The Addis Abeba prison administration Qilinto prison police
have this morning brought prominent opposition figure Bekele Gerba and
the 21 others in the same file for a hearing at a court all barefoot.
The detainees were also wearing mere shorts and t-shirts when they
appeared at the Federal High Court 19th Criminal Bench here in the capital.
Once inside the court room the detainees, through Bekele Gerba, first
secretary general of the opposition Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC),
told the judges that the police have come to their cells in Qilinto, a
prison in the outskirt of south of Addis Abeba, yesterday and stripped
them all of their clothes and shoes to prevent them from wearing black
upon appearing in court this morning.
On May 11 the police have failed to bring the 22 detainees, all
charged with Ethiopia’s infamous Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, ATP, to
the court because all them were wearing black to protest their arrest.
However, the police have told the court this morning that they didn’t
bring defendants during the last hearing because they have not received a
letter from the court. The judge told the police at the court this
morning that the police officers on duty on May 11 must appear in court
to explain the real reason.
Bekele also told the court that he and his co-defendants were
subjected to torture and other forms of physical and psychological
abuses inside the prison and requested the judge for a change of prison.
But the judge denied the request.
The 22 defendants were all arrested between November and December 2015, shortly after the start (and in connection with) Oromo protests in November
that gripped the nation for the next five months. Defendants include
several members of OFC, students and civil servants who came from
various parts of the Oromia regional state.
Prosecutors have charged
the 22 with various articles of the ATP. The charges include, but not
limited to, alleged membership of the banned Oromo Liberation Front
(OLF), public incitement, encouraging violence, as well as causing the
death of innocent civilians and property destructions in cities such as
Ambo and Adama, 120km west and 100km east of Addis Abeba during the
recent Oromo protests in Ethiopia. This morning all of the defendants
have presented a written defense statement. The court adjourned the next
hearing until June 27.
In a related development, the police at Qilinto
have failed to bring this morning 16 other individuals, all from the
Oromia regional state and were detained in connection with the
#OromoProtests, to the court. The 16 detainees, under the file name of
Tesema Regasa were first brought to the court on April 26. They were
subsequently charged with the ATP and have, last month, presented their
defense statements to the court. Today’s court appearance was adjourned
to hear prosecutors’ counter response for the defense statements. The
court re-adjourned the next hearing until June 15.
Wondimu Ebbissa, who is representing Bekele Gerba et.al, said last
month that more than 80 defendants, including Bekele Gerba et al, were
held in Qilinto and a further 97 were believed to be either at the Ethiopian Federal Polcie Force Central Bureau of Criminal Investigation, known in Amharic as Ma’ekelawi, or the Addis Abeba police prison facility near it. All of them are detained in connection with #OromoProtests.
In a separate development, the Federal High Court 19th
Criminal Bench yesterday adjourned the hearing for Yonatan Tesfaye,
former spokesman of the opposition Semayawi (Blue) Party, until June 21.
The court received Yonatan’s defense statement in its hearing and
adjourned the next hearing to receive prosecutor’s counter statement.
Last month prosecutors have
charged Yonatan with ATP and have presented as evidence the defendant’s
Facebook status updates during the #OromoProtests. The charges against
Yonatan allege that he was posting inciting message on his Facebook,
encouraging protesters to loot and destruct properties. Charges also
allege Yonatan was calling for regime change through violence.
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