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Ethiopia: HRW Report
Ethiopia: HRW Report
Date distributed (ymd): 980205
Document reposted by APIC
+++++++++++++++++++++Document Profile+++++++++++++++++++++
Region: East Africa
Issue Areas: +political/rights+
Summary Contents:
This posting contains the announcement of a Human Rights Watch/Africa report
released on Ethiopia in December 1997, criticizing the failure of the Ethiopian
government to live up to its professed commitment to human rights, and
calling on the US in particular to put pressure for the government to live
up to its human rights obligations.
+++++++++++++++++end profile++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Human Rights Watch,
485 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10017-6104
TEL: 212/972-8400; FAX: 212/972-0905;
E-mail: [email protected]
1522 K Street, N.W., Washington D.C. 20005
TEL: 202/371-6592; FAX: 202/371-0124
E-mail: [email protected];
Web site: http://www.hrw.org
Note: The US Department of State's Ethiopia Country Report on Human
Rights Practices can be found at:
http://www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/1997_hrp_report
/ethiopia.html
Human Rights Curtailed in Ethiopia
(New York, December 9, 1997)
Despite frequent statements about its commitment to the enforcement
of human rights standards in the country, the Ethiopian government's actual
practices, detailed in Ethiopia: The Curtailment of Rights released by
Human Rights Watch today, significantly deviate from these principles.
The government daily violates the civil and political rights of Ethiopian
citizens by denying them the basic freedoms of speech, assembly, and association.
The practices of arbitrary arrest, ill-treatment and torture in detention
continue under the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF)
which took power in May 1991 after defeating the Derg military dictatorship.
Commenting on the announced visit by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
to Ethiopia today, Peter Takirambudde, the Executive Director of the Africa
Division of Human Rights Watch said "we are reminding the United States
that it is time to insist that Ethiopia meets its international human rights
obligations. We call on the U.S. government to use its economic and strategic
support for the country to induce and to facilitate human rights improvements."
With the legacy of the Derg behind it, the EPRDF proclaimed, as it instituted
a four-year transitional period (1991-1995), its commitment to democratization
and respect for the rule of law and pledged to establish human rights in
the country. The transitional legislature ratified the major international
human rights treaties. The constitution of today's Federal Democratic Republic
of Ethiopia offers detailed basic human rights guarantees and provides
for the incorporation into domestic laws of all the human rights treaties
to which Ethiopia is party. New laws were enacted that guarantee the respect
of human rights and civil liberties, institute the independence of the
judiciary and the press, and provide for multipartyism and free universal
suffrage, theoretically allowing the convening of competitive elections
for the first time in the country's history.
Upon taking power in 1991, the EPRDF actively promoted a policy of ethnic
federalism that influenced the subsequent constitutional, political, and
administrative restructuring of the country. At the same time, it moved
effectively to dominate the political system by favoring regional parties
affiliated with it and clamping down on opposition and civil society groups.
The emerging contours of the political scene generated a particular
set of human rights problems. Among the major human rights concerns:
- Arbitrary Arrest and Torture: In remote regions, where government forces
sporadically confronted armed dissident groups pressing for self determination
on ethnic grounds, village shakedowns followed armed encounters or were
used to preempt such encounters. As a result, hundreds of civilians were
held in 1996 and 1997 under the authority of regional governments that
suspected them of supporting armed opposition groups. As documented in
Ethiopia: The Curtailment of Rights, this particular category of detainees
faced the greatest risk of political killings, torture, and harsh and inhumane
treatment, mainly at the hands of members of rural militias and other security
forces that enforce law and order in remote rural areas. The absence of
effective judicial oversight and the restriction of the work of most rights
monitoring groups to the capital has meant most of those suffering abuse
have had no recourse to legal remedy or to public denunciation.
- Freedom of Expression: Other crackdowns severely curtailed the exercise
of civil and political rights. The government attempted to bring a boisterous
private press in line by the routine use of detention and imprisonment,
and the imposition of prohibitive fines and bail amounts on journalists
and editors.
