Udenrigsudvalget 2014-15 (1. samling)
URU Alm.del Bilag 44
Offentligt
1424081_0001.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Amnesty International is a global movement of more than 3 million supporters, members and
activists in more than 150 countries and territories who campaign to end grave abuses of human
rights. Our vision is for every person to enjoy all the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights and other international human rights standards. We are independent of any
government, political ideology, economic interest or religion and are funded mainly by our
membership and public donations.
First published in 2014 by Amnesty International Ltd
Peter Benenson House 1 Easton Street
London WC1X 0DW United Kingdom
© Amnesty International 2014
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Original language: English Printed by Amnesty International, International
Secretariat, Kenya
All rights reserved. This publication is copyright, but may be reproduced by any method without fee
for advocacy, campaigning and teaching purposes, but not for resale. The copyright holders request
that all such use be registered with them for impact assessment purposes. For copying in any other
circumstances, or for reuse in other publications, or for translation or adaptation, prior written
permission must be obtained from the publishers, and a fee may be payable. To request permission,
or for any other inquiries, please contact [email protected]
Cover photo: Security services at the entrance to Dire Dawa University, 30 April 2014 © Private
amnesty.org
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 1
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0002.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
CONTENTS
CONTENTS ............................................................................................................................................... 2
LIST OF ACRONYMS ................................................................................................................................. 3
SUMMARY: REPRESSION OF DISSENT IN OROMIA ................................................................................. 4
MAP OF OROMIA .................................................................................................................................. 11
METHODOLOGY .................................................................................................................................... 11
INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................................................... 14
PART I: ARBITRARY ARRESTS OF ACTUAL OR SUSPECTED DISSENTERS ................................................ 16
GROUPS AT RISK OF ARBITRARY ARREST IN OROMIA BASED ON ACTUAL OR SUSPECTED DISSENT ... 20
PEACEFUL PROTESTORS ........................................................................................................................ 21
THE 2014 ‘MASTER PLAN’ PROTESTS .................................................................................................... 22
OTHER PEACEFUL PROTESTORS TARGETED BETWEEN 2011 AND 2014............................................... 24
STUDENTS ............................................................................................................................................. 28
SURVEILLANCE OF STUDENTS ............................................................................................................... 28
HARASSMENT AND ARREST OF STUDENTS ........................................................................................... 29
VIOLATIONS OF THE RIGHTS TO FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION AND CULTURAL EXPRESSION ............... 31
VIOLATION OF THE RIGHT TO EDUCATION ........................................................................................... 32
MEMBERS OF OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTIES ................................................................................... 33
SWEEPS OF OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTY MEMBERS IN 2014 AND 2011.......................................... 34
BEKELE GERBA AND OLBANA LELISA – ARRESTED OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTY LEADERS ............... 36
OTHER ARRESTS OF OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTY SUPPORTERS ....................................................... 36
OROMO ARTISTS AND OTHERS CELEBRATING OROMO CULTURE ....................................................... 37
GENERAL SUSPICION OF THE OROMO COMMUNITY ........................................................................... 39
OROMOS IN POSITIONS OF INFLUENCE ................................................................................................ 40
OROMOS WHO REFUSE TO JOIN THE RULING POLITICAL PARTY ......................................................... 42
OROMOS TARGETED IN AREAS OF OLF OPERATIONS........................................................................... 42
OPDO MEMBERS AND GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES ............................................................................. 44
OROMOS TARGETED DUE TO THEIR FAMILY CONNECTIONS ............................................................... 45
OROMOS ARRESTED IN LIEU OF FAMILY MEMBERS............................................................................. 46
PART II: ARBITRARY DETENTION, ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE, EXTRA- JUDICIAL EXECUTIONS AND
TORTURE ............................................................................................................................................... 49
ARBITRARY DETENTION ........................................................................................................................ 49
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 2
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0003.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
DETENTION WITHOUT CHARGE OR TRIAL ............................................................................................ 51
ACCESS TO LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES AND FAMILY MEMBERS ............................................................ 53
ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE ................................................................................................................. 55
UNOFFICIAL PLACES OF DETENTION ..................................................................................................... 57
CONDITIONAL RELEASE ......................................................................................................................... 60
UNFAIR TRIAL ........................................................................................................................................ 63
EXTRA-JUDICIAL EXECUTIONS ............................................................................................................... 65
TORTURE AND OTHER ILL- TREATMENT ............................................................................................... 68
PURPOSES AND CIRCUMSTANCES OF TORTURE ................................................................................... 69
METHODS AND EXPERIENCES OF TORTURE ......................................................................................... 72
RAPE ...................................................................................................................................................... 75
PSYCHOLOGICAL TORTURE ................................................................................................................... 76
MAIKELAWI, ADDIS ABABA ................................................................................................................... 77
TORTURE OUTSIDE DETENTION, IN HOMES ......................................................................................... 79
CONDITIONS IN DETENTION ................................................................................................................. 80
FORCED LABOUR ................................................................................................................................... 84
DEATH IN DETENTION ........................................................................................................................... 85
ACTIONS AND RESPONSES OF THE GOVERNMENT OF ETHIOPIA IN RESPECT...................................... 87
CONCLUSION......................................................................................................................................... 91
RECOMMENDATIONS ........................................................................................................................... 92
END NOTES............................................................................................................................................ 99
ANNEXES: CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE ETHIOPIAN GOVERNMENT ............................................... 117
LIST OF ACRONYMS
ACHPR – African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights/African Commission on Human and Peoples’
Rights
CAT – Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
CSP – Charities and Societies Proclamation
EHRC – Ethiopian Human Rights Commission
ENDF – Ethiopian National Defence Force
EPRDF – Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 3
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0004.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
ICCPR – International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
ICESCR – International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
NHRAP – National Human Rights Action Plan (2013-2015)
OFC – Oromo Federalist Congress (formed after the merger of the OPC and OFDM parties)
OFDM – Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement
OLA – Oromo Liberation Army (the armed wing of the OLF)
OLF – Oromo Liberation Front
ONC – Oromo National Congress (opposition political party at the time of the 2005 elections. After
divisions within the party, former ONC Chairman Merera Gudina re-registered his party as the OPC)
OPDO – Oromo People’s Democratic Organisation
OPC – Oromo People’s Congress
SUMMARY: REPRESSION OF DISSENT IN OROMIA
“I
was arrested for about eight months. Some school students had been arrested, so their classmates
had a demonstration to ask where they were and for them to be released. I was accused of
organising the demonstration because the government said my father supported the OLF so I did too
and therefore I must be the one who is organising the students.”
Young man from Dodola Woreda,
Bale Zone1. The anticipation and repression of dissent in Oromia manifests in many ways. The below
are some of the numerous and varied individual stories contained in this report:
A student told Amnesty International how he was detained and tortured in Maikelawi Federal Police
detention centre because a business plan he had prepared for a competition was alleged to be
underpinned by political motivations. A singer told how he had been detained, tortured and forced
to agree to only sing in praise of the government in the future. A school girl told Amnesty
International how she was detained because she refused to give false testimony against someone
else. A former teacher showed Amnesty International where he had been stabbed and blinded in
one eye with a bayonet during torture in detention because he had refused to ‘teach’ his students
propaganda about the achievements of the ruling political party as he had been ordered to do. A
midwife was arrested for delivering the baby of a woman who was married to an alleged member of
the Oromo Liberation Front. A young girl told Amnesty International how she had successively lost
both parents and four brothers through death in detention, arrest or disappearance until, aged 16,
she was left alone caring for two young siblings. An agricultural expert employed by the government
told how he was arrested on the accusation he had incited a series of demonstrations staged by
hundreds of farmers in his area, because his job involved presenting the grievances of the farmers to
the government.
In April and May 2014, protests broke out across Oromia against a proposed ‘Integrated Master
Plan’ to expand the capital, Addis Ababa, into Oromia regional territory. The protests were led by
students, though many other people participated. Security services, comprised of federal police and
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 4
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0005.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
the military special forces, responded to the protests with unnecessary and excessive force, firing
live ammunition on peaceful protestors in a number of locations and beating hundreds of peaceful
protestors and bystanders, resulting in dozens of deaths and scores of injuries. In the wake of the
protests, thousands of people were arrested.
These incidents were far from being unprecedented in Oromia. They were the latest and bloodiest in
a long pattern of the suppression – sometimes pre-emptive and often brutal – of even suggestions of
dissent in the region.
The Government of Ethiopia is hostile to dissent, wherever and however it manifests, and also shows
hostility to influential individuals or groups not affiliated to the ruling Ethiopian Peoples’
Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) political party. The government has used arbitrary arrest
and detention, often without charge, to suppress suggestions of dissent in many parts of the
country. But this hostility, and the resulting acts of suppression, have manifested often and at scale
in Oromia.
