Al Jazeera
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| Birtukan Mideksa | 
Birtukan
 Mideksa is a fellow at Harvard University’s WEB Du Bois Institute for 
African and African American Research and a former prisoner of 
conscience in Ethiopia.
Although
 Ethiopia has its first new prime minister in 17 years – so far, the 
government has failed to right a long history of wrongs. With prisoners 
of conscience still languishing in its prisons, Ethiopia must receive 
the clear message – especially from allies like the United States – that
 continued human rights violations will not be tolerated.
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| Eskinder Nega and his wife – Serkalem Fasil and their son Nafkot. | 
My 
journey to become a political prisoner in Ethiopia began as a federal 
judge fighting to uphold the rule of law. Despite institutional 
challenges and even death threats, I hoped to use constitutional 
principles to ensure respect for basic rights.
But, having witnessed firsthand the government disregard for fundamental constitutional rules, I joined the opposition and became the first woman to hold a high-level position in an Ethiopian political party.
Our
 party – the Coalition for Unity and Democracy – contested the 2005 
elections with a multiethnic platform based on economic liberalism and 
respect for individual rights. As momentum gathered, many hoped change 
had finally arrived in Ethiopia.
But
 after early reports showed our party ahead in the polls, the government
 dashed our optimism by throwing me and my colleagues behind bars and 
declaring a victory for the ruling party.
When I emerged after 21 
months in prison, our party was outlawed and the political landscape had
 grown increasingly repressive. But we forged ahead, forming the new 
Unity for Democracy and Justice Party and continuing to advocate for 
dialogue and non-violent political reform in Ethiopia.
Authorities arrested me again
 in 2008, claiming that I had mischaracterised the circumstances of my 
release. But peaceful political activities are not the only way to 
become a prisoner of conscience in Ethiopia.
Independent journalists face the very real threat of imprisonment in response to their work. Authorities have detained my friend Eskinder Nega eight times over his 20-year career as a journalist and publisher.
After
 the 2005 elections, Eskinder and his wife – Serkalem Fasil – spent 17 
months in prison. Pregnant at the time, Serkalem gave birth to a son 
despite her confinement and almost no pre-natal care.
Banned from publishing after his release in 2007, Eskinder continued to write online. In early 2011, he began focusing particularly on the protest movements then sweeping North Africa and the Middle East.
Eskinder,
 who does not belong to any political party because of a commitment to 
maintain his independence, offered a unique and incisive take on what 
those movements meant for the future of Ethiopia.
Committed to the principle of non-violence, Eskinder repeatedly emphasised that any similar movements in Ethiopia would have to remain
 peaceful. Despite this, police briefly detained him and warned him that
 his writings had crossed the line and he could face prosecution.
Then
 in September 2011, the government made good on that threat. Authorities
 arrested Eskinder just days after he publicly criticised the use of 
anti-terror laws to stifle dissent. They held him without charge or 
access to an attorney for nearly two months.
The government 
eventually charged Eskinder with terrorism and treason, sentencing him 
to 18 years in prison after a political trial. Unfortunately, Eskinder 
is not alone; independent journalists Woubshet Taye and Reeyot Alemu 
also face long prison terms on terrorism charges.
The legal 
advocacy organisation Freedom Now, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary 
Detention – a five-person panel of experts from around the world that 
consider individual cases – found Eskinder’s continued detention illegal
 under international law and called for his immediate release.
The
 UN specifically found that the government prosecuted Eskinder using 
overly broad terrorism charges because he exercised his internationally 
protected right to freedom of expression. It also held that procedural 
violations, such as denying Eskinder access to an attorney for nearly 
two months, violated his due process rights.
With this unequivocal
 finding by the UN, the international community can, and must, do more 
to help Eskinder and his imprisoned colleagues. In particular, the US, 
which has a close relationship with government in Addis Ababa, must 
speak out at every opportunity for those who cannot speak out for 
themselves from behind the prison walls.
Birtukan 
Mideksa is a fellow at Harvard University’s WEB Du Bois Institute for 
African and African American Research and a former prisoner of 
conscience in Ethiopia.
Follow her on Twitter: @Birtukanmideksa
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.


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