Reporters Sans Fronetiers (RSF), one of the International Freedom of Expression watchdogs disclosed this today following yesterday's orchestrated trial held in Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa. Since the prosecutor couldn't corroborate the fabricated charges against these innocent citizens who did nothing but exercised birthrights, it repeats the two decades tradition by denying bail and adjourning the trial for the 8th times. Here's the details of RSF's reportage about the "hearing".
Three
journalists and six bloggers who have been held
for the past five months were denied bail by a federal court in
Addis Ababa yesterday after the prosecution argued that article 3 of
the 2009 anti-terrorism law, under which they are detained, precludes
release on bail.
The
defence said article 3’s bail prohibition does not apply because
none of them has been individually charged with a specific crime
under the anti-terrorism law. The defence also argued that article 3
violates the constitutional guarantee of the right to release on
bail.
The
three journalists are
Tesfalem
Waldyes, Edom Kasaye
and Asmamaw
Hailegiorgis,
and the six bloggers – all members of the Zone
9
collective – are Atnaf
Berhane, Mahlet Fantahun, Befekadu Hailu, Abel Wabella, Natnail
Feleke
and Zelalem
Kibret.
One of the collective’s co-founders, Soliyana
Shimelis,
is being prosecuted in absentia.
“The
Ethiopian government is clearly trying to gag the media,” said
Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire.
“These three journalists and nine bloggers have been held for
nearly five months without being given the least guarantee of due
process. The prosecution still has not said what precisely they are
supposed to have done to justify the charges. We call for their
immediate release because they have no place being in prison.”
The
prosecution accused them on 17 July of “organizing themselves into
covert sub-groups to overthrow the government by contacting and
receiving finance and training from two designated terrorist groups”
– the US-based opposition group Ginbot 7 and the separatist Oromo
Liberation Front (OLF). They are facing up to 15 years in prison
under the anti-terrorism law.
Restrictions
on freedom of information have grown in recent months in Ethiopia,
where at least six journalists are currently detained in connection
with their work. A state broadcaster fired
20 employees because of their political views on 25 June, and the
justice ministry announced on 5 August that it intended to bring
criminal charges against six news publications for “encouraging
terrorism and endangering national security.”
Ethiopia
is ranked 143rd out of 180 countries in the 2014
Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.
Source: RSF
Source: RSF
No comments:
Post a Comment