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Tuesday, December 18, 2012
For Immediate Release: 16 Members of the European Parliament Call for the Release of Imprisoned Ethiopian Journalist Eskinder Nega
December 18, 2012
For Immediate Release
For Immediate Release
Contact: Patrick Griffith
+1 (202) 423-7925
pgriffith@freedom-now.org
+1 (202) 423-7925
pgriffith@freedom-now.org
16 Members of the
European Parliament Call for the Release of Imprisoned Ethiopian
Journalist Eskinder Nega
Washington, D.C.: Today, 16
members of the European Parliament issued a public letter to Ethiopian Prime
Minster Hailemariam Desalegn expressing their grave concern regarding the
continued detention of imprisoned journalist and blogger Eskinder Nega.
Arrested in 2011 and detained
without access to an attorney for nearly two months, Mr. Nega was sentenced to
18 years in prison under the country’s broad 2009 Anti-Terrorism Proclamation
on July 13, 2012. Mr. Nega’s arrest and prosecution came after he wrote online
articles and spoke publicly about the possibility of an Arab Spring-like
movement taking place in Ethiopia. After his sentencing, the government
initiated proceedings to seize his assets, including the home still used by his
wife and young son. An appeal hearing in the case is scheduled for Wednesday,
December 19th.
The letter, notes that the
Ethiopian government has an obligation to uphold the right to free expression
and reminds the newly appointed Prime Minister that he has “the unique
opportunity to lead Ethiopia forward on human rights and bring the country
fully within the community of nations.” The letter closes by urging the Prime
Minister to take all measures within his power “to facilitate the immediate and
unconditional release of Mr. Nega.”
“This is an important
recognition by members of the European Parliament from across the political
spectrum that the right to free expression is universal and must be respected
by the Ethiopian government,” said Freedom Now Executive Director Maran Turner.
“Mr. Nega has been wrongfully detained in Ethiopia in violation of his right to
freedom of expression, and he must be released.”
The text of the letter is
copied below and a full PDF of the letter can be found at the below link.
Freedom Now, a legal advocacy organization that represents prisoners of
conscience around the world, serves as international pro bono counsel to Mr.
Nega.
###
Dear Prime Minister Desalegn,
We write to express our grave
concern regarding the continued detention of independent Ethiopian journalist
and blogger Eskinder Nega and urge you to facilitate his immediate release.
Mr. Nega, a longtime publisher
and journalist, was arrested in 2011 and charged under the country’s 2009
Anti-Terror Proclamation after he wrote and spoke publicly about the
Arab-Spring movements then unfolding across the Middle East and North Africa.
Although clearly sympathetic, Mr. Nega consistently emphasized that any similar
movements in Ethiopia must remain peaceful. Despite this, the government of
your predecessor Prime Minister Meles Zenawi arrested Mr. Nega, held him
without access to family for nearly one month and without access to an attorney
for nearly two months, and ultimately sentenced him to 18 years in prison. Even
now, reports indicate that proceedings are underway to seize Mr. Nega’s home,
where his wife and young son continue to live.
Unfortunately, Mr. Nega is not
alone—journalists Woubshet Taye and Reyot Alemu have also received long prison
sentences on terror charges. In response to your government’s use of the 2009
Anti-Terror Proclamation against journalists and opposition leaders, the
African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, and five United Nations Special
Rapporteurs—including the Special Rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human
rights—have all expressed alarm at this worrying trend. As some have noted, the
use of vague anti-terror legislation to silence legitimate expression threatens
to seriously undermine the credibility of efforts to address real security
threats to the region.
It is our understanding that
appeal proceedings in Mr. Nega’s case are ongoing and we respect your need to
allow the judicial process to continue. However, it is also your government’s
obligation to respect the right to freedom of expression as established under
customary international law and codified in Article 19 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Ethiopia is a party.
You now have the unique
opportunity to lead Ethiopia forward on human rights and bring the country
fully within the community of nations. As such, we urge you to take all
measures within your power to facilitate the immediate and unconditional
release of Mr. Nega.
Sincerely,
Alexander Graf Lambsdorff
Ana Gomes
Charles
Tannock
Eduard
Kukan
Eija-Riitta
Korhola
Emilio
Menendez del Valle
Fiona
Hall
Frank
Engel
Kinga
Gál
Laima Liucija Andrikienė
Maria Da Graça Carvalho
Mariya Gabriel
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