A number of former detainees, as well as former officials, have observed that Oromos make up a
high proportion of the prison population in federal prisons and in the Federal Police Crime
Investigation and Forensic Sector, commonly known as Maikelawi, in Addis Ababa, where prisoners
of conscience and others subject to politically-motivated detention are often detained when first
arrested. Oromos also constitute a high proportion of Ethiopian refugees. According to a 2012 Inter-
Censal Population Survey, the Oromo constituted 35.3% of Ethiopia’s population. However, this
numerical size alone does not account for the high proportion of Oromos in the country’s prisons, or
the proportion of Oromos among Ethiopians fleeing the country. Oromia and the Oromo have long
been subject to repression based on a widespread imputed opposition to the EPRDF which, in
conjunction with the size of the population, is taken as posing a potential political threat to the
government.
Between 2011 and 2014, at least 5,000 Oromos have been arrested as a result of their actual or
suspected peaceful opposition to the government, based on their manifestation of dissenting
opinions, exercise of freedom of expression or their imputed political opinion. These included
thousands of peaceful protestors and hundreds of political opposition members, but also hundreds
of other individuals from all walks of life – students, pharmacists, civil servants, singers,
businesspeople and people expressing their Oromo cultural heritage – arrested based on the
expression of dissenting opinions or their suspected opposition to the government. Due to
restrictions on human rights reporting, independent journalism and information exchange in
Ethiopia, as well as a lack of transparency on detention practices, it is possible there are many
additional cases that have not been reported or documented. In the cases known to Amnesty
International, the majority of those arrested were detained without charge or trial for some or all of
their detention, for weeks, months or years – a system apparently intended to warn, punish or
silence them, from which justice is often absent.
Openly dissenting individuals have been arrested in large numbers. Thousands of Oromos have been
arrested for participating in peaceful protests on a range of issues. Large-scale arrests were seen
during the protests against the ‘Master Plan’ in 2014 and during a series of protests staged in 2012-
13 by the Muslim community in Oromia and other parts of the country against alleged government
interference in Islamic affairs. In addition, Oromos have been arrested for participation in peaceful
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 5
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0006.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
protests over job opportunities, forced evictions, the price of fertilizer, students’ rights, the teaching
of the Oromo language and the arrest or extra-judicial executions of farmers, students, children and
others targeted for expressing dissent, participation in peaceful protests or based on their imputed
political opinion. Between 2011 and 2014, peaceful protests have witnessed several incidents of the
alleged use of unnecessary and excessive force by security services against unarmed protestors.
Hundreds of members of legally-registered opposition political parties have also been arrested in
large sweeps that took place in 2011 and in 2014, as well as in individual incidents.
In addition to targeting openly dissenting groups, the government also anticipates dissent amongst
certain groups and individuals, and interprets certain actions as signs of dissent. Students in Oromia
report that there are high levels of surveillance for signs of dissent or political activity among the
student body in schools and universities. Students have been arrested based on their actual or
suspected political opinion, for refusing to join the ruling party or their participation in student
societies, which are treated with hostility on the suspicion that they are underpinned by political
motivations. Hundreds of students have also been arrested for participation in peaceful protests.
Expressions of Oromo culture and heritage have been interpreted as manifestations of dissent, and
the government has also shown signs of fearing cultural expression as a potential catalyst for
opposition to the government. Oromo singers, writers and poets have been arrested for allegedly
criticising the government and/or inciting people through their work. People wearing traditional
Oromo clothing have been arrested on the accusation that this demonstrated a political agenda.
Hundreds of people have been arrested at Oromo traditional festivals.
Members of these groups - opposition political parties, student groups, peaceful protestors, people
promoting Oromo culture and people in positions the government believes could have influence on
their communities - are treated with hostility not only due to their own actual or perceived
dissenting behaviour, but also due to their perceived potential to act as a conduit or catalyst for
further dissent. A number of people arrested for actual or suspected dissent told Amnesty
International they were accused of the ‘incitement’ of others to oppose the government.
The majority of actual or suspected dissenters who had been arrested in Oromia interviewed by
Amnesty International were accused of supporting the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) – the armed
group that has fought a long-term low-level insurgency in the region, which was proscribed as a
terrorist organization by the Ethiopian parliament in June 2011. The accusation of OLF support has
often been used as a pretext to silence individuals openly exercising dissenting behaviour such as
membership of an opposition political party or participation in a peaceful protest. However, in
addition to targeting demonstrators, students, members of opposition political parties and people
celebrating Oromo culture based on their actual or imputed political opinion, the government
frequently demonstrates that it anticipates dissenting political opinion widely among the population
of Oromia. People from all walks of life are regularly arrested based only on their suspected political
opinion – on the accusation they support the OLF. Amnesty International interviewed medical
professionals, business owners, farmers, teachers, employees of international NGOs and many
others who had been arrested based on this accusation in recent years. These arrests were often
based on suspicion alone, with little or no supporting evidence.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 6
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0007.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Certain behaviour arouses suspicion, such as refusal to join the ruling political party or movement
around or in and out of the region. Some people ‘inherit’ suspicion from their parents or other
family members. Expressions of dissenting opinions within the Oromo party in the ruling coalition –
the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO) – have also been responded to with the
accusation that the dissenter supports the OLF. Family members have also been arrested in lieu of
somebody else wanted for actual or suspected dissenting behaviour, a form of collective punishment
illegal under international law.
In some of these cases too, the accusation of OLF support and arrest on that basis appears to be a
pretext used to warn, control or punish signs of ‘political disobedience’ and people who have
influence over others and are not members of the ruling political party. But the constant repetition
of the allegation suggests the government continues to anticipate a level of sympathy for the OLF
amongst the Oromo population writ large. Further, the government appears to also believe that the
OLF is behind many signs of peaceful dissent in the region.
However, in numerous cases, the accusation of supporting the OLF and the resulting arrest do not
ever translate into a criminal charge. The majority of all people interviewed by Amnesty
International who had been arrested for their actual or suspected dissenting behaviour or political
opinion said that they were detained without being charged, tried or going to court to review the
legality of their detention, in some cases for months or years. Frequently, therefore, the alleged
support for the OLF remains unsubstantiated and unproven. Often, it is merely an informal
allegation made during the course of interrogation. Further, questions asked of actual or suspected
dissenters by interrogators in detention also suggest that the exercise of certain legal rights – for
example, participation in a peaceful protest – is taken as evidence of OLF support. A number of
people interviewed by Amnesty International had been subjected to repeated arrest on the same
allegation of being anti- government or of OLF support, without ever being charged.
Amnesty International interviewed around 150 Oromos who were targeted for actual or suspected
dissent. Of those who were arrested on these bases, the majority said they were subjected to
arbitrary detention without judicial review, charge or trial, for some or all of the period of their
detention, for periods ranging from several days to several years. In the majority of those cases, the
individual said they were arbitrarily detained for the entire duration of their detention. In fewer
cases, though still reported by a notable number of interviewees, the detainee was held arbitrarily –
without charge or being brought before a court – during an initial period that again ranged from a
number of weeks to a number of years, before the detainee was eventually brought before a court.
A high proportion of people interviewed by Amnesty International were also held incommunicado –
denied access to legal representation and family members and contact with the outside world – for
some or all of their period of detention. In many of these cases, the detention amounted to enforced
disappearance, such as where lack of access to legal counsel and family members and lack of
information on the detainee’s fate or whereabouts placed a detainee outside the protection of the
law. Many people reported to Amnesty International that, after their family members had been
arrested, they had never heard from them again. The family continued to be ignorant of their fate
and did not know whether they were alive or dead.
Arrests of actual or suspected dissenters in Oromia reported to Amnesty International were made by
local and federal police, the federal military and intelligence officers, often without a warrant.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 7
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0008.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Detainees were held in Kebele, Woreda and Zonal
3
detention centres, police stations, regional and
federal prisons. However, a large proportion of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty
International were detained in unofficial places of detention, mostly in military camps throughout
the region. In some cases apparently considered more serious, detainees were transferred to
Maikelawi in Addis Ababa. Arbitrary detention without charge or trial was reported in all of these
places of detention.
Almost all people interviewed by Amnesty International who had been detained in military camps or
other unofficial places of detention said their detention was not subject to any form of judicial
review. All detainees in military camps in Oromia interviewed by Amnesty International experienced
some violations of the rights and protections of due process and a high proportion of all
interviewees who had been detained in a military camp reported torture, including rape, and other
ill-treatment.
Actual or suspected dissenters have been subjected to torture in federal and regional detention
centres and prisons, police stations, including Maikelawi, military camps and other unofficial places
of detention. The majority of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International, arrested
based on their actual or imputed political opinion, reported that they had been subjected to
treatment amounting to torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, in most cases
repeatedly, while in detention or had been subjected to treatment that amounts to torture or ill-
treatment in and around their homes. Frequently reported methods of torture were beating,
particularly with fists, rubber batons, wooden or metal sticks or gun butts, kicking, tying in contorted
stress positions often in conjunction with beating on the soles of the feet, electric shocks, mock
execution or death threats involving a gun, beating with electric wire, burning, including with heated
metal or molten plastic, chaining or tying hands or ankles together for extended periods (up to
several months), rape, including gang rape, and extended solitary confinement. Former detainees
repeatedly said that they were coerced, in many cases under torture or the threat of torture, to
provide a statement or confession or incriminating evidence against others.