- Freedom of Association: The exercise of constitutionally guaranteed
freedom of association was severely curtailed as activists loyal to the
government targeted the two largest labor organizations in the country,
the Ethiopian's Teachers' Association (ETA) and the Confederation of Ethiopian
Trade Unions (CETU), for control. Indicative of the predicament of ETA
was that its president, Dr. Taye Wolde Semayat, started his second year
in prison in May 1997, pending the conclusion of his trial on charges of
heading an armed clandestine anti-government group. And on May 8, 1997,
the police said they had shot and killed his successor at the head of ETA,
Assefa Maru. The police statement claimed that the union official, who
was also an executive committee member of the independent Ethiopian Human
Rights Council, resisted arrest when police caught him preparing a terrorist
act with other accomplices, and charged that he had replaced Dr. Taye as
the leader of the clandestine armed group. Human Rights Watch interviews
with eyewitnesses and photographic evidence, indicated that Assefa Maru
was shot in the street on the way to his office. According to the testimonies,
at least four police teams took part in the assassination-style killing.
Despite constitutional guarantees of the right to associate and organize,
conflicting policy and administrative regulations have left non-governmental
organizations in confusion and uncertainty. Newly founded organizations
have found it difficult to register, some already existing organizations
have been deregistered. The government continued to deny the veteran Ethiopian
Human Rights Council legal status, contending that it was a political organization.
In November 1997, seven Oromo elders and board members of the newly founded
Human Rights League were detained and charged, in December, with terrorism
and stockpiling of arms. The Ogaden Human Rights Committee, established
in 1995, operates clandestinely and publishes its reports outside the country.
Founded in 1992, the Oromo Ex-Prisoners For Human Rights similarly continued
to function in a perilous clandestinity.
- Freedom of Assembly: Under Ethiopian law, organizers of political meetings
and demonstrations are required only to notify the competent government
authorities prior to convening an event. The government managed, however,
to restrict freedom of assembly by introducing a de facto permit system
by virtue of which it stalled in acknowledging notifications and declared
events which went ahead anyway as illegal, and therefore subject to dispersal
and the arrest of participants. The government required some of those it
arrested for taking part in political meetings and anti-government demonstrations,
such as the 1997 demonstrations in Addis Ababa by shopkeepers and students,
to submit written statements admitting their participation in an illegal
activity, promising not to repeat the act, and praying for its pardon to
be released. With threats of unspecified punishments hanging over their
heads, the detained demonstrators all submitted to this humiliating ritual,
which in addition implied that they would forfeit their constitutional
right of peaceful assembly.
- The Judicial System: In the face of an all-dominant party and powerful
executive branch, victims of abuses had no redress. The restructuring of
the judiciary, which had already suffered sweeping political purges in
the immediate aftermath of the fall of the Derg, has led to further pressure
on its meager capacities, resulting in its near paralysis. Despite significant
government efforts to reform the judiciary and ease its bottlenecks, judges
who try to uphold the rule of law are frequently defeated by local officials
who refuse to comply. The Council of Peoples' Representatives initiated
preparations in 1996 for the establishment of a human rights commission
and ombudsman institution to fill in some of the gaps in the rights protection
regime. By the end of 1997, no concrete steps in that direction had as
yet been taken. The credibility of the new police force, which was meant
to be established under civilian control, and made accountable before the
law, suffered serious setbacks following the role of the police in some
troubling political cases, particularly the killing in May 1997 of Assefa
Maru.
- The "Derg Trials": In 1994, Human Rights Watch published
"Reckoning Under the Law," detailing the process of accountability
for officials of the Derg who committed atrocities. By the third quarter
of 1997, the trials on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity
of the seventy-two top-ranking Derg officials, including Col. Mengistu
Haile Mariam, who had fled to Zimbabwe shortly before the fall of Addis
Ababa to the EPRDF, were still pending. As for the majority of those detained
in relation to their suspected role during the Derg dictatorship, it was
only in the first quarter of 1997 that the Special Prosecutor's Office
announced they had been charged with criminal offences. The Office charged
a total of 5,198 people, of whom 2,246 were already in detention, while
2,952 were charged in absentia. The vast majority of the defendants were
charged with genocide and war crimes, and alternatively charged with aggravated
homicide and wilful injury. Many of the defendants were in pre-trial detention
for almost six years before they were brought to court.
