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Horror stories of torture hound Ethiopia...
NICK WADHAMS
Special to The Globe and Mail, with a report from Zoe Alsop
May 29, 2007
NEKEMTE, ETHIOPIA -- During the six months that 25-year-old Aman
was detained in an Addis Ababa prison, he alleges, police kicked
and punched him and kept him for weeks on end in a tiny cell with
his hands bound as if always in prayer.
Then there was the day that Aman, a second-year law student at
the time, went before a judge and found himself correcting her on
the Ethiopian criminal code. She had granted prosecutors' request
to detain him for three weeks of investigation, a week longer than
the law allows.
"I could not have words to express the situation, it is so
difficult," said Aman, who was never charged with a crime and
eventually released.
"They appoint judges who have no legal knowledge of law, who
learn about the law for six months and sit at the court."
This is the state of affairs in today's Ethiopia. Interviews with
dozens of people across the country, coupled with testimony given
to diplomats and human-rights groups, paint a picture of a nation
that, despite government claims to the contrary, jails its citizens
without reason or trial, tortures many of them and habitually violates
its own laws. The government was also severely criticized for a
2005 crackdown in which tens of thousands of opposition members
were jailed and nearly 200 people killed after elections in which
the opposition made major gains.
But many Western governments that do business with Ethiopia, including
Canada and the United States, maintain that Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi's government is committed to democratic and human-rights
reforms. The United States has even worked with Ethiopia's jailers;
the Bush administration recently acknowledged that CIA and FBI officials
interrogated suspected terrorists there who had fled the fighting
in Somalia.
Canada says that one of its citizens, Bashir Makhtal, is one of
Ethiopia's prisoners. Although reports so far indicate he has not
been tortured, Canadian diplomats say they have not been allowed
to visit Mr. Makhtal. The International Committee of the Red Cross
is also barred from visiting federal prisons.
People interviewed across Ethiopia recounted stories of torture:
electric shocks, beatings with rubber clubs, police who held guns
to prisoners' heads, mutilation or pain inflicted on the genitals.
One man said police arrested him because he played too much ping
pong; they began to suspect that he was recruiting people to a rebel
group while he played. Another described 17 days of electric shocks
on his legs and back, followed by beatings with rubber truncheons.
He never learned his crime, but suspects he was targeted for his
refusal to join Mr. Meles's ruling EPRDF party.
"They took us turn by turn to a dark place, and they would
shock us and say, 'What do you think now? You won't change your
ways now? Do you want to be a member of our party now?' " said
the man, Tesfaye. He refused to give his last name for fear of being
rearrested.
Ethiopian officials dismiss stories of torture as lies, and have
expelled many foreign journalists and representatives of human-rights
groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
The country's Culture and Tourism Minister, Mohamoud Dirir, recently
accused the Western media of giving one-sided information "magnifying
the negative."
Bereket Simon, a top adviser to Mr. Zenawi, echoed that theme. He
said it's in the interests of rights groups to lie about the situation,
and he rejected the idea that torture occurs in Ethiopia.
"No way. No way. No way. I think you know, these are prohibited
by laws, by Ethiopian laws, ..." Mr. Bereket said. "In
fact, we have been improving on our prison standards. We've been
working hard to train the police forces, the interrogators."
Yet claims of the abuses are widespread. The U.S. State Department's
2006 human-rights report for Ethiopia cited "numerous credible
reports that security officials often beat or mistreated detainees."
It included more than 30 pages of detailed accounts of violations,
ranging from the beating of teenagers to arbitrary arrests to the
banning of theatre performances that send the wrong political message.
European diplomats and employees of Western aid groups, speaking
on condition of anonymity, said they keep quiet about abuses because
they fear the government will freeze them out of aid work. About
2.8 million of Ethiopia's 75 million people depend on foreign food
aid.
U.S. Ambassador Donald Yamamoto said in an interview that he wants
to investigate claims of abuse, but warned against making allegations
without proof.
"There's a lot of misinformation about Ethiopia. I mean it's
amazing," Mr. Yamamoto said. "The problem comes in trying
to divide or separate what is fact and what's fiction, and trying
to keep an open mind on every issue."
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