Accounts of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International consistently demonstrate that
conditions in detention in regional and federal police stations, regional and federal prisons, military
camps and other unofficial places of detention, violate international law and national and
international standards. Cases of death in detention were reported to Amnesty International by
former fellow detainees or family members of detainees. These deaths were reported to result from
torture, poor detention conditions and lack of medical assistance. Some of these cases may amount
to extra-judicial executions, where the detainees died as a result of torture or the intentional
deprivation of food or medical assistance.
There is no transparency or oversight of this system of arbitrary detention, and no independent
investigation of allegations of torture and other violations in detention. No independent human
rights organizations that monitor and publically document violations have access to detention
centres in Ethiopia.
In numerous cases, former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International also said their release
from arbitrary detention was premised on their agreement to a set of arbitrary conditions unlawfully
imposed by their captors rather than by any judicial procedure, and many of which entailed
foregoing the exercise of other human rights, such as those to the freedoms of expression,
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 8
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0009.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
association and movement. Failure to uphold the conditions, detainees were told, could lead to re-
arrest or worse. Regularly cited conditions included: not participating in demonstrations or other
gatherings, political meetings or student activities; not meeting with more than two or three
individuals at one time; not having any contact with certain people, including spouses or family
members wanted by the authorities for alleged dissenting behaviour; or not leaving the area where
they lived without seeking permission from local authorities. For a number of people interviewed by
Amnesty International, it was the difficulty of complying with these conditions and the restricting
impact they had on their lives, or fear of the consequences if they failed to comply, intentionally or
unintentionally, that caused them to flee the country.
The testimonies of people interviewed by Amnesty International, as well as information received
from a number of other sources and legal documents seen by the organization, indicate a number of
fair trial rights are regularly violated in cases of actual or suspected Oromo dissenters that have gone
to court, including the rights to a public hearing, to not be compelled to incriminate oneself, to be
tried without undue delay and the right to presumption of innocence. Amnesty International has
also documented cases in which the lawful exercise of the right to freedom of expression, or other
protected human rights, is cited as evidence of illegal support for the OLF in trials.
Amnesty International also received dozens of reports of actual or suspected dissenters being killed
by security services, in the context of security services’ response to protests, during the arrests of
actual or suspected dissidents, and while in detention. Some of these killings may amount to extra-
judicial executions.
A multiplicity of both regional and federal actors are involved in committing human rights violations
against actual or suspected dissenters in Oromia, including civilian administrative officials, local
police, federal police, local militia, federal military and intelligence services, with cooperation
between the different entities, including between the regional and federal levels.
Because of the many restrictions on human rights organizations and on the freedoms of association
and expression in Ethiopia, arrests and detentions are under-reported and almost no sources exist to
assist detainees and their families in accessing justice and pressing for remedies and accountability
for human rights violations.
The violations documented in this report take place in an environment of almost complete impunity
for the perpetrators. Interviewees regularly told Amnesty International that it was either not
possible or that there was no point in trying to complain, seek answers or seek justice in cases of
enforced disappearance, torture, possible extra-judicial execution or other violations. Many feared
repercussions for asking. Some were arrested when they did ask about a relative’s fate or
whereabouts. As Ethiopia heads towards general elections in 2015, it is likely that the government’s
efforts to suppress dissent, including through the use of arbitrary arrest and detention and other
violations, will continue unabated and may even increase.
The Ethiopian government must take a number of urgent and substantial measures to ensure no-
one is arrested, detained, charged, tried, convicted or sentenced on account of the peaceful exercise
of their rights to the freedoms of expression, association and assembly, including the right to
peacefully assemble to protest, or based on their imputed political opinion; to end unlawful
practices of arbitrary detention without charge or trial, incommunicado detention without access to
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 9
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0010.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
the outside world, detention in unofficial detention centres, and enforced disappearance; and to
address the prevalence of torture and other ill-treatment in Ethiopia’s detention centres. All
allegations of torture, incidents involving allegations of the unnecessary or excessive use of force by
security services against peaceful protestors, and all suspected cases of extra-judicial executions
must be urgently and properly investigated. Access to all prisons and other places of detention and
to all prisoners should be extended to appropriate independent, non-governmental bodies, including
international human rights bodies.
Donors with existing funding programmes working with federal and regional police, with the military
or with the prison system, should carry out thorough and impartial investigations into allegations of
human rights violations within those institutions, to ensure their funding is not contributing to the
commission of human rights violations.
Further, the international community should accord the situation in Ethiopia the highest possible
level of scrutiny. Existing domestic investigative and accountability mechanisms have proved not
capable of carrying out investigations that are independent, adequate, prompt, open to public
scrutiny and which sufficiently involve victims. Therefore, due to the apparent existence of an
entrenched pattern of violations in Ethiopia and due to concerns over the impartiality of established
domestic investigative procedures, there is a substantial and urgent need for intervention by
regional and international human rights bodies to conduct independent investigations into
allegations of widespread human rights violations in Oromia, as well as the rest of Ethiopia.
Investigations should be pursued through the establishment of an independent commission of
inquiry, fact-finding mission or comparable procedure, comprised of independent international
experts, under the auspices of the United Nations Human Rights Council or the African Commission
on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 10
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0011.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
MAP OF OROMIA
Source: OCHA/ReliefWeb
METHODOLOGY
This report documents patterns of human rights violations against actual and suspected dissenters in
the Oromia region of Ethiopia between 2011 and 2014.
Many former prisoners have commented on the high proportion of Oromos in the prison population
in federal prisons and the Federal Police Crime Investigation and Forensic Sector of Maikelawi in
Addis Ababa. Amnesty International has also for many years received regular unsolicited reports of
the targeting of actual or suspected dissenting voices in Oromia. In 2011, large sweeps seemingly in
response to a fear that the Middle East and North Africa popular uprisings of the period might be
replicated in Ethiopia resulted in the majority of those arrested being Oromos. For these reasons,
research was undertaken to examine and map patterns of violations against actual or suspected
dissenting voices in Oromia from the period beginning with the 2011 sweeps up to the time of
writing. Many of the patterns of violations documented in this report are long-standing – Oromia
has witnessed violations of the freedoms of expression and association, arbitrary detention, torture
and other human rights violations over a sustained period. This report documents the current
situation in the region, demonstrating that these patterns continue at scale.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 11
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0012.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Many of the human rights violations documented in this report, including arrests based on actual or
suspected dissent, violations of detainees’ due process rights, torture, violations in federal prisons
and in Maikelawi, affected other ethnic groups as well as Oromos over the same time period.
However, this reports focuses specifically on Oromia and Oromos due to the large scale of the
targeting of actual or perceived dissent in the region. This research did not, however, compare the
treatment of the Oromo to treatment of other ethnic groups, so the report does not seek to
establish discriminatory treatment, but to specifically document patterns of violations in Oromia.
The government has not permitted Amnesty International to access Ethiopia to conduct research
since the organization’s last visit in 2011. The 2011 visit was itself the first research visit for several
years and was cut short when Amnesty International delegates were ordered to leave the country,
despite possession of valid business visas.
The majority of the information and first-hand testimonies contained in this report were therefore
gathered through face-to-face interviews with 176 Oromo refugees conducted between July 2013
and July 2014. Interviews were conducted in four main locations – Nairobi and Kakuma refugee
camp in Kenya, Hargeisa in Somaliland and Kampala in Uganda. A range of sources were used to
identify interviewees, including referrals by other former detainees.
Many interviewees feared repercussions if their names were revealed, particularly those who still
have family members in Ethiopia. For this reason, the names of all interviewees have been withheld.
In some cases, the location of interviewees has also been withheld to avoid endangering them. In
some cases, the location in which the events described took place has also been withheld for the
Interviews were conducted in Afan Oromo and occasionally in Amharic, using interpreters, except
for a small number of cases where the interviewees spoke English. Fourteen translators were used
during the collection of testimonies.
In addition, more than 40 telephone interviews and email exchanges were conducted with people in
different locations in Oromia and in Addis Ababa between 2012 and 2014. These people were
victims of human rights violations, family members of victims or eye-witnesses of human rights
violations. Due to the risk of reprisals against those giving information to human rights organizations,
Amnesty International has not included identifying details for information received from within
Ethiopia.
In addition, a small number of individual telephone or face-to-face interviews were conducted with
Oromo refugees in the United Kingdom (UK), the United States (US) and Sweden.
Information was also taken from a further 30 face-to-face interviews conducted with Oromos in
Egypt and Ethiopia in 2011 (during Amnesty International’s last research and advocacy visit to the
country) and in Kenya in 2012.
