They speak of democracy but act violently
to suppress dissenting voices and control the people through the inculcation of
fear. They ignore human rights and trample on the people. They are tyrannical
wolves in democratic sheep’s clothing, causing suffering and misery to
thousands of people throughout Ethiopia .
The right to
protest
The Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary
Democratic Front (EPRDF) government repeatedly scoffs at
international law and consistently acts in violation of its own federal
constitution – a liberal document written by the regime to please and deceive
its foreign supporters. It has enacted laws of repression: the widely condemned
Charities and Societies Law and the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation – the main tool
of political control – together with the Mass Media and Freedom of Information
Proclamation form a formidable and unjust arsenal of government control. Freedom
of the media (which is largely “state-owned”) is denied and political dissent
is all but outlawed.
Against this repressive backdrop, the
Semayawi (Blue) Party, a new opposition group, organized peaceful protests on 2
June in Addis
Ababa .
Ten thousand or so people marched through the capital demanding the release of
political prisoners, “respect for the constitution” and justice. It was,
Reuters news agency reported, an “anti-government procession… the first
large-scale protest since a disputed 2005 election ended in street violence that
killed 200 people” – a “disputed election” result that was discredited totally
by European Union observers and denounced by opposition groups and large
swathes of the population.
The chairman of the Semayawi Party,
Yilekal Getachew, told Reuters: “We have repeatedly asked the government to
release political leaders, journalists and those who asked the government not
to intervene in religious affairs.” In keeping with the recent worldwide
movement for freedom and social justice, he stated that, “if these questions
are not resolved and no progress is made in the next three months, we will
organize more protests. It is the beginning of our struggle.”
To the disappointment of many and the
surprise of nobody, the government has made no attempt to resolve the questions
raised and, true to their word, a second demonstration was planned for 1
September in Addis Ababa . In the event, as the BBC reported, around “100
members of Ethiopia ’s opposition Semayawi Party were arrested
and some badly beaten”, and “equipment such as sound systems were confiscated”,
ahead of the planned rally, which was banned by the EPRDF. A government
cock-and-bull story was duly constructed with Communication Minister Shimeles
Kemal stating: “The venue [for Semayawi’s event] had already been booked by a
pro-government group condemning religious extremism.”
Non-interference in religious affairs is
one of the key demands of the Semayawi Party, a demand based on the
constitutional commitment of religious independence from the state, which
Muslim groups claim the government has violated. Enraged by government interference
in all matters religious, the Muslim community has organized regular
small-scale protests and sit-ins in the capital for the last two years. In
early August, Reuters reported that demonstrators chanted God is great and
hoisted banners that read “Respect the constitution”, referring to allegations
that the government has tried to influence the highest Muslim affairs body, the
Ethiopian Islamic Affairs Supreme Council.
Around 40 per cent of Ethiopia ’s population (about 85 million) are
Muslim. For generations they have lived amicably with their Orthodox Christian
neighbours, who make up the majority of the population. The Muslim community is
generally regarded as moderate in its beliefs and peaceful in its ways. The
EPRDF, in contrast, is violent, intolerant and ideologically driven,
“Revolutionary Democracy” being the particular tune to which the democratic
dictatorship hums and drums its partisan rule.
Name calling
The government’s response to the peaceful
demonstrations has been intolerant and dismissive, describing the demonstrators
as foreign-funded Muslim extremists seeking to set up an Islamic state.
Characteristically, it has also imprisoned
Muslims, prompting Amnesty International to voice extreme concern and to demand
an end to the widespread arrest of Muslim protesters and the repressive
crackdown on freedom of speech and the right to peacefully protest.
Meanwhile, protests in Kofele in the
Oromia region on 8 August ended in “the deaths of an unconfirmed number”. There
have also been reports of large numbers of people being arrested in Kofele and Addis Ababa , including two journalists.
The EPRDF does not tolerate any
independent media coverage within the country. It does all it can to control
the flow of information out of Ethiopia and restricts totally dissenting voices.
Nor does the EPRDF care who the
journalists it represses work for. In October 2012 a reporter from the Voice of
America (VOA) covering a protest in Anwar Mosque in Addis was arrested and told
to erase her recorded interviews, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
reported. This was not the first time a VOA journalist had been detained. “They
are criminalizing journalism,” said Martin Schibbye, a Swedish freelance
journalist who, together with another colleague, was jailed for more than 14
months in 2011 for entering the Ogaden region.
The Ogaden is a heavily militarized area
where wide ranging human rights violations constituting crimes against humanity
are taking place – violations which have been hidden from the international
media and aid organizations since 2007.
Unjust laws of control
In July last year, hundreds of protesting
Muslims peacefully demanding that the government stop interfering in their religious
affairs and allow them to vote freely for representatives on the Ethiopian
Islamic Affairs Supreme Council were arrested. Most were released, but 29
members of the protest committee were charged on 29October under the
universally criticized Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, accused of “intending to
advance a political, religious or ideological cause” by force, and of the
“planning, preparation, conspiracy, incitement and attempt of terrorist acts”. Their
arrest has been slammed by human rights groups as well as by the United States
Commission on Religious Freedom, which said it was “deeply concerned that Ethiopia ’s government is seeking to silence
peaceful religious freedom proponents by detaining and trying them in secret
under trumped-up terrorism charges”. Those, who are detained, claim to have
been tortured and experienced other ill-treatment in detention.
The ambiguous Anti-Terrorism Proclamation
was introduced in 2009 and has been used by the Ethiopian government “to
severely restrict basic rights of freedom of expression, association and
assembly”, Human Rights Watch states. It violates dues process which, like
a raft of other internationally recognized and legally binding rights, is
enshrined in the Ethiopian constitution.
The proclamation allows for long-term
imprisonment and the death penalty for so-called crimes that meet the EPRDF’s
definition of terrorism, and in some cases it denies a defendant’s right to be
presumed innocent – the bedrock of the international judicial system. Torture
is used without restraint by the military and police. Under the Anti-Terrorism
Proclamation evidence obtained while a prisoner is being beaten, hanged,
whipped or drowned is admissible in court, which contravenes Article 15 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture (ratified
by Ethiopia in 1994).
Violent rule, however, is a storm that is
imploding throughout the world. The people who have suffered long enough are
sensing their collective strength and are awakening.
Need for unity
Contrary to the EPRDF’s pledge of ethical
federalism, divide-and-rule is its methodology of choice. In a country with
dozens of tribal and ethnic groups, and different religious beliefs, unity is
the key to any popular social revolution. We are witnessing a worldwide protest
movement for change. Age-old values of freedom, equality and social justice,
brotherhood and peace are the clarion call of many marching and protesting
people.
And so it is in Ethiopia . The Semayawi Party and other opposition
groups, the Muslim community and the students are on the street demanding
justice. Out of step and blind to the needs of the people and their rightful
demands, the ruling party acts with violence to drown out their voices and
suppress their rights: in Addis Ababa, where thousands marched in June; in
Oromia and the Ogaden, where the people seek autonomy; in Amhara, where
thousands have been displaced; and in Gambella and the Lower Omo Valley, where
native people are being driven off their ancestral land into state-created
villages, women raped and men beaten.
Unity is the song of the day. All steps
need to be taken to remove the obstacle to the realization of unity throughout
the country – ethnic prejudices and tribal differences must be laid aside. The
Ethiopian regime may succeed in subduing the movement for change that is
simmering throughout the country, but with sustained, unified action,
peacefully undertaken and relentlessly expressed, freedom and social justice
will surely come.
Grahm Peebles
Grahm Peebles
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