Ethiopian Court Demands Justification for Journalist’s Conviction
(VOA) ADDIS ABABA — Ethiopia’s Federal Supreme Court has postponed hearing an appeal of the conviction of
from left Eskinder Nega and Andualem Arage |
prominent
Ethiopian journalist Eskinder Nega and opposition leader Andualem
Arage. But the court gave its first indication Thursday that charges
brought by prosecutors under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation may not be
that strong by demanding that prosecutors justify the June convictions.
Journalist
Eskinder Nega received an 18-year sentence, while opposition politician
Andualem Arage is serving life in prison on terrorism-related charges.
Andualem’s lawyer, Abebe Guta, said the court has found many irregularities in the prosecution’s charges.
“As
they scrutinized our ground of appeal they found so many legal and
factual irregularities,” said Abebe. “Therefore, before the ruling
passes, that means before our appeal is accepted or approved, they
wanted to summon the prosecution officers to come and justify.”
Maran
Turner, the executive director of Freedom Now, a Washington D.C.- based
organization that works on individual prisoners of conscience cases,
said the latest developments are positive. Freedom Now has been
supporting Eskinder and brought his case before the United Nations
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention.
“It seems to me that the
court also is confounded by the charges against Eskinder and the other
defendants,” Turner said. “So the fact that the court has postponed the
case, it obviously acknowledges the flaws that we see, which is that the
charges themselves are flawed. In fact, the case is flawed from the
very beginning of arrest.”
Eskinder, Andualem and more than 20
others were found guilty of ties to a U.S.-based opposition group,
Ginbot 7, classified as a terrorist organization by the Ethiopian
government.
Amnesty International and other rights advocacy groups have said the trial was a sham used to silence dissent.
The prosecution will need to justify its convictions before the court on December 19.
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