In total, over 240 testimonies were used to compile this report. Details and corroborating
information was also taken from phone calls and emailed exchanges with Oromo activists in exile,
former prisoners from other ethnic groups, lawyers, media sources and previous Amnesty
International research.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 12
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0013.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Testimonies collected from interviewees over a range of locations and over a main research period
of one year consistently repeated the same or similar violations and experiences. The consistency of
these reports suggest patterns in the targeting of actual or suspected dissenters and their treatment
if arrested in Oromia. The same or similar experiences featured in the testimonies of interviewees
originally from a range of locations throughout Oromia, again demonstrating patterns in the
response of the government to dissent in the region. Human rights violations reported to Amnesty
International were included in this report where a substantial number of interviewees, interviewed
by Amnesty International on different days and in different locations, reported the same human
rights violation or pattern of treatment and where the pattern was supported by other corroborative
information. Of the 176 primary interviewees, around 150 had been harassed or arrested based on
possession of actual or suspected dissenting opinions or demonstration of dissenting behaviour. In
addition, the 40 interviews with people inside Oromia all concerned incidents or cases of the
targeting of dissenters, mostly peaceful protestors.
The majority of interviewees who had been arrested reported they were subjected to arbitrary
detention without charge or being brought before a judicial authority to review the legality of their
detention for some or all of the period of their detention, and a high proportion of those detained
reported they were subjected to torture. Methods of torture documented in this report were
included where between five and forty interviewees reported the same method. Descriptions
provided by former detainees and photographs of physical scars and other results of torture were
also corroborated with an independent medical forensics expert.
While this report looks at the period from the 2011 sweeps to the present day to document current
patterns of violations in Oromia, many interviewees had accumulated long histories of
the targeting of both themselves and their families, had experienced multiple incidents of arbitrary
detention, had family members who had been subjected to extra-judicial execution or enforced
disappearance or had experienced other violations over many years. Violations which occurred
before 2011 were not included in the report, but were relevant in identifying and corroborating
repeat violations or patterns of violations.
As Amnesty International does not have access to Ethiopia, it was not possible to meet with local or
regional authorities in Oromia or with the federal authorities in Addis Ababa to discuss the findings
of this research. Therefore, the organization communicated the main findings of the research to the
federal ministries of Defence, Federal Affairs and Justice and the regional government of Oromia,
copied to the Oromia Justice Bureau, along with sets of questions relating to the specific jurisdiction
of each addressee, to request information and comment on the findings. These letters are included
in an annex at the end of this report. A response was received from the Oromia Justice Bureau.
Where relevant, its contents have been incorporated into this report, and the response itself is also
included at the end of the report. At time of publication, Amnesty International had not received a
response from the three federal ministries.
This report is by no means a comprehensive appraisal of the situation in Oromia and all human rights
violations committed in the region since 2011. It seeks to identify and document patterns of human
rights violations in the region which require substantial action by the Government of Ethiopia – to
credibly and thoroughly investigate all incidents, identify perpetrators and bring them to justice and
provide information and reparations to victims and their families.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 13
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0014.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
The restrictive 2009 Charities and Societies Proclamation (CSP) has had a devastating impact on
domestic human rights organizations in Ethiopia. The independent media has also been under
sustained attack since the 2005 elections. For these reasons, in conjunction with the climate of fear
and risk of repercussions against anyone reporting human rights violations, incidents and patterns of
human rights violations in Ethiopia are under-reported and investigated. As a result, in the period
covered in this report, there has been limited information on, or documentation of, human rights
violations in Oromia from domestic independent human rights organizations or other relevant actors
within the country.
INTRODUCTION
“The prison speaks Oromiffa” Siye Abraha
A number of former prisoners have commented on the high proportion of Oromos among the
population of Ethiopia’s federal prisons and the federal police detention centre of Maikelawi. Siye
Abraha, former politburo member of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), the most powerful
group in the ruling coalition, famously said upon his release in 2007 after more than five years’
detention on alleged corruption charges “the
prison speaks Oromiffa”
(the Oromo language, also
referred to as Afan Oromo). Former President of Ethiopia, Negasso Gidada, has stated that, when he
left power in 2001, there were 25,000 Oromo prisoners in regional and federal prisons on the
accusation of supporting the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF).4
Oromia is Ethiopia’s largest region, covering more than 30% of the country’s landmass,5 and the
Oromo are the largest ethnic group in the country – comprising 35.3% of the population according to
a 2012 Inter-Censal Population Survey.6 However, this numerical size alone does not account for the
high proportion of Oromos in the country’s prisons. Oromia and the Oromo have long been subject
to repression based on an imputed opposition to the government. Among the Oromo population
inside Ethiopia and in exile, there is much criticism of the government’s treatment of the Oromo, the
historical treatment of the Oromo by previous governments and criticism of the government’s
practices in the region.
The ruling Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) is hostile to dissent wherever
and however it manifests. Since the 2005 elections, the environment for freedom of expression and
association has steadily deteriorated – members of legally-registered opposition political parties
have been jailed in large numbers, the independent media and human rights civil society have been
dismantled through a combination of harassment and repressive legislation. But in Oromia, the
government’s intolerance of dissent is particularly potent. The government has demonstrated
repeatedly that it anticipates a high level of dissent among the Oromo. This, in conjunction with the
numerical size of the Oromo and the sense of Oromo identity and nationalism, is assumed to pose a
potential political threat.
As a result, hundreds of Oromos are regularly arrested, individually and in groups, based on their
actual or suspected opposition to the government. Thousands have been arrested in the last few
years alone. Signs of dissent are sought out and suppressed. Peaceful protestors, students, people
celebrating Oromo cultural heritage and members of political opposition parties are targeted for
arbitrary arrest and detention. In addition, people from all walks of life, including medical
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 14
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0015.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
professionals, artists, athletes, businesspeople, teachers and many others, are regularly arrested and
detained based on their suspected political opinion.
Comprehensive official statistics are not available of the number of Oromos currently in detention. A
2012 report from the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) stated there were 26,527
detainees in regional detention centres in Oromia.7 The statistics also cited a total of 17,752
detainees in federal detention centres. However, a breakdown of this figure disaggregated by
ethnicity was not available, so it is not known how many of these were Oromos. The regional figure
for Oromia does not include detainees in police stations or in unofficial places of detention such as
military camps – in which hundreds of people are arbitrarily detained in Oromia. Nor does the report
acknowledge or take into account people held arbitrarily without charge or trial and without being
brought before a judicial authority to review the lawfulness of the detention. Therefore, it is not
possible to know the accurate figure of Oromo detainees in the country.
The significant majority of Oromos arrested for their actual or suspected opposition to the
government are accused of supporting the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) – see box below. However,
in a high proportion of these cases, the arrested person is not charged with a crime. Hundreds of
people are regularly detained without charge or trial, for weeks, months or years – apparently
intended to warn, punish or silence them, in ways in which justice is often absent.
Part I of this report documents the patterns of targeting, harassment and arbitrary arrest of people
based on their actual or imputed political opinion. Part II of the report documents the patterns of
arbitrary detention without charge or trial, enforced disappearance, torture and other ill-treatment,
extra-judicial executions and other violations against actual or suspected dissenters targeted by the
government.
THE OROMO LIBERATION FRONT (OLF)
The majority of Oromos arrested for actual or suspected dissent interviewed by Amnesty
International, as well as suspected Oromo dissidents arrested in scores of other cases reported to the
organization, were accused of supporting the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF). The OLF (and its
armed wing the Oromo Liberation Army, OLA), formed in the 1970s, was one of a number of armed
groups that fought against the previous government of Mengistu Hailemariam. When Mengistu
Hailemariam was overthrown in 1991, the OLF was briefly part of a transitional government led by
the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition. However, the OLF
always had an uneasy relationship with the TPLF – the strongest political party in the EPRDF
coalition. These tensions led to the OLF leaving the transitional government in 1992. Subsequently,
thousands of OLF fighters, supporters and suspected supporters were arrested.
Since then, the OLF has continued to wage a low-level armed struggle against the government, stating
that its fundamental objective is to exercise the Oromo peoples’ right to self-determination.
The 1994 Constitution guarantees the “right of self-determination up to secession” (Article 39).
Nevertheless, since the OLF left the transitional government, thousands of Oromos have been arrested
and detained, often without charge or trial, and sometimes for many years, on the allegation of
supporting the OLF. In June 2011, parliament proscribed the OLF as a terrorist organization.
The Constitution established Ethiopia as a multicultural federation based on ethno-national
representation and provided for nine ethnic-based regional states. However, the regional state
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 15
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0016.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
governments are considered to be weak compared to the federal government. Further, the Oromo-
based party in the ruling EPRDF coalition – the Oromo People’s Democratic Organisation (OPDO),
which was formed in 1990 – is widely known to have been created by the TPLF, and never had the
same base of popular support in the region as the OLF. The OPDO continues to be distrusted by
many Oromos. In addition, the OPDO is considered weak within the ruling coalition.
