Ethiopia: Crackdown Spreads Beyond Capital
As Arbitrary Arrests Continue, Detainees Face Torture
 
(New York, June 15, 2005) — In the wake of last week's election-
related protests, the Ethiopian government's crackdown on potential 
sources of unrest has spread throughout the country, Human Rights 
Watch said today. While international attention has focused on events 
in Addis Ababa, opposition members and students in other cities are 
increasingly at risk of arbitrary arrest and torture.

The current wave of arrests followed a chaotic week in Addis Ababa 
that saw security forces put down a series of election-related protests 
with excessive force. The disorder in the capital reached a bloody peak 
on Wednesday, when security forces responded to incidents of rock-
throwing and looting by opening fire indiscriminately on large crowds 
of people, killing at least 36 and wounding more than 100.   
  
The Ethiopian government has refused to accept any responsibility for 
the shootings, insisting that the opposition Coalition for Unity and 
Democracy (CUD) was wholly to blame because of its alleged 
involvement in organizing the protests in defiance of a citywide ban on 
demonstrations in the capital.   
  
"Opposition rhetoric may well have contributed to last week's unrest, 
but the government must take responsibility for the conduct of its own 
security forces," said Georgette Gagnon, deputy Africa director at 
Human Rights Watch. "The security forces have killed dozens of 
protesters and arbitrarily detained thousands of people across the 
country."   
  
Since protests over alleged electoral fraud in the country's May 15 
elections erupted last week in Addis Ababa and several other towns, 
police and other security officials have detained several thousand 
people throughout Ethiopia. Many of those swept up in the initial 
round of mass arrests in the capital and elsewhere have since been 
released, but smaller-scale arrests targeting CUD supporters and 
student activists have continued unabated.   
  
The Ethiopian Constitution mandates that detainees be taken to court 
within 48 hours of their arrest and informed of the reasons for their 
detention. However, almost none of the people swept up in the past 
week's arrests have been brought before a judge.   
  
The situation of individuals detained in towns relatively far from the 
capital is of particular concern, as little is known about their total 
numbers, the reasons for their arrest or the conditions under which 
they are being held. Local officials in many towns have cast a very 
wide net, arbitrarily detaining individuals they suspect of being 
sympathetic to last week's demonstrations. Most of these detainees are 
locally prominent CUD members and students.   
  
"Given the Ethiopian security forces' long record of detainee abuse, 
there is every reason to worry that those arrested are being 
mistreated," 
Gagnon said. "This is especially true for those who have been detained 
in towns far from the media spotlight that has focused on Addis Ababa 
in recent days."   
  
Human Rights Watch has obtained reports of mass arrests in at least 
nine cities outside of Addis Ababa since last Monday. In Gondar, Bure, 
Bahir Dar, Debre Markos, Dessie and Awassa, several hundred 
students were arrested after police forcibly put down peaceful 
election-
related student demonstrations. Police subsequently released many of 
those detained, but at least several dozen students remain in detention 
without charge.   
  
In addition, security forces in Gondar, Dessie, Wondo Genet, 
Kombolcha and Jinka have arrested several dozen locally prominent 
CUD members over the course of the past several days. Unconfirmed 
reports of arrests following a similar pattern have emerged from 
several other towns. Government officials have offered no public 
acknowledgement of or explanation for any of these arrests.   
  
Security forces have also continued to arrest large numbers of CUD 
supporters in the capital over the course of the past several days. 
They 
have also detained three investigators for the Ethiopian Human Rights 
Council, all of whom had been working to gather information about 
the continuing arrests.   
  
Large numbers of prisoners are being held at the Ziway detention 
facility, about 150 kilometers south of the capital. The total number 
of 
detainees being held there is unknown, and the government has not 
allowed any outside groups to access the facility. Some of the students 
recently released from the Sendafa detention facility, 40 kilometers 
north of Addis Ababa, after being detained last Monday reported that 
they were forced to perform a series of exhausting drills and exercises 
as a form of punishment.   
  
"The Ethiopian security forces' long history of mistreating detainees 
arrested for political reasons is hardly a secret," said Gagnon. "The 
international community should call on the Ethiopian government to 
immediately open up these detention facilities to international 
scrutiny."   
  
On several occasions over the course of the past four years, police 
beat 
and tortured large numbers of university and secondary school 
students they arrested following student protests in Addis Ababa and 
in towns throughout Oromia region. Many of those student detainees 
were kept in prison for weeks or months without ever being brought 
before a judge. Security forces have subjected other perceived 
dissidents to similarly abusive treatment and prolonged periods of 
arbitrary detention.   
  
Last week's bloodshed in Addis Ababa was also not the first time that 
Ethiopian security forces have killed large numbers of protesters. In 
April 2001, police killed more than 30 people and wounded an 
estimated 400 more in putting down a student demonstration at Addis 
Ababa University. And in May 2002, police opened machine-gun fire 
on protesters in Awassa, killing an estimated 38 people.

To view this document on the Human Rights Watch web site, please 
visit: http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/06/15/ethiop11124.htm


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