Press freedom in Ethiopia is
dwindling in light of recent anti-government protests and the severe drought in
the Horn of Africa state, according to a journalists’ association.
Two
journalists and a translator were arbitrarily detained for 24 hours on Thursday
when reporting on the protests in Oromia, according to a statement
issued by the Foreign Correspondents’ Association of East Africa (FCAEA) on
Monday. Bloomberg correspondent William Davison and freelance journalist Jacey
Fortin, along with their translator, were not given any reason for their
detention. Their phones and identification cards were taken during the arrest.
Protests
among the Oromos, who constitute Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group, have been
ongoing since November 2015 and were originally directed against plans by the
federal government to expand the capital Addis Ababa. At least 140 protesters were killed between November 2015 and January,
according to Human Rights Watch (HRW). The Addis expansion plans were dropped
in January but the protests—which have morphed into a general expression of
dissatisfaction with the government among Oromos—have continued and
demonstrators are still being subjected
to “lethal force,” HRW
said on February 22. The Ethiopian government has said that “destructive forces” —including some from neighboring
Eritrea—have hijacked the protests and would be dealt with decisively.
Davison told Newsweek that the risks of reporting on
certain topics in Ethiopia is too high because of the threat of detainment. “It
was a shock to be held overnight in a prison cell and not be given any
explanation of what we were being held for,” says Davison. The “very heavy and
militarized response” to the Oromo protests “raises the chance that reporters
are going to be obstructed from doing their work,” he says.
The FCAEA
said that the detentions marked “a worrying escalation” in Ethiopia, which
already has a poor record for allowing journalists to operate freely. Ethiopia
was ranked 142nd out of 180 countries in terms of press freedom in 2015 by
non-profit organization Reporters Without Borders, which recorded six
newspapers closing and more than 30 cases of journalists fleeing abroad in
2014. “Ethiopia is well-known for its tough stance on journalists but this is a
worrying spike of arbitrary detention of media workers at a time of increased
interest in Ethiopia,” says Ilya Gridneff, chairman of FCAEA. “Journalism is
not a crime and those in Ethiopia should not be treated as criminals.”
Newsweek contacted
the Ethiopian Embassy in London but was yet to receive a reply at the time of
publication.
Coupled
with the Oromo protests, Ethiopia is currently experiencing its worst drought in
around 50 years, partly due to the El Nino weather pattern. Up to 15
million people in the country require emergency humanitarian food assistance
and the United Nations is appealing for $50
million to help the
government cope with the crisis.
Source: http://europe.newsweek.com/ethiopia-detains-journalists-covering-oromo-protests-434307
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