The OLF has been riven by leadership divisions and relatively inactive in recent years. Estimates put
the number of fighters now at a few thousand. A summary of the group’s activities in 2012 (the
latest available) listed around 65 incidents, including single targeted killings, attacks on military
camps, ambushes and skirmishes. The group says it killed around 150 people during 2012 including
soldiers, local and federal police, ‘security officers’ and militia.
The OLF has also been accused of human rights abuses through the years. The government has
accused the group of responsibility for a series of bombings throughout the country. The group
openly states in its list of 2012 activities that some people were killed for refusing to stop
collaborating with the government.
The government suggests the OLF continues to enjoy popular support in Oromia and many observers
agree. This may be true, at least to some extent - a widely-held perception of marginalisation and
repression of the Oromo at the hands of the government may cause some Oromos to retain
sympathy for the aims of the OLF, and a belief that the OLF represents their interests, although some
young Oromos state the OLF ceased to exist before they were born and is not relevant to them in
the current context.
However, the government regularly equates exercising various rights such as participation in
peaceful protests, membership of a political opposition party or refusal to join the ruling political
party, as ‘evidence’ of OLF support.
In the context of the EPRDF’s hostility to dissent, it is often unclear whether the government still
believes there to be a high level of support for the OLF or whether it is merely politically expedient
for it to say so. The government anticipates opposition to the EPRDF in Oromia and the pretext of
OLF support is frequently used to silence voices the government does not wish to be heard and
justify the large-scale repression of all dissent in Oromia.
PART I: ARBITRARY ARRESTS OF ACTUAL OR SUSPECTED DISSENTERS
“In 2011, there was unrest and revolution in the Middle East. So the
government had fear that such a movement would happen in Ethiopia and, if it
did, we would mobilise the people. So they arrested people before anything
happened.”
Member and former regional parliamentary candidate of Oromo People’s Congress
opposition political party, arrested in 20118
Under international law and the Ethiopian Constitution, the rights to the freedoms of expression,
association and cultural participation are guaranteed.9 No-one can be arrested based on their actual
or imputed political opinion, participation in peaceful protests, lawful exercise of their right to
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 16
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0017.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
freedom of expression or expression of their cultural identity. Such arrests are arbitrary and contrary
to international and Ethiopian law.
However, Amnesty International has received reports and information about the arbitrary arrests of
at least 5000 actual or suspected opponents of the government in Oromia since 2011, based on their
manifestation of dissenting opinions, exercise of freedom of expression or imputed political
opinions. These included thousands of peaceful protestors, hundreds of political opposition
members and hundreds of other individuals arrested for various reasons.10 Due to restrictions on
human rights reporting, independent journalism and information exchange in Ethiopia and a lack of
transparency with respect to detention practices, it is possible there are many additional cases that
have not been reported or documented.
The Government of Ethiopia exhibits a general intolerance of dissent, encompassing criticism of the
government or even suggestions about the government’s unpopularity.11 In Oromia, this
intolerance manifests regularly. But further, the government repeatedly shows that it anticipates a
high level of dissent or opposition to the government in Oromia, and signs of dissent are sought out
and regularly, sometimes pre-emptively, suppressed, including through the use of arbitrary arrest
and detention, often without charge.
Thousands of people openly expressing dissent – such as peaceful protestors and members of
legally-registered opposition parties – have been arrested between 2011 and 2014. In addition, the
government also anticipates dissent amongst certain groups and individuals. Many students in
Oromia are harassed, subjected to surveillance and arrested based on their actual or suspected
political opinion or participation in peaceful protests. Expressions of Oromo history and culture have
also been interpreted by the government as manifestations of dissent and not tolerated – Amnesty
International has received reports of hundreds of people arrested for celebrating their cultural
identity as Oromos, singing or writing about their culture, or during traditional Oromo festivals.12
These groups – opposition political parties, student groups, peaceful protestors, people involved in
promoting Oromo culture and other people in positions the government believes could influence
their communities – are treated with hostility, not only due to their own actual or alleged dissenting
behaviour, but also due to their perceived potential to catalyse opposition to the government. A
number of people arrested for actual or suspected dissent told Amnesty International they were
accused of the ‘incitement’ of others to oppose the government.
Anyone arrested based on their actual or suspected political opinion, their participation in peaceful
protests, the exercise of their right to freedom of expression or their expression of their cultural
identity as an Oromo, is a prisoner of conscience and should be released immediately and
unconditionally.
The majority of actual or suspected dissenters who had been arrested in Oromia interviewed by
Amnesty International were accused of supporting the OLF – the armed group in the region,
proscribed as a terrorist organization by parliament in June 2011. This accusation is often levelled
against individuals arrested for openly exercising dissenting behaviour such as membership of an
opposition political party or participation in a peaceful protest as a pretext to silence them.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 17
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0018.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
In addition to targeting openly dissenting or politically active individuals, the government frequently
demonstrates that it anticipates dissenting political opinion widely among the general population of
Oromia. People from all walks of life are regularly arrested based on their suspected political opinion
– on the accusation they support the OLF. Amnesty International interviewed medical professionals,
business owners, farmers, artists, civil society workers and others who had been arrested based on
this accusation in recent years. These arrests were often based on suspicion alone, with little or no
supporting evidence. In some cases, suspicion is based on actions such as refusing to join the ruling
political party and some people ‘inherit’ suspicion from their parents or other family members.
Family members have been arrested in lieu of somebody else wanted for suspected OLF support, a
form of collective punishment illegal under international law. Even expressions of dissenting
opinions within the OPDO have been responded to with the accusation that the dissenter supports
the OLF. In some of these cases too, the accusation of OLF support and arrest on that basis appear to
be a pretext to control or punish signs of ‘political disobedience’ and/or people who might influence
others.
The government demonstrates that it continues to believe sympathy or support for the OLF remains
widespread in the region. Further, the government appears to also believe the OLF is behind many
signs of peaceful dissent in the region. People arrested for participation in peaceful protests on a
range of issues, for membership of legally-registered opposition political parties, for membership in
a student or cultural society and other peaceful expressions of their political opinions or cultural
identity, have been compelled during interrogation in detention to confess the OLF was behind their
actions.
The testimonies of many people interviewed by Amnesty International showed a pattern of
suspicion accumulating based on previous actions:
“The
2011 arrest was worse than previous arrests. The problem was my accumulated record: I
became more and more of a suspect because I didn’t attend the government’s political meetings.”13
People who had participated in a peaceful protest, failed to attend ruling political party meetings,
refused join the ruling political party or had previously fallen under suspicion of holding dissenting
opinions, told Amnesty International they subsequently fell under ongoing suspicion and, in some
cases, would be subjected to repeated arrest on the allegation of being anti-government:
“If
you’ve been suspected once by the government, then you are under constant surveillance. All your
activities are monitored.”14
Many Oromos have been arrested on repeated occasions based on the same suspicion of holding
dissenting opinions, without being charged, taken to court or having any evidence presented against
them. One young man interviewed by Amnesty International had been detained five times between
the ages of 14 and 18, for periods ranging from three weeks to eight months, without being charged
on any occasion.15 Another young man detailed to Amnesty International the four times he had
been detained, for periods ranging from two weeks to nine months, without charge or trial, each
time on suspicion of having instigated demonstrations. When he heard the government was looking
for him to arrest him for a fifth time, he fled the country.16
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 18
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0019.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
The targets of suppression are often young people, particularly those who are frequently the
instigators of and participants in protests, but also as part of a demographic from which the
government appears to fear large-scale dissent or popular unrest might manifest, as detailed below
in relation to the harassment of students. In 2012-13, Ethiopia’s Muslim community staged a series
of protests against alleged government interference in Islamic affairs, including in Oromia, which
saw incidents of unnecessary and excessive use of force by security services and mass arrests. In the
wake of one such incident in Oromia, a local resident told Amnesty International:
“You can’t see any youth in the area now. They have been arrested, they are not leaving their houses,
or they have fled to the rural areas to hide.”17
Many Oromos believe they are targeted based purely on their ethnic identity. When asked why they
were arrested, the initial answer many people gave to Amnesty International was simply “because I
am Oromo.”
“For this government, being Oromo is a crime.”18
The accusation of OLF support is frequently levelled against people with little or no evidence. In
numerous cases, the accusation and the resulting arrest do not ever translate into a criminal charge.
In the majority of all cases documented in this section of the report – in all categories of reasons for
arrest – individuals said they were detained without being charged, sometimes for months or years.
In many cases, therefore, their alleged support for the OLF remains unsubstantiated and unproven.
Frequently, it is merely an informal allegation made during the course of interrogation. Questions
asked of actual or suspected dissenters by interrogators in detention also suggest the exercise of
certain legal rights – for example, participation in a peaceful protest – is taken as evidence of OLF
support. Amnesty International has also documented cases in which the lawful exercise of the right
to freedom of expression, or other protected human rights, is cited as evidence of illegal support for
the OLF in trials.
