FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 8, 2012| By USCIRF
The U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) is deeply concerned
about the increasing deterioration of religious freedoms for Muslims in
Ethiopia. Since July 2011, the Ethiopian government has sought to force
a change in the sect of Islam practiced nationwide
and has punished clergy and laity who have resisted. Muslims throughout
Ethiopia have been arrested during peaceful protests: On October 29, the
Ethiopia government charged 29 protestors with terrorism and attempting to
establish an Islamic state.
“These charges
are only the latest and most concerning attempt by the Ethiopian
government to crush opposition to its efforts to control the practice of
religion by imposing on Ethiopian Muslims a specific interpretation of
Islam,” said USCIRF Commissioner Azizah al-Hibri. “The
individuals charged were among tens of thousands peacefully protesting the
government’s violations of international standards and their constitutional
right to religious freedom. The Ethiopian government should cease
interfering in the internal affairs of its Muslim community and immediately
and unconditionally release those wrongfully imprisoned.”
Since July
2011, the Ethiopian government has sought to impose the al-Ahbash Islamic
sect on the country’s Muslim community, a community that traditionally has
practiced the Sufi form of Islam. The government also has manipulated
the election of the new leaders of the Ethiopia Islamic Affairs Supreme
Council (EIASC). Previously viewed as an independent body, EIASC is now
viewed as a government-controlled institution. The arrests, terrorism
charges and takeover of EIASC signify a troubling escalation in the
government’s attempts to control Ethiopia’s Muslim community and provide
further evidence of a decline in religious freedom in Ethiopia.
“The U.S. government
should raise with the new leadership in Addis Ababa the importance of abiding
by Ethiopia’s own constitution and international standards on freedom of
religion of belief. USCIRF has found that repressing religious
communities in the name of countering extremism leads to more extremism,
greater instability, and possibly violence,” said USCIRF Chair Dr. Katrina
Lantos Swett. “Given Ethiopia’s strategic importance in the Horn of
Africa and that Muslims account for more than one-third of all Ethiopians,
it is vital that the Ethiopian government end its religious freedom abuses
and allow Muslims to practice peacefully their faith as they see fit.
Otherwise, the government’s current policies and practices will lead to
greater destabilization of an already volatile region.”
Background
Ethiopian
Muslims traditionally are Sufis. Article 27 of the Ethiopian
constitution guarantees religious freedom and “the independence of the state
from religion.”
However, due
to a concern about the rise of Wahhabism in Ethiopia, the government in July
2011 brought al-Ahbash imams from Lebanon to train Ethiopian imams and
Islamic school educators on that sect’s beliefs to teach their students and
worshippers. The government dismissed from their positions those who
refused to be trained in or teach al-Ahbash and closed mosques andschools. Beginning in December 2011, protests
have been held almost every Friday outside of mosques after prayers.
While these demonstrations have taken place nationwide, they are centered at
the Awalia Mosque and Islamic school in Addis Ababa.
As the
protests continued, an Arbitration Committee of 17 Islamic leaders was
created this past spring to negotiate with the government about: 1)
respecting the Ethiopian constitution’s guarantees of religious freedom; 2)
ending government imposition of al-Ahbash on Ethiopian Muslims, while
allowing al-Ahbash to operate equally with other religious communities; 3)
re-opening and returning schools and mosques to their original imams and
administrators; and 4) holding new elections for the EIASC, and having these
elections take place in mosques, rather than in neighborhood government
community centers, to ensure that the community’s selections would be
honored.
By July, the
negotiations had failed and the protests increased in both size and
frequency. In response, the Ethiopian government started to crack down
on and intimidate the demonstrators, surrounding them with armed guards and
conducting house-to-house searches. Between July 13 and 21, the
government arrested all 17 members of the Arbitration Committee and at least
70 protestors. (While the government has confirmed 70 people were arrested,
demonstrators place the number in the hundreds). Human rights
organizations reported that the police used excessive force against
individuals during the arrests and while in detention. While many were
released after being held for a short time, nine of the Arbitration Committee
members remain in jail.
The charges
the government leveled on October 29 were the first issued against any of the
arrested protestors, including the nine Arbitration Committee members who
were not released with their colleagues in July. The individuals
charged were first detained and held in Maikelwai federal police detention
center, which frequently houses political prisoners and is known for abusing
prisoners, including torturing them during interrogations. The
individuals detained also were charged under the nation’s anti-terror law
which has been used to target dissent, rather than to stop terrorism.
Protestors now
hold up yellow or white placards to signal that they are peaceful and to
condemn the arrests and charges. While the demonstrations largely have
been peaceful, there have been a few violent incidents: On October 21,
2011 four Muslims were killed as they stormed a jail attempting to free
protestors and in April 2012 five people were killed protesting the dismissal
of an imam who refused to propagate al-Ahbash.
To interview a
USCIRF Commissioner please contact Samantha Schnitzer at sschnitzer@uscirf.gov or (202) 786-0613.
|
Monday, December 3, 2012
Statement: USCIRF Deeply Concerned by Emerging Religious Freedom Violations in Ethiopia
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