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    Main » 2011 » October » 26 » Journalists Charged under Ethiopian Anti-Terror Law Appear in Court / Government Using Vaguely-Worded Provision to Smother Press Freedom
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    Journalists Charged under Ethiopian Anti-Terror Law Appear in Court / Government Using Vaguely-Worded Provision to Smother Press Freedom

    VIENNA, Austria, October 25, 2011/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- Three Ethiopian...


    VIENNA, AustriaOctober 25, 2011/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- Three Ethiopian journalists arrested this summer and charged with terrorism appeared before an Addis Ababa court last week. Their respective cases, along with that of two Swedish journalists detained in eastern Ethiopia in July, have deepened suspicions that the government is using a new, vaguely-worded national security law to stifle independent media in the country.

    The court ordered Wubshet Aye, deputy editor of the Awramba Times, and Reyot Alemu, a reporter for the newspaper Fateh, to reappear on 25 November, allowing time for the prosecution to amend its charges, Mesfin Negash, managing editor of the Ethiopian online newspaper Addis Neger, told the International Press Institute (IPI). Mr. Aye and Ms. Alemu have been held without bail since June, when they were arrested and accused of planning to sabotage power lines and recruiting people to destabilise the government, as IPI previously reported.

    According to the London-based Bureau for Investigative Journalism, both journalists are being held in Addis Ababa'sMaikelawi prison, which serves as the federal police's "Central Investigation Department.” A 2010 report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) alleged frequent and systematic use of torture at the facility.

    A third journalist, critical columnist Eskinder Nega, was ordered to return to court on 10 November, Mr. Negash further communicated. Mr. Nega had been arrested in early September and accused by the government of "leading a plan to throw the country into serious political chaos through a series of terror attacks.”

    Mr. Nega has been an outspoken critic of the administration of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi and the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) party; he and his wife, publisher Serkalem Fasil, were previously jailed for 17 months as part of the government's crackdown on post-election dissidence in 2005, Voice of America (VOA) and other sources reported. Mr. Nega told VOA earlier that federal police had also briefly detained him this past February and accused him of "trying to incite Egyptian and Tunisian-like protests”.

    The current law in question, known as the Anti-Terror Proclamation, was enacted by the Zenawi administration in 2009. According to HRW, which had urged the government to reject the bill, it prescribes up to 20 years in prison for anyone found to have written or distributed information seen as supporting or encouraging terrorism.


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