Further, in cases where there is a genuine basis for the allegation of OLF support, and where charges
and a trial do take place, broad and ambiguous terms in the criminal law which criminalize, for
example, “moral
support”19
for a terrorist organization lack the clarity required of laws restricting
the exercise of rights.20 It is difficult to discern, for example, whether the law criminalizes acts such
as holding an opinion in support of the OLF – for example, where an individual believes the OLF is
fighting a just cause, agrees with the aims of the OLF or similar – or whether the law considers such
opinions the valid exercise of freedom of expression and opinion protected under the Constitution
and international law which may not be criminalised.21
Therefore, many people arrested based on genuine suspicion of support for the OLF, who have not
had further involvement or used or advocated violence, are prisoners of conscience – arrested solely
on the basis of their suspected political opinion and should be released immediately and
unconditionally.
Arrests of actual or suspected dissenters in Oromia reported to Amnesty International were made by
local and federal police, the federal military and intelligence officers, often without a warrant.
Detainees were held in Kebele, Woreda and Zonal22 detention centres, police stations, regional and
federal prisons, military camps and other unofficial places of detention. In some cases apparently
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 19
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0020.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
considered more serious, the detainee was transferred to the Federal Police Crime Investigation and
Forensic Sector known as Maikelawi in Addis Ababa. Both the regional and federal authorities are
responsible for arbitrary arrests and detentions. In some cases, former detainees interviewed by
Amnesty International reported there had been cooperation between local and federal authorities in
these practices.
The majority of people arrested for actual or suspected dissent interviewed by Amnesty
International said they were held arbitrarily – without charge or trial, and without being brought
before a judicial officer to review the legality of the detention. Actual or suspected dissenters were
detained for periods ranging from several days to several years, in many cases without ever being
charged. In several cases reported to Amnesty International, when large numbers of people
(hundreds or more) were arrested after demonstrations, the majority were released after periods
ranging from a few days to a few months, while some, including those suspected of instigating the
demonstration, were detained for longer periods. However, often, as detention is arbitrary and the
duration is not decided by a judicial process, periods for which people are detained for a similar
‘offence,’ for example, membership of an opposition political party, can vary significantly, and there
does not appear to be consistency in the treatment of actual or suspected dissenters arrested for
similar reasons.
Part II of this report documents what happens to actual or suspected dissenters after arrest,
including numerous violations of the due process rights of detainees. In addition to detention
without charge, trial or judicial review, a significant proportion of former detainees interviewed by
Amnesty International said they were held incommunicado – with no contact with family members,
legal representatives or others, and many were held in unofficial places of detention. Detentions in
these circumstances often amount to enforced disappearance – the government refuses to confirm
the arrests or conceals the whereabouts or fate of the disappeared persons, placing them outside
the protection of the law. Torture and other ill- treatment were widely reported among former
detainees interviewed by Amnesty International.
In cases where actual or suspected dissenters are charged, generally on the accusation of supporting
the OLF, the charges usually fall under the group of charges in the Criminal Code entitled ‘Crimes
against the Constitutional Order and the Internal Security of the State,’ a group of charges used
innumerable times in the past to imprison and thereby suppress suggestions of dissent amongst the
Oromo, as well as against actual or suspected dissenters in other regions.23 Convictions have been
handed down against actual or perceived dissenters in proceedings marred by fair trial concerns.
Part II also documents cases of extra-judicial execution of actual or suspected dissenters.
GROUPS AT RISK OF ARBITRARY ARREST IN OROMIA BASED ON
ACTUAL OR SUSPECTED DISSENT
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 20
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0021.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
PEACEFUL PROTESTORS
The right to peacefully assemble to protest is protected in Ethiopian and international law. The
Constitution contains an expansive provision on this right which states “Everyone shall have the
freedom, in association with others, to peaceably assemble without arms, engage in public
demonstration and the right to petition.”24 The response received by Amnesty International from
the Oromia Justice Bureau noted that “appropriate regulations are put in place in the interest of
public convenience relating to the location of open-air meetings and the route of movement of
demonstrators or, for the protection of democratic rights, public morality and peace during such a
meeting or demonstration.” But, it further noted, “This does not exempt organizers from liability
under laws enacted to protect the well-being of youth or the honour and reputation of individuals,
and laws prohibiting propaganda.”25
The United Nations (UN) Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement
Officials and the UN Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials establish guidelines which
govern, inter alia, situations in which law enforcement officials may use force without violating
human rights, including the right to life. They state law enforcement officials may use only such force
as is necessary and proportionate to achieve legitimate aims and may resort to the intentional lethal
use of firearms only if strictly unavoidable to protect human life.26
The violent crackdown on student protests across Oromia in April and May 2014 had a number of
large and small-scale precedents in which the federal and regional authorities aggressively and
sometimes violently suppressed protests and demonstrations in Oromia. They included large-scale
incidents involving protests occurring in multiple locations and smaller, more localised
demonstrations.27
Thousands of Oromos have been arrested between 2011 and 2014 for participating in peaceful
protests on a wide range of issues. Several thousand people were reported to have been arrested in
the context of a series of protests carried out by the Muslim community in 2012-2013 against
alleged government interference in Islamic affairs, and during and after the ‘Master Plan’ protests in
2014. Several thousand people were reported to have been arrested in relation to coordinated
protests staged by farmers in 10 locations across Oromia in 2012. Around 1000 further arrests were
reported to Amnesty International as having taken place in seven different incidents of peaceful
protests.
Protests are taken as criticism of, or opposition to, the government, which is not tolerated, no
matter what issue or grievance is the subject of the demonstration. The government has shown
intolerance of protests, particularly since the disputed 2005 elections, in the aftermath of which
security services opened fire on peaceful protestors in Addis Ababa and thousands of people were
arrested around the country.28 Amnesty International is aware of incidents in other parts of the
country of the suppression of peaceful protests and the related arrests of many people, including
during the Muslim protest movement. These are regular occurrences in Oromia.
Amnesty International interviewed people arrested for demonstrating about job opportunities,
forced evictions, the price of fertilizer, students’ rights, the teaching of the Oromo language, and, in
several incidents, the arrest or extra-judicial executions of farmers, students, children and others
targeted for expressing dissent, participation in peaceful protests or based on their imputed political
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 21
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0022.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
opinion – on the accusation they supported the OLF or simply did not support the government.29
Peaceful protestors made up a significant proportion of the 5000 cases of actual or suspected
dissenters arrested in Oromia since 2011 known to Amnesty International.
Amnesty International has received information and testimonies relating to several incidents over
the last three years in which security services are alleged to have used unnecessary force against
peaceful protestors, including firing live ammunition on unarmed protestors and allegations of
beating of peaceful protestors and, in some cases, bystanders, resulting in deaths and injuries.30 The
killing of protestors during several demonstrations since 2011 amount to extra-judicial executions,
as discussed later in this report.
Amnesty International interviewed around three dozen people involved in or witnesses to incidents
in the large scale protests of the 2012-13 Muslim protest movement and the 2014 ‘Master Plan’
protests. In addition, Amnesty International interviewed nine people who had been arrested for
their participation in other protests, and around 10 people arrested in apparent pre-emptive moves
against demonstrations happening in 2011.
Some people were arrested during the protest itself but, in at least five reported cases, people who
had been involved and those suspected of organising the protest were also pursued and arrested
after the protest had taken place. People interviewed by Amnesty International reported incidents
of arrests of protestors carried out by local and federal police and the federal military. Some
interviewees reported that the ensuing detention of protestors – often without charge – was longer
in cases of organisers or suspected organisers and that the organisers were subjected to worse
conditions of detention. Incidents of the enforced disappearance of organisers or suspected
organisers were reported to Amnesty International.
THE 2014 ‘MASTER PLAN’ PROTESTS
In April and May 2014, protests against the ‘Addis Ababa and Oromia Special Zone Integrated
Development Master Plan’ took place in many universities and towns across Oromia. According to
the government, the ‘Master Plan’ would bring urban services to remote areas. However, protestors
and other Oromos feared that the move would be detrimental to the interests of Oromo farmers
and would lead to large-scale evictions to make way for land leasing or sale, which had already
happened in some parts of the region. Many Oromos also considered the move to be in violation of
the Constitutionally-guaranteed protection of the “special interest” of Oromia in relation to the
“supply of services or the utilization of resources or administrative matters arising from the presence
of the city of Addis Ababa within the state of Oromia.”31 The security services responded to the
protests with unnecessary and excessive force and arbitrary arrests. The violent response of the
security services to the initial protests contributed to fuelling further protests. Eye-witnesses, local
residents and other sources told Amnesty International that security services, comprised of federal
police and the military special forces, opened fire with live ammunition on peaceful protestors in
Ambo and Guder towns and at Wallega and Madawalabu universities.32 Due to the ongoing military
operation, restrictions on independent media and human rights organizations and the number of
incidents involved, even three months after the incidents there was no confirmed number of those
killed during the protests. However, reports consistently indicated at least 30 people had been killed.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 22
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0023.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Students and children as young as eleven were among the dead. According to available information,
at time of writing, no investigations had taken place into the incidents.
