ADDIS ABABA – Twenty Ethiopians, including a prominent blogger, journalists and opposition figures were jailed for between eight years and life yesterday on charges of conspiring with rebels to topple the government.
Rights groups condemned the sentences and the Committee to Protect Journalists said it showed Ethiopia was using an “iron fist” to crush critical reporting.
The Horn of Africa nation, a major recipient of western aid, is fighting separatist rebel movements and armed groups it says are backed by arch-foe Eritrea.
But rights groups say Ethiopia, sandwiched between volatile Somalia and Sudan, uses security concerns as an excuse to crack down on dissent and media freedoms.
The Addis Ababa government, a key ally in Washington’s campaign against Islamist militants in Somalia, denies the charge.
Blogger and journalist Eskinder Nega, who was arrested last year and accused of trying to incite violence with a series of online articles, was jailed for 18 years. Five other exiled journalists were sentenced in absentia to between 15 years and life. Andualem Arage, from the opposition Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJ) party, was jailed for life. Two other prominent opposition figures, Berhanu Nega and Andargachew Tsige, both out of the country, also received life sentences.
“The court has given due considerations to the charges and the sentences are appropriate,” Judge Endeshaw Adane said in court.
The 20 were charged last year, most of them in absentia, with counts including conspiracy to dismantle the constitutional order, recruitment and training for terror acts, and aiding Eritrea and a rebel group to disrupt security.
They were also accused of belonging to Ginbot 7, a group branded a “terrorist” organisation by the government.
Another four people charged with them were not sentenced and were being treated as a separate case, said court officials.
Eskinder Nega’s lawyer Abebe Guta said his client would appeal the sentence. Nega wrote for diaspora-based blogs. “We can’t even express our fundamental rights anymore,” UDJ member Temesgen Zewdie said.
“This sentence makes clear that Ethiopia’s growth and stability is dependent on an iron fist from a leadership intolerant of critical reporting or journalists seeking public accountability,” said Mohamed Keita from the Committee to Protect Journalists. Amnesty International said: “The Ethiopian government is treating calls for peaceful protest as a terrorist act and is outlawing the legitimate activity of journalists and opposition members.” – (Reuters)