The Role of the International Community: Ethiopian government officials
frequently made statements that equated the expression of human rights
concerns by representatives of the international community with interference
in the internal affairs of the country. In any case, Ethiopia's partners
in the international community gave mixed signals. They considered the
country a model of economic reforms, and strategic ally both for the stabilization
of the Horn of Africa region and for the diplomatic and military containment
of perceived threats from the Islamist government of neighboring Sudan.
This led to firm commitments of aid, and less resolve as to the conditioning
of that aid on human rights improvements and sound governance benchmarks.
Five years into this strategic alliance, concerned representatives of the
international community still had no focal point to which they could bring
their queries about abuses, and their appeals were rarely answered.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To the Ethiopian Government Abide by the provisions of the Constitution
of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, and the international human
rights instruments to which Ethiopia is party, in particular the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, taking measures to this effect
to:
- guarantee the physical and psychological integrity of all Ethiopians
currently in detention, and immediately release those illegally detained;
- put an end to the practice of illegal or arbitrary detention as well
as ill-treatment or torture of detainees and extrajudicial executions;
- guarantee the independence of the judiciary as required by the Ethiopian
constitution and international law. Particularly, allocate sufficient financial
resources to the judiciary, ensure the proper training of judges and others
involved in the administration of justice, and hold police and other officials
who interfere with the independence of the judiciary or refuse to obey
court orders accountable before the law;
- respect freedom of association, by immediately lifting all legal and
bureaucratic obstacles hindering the registration of existing and new nongovernmental
organizations;
- cease the arbitrary detention and harassment of activists in nonviolent
civil organizations. Stop all unlawful attacks on these organizations in
the form of raids against their offices and projects, confiscation of their
property, and freezing of their bank accounts;
- respect freedom of assembly, by lifting restrictions on political meetings
and public demonstrations imposed by law and in practice, and halting arbitrary
police actions to ban and disperse such meetings and demonstrations;
- respect freedom of expression, by lifting arbitrary restrictions on
the print and public broadcasting media; and ceasing the detention and
imprisonment of journalists for the expression of their opinions;
- respect academic freedom, by removing all restrictions on faculty and
students' rights to associate and assemble;
- recognize the rights of Ethiopian human rights defenders to monitor,
investigate, and report on human rights abuses in the country; and their
rights to associate with others nationally and internationally in pursuit
of the promotion of human rights and their protection in the country.
Establish a civilian, accountable police force, and strengthen the training
of its personnel on issues of due process of law and on human rights standards
and protections. To that effect:
- conduct an independent inquiry into the killing of Assefa Maru, executive
committee member of both the Ethiopian Teachers Association and the Ethiopian
Human Rights Council, at the hands of police officers;
- investigate all other allegations of police abuse and improper treatment
of detained persons; hold police officials responsible for such abuses
accountable before the law.
Establish a permanent human rights commission which is genuinely independent
of the government, empowering it to:
- monitor and report on compliance with the human rights standards enshrined
in the domestic legal system and the international instruments to which
Ethiopia is party;
- establish its own priorities, which should include investigating reports
of violations of the right to life and security of the person, and the
right to freedom from torture and arbitrary arrest and detention;
- submit findings to judicial bodies so that perpetrators, including
those within the security forces, are brought to justice;
- ensure that victims of abuses receive the adequate remedies that their
cases call for, including protection for witnesses appearing before it
and compensation for and rehabilitation of victims of abuses perpetrated
by security forces.
To the International Community Human Rights Watch urges members of the
international community to press the government of Ethiopia to implement
the above recommendations, in particular by using their economic support
to the country to induce and to facilitate tangible human rights improvements.
In particular:
- support efforts by organizations of civil society to promote human
rights standards and monitor government's compliance;
- target assistance to the judiciary in order to improve its capacity
and encourage its independence;
- encourage the establishment of a permanent independent human rights
commission through the extension of financial and technical support.
This material is being reposted for wider distribution by the Africa
Policy Information Center (APIC), the educational affiliate of the Washington
Office on Africa. APIC's primary objective is to widen the policy debate
in the United States around African issues and the U.S. role in Africa,
by concentrating on providing accessible policy-relevant information and
analysis usable by a wide range of groups individuals.
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