Ethiopia

2006

  

Ethiopia: Poison, Politics, and the Press

By Julia CrawfordIn Ethiopia’s toxic political climate, Zenawi’s government sweeps up journalists and shuts down newspapers.

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Two more journalists sentenced to jail on old charges

New York, April 25, 2006—Two more journalists have been sentenced to jail on revived charges under Ethiopia’s 1992 press law, according to CPJ sources. Wosonseged Gebrekidan, who is already jailed on antistate charges, was sentenced to 16 months for defamation on April 18. Freelance writer Abraham Reta was sentenced yesterday to one year and jailed…

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Another journalist faces antistate charge

Your Excellency: The Committee to Protect Journalists is concerned about the imprisonment of Goshu Moges, a veteran journalist arrested in February in what police described as a crackdown on terrorists linked to opposition parties. We are seeking further information about the evidence against him.

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CPJ update, April 2006

CPJ UpdateCommittee to Protect JournalistsApril 19, 2006

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Court drops charges against five Voice of America journalists

New York, March 22, 2006—An Ethiopian court today granted a state prosecutor’s request to drop charges of treason against five Voice of America journalists and another radio journalist being tried in absentia. “We welcome the dropping of these ridiculous charges against VOA staff,” said Ann Cooper, Executive Director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. “But…

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CPJ Update

CPJ Update Committee to Protect JournalistsMarch 17, 2006 In meeting with CPJ, Colombian president vows support for beleaguered provincial press

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Arrests, closings, censorship found by CPJ delegationEthiopian political divide ensnares the press

Nairobi, Kenya, March 14, 2006—Deep political divisions in Ethiopia have fueled the massive, months-long crackdown on the private press in that country, gutting the print media, promoting rampant self-censorship, and resulting in the imprisonment of more than a dozen journalists on charges that could bring the death penalty, the Committee to Protect Journalists found during…

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Arrests, closings, censorship found by CPJ delegationEthiopian political divide ensnares the press

Nairobi, Kenya, March 14, 2006—Deep political divisions in Ethiopia have fueled the massive, months-long crackdown on the private press in that country, gutting the print media, promoting rampant self-censorship, and resulting in the imprisonment of more than a dozen journalists on charges that could bring the death penalty, the Committee to Protect Journalists found during…

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Ethiopian editor sentenced to prison; another freed on bail

New York, March 10, 2006—An editor was sentenced on Wednesday to one year in prison on a charge of publishing “false news” in a 2002 report attributed to the BBC, which claimed that Ethiopia was training rebels in neighboring Eritrea. Abraham Gebrekidan, who edited the now-defunct Amharic-language weekly Politika, was immediately jailed, several local sources…

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Ethiopian prime minister pledges fair trials for jailed journalists

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, March 9, 2006—Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, facing international criticism for cracking down on the press, pledged today that his government would give journalists charged with treason and genocide “their day in court” and a fair and proper trial. In a two-hour meeting with a delegation from the Committee to Protect Journalists,…

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2006