Ethiopian PM Hailemariam Desalegn at
World Economic Forum. Back home his government has been accused by
rights groups of wielding the hammer against opponents.
Mail & Guardian Africa
By WILLIAM DAVISON, BLOOMBERG
Ethiopia’s crackdown on journalists, opposition ahead of May polls leads to funds cut
THE UK ended support for a programme funding public services in
Ethiopia partly because of the Horn of Africa nation’s crackdown on
journalists and opposition politicians in the run-up to May elections,
the Department for International Development said.
The Secretary of State for International Development Justine Greening
decided to “accelerate” DfID’s withdrawal from the multi-donor funded
Promotion of Basic Services (PBS) in January after making an initial
decision in May 2014 to focus more on supporting economic development,
according to a statement made to the UK High Court on March 4 and
e-mailed to Bloomberg by DfID’s press office two days later.
“This was as a result of ongoing concerns related to civil and
political rights at the level of the overall partnership in Ethiopia,”
DfID told the court. “And in particular recent trends on civil and
political rights in relation to freedom of expression and electoral
competition, and continued concerns about the accountability of the
security services.”
Ethiopia will hold parliamentary elections on May 24. Rights groups
including Amnesty International and donors such as the US have
criticized Ethiopia’s government for criminalizing dissent using a 2009
anti-terrorism law. Ethiopian officials say cases against the media and
political activists haven’t infringed on constitutionally protected
civil rights.
Ethiopian State Minister of Communications Shimeles Kemal wasn’t available to comment when contacted on Tuesday.
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