Nairobi, October 5,
2012--Ethiopian authorities should halt their harassment of journalists
covering the country's Muslim community and their intimidation of citizens who
have tried to speak to reporters about sensitive religious, ethnic, and
political issues, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.
Police in the capital,
Addis Ababa, briefly detained Marthe Van Der Wolf, a reporter with the U.S.
government-funded broadcaster Voice
of Americaas she was covering a protest by members of Ethiopia's Muslim community
at the Anwar Mosque, local journalists said. The protesters were demonstrating
against alleged government interference in Islamic
Council elections scheduled for Sunday,
according to VOA and local journalists.
Wolf was taken to a police station and told to erase her recorded
interviews, and then released without charge, local journalists said.
This week, security officers have also harassed Ethiopian citizens who
were interviewed by VOA's Amharic-language service, according to the station.
Police arrested two individuals who spoke to VOA on Thursday about a land dispute
outside the capital, VOA reported. On Monday, police harassed individuals who
spoke to the station about a dispute over resources between ethnic communities,
the outlet said.
"We urge the government's leadership to set a new tone of tolerance
and halt the bullying tactics of the past," said CPJ East Africa
Consultant Tom Rhodes. "Citizens should be allowed to voice their opinions
to journalists without fearing arrest or intimidation, and reporters should be
allowed to cover even those events the government dislikes."
For much of the year,
Ethiopian authorities have cracked
down on journalists and news outlets
reporting on the unprecedented protests by members of the Muslim community,
according to CPJ research. In May, police detained former VOA correspondent Peter Heinlein overnight on accusations of
"illegal reporting" for covering a similar protest, VOAreported.
VOA released a statement today that condemned the harassment and obstruction and said the
incident was "designed to prevent journalists from doing their job."
Three Muslim-oriented papers have not been published in the country
since July after police raided the outlets and searched the homes of their
editors. Yusuf Getachew, editor of Ye
Muslimoch Guday, has been imprisoned on charges of treason and incitement
to violence for reporting on the grievances of the Muslim community, and at
least two journalists, Senior Editor Akemel Negash and copy editor Isaac
Eshetu, have fled into hiding, according to CPJ research.
With six journalists in
jail, Ethiopia is the second leading jailer of journalists in Africa, second
only to its neighbor, Eritrea, according to CPJ
research.
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