How Debrestion & Co are Making Ethiopia A Prison State
There’s a knock at your door. You open it, only to find several grave-looking police officers accusing you of a crime you didn’t commit. They pull out records of your most recent phone calls and tie you to your alleged co-conspirator, and now you’re screwed. This is Ethiopia.
According
to a
recent Human Rights Watch (HRW) report, Ethiopian
surveillance of phones and emails is rampant. Eskinder
Nega, a journalist and dissident blogger, reports being
shown emails, text messages, and phone recordings when approached by
Ethiopian police who were investigating him. Nega’s newspaper,
Ethiopis,
was shut down for being critical of the Ethiopian government’s
abuses in freedom of expression and freedom of the press. Nega was
sentenced to 18 years in prison for allegedly conspiring against the
government in July of 2012.
TPLF's Long-arm Don't Spare Diaspora Ethiopians
“Ethiopia
certainly doesn’t have the resources or capacity to engage in
surveillance on the scale of the NSA—very few governments do,”
Cynthia Wong, a Senior Researcher at HRW, told me. “The biggest
difference, however, is that Ethiopia is using surveillance
to
silence dissent and opposition parties. While we don’t know the
full extent of who the NSA is monitoring, there is no evidence yet
that suggests that the NSA is broadly targeting critics or political
opposition groups, as we have found in Ethiopia.”
Ethiopia,
despite a dreadful history of human rights abuses, is a key
African ally of the United States. But even American citizens with
relations to Ethiopia are not safe from the surveillance program. The
report highlights a US citizen by the name of “Kidane,” who
runs technical support for Ethiopian diaspora groups, who found that
his computer had been infected with spyware that was recording his
Skype calls, emails, and web searches.
Wong
claims the surveillance is used during abusive investigations and
that police and the government have “unfettered access to call
records and intercepted phone calls.” She says even the citizen’s
protections that exist on paper are systematically ignored, and that
one of the justifications the Ethiopian government gives for
operating at such a level is the ongoing war on terror.
Is The USA a Complicit?
It
seems Ethiopia, as an ally of the United States, is taking notes from
the American playbook. In order to fight against anyone
who opposes it, the Ethiopian government is finding ways to
silence them under the guise of “terrorism.” “Anything it does
to go after terrorists in its state is largely supported by the
United States,” Eva Galperin, Global Policy Analyst at the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, told me. “When they start labeling
journalist and political dissidents as terrorists, that’s really
problematic, because it sort of makes us complicit in their human
rights abuses.”
Essentially,
the Ethiopian government has learned it can do whatever it wants in
surveillance, as guided by the precedent set by the United
States.
“They’ve
learned that 'terrorism' is a very powerful word, both in domestic
and foreign policy,” Galperin says. “If you can name your enemies
'terrorists,' and say that you are fighting terrorism by monitoring
these Ethiopian dissidents, it’s possible for the government to
come out of this looking really good as strong ‘war on terror’
allies in Africa.”
As
a fighter of “terrorism” and an ally of the United States,
Ethiopia is afforded certain opportunities in the international
market. The country has been able to acquire server access and
spyware technology from western countries. Hacking
Team (Italy) and Gamma/FinFisher
(UK/Germany) are two companies the HRW report identifies as being
compliant in the country’s efforts. There is no specific evidence
of US software or servers being used in the surveillance, but it
certainly wouldn’t require a stretch of the imagination.
“Trade
in surveillance equipment is currently unregulated at the
international level,” Wong told me. She believes that the world
community needs to instigate regulations on the trade and selling of
surveillance equipment around the world, as to protect the
investigation of human rights abuses. She thinks the EU needs to take
control of where this equipment is going so it doesn’t end up in
the wrong hands.
“The
U.S. really needs to reconsider Ethiopia as a strong African ally,”
Galperin says. A country with such a tattered history of abusing its
own citizens and turning a blind eye to censorship should not be a
country we put support behind. The United States is obviously a
country that should be concerned with terrorism. However, when the
goal becomes getting away with whatever you can under the umbrella of
fighting terrorism, it becomes a serious problem, Galperin adds.
Surveillance
of phone calls, emails, and texts makes sense when you’re
investigating a Taliban leader, but is it walking on thin ice
when it’s a tech support guy? Possibly. Just not
in Mexico.
Source: MotherBoard
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