Amnesty International received reports of the security services beating hundreds of people, during
and after the protests, including protestors, bystanders and parents of protestors for failing to
‘control’ their children, resulting in scores of injuries in locations including Ambo, Jimma, Nekemte,
Wallega, Dembi Dollo, Robe town, Madawalabu and Haromaya.33 Thousands of people were
reported to have been arrested in the wake of the protests. Witnesses told Amnesty International
many of the arrests took place after the protestors had dispersed. Security services conducted
house-to-house searches in a number of locations in the region, looking for students and others who
may have been involved. Hundreds were initially taken to Senkele police training camp near Ambo.
Subsequently, detainees were reported to be in prisons across the region, including in Ambo, Dire
Dawa, Gimbi, Dembi Dollo and Kelem Wallega. Arrests continued to be reported during June
2014.34
Following the protests, local residents told Amnesty International there was a high security force
presence in several towns across the region and on some university campuses. In early May, sources
in Oromia told Amnesty International that classes were suspended in some universities, and in other
universities where classes had not been suspended or had already resumed after brief suspensions,
attendance registers were being taken for classes and those not present would fall under suspicion
of involvement in the protests, which could result in further repercussions.
Most of those arrested were reported to have been initially detained without charge and
incommunicado. Some who fell under suspicion of having organised the protests or who were
previously suspected of dissenting tendencies were transported to Maikelawi. Amnesty International
had received the names of 43 individuals transferred to Maikelawi by the end of July 2014 and some
reports indicated 40 other people may also have been transferred. These were reported to include
students from Haromaya, Jimma, Wallega and Adama universities, as well as farmers and
businesspeople from various locations throughout the region. Amnesty International received
information from the family of one of the detained students that they had been denied access to
visit the detainee in Maikelawi in mid-June 2014.35
In July 2014, Amnesty International received several reports that a number of people arrested in
relation to the ‘Master Plan’ protests continued to be held in detention in Kelem Wallega, Jimma and
Ambo despite the fact the courts had ordered their release on bail or their unconditional release.
Many of those arrested were released after varying periods of time in detention, between May and
October 2014. By late September sources indicated that many of those arrested had been released
either on bail or released without charge. However, Amnesty International also received information
of individuals who were denied bail, and others who continued to be detained without charge,
including in Maikelawi. Others, including students and Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC) opposition
political party members, were prosecuted and convicted in rapid trials on various charges relating to
the protests, including a group in Ambo reportedly convicted in late September and sentenced to
periods of imprisonment ranging from one year to six years. Amnesty International received
information that some protestors were charged with offences such as theft during the protests,
while others were reportedly charged with ‘inciting unrest to overthrow the government.’
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 23
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0024.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
The OFC reported that further arrests of their members, students and other people took place in
September and October 2014, including several hundred arrests in early October in Hurumu and
Yayu Woredas in Illubabor Zone, of high school students, farmers and other local residents.36
2012-2013 MUSLIM PROTEST MOVEMENT
In 2012 and 2013, another large-scale protest movement witnessed arrests and the reported use of
excessive and unnecessary force by security services, as the Muslim community staged a series of
demonstrations against alleged government interference in Islamic affairs. These took place in Addis
Ababa, a number of locations across Oromia and other parts of the country. Amnesty International is
aware of at least five incidents in Oromia that resulted in the arrests of people involved in, or
suspected of involvement in, the Muslim protest movement. As with the ‘Master Plan’ protests, local
and federal police, and the federal military were reported to have been responsible for arrests in
relation to the Muslim movement.
One incident in the town of Kofele in August 2013, resulted in the deaths of at least 11 people,
including children. The demonstrators were protesting against the arrests of members of the local
Muslim community. Witnesses told Amnesty International the police and military opened fire on the
demonstrators. One resident of Kofele told Amnesty International 14 people were shot dead by the
army, including at least three children. Another said that 11 people had been killed. One resident
told Amnesty International:
“They
didn’t even shoot towards the sky, they shot at the people who were running. I don’t even have
the words to describe it.”37
A young man told Amnesty International that his father had been beaten by soldiers when he went
to retrieve the body of his 14-year-old son (the interviewee’s brother) who had been killed at the
town mosque.38 Many hundreds of people were reported to have been arrested, including in house-
to-house searches after the demonstration dispersed. A significant security presence was reported
around the area in the aftermath of the incident.
In April 2012, the police allegedly shot dead at least four people in Asasa town, Arsi district, in
relation to the Muslim protest movement during that year.39 Reports about the incident from the
government and from those involved differ. The violence is reported to have occurred when the
police attempted to arrest an Imam from the mosque. In statements to the media after the event,
the government stated supporters of the Imam attacked the police station to try to secure his
release. However, eye-witnesses said the police had opened fire in the town when supporters tried
to prevent the man’s arrest. The Imam was reportedly arrested because he had refused to undergo
‘training’ in Al Ahbash ideology, which the government had made obligatory for Muslim preachers.
OTHER PEACEFUL PROTESTORS TARGETED BETWEEN 2011 AND
2014
Between 2011 and 2014, peaceful protests across Oromia have resulted in arrests of protestors and
incidents of the alleged use of unnecessary and excessive force by security services against unarmed
protestors.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 24
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0025.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Amnesty International interviewed nine people arrested for actual or suspected participation in
individual protests on a wide range of issues and received information from other sources about
further protest-related arrests. Another 10 interviewees told Amnesty International their problems
with the government had begun when they participated in a peaceful protest in previous years.
In three of these cases, arrests took place at demonstrations against incidents of arbitrary arrest and
detention, enforced disappearance or killing of class-mates, friends or community members. A
former student told Amnesty International he and his fellow students had staged two
demonstrations demanding information on the whereabouts of four of their class-mates arrested by
the military and subjected to enforced disappearance for their membership in a student
development association:
“We
asked the university where the four students were but they said they had asked the military
what happened to them and the military said they didn’t know anything about them. So we
organised a demonstration to demand where they were. After the demo dispersed, we heard that the
military were coming to arrest the people involved, so we left the university and went into hiding.”41
Another young man told Amnesty International dozens of people were arrested in Dodola town in
early 2012 for demonstrating about the shooting by the military of a young boy as he went home
from school.42
In two of the incidents reported to Amnesty International, people were arrested for demonstrating
over a lack of job opportunities for graduating Oromo students, which they and their fellow students
believed was due to discrimination in the distribution of jobs by the government:
“In October 2012, I was arrested the second time. We demonstrated because Oromos who graduate
from college are not offered a job. People were asking for their rights because the government is
supposed to give them jobs.”43
“In early 2013, many people demonstrated in Chiro because most Oromo students do not get
assigned to any job because of our ethnicity if we’re not a member of OPDO. Twelve people were
arrested for that demonstration.”44
Another man interviewed by Amnesty International was arrested for petitioning the local authorities
over a road-building project which he said had caused displacement with no consultation or
compensation of the local community:
“We
took our complaint about the road-building project and the lack of compensation for people to
the regional level. A large number of us were arrested that day. If you complained about anything to
do with the project, they say you are anti-government and pro-OLF.”45
Another young man told Amnesty International how he had been arrested after taking part in a
demonstration in 2011 in Chancho town in Gololcaha Woreda, Arsi Zone of young people and their
parents protesting about children being taught in Amharic in school, instead of Afan Oromo:
“We
demonstrated to say we wanted to learn in Afan Oromo. The farmers were demonstrating
because they wanted their children to learn in the Oromo language. Even some people in the local
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 25
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0026.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
government who felt bad about the decision that we should be taught in Amharic joined in. Then the
military came and took us to the jail. About 250 people were arrested, including many students.”46
In early 2011, the authorities made large-scale arrests which appeared to be pre-emptive – to
prevent demonstrations from taking place. Hundreds of students and opposition political party
members were arrested across Oromia, apparently in relation to the ‘Arab Spring’ uprisings in the
Middle East and North Africa of that period. The government showed signs of fearing the unrest
would be replicated in Ethiopia and large numbers of opposition political party members, students
and other dissenters, including independent journalists and advocates of reform, were arrested. Of
the cases of arrests made known to Amnesty International, the majority were Oromos.47 In addition
to the large numbers of opposition political party members and students targeted in the sweeps,
artists, employees of international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and others were also
arrested.
Amnesty International received the names of at least 60 students who were reported to have been
arrested. In addition to this, sources believed that there had been further arrests, but the details of
those arrested were not known. Therefore, the true figure of students arrested may have been
higher.48 Students were reportedly arrested across Oromia, including from the universities of
Jimma, Haromaya, Awassa, Wallega, Nekemte, Ambo and Addis Ababa. A student from Jimma
University arrested in April 2011 had the same opinion on the cause of the arrests:
“They
feared the same [the uprisings] would happen in Ethiopia, particularly in universities and
particularly in Oromia. So, to prevent that, they arrested students from the universities to frustrate
any ideas they had about uprisings.”49
He was arrested alongside four other students from his department and detained without charge for
one month. During his detention, he was interrogated to tell if he knew of a clandestine student
network in the universities. He was released but said the four others were not and were transferred
to Maikelawi. Another student arrested from Addis Ababa University in 2011 was also held in
Maikelawi for six weeks. He told Amnesty International that Oromo students were detained with
him from universities across the region as well as many from Addis Ababa University.50
The arrests continued throughout the year. Further, members of the Oromo opposition political
parties were arrested in August and September 2011, as well as a number of students in August
2011. Amnesty International also received information about the arrests of more than 75 students
from Wallega and Adama universities and Gimbi town in December 2011.
