Ethiopian journalist Eyob Shimelis
Ethiopian journalist Eyob Shimelis has faced repeated threats and intimidation, which have forced him into hiding throughout 2025. (Photo: Credit withheld)

Ethiopian TikTok journalist Eyob Shimelis detained after corruption reporting

Nairobi, December 10, 2025—The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on Ethiopian authorities to immediately release journalist Eyob Shimelis, who has been in detention since December 1 on accusations of spreading false information and defamation.

Police arrested Eyob, founder and reporter of TikTok-based Sidama News, which reports on corruption in Ethiopia’s southern Sidama state, at around 10 a.m. outside his home in the regional capital Hawassa and took him to the capital’s Addis Ketema sub-city police station, two people with knowledge of the case told CPJ, on condition of anonymity, citing safety concerns. Eyob was questioned about his recent reporting on alleged abuses by regional officials, they said.

“It is alarming that a journalist exposing alleged corruption is being met with arrests and intimidation,” said CPJ Africa Program Coordinator Muthoki Mumo. “Ethiopian authorities must release Eyob Shimeles immediately and stop using security forces and the courts to suppress independent reporting.”

When Eyob appeared before Hawassa City First Instance Court on December 3, it approved investigators’ request to keep him in remand until December 9, which it then extended until December 17, according to the two individuals.  

Eyob has faced repeated threats and intimidation, which have forced him into hiding throughout 2025, and fled to neighboring Kenya and Uganda for months, only returning after receiving informal assurances that he would not be harmed, those two individuals said.

On September 29, Eyob was detained on allegations of defamation, which is a civil, not a criminal, offense in Ethiopia. He was released on October 4, without appearing in court, on condition that he apologize publicly — which he did.

In his statement, Eyob asked regional leaders for forgiveness for his “use of words that were demeaning” and promised to “continue to be the voice of the public by reporting only the truth and doing so in a way that is far removed from emotional bias.”

CPJ sent queries via messaging app to the Sidama police and the region’s communications affairs bureau but did not receive responses. An email address provided by the bureau through its Facebook page returned an error message.