He is one of Ethiopia’s most critical journalists. Muluken Tesfaw is
in Europe and too scared to return. He doesn’t want to share his
location, but talked to DW about press freedom declining dramatically in
his country.
According to a report by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ),
released late last year, the number of journalists imprisoned in Iran,
Vietnam, and Ethiopia increased in 2015. The report said that in all
three countries a climate of fear for the media persists, with many of
those released continuing to face legal charges or harsh restrictions,
including forced exile.
DW: Why did you flee your country?
Muluken Tesfaw: I just came to Europe, because I wanted to
participate in the World Press Freedom Day celebrations on May 3rd in
Helsinki. I was representing journalists from my country there.
After that, I got many messages from family members and friends. They
strictly warned me not to come back to Ethiopia. They said, they were
questioned by different security officers and unknown people, and the
manager of my newspaper was also held by police in the eastern part of
Addis Ababa. And, for many other reasons that I can’t talk about now, I
am obliged to ask for asylum and legal protection, here where I am.
As a journalist, what did you have to go through back in your home country?
I tried my best for the development of a free press in Ethiopia.
Since 2012, I have worked as a columnist, reporter, editor and
editor-in-chief in different newspapers like Ethio-Mihdar and Yekelem
Qend and I’ve been featured on many other websites. While doing my job, I
was jailed and tortured in 2012. And last year during the elections,
security officers followed me.
Whenever I went to my home or came out, there were people around –
that’s why I had to hide in a monastery near Lake Tana. I was in hiding
there for about two weeks. After the elections I returned to Addis.
Since then I got a lot of intimidating phone calls and I was also
physically attacked. I reported these intimidations to the human rights
council and wrote about it in social media and in the newspaper. In my
articles, I always speak about human rights violations, press freedom
and so forth. I highly criticized the regime.
What does that mean for your fellow journalists back in Ethiopia, what can you tell us about their situation?
Frankly speaking the press environment there is locked. Last year
alone, more than 20 journalists and activists were forced into exile.
Dozens of newspapers and magazines were forced to close down by the
regime. The government might give you a license, but after you have it,
there is no fertile ground towork with the license. I think the
international community can understand that the press environment in
Ethiopia is much more in danger than ever.
Why do you think is the government so sensitive to some of the news coverage that you do?
I just try to investigate facts, but there are still so many
challenges. The government is totally autocratic. In a totalitarian
government like in Ethiopia, it’s the nature of such regimes to be
prohibitive. Sometimes they want to be seen by foreigners as being more
democratic and liberal, but practically they are very autocratic. That’s
the nature and behavior of the Ethiopian regime.
Interview: Eunice Wanjiru (DW)
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