Ethiopia: Political Dissent Quashed
Election Observers Should Not Fail to Recognize Effects of 
Systematic Repression 

(Nairobi, May 10, 2005) — As parliamentary elections approach, the 
Ethiopian authorities have established new institutions that suppress 
speech and political activity in the country's most populous region, 
Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. At the same time, 
officials have continued to detain and harass perceived political 
opponents.

The 44-page report, "Suppressing Dissent: Human Rights Abuses and 
Political Repression in Ethiopia's Oromia Region," documents how 
regional authorities and security forces have used exaggerated 
concerns about armed insurgency and "terrorism" to justify the torture, 
imprisonment and sustained harassment of their critics and even 
ordinary citizens in the central region of Oromia. The ethnic-based 
party that controls the region, the Oromo Peoples' Democratic 
Organization, holds the largest share of parliamentary seats within the 
four-party coalition that has ruled Ethiopia since 1991.   
  
Human Rights Watch said that election observers reporting on the May 
15 parliamentary vote must acknowledge the extent to which these 
pervasive abuses have been used to prevent the emergence of 
dissenting voices and to punish those who speak out critically against 
government policies.   
  
"The Ethiopian government claims that the elections demonstrate its 
commitment to democratic principles," said Peter Takirambudde, 
executive director of Human Rights Watch's Africa Division. "But in 
the run-up to the elections, the authorities have intensified the 
repression they have used to keep themselves in power for 13 years."   
  
In recent months, regional authorities in Oromia have imposed new 
local institutions that restrict the large rural population's most 
basic 
freedoms. For more than a decade, the region's ruling Oromo 
Democratic Peoples' Organization has sought to solidify its grip on 
power by punishing dissenters and intimidating others into silence. So 
far, these abuses have been largely ignored by the international 
community.   
  
The Oromo Democratic Peoples' Organization (OPDO) has enjoyed a 
position of unchallenged dominance in Oromia's governance since 
1991, following the overthrow of the military leader Mengistu Haile 
Mariam. The following year, the Oromo Democratic Peoples' 
Organization's only rival for political control of Oromia, the Oromo 
Liberation Front, withdrew from the political process after its 
candidates and supporters were harassed and intimidated in the run up 
to parliamentary elections.   
  
Since then, the Oromo Liberation Front has waged an ineffectual 
armed struggle that has provided the authorities with a rationalization 
for repression. Throughout this period, Oromo's ruling party has 
routinely accused its critics and opponents of involvement with the 
rebel group to justify subjecting them to extreme abuse and 
harassment.   
  
In March, Human Rights Watch researchers interviewed dozens of 
people in Oromia who had been arbitrarily detained, often repeatedly, 
when officials accused them of supporting the Oromo Liberation Front. 
In each of those cases, despite the inability of Ethiopian government 
authorities to produce any evidence to support their allegations, the 
detainees were held for weeks or months. None of the former detainees 
interviewed had ever been tried for any offense connected to their 
arrest or confronted with any evidence that they had committed any 
crime. Human Rights Watch documented cases in which security 
officials had arrested children as young as 11 and accused them of 
plotting armed insurrection.   
  
Many of the people detained on suspicion of involvement in the 
Oromo Liberation Front were severely beaten while in detention, and 
some were subjected to brutal methods of torture. Several people 
detained last year described being beaten to the point of 
unconsciousness. Others recounted how they were stripped naked and 
made to stand with partially full bottles of water tied to their 
testicles.   
  
"They told me that I had gone to school not for education but to do 
politics," said a 19- year-old Oromo woman detained in August by 
police in Agaro. "They forced me to take off my clothes and I was 
naked except for my underwear when they started kicking me.…They 
put a pistol in my mouth and said that they would kill me."   
  
Many former detainees said their ordeals did not end when they were 
released from detention. In many cases, security personnel subjected 
them to continuing harassment severe enough to destroy their 
livelihoods. After several former detainees were released without 
charge, their businesses failed as clients began to avoid them because 
police harassed those who patronized stores owned by the former 
detainees.   
  
In the past six months, regional authorities have taken even greater 
efforts to stifle dissent in Oromia's countryside, where more than 85 
percent of the population lives. Beginning late last year, Oromia's 
regional government began imposing an entirely new set of quasi-
governmental community "development" organizations called gott and 
garee, in thousands of rural communities. While government officials 
claim that these institutions exist to facilitate development work, 
they 
are actually being used to monitor and control the speech, movement 
and personal associations of rural households in violation of 
fundamental rights. With elections approaching, these institutions have 
also used monetary sanctions to enforce attendance at pro-ruling party 
political rallies thinly disguised as "community meetings."   
  
"Far from being isolated incidents, the patterns of human rights abuse 
that prevail in Oromia call into question the Ethiopian government's 
professed commitment to human rights," Takirambudde said.   
  
In response to repeated demonstrations by students protesting 
government policies, regional and local authorities have gone to great 
lengths to monitor and suppress criticism in Oromia's schools. 
Students said that they could not express themselves freely in the 
classroom for fear of being suspended, expelled or even imprisoned. 
Several teachers confirmed that such fears were well-founded, 
describing how school administrators pressured them into gathering 
and reporting information about their students' political leanings.   
  
People who have suffered abuse at the hands of government officials 
because of their critical opinions said that they now avoid speaking in 
public about the issues facing their communities. The chilling effect 
of 
these abuses is most pronounced in Oromia's countryside, where 
dozens of farmers interviewed by Human Rights Watch said that the 
efforts of the garee to monitor their opinions have caused them to 
avoid any discussion that might be seen as political.   
  
"I used to speak at meetings about things that I thought were wrong. 
But now I never do this," one elderly man told Human Rights Watch. 
"They are too suspicious of anyone whose ideas are not the same as 
theirs."   
  
Human Rights Watch called upon the Ethiopian government to take 
immediate action to end these deeply entrenched patterns of human 
rights violations and to hold responsible security and government 
officials accountable for their role in carrying them out. 
International 
donors should employ their considerable leverage to press the 
country's government into taking prompt and meaningful action in this 
regard.   
  
With elections approaching on May 15, Human Rights Watch also 
urged international election observers to acknowledge the extent to 
which these abuses have restricted the possibility for meaningful 
political debate in the country's most populous region.  

To view this document on the Human Rights Watch web site, please 
go to: http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/05/10/ethiop10590.htm

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