(Bloomberg) — Ethiopia’s Federal High Court sentenced two senior
Oromo politicians to as much as 13 years in prison after their
convictions on charges of inciting a secessionist rebellion.
Bekele
Gerba, deputy chairman of the opposition Oromo Federalist Democratic
Movement was sentenced to 8 years in prison and Olbana Lelisa of the
Oromo People’s Congress party to 13 years, Judge Kenate Hora said.
“It’s absolute injustice,” Bekele said to reporters outside the
courtroom.
Bekele
and Olbana were accused of being members of the banned Oromo Liberation
Front and inciting students to rebel, Kenate said. Seven others were
given sentences of between three years and 12 years for getting training
in camps in Kenya and being involved in gunfights with Ethiopian
soldiers, he said.
The Oromo Liberation Front has been fighting for more autonomy for
the Oromo, Ethiopia’s most populous ethnicity, since 1973, according to
its website. The group was initially part of a transitional government
after helping allied rebels oust the Derg military regime in 1991. The
Ethiopian government silences legitimate Oromo opposition by branding
them rebels, Amnesty International said in a report in January.
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