Members and leaders of opposition parties as well as
protesters were extrajudicially executed. General elections took place
in May against a backdrop of restrictions on civil society, the media
and the political opposition, including excessive use of force against
peaceful demonstrators, the disruption of opposition campaigns, and the
harassment of election observers from the opposition. The police and the
military conducted mass arrests of protesters, journalists and
opposition party members as part of a crackdown on protests in the
Oromia region.
BACKGROUND
The ruling political party, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary
Democratic Front, won all the seats in the Federal and Regional
Parliaments in the general election.
The opposition Semayawi Party reported that the National Election
Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) refused to register over half of its proposed
candidates for the House of Peoples’ Representatives: of 400 candidates,
only 139 were able to stand for election. The opposition Medrek
coalition reported that the NEBE only approved 270 of the 303 candidates
it had proposed to register.
Famine due to rainfall shortages during the main harvesting season
(June to September) affected more than 8 million people in the north and
east.
ARBITRARY ARRESTS AND DETENTIONS
Police and security officers arrested Omot Agwa Okwoy, Ashinie Astin
Titoyk and Jemal Oumar Hojele at Addis Ababa Bole International Airport
on 15 March, on their way to a workshop in Nairobi, Kenya. The workshop
was organized by the NGO Bread for All with the support of the NGOs
Anywaa Survival Organisation and GRAIN. The police held the three men
for 161 days without bail at the Maekelawi detention centre, beyond the
four months allowed by the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation (ATP), under
which they were charged on 7 September.
On 12 May, security officers arrested two campaigners and three
supporters of the Semayawi Party who were putting up campaign posters in
the capital, Addis Ababa. They were released on bail after four days in
detention.
On 19 May, Bekele Gerba and other members of the Oromo Federalist
Congress were campaigning in Oromia when police and local security
officers beat, arrested and detained them for a couple of hours.
Over 500 members of Medrek were arrested at various polling stations
in Oromia region on 24 and 25 May. Security officers beat and injured 46
people during the elections; six people sustained gunshot injuries and
two were killed.
EXTRAJUDICIAL EXECUTIONS
Four members and leaders of opposition parties were killed after the election.
Samuel Aweke, founder of the Semayawi Party, was found dead on 15
June in the city of Debre Markos. A few days before his death he had
published an article in his party’s newspaper, Negere Ethiopia,
criticizing the behaviour of local authorities, police and other
security officials. The Semayawi Party claimed that Samuel Aweke had
received threats from security officials after the article was
published.
On 16 June, Medrek member Taddesse Abreha was accosted on his way
home in the Western Tigrai zone by three unknown people who attempted to
strangle him. He died shortly after reaching his home.
Medrek member Berhanu Erbu was found dead on 19 June near a river in
the Hadiya zone, 24 hours after he was taken from his home by two police
officers.
Asrat Haile, election observer on behalf of Medrek in the Adio Kaka
unit, Ginbo Woreda district and Kefa zone, died after being repeatedly
beaten by police officials on 5 July.
None of these deaths except Samuel Aweke’s was investigated. The
Semayawi Party said the trial, conviction and sentencing of Samuel
Aweke’s killer were a “sham”, intended to protect the real culprit.
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
In the run-up to the general elections, the government continued to
use the ATP to suppress freedom of expression through the continued
detention of journalists and protracted trials: it arrested and charged
at least 17 journalists under the ATP. Many also fled the country due to
intimidation, harassment and politically motivated criminal charges.
Police arrested Habtamu Minale, editor-in-chief of Kedami newspaper and reporter for YeMiliyonoch Dimts newspaper, on 9 July at his house. He was released on 26 July without charge.
The Public Prosecutor dropped the charges against two members of the
Zone 9 bloggers’ group. On 16 October, the High Court acquitted five of
the Zone 9 bloggers of terrorism charges, after they had spent over 500
days in pre-trial detention.
On 22 October, the High Court convicted and sentenced in his absence
Gizaw Taye, Manager of Dadimos Entertainment and Press, to 18 years’
imprisonment for terrorism.
FREEDOM OF ASSEMBLY
On 27 January, police used excessive force to disperse a peaceful
demonstration in Addis Ababa that was organized by the Unity for
Democracy and Justice opposition party. Police beat demonstrators with
batons, sticks and iron rods on the head, face, hands and legs, injuring
more than 20 of them.
On 22 April, the government called a rally on Meskel Square to
condemn the killing in Libya of Ethiopian migrants by affiliates of the
armed group Islamic State (IS). When some demonstrators shouted slogans
during the rally, police used excessive force, including tear gas and
beatings, to disperse the crowd, which escalated the situation to
clashes between protesters and police. A journalist reported that 48
people had been injured and admitted to hospital, and that many others
sustained minor injuries. Hundreds were reported to have been arrested.
Woyneshet Molla, Daniel Tesfaye, Ermias Tsegaye and Betelehem Akalework
were arrested on 22 April and charged with inciting violence during the
rally. They were convicted and sentenced to two months in prison, and
were kept in custody for more than 10 days after the completion of their
prison term, although courts had ordered their release. The police
released them on bail on 2 July.
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