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Author: EthiopianReview.com

Town hall meeting – postponed

The town hall meeting has been rescheduled for Sunday, October 30, due to Hurricane Irene. The place and time remains the same. Only the date has been changed.

 

Regime change in Ethiopia – A town hall meeting

Ethiopian Review will hold a special town hall meeting in Washington DC on Saturday, September 3, 2011, on the topic of “Removing and Replacing the dictatorship in Ethiopia.” The meeting will focus on how to remove the regime and who to replace it with. A list of guest speakers and more details will be released shortly.

Place: Washington Ethical Society
Address: 7750 16th Street Northwest, Washington D.C., DC 20012
Time: 5:30 PM

More info:
Email: [email protected]
Tel: 703 828 4821

CPJ speaks out against the torture of Ethiopian journalists

New York (CPJ) — The Committee to Protect Journalists holds Ethiopia responsible for the well-being of two journalists detained without charge or legal access since June under the country’s far-reaching anti-terrorism law.

Police arrested Woubshet Taye, deputy editor of the weekly Awramba Times, and Reeyot Alemu, columnist for the weekly Feteh, on June 19 and 21, respectively, on vague accusations of terrorism. The journalists have been held for more than 65 days with no official charges placed against them and no access to legal counsel, local journalists told CPJ.

In a court hearing last month, Taye said state officials repeatedly tortured him while he was being interrogated in Maekelawi Prison in the capital, Addis Ababa, local journalists said. Ethiopia’s constitution dictates that a suspect cannot be compelled to make a confession and that any evidence obtained under coercion is admissible. Taye is due back in court on September 13.

Alemu’s overall health rapidly deteriorated during her detention at Maekelawi Prison, according to local journalists who visited her in prison. Her relatives were allowed to visit her and brought her medicine for chronic gastritis, which improved her condition somewhat. She is expected back in court on September 14, local journalists told CPJ.

“We are very disturbed by Woubshet Taye’s allegations of torture and call on authorities to immediately investigate and bring to justice the perpetrators of this crime,” said CPJ East Africa Consultant Tom Rhodes. “Authorities must also provide adequate medical treatment for Reeyot Alemu.”

Ethiopia’s July 2009 anti-terrorism law criminalizes any reporting considered supportive to groups that the government has labeled “terrorists.” In June, the government formally classified five groups as terrorist entities, including the banned political party Ginbot 7.

Ethiopia’s tyrant expels Amnesty International delegation

Ethiopia’s khat-addicted tyrant has expelled Amnesty International delegates, VOA reports.

(VOA) — Rights group Amnesty International says a group of its delegates was expelled from Ethiopia this week after meeting with two opposition leaders who have since been arrested.

Amnesty said Wednesday that a delegation of foreign members was told by Ethiopian officials on August 27 to leave the country, after it held separate meetings with the opposition leaders.

The government arrested the two leaders, Bekele Gerba and Olbana Lelisa, the same day. Gerba was charged with involvement in a banned rebel group, the Oromo Liberation Front. The charges against Lelisa remain unclear.

Amnesty says it is worries the two men were arrested because they spoke with the delegates. It notes that Ethiopian officials have denied the allegation.

The group says the arrests are an example of the constant harassment that opposition politicians face in Ethiopia.

Human rights groups have complained frequently about abuses and oppression by the Ethiopian government. The party of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has ruled the country since 1991.

Amnesty international says its foreign delegates were under constant surveillance during the 12 days they spent in the country before being expelled.

Latest Wikileaks releases of U.S. diplomatic cables from Ethiopia

Wikileaks: Secret diplomatic messages sent from the American Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia by U.S. diplomats

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2009-12-22 ETHIOPIA: DEATH SENTENCES FOR FIVE GINBOT 7 DEFENDANTS

2009-11-04 HIGH RISK OF HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS FOR RURAL ETHIOPIAN GIRLS

2009-10-21 DRUG TRAFFICKING IN ETHIOPIA

2009-10-05 RUSSIAN BUSINESS PRESENCE IN ETHIOPIA

2009-06-22 Ethiopian Stowaway Detained in U.S.

2009-06-10 ETHIOPIA’S EMERGENCY FOOD NEEDS – A PERMANENT STATE

2009-06-08 UNDERSTANDING THE ETHIOPIAN HARDLINERS

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2009-05-07 Ethiopian Government Builds Case Against VOA

2009-04-30 FOREX CRUNCH IMPERILS REPATRIATION OF PROFITS?

2009-04-21 ETHIOPIA: REPORT ON FISCAL TRANSPARENCY

2009-04-09 TREASURY FINDS AN ETHIOPIA MORE RELIANT ON AID THAN REFORM

2008-02-06 ETHIOPIA: ASSISTANT SECRETARY FRAZER AND PRIME MINISTER MELES DISCUSS KENYA, SUDAN, SOMALIA, AND ERITREA

2007-11-28 OGADEN: COUNTER INSURGENCY OPERATIONS HITTING A WALL

2007-09-06 SHEIK AL AMOUDI DISCUSSES BUSINESS AND POLITICAL CLIMATE

2006-05-16 ETHIOPIAN DOMESTIC WORKERS IN THE UAE

2006-05-11 COMMISSION INVESTIGATING ETHIOPIAN ELECTORAL VIOLENCE INVESTIGATES THOUSANDS OF CLAIMS