Video: Ethiopia suffers

Interview with the Ethiopian People’s Patriotic Front (EPPF) International Committee’s chairman Ato Leul Qeskis with Ethiopian Review publisher Elias Kifle and EPPF’s head of press office Demis Belete. Click below to listen[podcast]http://www.ethiopianreview.info/audio/leul_qeskis_11162008.mp3[/podcast]
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EDITOR’S NOTE: The same fate awaits most the ruling Woyanne officials of Ethiopia.
STRASBOURG, France (AFP) — A Tunisian ex-diplomat, accused of torturing the wife of an opposition member in the 1990s when he was a police chief in Tunisia, was sentenced to eight years in prison in France on Monday.
Khaled Ben Said, who served as Tunisian vice-consul in the French city of Strasbourg from 2000 to 2001, had faced up to 20 years in jail if found guilty of torture.
The prosecution had asked for him to be acquitted, arguing that his case was “absolutely void”.
Targeted by an international arrest warrant, 46-year-old Ben Said stood accused by Zoulaikha Gharbi of leading a group of officers who interrogated and tortured her in a police station in the Tunisian town of Jendouba in 1996.
Gharbi claims she was subjected to torture during 24 hours for information about her husband Mouldi Gharbi, an opponent of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali who holds refugee status in France.
The 44-year-old woman alleged that her torturers partially undressed her, hung her from a metal bar, insulted, scratched and pinched her breasts.
Ben Said was tried under French laws on universal jurisdiction that allow courts to prosecute foreigners for crimes committed anywhere in the world.
Tunisian officials have rejected the charges against Ben Said as “totally unfounded”, and questioned the French court’s competence to try the case.
The Tunisian government issued a statement describing the case as “sheer fabrication and a propaganda ploy by fundamentalists” bent on discrediting Ben Ali’s government.
“Torture and other forms of inhumane and degrading treatment are strictly forbidden under Tunisian law,” said the statement issued in Tunis.
Gharbi, 44, who now also lives in France, lodged the suit in 2001.
A Tunisian journalist and a political expert took the stand in the eastern city of Strasbourg on behalf of the plaintiff and described torture as a regular occurrence in the north African country.
“Violence is one of the central tenets of the Tunisian regime,” said Vincent Geisser, a research fellow for the CNRS institute, who said it was a “state-sponsored practice”.
“Torture is institutionalised” in Tunisia, said journalist Sihem Bensedrine. Once confined to special interior ministry rooms, torture is nowadays “practiced everywhere, even in the smallest police station,” he said.
It is the second time a legal case was opened in France under the provisions of universal jurisdiction, following the trial for torture of a Mauritanian military officer in 2005.
Written into the UN convention against torture, the principle has been making inroads into international law ever since the detention of Chilean former dictator Augusto Pinochet in London in 1998.
The Paris-based International Federation of Human Rights Leagues was a civil plaintiff in the case, in which the Tunisian president and ambassador to France have both been called to testify.
Ethiopians in Washington DC demand the release of Teddy Afro
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Hundreds of Ethiopians residing in the Washington DC area held a protest rally in front of the Woyanne-occupied Ethiopian embassy to demand the immediate release of Teddy Afro. Several Ethiopian musicians were among the protesters.
Ethiopians in Washington DC demand the release of Teddy Afro: Protest in front of the Woyanne embassy
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Related posts:
* Kangaroo court in Ethiopia convicts Teddy Afro
* There Is No Justice In Ethiopia – The Teddy Afro show trial
* The Ballad of Teddy Afro
* Judge WoldeMikael Meshesha on Teddy Afro’s case
* Journalists reporting Teddy Afro’s trial in Ethiopia arrested
* Woyanne throws Teddy Afro in jail
* Woyanne court rules against Tedy Afro
* Teddy Afro’s lawyer arrested
* Teddy Afro – Another victim of Ethiopia’s ruthless dictator
Ethiopians in the Washington DC area are holding a protest rally in front of the Woyanne occupied Ethiopian embassy today, Monday, starting at 10 AM, to demand the release of Teddy Afro.
3506 International Dr NW
Washington, DC 20008
Organizers of the Woyanne embassy protest include Ethiopian artists, Addis Dimts Radio, EthioLion.com, Ethiopian Review, Ethiopiawinet Radio, Galbeed.com, Int’l Ethiopian Women Association, Netsanet Le Ethiopia Radio, Moa Anbessa, and Tegbar.
The organizers call on Ethiopians around the world to mobilize and help free Teddy Afro and all the political prisoners in Ethiopia, including Bekele Jirata, the recently jailed secretary general of the Oromo Federal Democratic Movement, from the Woyanne fascist regime’s disease-infested jails.
Related posts:
* Kangaroo court in Ethiopia convicts Teddy Afro
* There Is No Justice In Ethiopia – The Teddy Afro show trial
* The Ballad of Teddy Afro
* Judge WoldeMikael Meshesha on Teddy Afro’s case
* Journalists reporting Teddy Afro’s trial in Ethiopia arrested
* Woyanne throws Teddy Afro in jail
* Woyanne court rules against Tedy Afro
* Teddy Afro’s lawyer arrested
* Teddy Afro – Another victim of Ethiopia’s ruthless dictator