New York, December 12, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
is outraged that two more journalists have been jailed on criminal charges
that have been revived since a crackdown on the press in November. The
convictions last week relating to articles published up to seven years
ago bring the number of journalists now behind bars in Ethiopia to at
least 15, according to CPJ research.
"It is scandalous that Ethiopian authorities have persisted in using
outdated and illegitimate charges to send these journalists to jail,"
said Ann Cooper, executive director of CPJ. "We call on authorities
to release our Ethiopian colleagues immediately, and to work towards
removing criminal penalties for press offenses."
Getachew Simie, former editor-in-chief of the defunct Amharic-language
weekly Agere, was sentenced on December 7 to three months in
prison for criminal defamation. Leykun Engeda, former editor-in-chief
and publisher of the Amharic-language weekly Dagim Wonchif, was
sentenced on December 9 to 15 months in prison for allegedly publishing
false news.
Thirteen journalists have been detained since renewed anti-government
protests in early November. They have been accused of treason, held
without charge, and denied bail. On December 6, one of the detained
journalists, Wosonseged Gebrekidan, was sentenced to eight months in
jail, in an unrelated case, for allegedly defaming a former diplomat
in a 2002 opinion piece. For more information,
see CPJ's December 7 alert.
Simie was arrested on December 6 and is now in Kality prison on the
outskirts of the capital, Addis Ababa, according to a CPJ source. The
case against him stemmed from an article printed in Agere in
1998, the source said. Simie has since become a reporter for the Amharic-language
weekly Addis Admas. The article described alleged financial
mismanagement and corruption at a state-owned textile factory, CPJ sources
said. It is unclear who brought the defamation suit against Simie.
The case against Engeda stemmed from an article published in Dagim
Wonchif in 1999 about a rebel organization known as the Ethiopian
Patriotic Front, according to a CPJ source. Engeda has since left the
newspaper and launched a new one, Mechachal. The article alleged
that the rebels had scored a military victory against Ethiopian troops.
Engeda was also sent to Kality prison after he was sentenced.
