be released, even after they appealed,
they chose to sign the negotiated document, and were
subsequently pardoned and released after serving 29
months of their sentence. Charges of conspiring to commit "outrages against
the Constitution" faced by Yalemzewd Bekele,
a human rights lawyer who had been working for the
European Commission in Addis Ababa, were dropped,
without prejudice, before trial. Abdirahman Mohamed Qani, chief of the Tolomoge sub-clan
of the Ogaden clan in the Somali Region, was detained
on 13 July after receiving a large public welcome
when he returned from two years abroad. He was released
on 7 October, and his relatives who had also been
detained were reportedly released several days later.
CUD activist Alemayehu Mesele, who had suffered harassment
since his release from prison in 2007, fled Ethiopia
in early May after he was severely beaten by unknown
assailants. The editor of the Reporter newspaper Amare Aregawi
was severely beaten by unknown assailants on 31 October
in Addis Ababa. He had previously been detained by
security officers in August. In September, the government announced that it had
released 394 prisoners and commuted one death sentence
to life imprisonment to mark the Ethiopian New Year.
Freedom of expression Independent journalists continued to face harassment
and arrest. At least 13 newspapers shut down by the government
in 2005 were still closed. Independent journalists
were reportedly denied licences to operate, although
others did receive licences. Serkalem Fasil, Eskinder
Nega and Sisay Agena, former publishers of Ethiopia´s
largest circulation independent newspapers, who had
been detained with CUD members, were denied licences
to open two new newspapers. In February the Supreme Court upheld a decision to
dissolve the Ethiopian Teachers Association (ETA)
and hand over its assets to a rival union formed by
the government, also known as the Ethiopian Teachers
Association. This action followed years of harassment
and detention of union members. In December the union,
under its new name, the National Teachers´ Association,
had its application for registration as a professional
organization rejected. On World Press Freedom Day (3 May) Alemayehu Mahtemework,
publisher of the monthly Enku, was detained and 10,000
copies of his publication impounded. He was released after five days without charge and
copies of the magazine were later returned to him.
In November a Federal High Court judge convicted
editor-in chief of the weekly Enbilta, Tsion Girma,
of "inciting the public through false rumours"
after a reporting mistake. She reportedly paid a fine
and was released. Human rights defenders A draft Charities and Societies Proclamation was
revised several times by the government in 2008, but
remained threatening to the rights of freedom of assembly,
association and expression. Its provisions included severe restrictions on the
amount of foreign funding Ethiopian civil society
organizations working on human rights-related issues
could receive from abroad (no more than 10 per cent
of total revenues). It would also establish a Civil
Societies Agency with sweeping authority over organizations
carrying out work on human rights and conflict resolution
in Ethiopia. It was expected to be passed into law
by Parliament in early 2009. Ethiopian troops in Somalia Ethiopia maintained a significant troop presence
in Somalia which supported the TFG until the end of
the year. Ethiopian forces committed human rights
abuses and were reported to have committed war crimes.
Ethiopian forces attacked the al-Hidya mosque in Mogadishu
killing 21 men, some inside the mosque, on 19 April.
More than 40 children were held for some days after
the mosque raid before being released Many attacks by Ethiopian forces in response to armed
insurgents were reported to have been indiscriminate
and disproportionate, often occurring in densely civilian-populated
areas. Internal armed conflict The government continued counter-insurgency operations
in the Somali Region, which increased after attacks
by the ONLF on an oil installation in Obole in April
2007. These included restrictions on humanitarian
aid which have had a serious impact on conflict-affected
districts of the region. The government did not allow
unhindered independent access for human rights monitoring.
Reports, dating back to 2007, of beatings, rape and
other forms of torture, forcible conscription and
extrajudicial executions in the Somali Region were
investigated by a government-contracted body but not
by an independent international body. Torture and other ill-treatment Reports of torture made by defendants in the trial
of elected parliamentarian Kifle Tigeneh and others,
one of several CUD trials, were not investigated.
Conditions in Kaliti prison and other detention facilities
were harsh – overcrowded, unhygienic and lacking
adequate medical care. Among those detained in such
conditions were long-term political prisoners held
without charge or trial, particularly those accused
of links to the OLF. Mulatu Aberra, a trader of the Oromo ethnic group
accused of supporting the OLF, was released on 1 July
on bail and fled the country. He had been arrested
in November 2007 and reportedly tortured and denied
medical treatment for resulting injuries while in
detention. Death penalty While a number of death sentences were imposed by
courts in 2008, no executions were reported. In May the Federal Supreme Court overturned earlier
rulings and sentenced to death former President Mengistu
Haile Mariam (in exile in Zimbabwe) and 18 senior
officials of his Dergue government. The prosecution
had appealed against life imprisonment sentences passed
in 2007, after they were convicted by the Federal
High Court of genocide and crimes against humanity
perpetrated between 1974 and 1991. On 6 April a court sentenced to death five military
officers in absentia. They served under Mengistu Haile
Mariam, and were held responsible for air raids in
Hawzen, in the Tigray Region, which killed hundreds
in a market in June 1980. On 8 May a court in Tigray Region found six people
guilty of a bus bombing in northern Ethiopia between
Humora and Shira on 13 March and sentenced three of
them to death. On 21 May the Federal Supreme Court sentenced eight
men to death for a 28 May 2007 bombing in Jijiga in
the Somali Region. On 22 May a military tribunal sentenced to death
in absentia four Ethiopian pilots , who sought asylum
while training in Israel in 2007 Source: http://thereport.amnesty.org/en/regions/africa/ethiopia
Restrictions
on humanitarian assistance to the Somali Region (known
as the Ogaden) continued. The government engaged in
sporadic armed conflict against the Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF) and both forces perpetrated
human rights abuses against civilians. Ethiopian troops
fighting insurgents in Somalia in support of the Transitional
Federal Government (TFG) committed human rights abuses
and were reported to have committed war crimes. Security
forces arrested members of the Oromo ethnic group in
Addis Ababa and in the Oromo Region towards the end
of the year. Independent journalists continued to face
harassment and arrest. A number of political prisoners
were believed to remain in detention and opposition
party leader Birtukan Mideksa, who was pardoned in 2007,
was rearrested. A draft law restricting the activities
of Ethiopian and international organizations working
on human rights was expected to be passed by parliament
in 2009. Ethiopia remained one of the world´s
poorest countries with some 6.4 million people suffering
acute food insecurity, including 1.9 million in the
Somali Region.
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