Many of the people who reported protest-related arrests to Amnesty International said that, after
the demonstrations, the government searched for and tried to establish the leaders or organisers.
Interviewees said those suspected of having organised the demonstrations were treated as more
serious cases – resulting in longer detention periods, incommunicado detention or enforced
disappearance:
“Those who were accused of organising the demonstration were treated the worst.”51
“In
the military camp, those put underground and in the other building in the dark were the ones of
accused of organising the demonstration.”52
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 26
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0027.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A man who worked as an agricultural expert in a Zonal Bureau of Agriculture,53 told Amnesty
International large numbers of farmers were arrested on a regular basis either for protesting about
economic concerns or simply on the suspicion they supported the OLF. He said that, in May 2012,
peaceful demonstrations took place in 10 different locations in the course of one week to protest
about the availability and price of fertilizer and the detention of other farmers on the accusation of
supporting the OLF. Hundreds of farmers were arrested by the military for their involvement in the
demonstrations:
“The
government sent soldiers and hundreds of farmers were detained. I was not involved in the
demonstration but my job was presenting those kind of questions from the farmers to the
government so they accused me of being behind the demonstration. While the people were detained
at the Kebele level – in the Kebele office and at the police station – they took some time and
identified who they suspected was behind the demonstration and they took those people to the
military camp – Dembi Dollo camp in Kebele 7. I was among about 500 who were taken to the
camp.”54
Several people said they had been targeted when the government was searching for those
responsible after a demonstration because they were already under suspicion for reasons including,
inter alia, previous involvement in a demonstration, refusal to join the ruling political party or
because of the known or suspected political affiliation of their family members. A number of
dissenters arrested for various reasons said they were threatened by the authorities that they would
be held responsible if demonstrations or similar political activities took place in their area:
“I
was arrested for about eight months. Some school students had been arrested, so their classmates
had a demonstration to ask where they were and for them to be released. I was accused of
organising the demonstration because the government said my father supported the OLF so I did too
and therefore I must be the one who is organising the students.”55
Several people who had been arrested for their participation in peaceful protests told Amnesty
International they were accused, while in detention, of having had alternative political motivations –
that they did not genuinely wish to raise the issue the protest was ostensibly about, but merely
wished to oppose the government. Several people also told Amnesty International it was alleged the
demonstration they took part in – no matter what grievance was being protested – was instigated by
the OLF:
“They
said I was behind the demonstration and was inciting farmers against the government. They
said I had a connection with OLF.”56
It was reported to Amnesty International that during the 2014 ‘Master Plan’ protests, the 2012-13
Muslim protest movement and other individual demonstrations, bystanders within the vicinity of the
demonstrations were also arrested:
“In
October 2012, there was a demonstration in our town because people were not being offered
jobs by the government when they graduated. I did not participate but I was standing in front of our
shop watching the demonstration. The military came and started beating and arresting people and
they arrested me too. Many were arrested on that day. I was arrested for one month in a military
camp.”57
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 27
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0028.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A journalist told Amnesty International how he had been arrested while trying to report on a
demonstration in Adama in May 2012 about unemployment, inflation and other economic issues.
The demonstration was broken up by the military:
“I
was filming the demonstration. The military came and took the video camera. They broke it. I ran
away from them. In the evening, the military came to my house and arrested me.”58
Participation in demonstrations can cause long-term repercussions. Amnesty International
interviewed 10 people who said they experienced recurring problems with the government –
suspicion, harassment or arrest – based on previous participation in a demonstration. These
included students being suspended or expelled from school or university. One student arrested for
participating in a peaceful demonstration said:
“Although
we were released, the government cadres continued to watch over all of us on a daily
basis. This helps the government to identify where to target those who oppose them.”59
STUDENTS
Students comprised a significant proportion of all cases of arrests in relation to peaceful protests
reported to Amnesty International, including arrests during the 2014 ‘Master Plan’ protests. Scores
of students were also arrested in the large-scale sweeps in 2011 documented above.
But students in Oromia also face a wider, ongoing context of suspicion. A pattern of surveillance and
arrests demonstrates that the government anticipates dissent amongst students in Oromia and is
watchful for signs of dissent manifesting in this group. Current and former students have reported to
Amnesty International that there are high levels of surveillance for signs of dissent in schools and
universities.
As a result, large numbers of students are reported to have been arbitrarily arrested in recent years
based on their suspected political opinion. Oromo students have also reported restrictions on their
right to the freedoms of expression and association, including forming cultural societies. Perceived
dissenters, including those who have been arbitrarily arrested based on suspicion of holding
dissenting opinions or for participation in peaceful demonstrations, have been suspended or
expelled from their universities or high schools as punishment.
Amnesty International interviewed over 20 former students, from universities and high schools in
different locations across Oromia, who had been arrested on suspicion of holding dissenting
opinions. The interviewees reported similar patterns of surveillance and targeting of students in
different locations around the region.
SURVEILLANCE OF STUDENTS
Former students interviewed by Amnesty International felt there was high surveillance of Oromo
students.60 The sources of surveillance are reported to be extensive:
“They
[the ruling political party] have spies in the university, from the police, from federal security
offices, from regional security offices, but also their members who are in the class with you. If you ask
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 28
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0029.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
a remotely political question, they will report you. Then you will be accused of being a member of
OLF.”61
The regular presence of police or other security officers was reported on some university campuses,
including plain-clothed officers living alongside students in dormitories as informers:
“There are agents among students and university compound police who leak information to the
police outside the compound.”62
“They
call the university from the town. They have securities allocated for the college. To report on
the students, they call the police.”63
Several former students reported cooperation between university staff and local security forces or
local civilian officials in the surveillance of students and identification of suspected dissenters:
“The
university itself is the one who gives the list to the police of the students they think should be
investigated.”64
One student commented that university staff were under pressure to do so:
“The
lecturers ask students to join the ruling political party, then they report to the police. The
lecturer himself, it is not because he likes to do this, the government is forcing him to. So many
lecturers have suffered.”65
In the case cited above of the arrest of four members of a student development association,
Amnesty International was told:
“The
soldiers already had the list of their names. They got it from the security guards in the
compound. The military inform to the police and also the university administration so they all work
together.”66
HARASSMENT AND ARREST OF STUDENTS
The various surveillance efforts appear to be intended to watch for signs of dissent or political
activity among the student body, or to intimidate and harass students as a means of control.
Students repeatedly told Amnesty International that falling under suspicion of not supporting the
government or having dissenting tendencies, either causing the student to come under surveillance
or, in some cases, resulting from surveillance, can lead to ‘investigation’ and possible arrest:
“It
is common that the government fears the students might have different ideology so you get
investigated. The police come and interrogate the students. After that, the military come for those
who are suspected and take them away. One night after 9 pm, soldiers came to our dormitory and
took three students, including me. They asked us who we are, where we come from, what is our
objective in learning at this university. We told them we’d come to university for education and they
were asking us about politics. I was detained for eight months. They said that I wasn’t learning to
change myself, I was trying to mobilise students to overthrow the government.”67
A number of former students interviewed by Amnesty International said all students are expected to
demonstrate loyalty to the ruling political party and, by doing so, they protect themselves against
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 29
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0030.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
suspicion of holding anti-government opinions. Students and other people also told Amnesty
International membership in the ruling political party is necessary to enjoy opportunities, including
employment opportunities, after graduation. One former student at Jimma University said:
“The
government was forcing students to be a member of the party [OPDO]. They have a form to fill
in to become a member and in order to get opportunities, including job opportunities, after
graduation. If students refused, there was a consequence.”68
One consequence of refusal to join can be arrest. Amnesty International received information from
interviewees and from other sources of numerous cases of individual and group arrests of students
in Oromia between 2011 and 2014, in addition to those cases cited above who were arrested in
2011.
Seven former students told Amnesty International they had come under suspicion at university
because they refused to join the ruling EPRDF political party within the university and were
therefore suspected of having an alternative political agenda.69 One student arrested after he
refused to join the ruling party told Amnesty International:
“In
detention, the police interrogated me twice a week. They asked which kind of meeting I attended
at college. I said I didn’t call any meeting, I didn’t attend my meeting. The police officer beat me
badly on the face. I lost two teeth.”70
Several among those arrested for refusing to join the party, as well as students arrested for other
manifestations of actual or suspected dissent interviewed by Amnesty International said they were
accused during interrogation in detention of ‘incitement’ of others to not support the government.
The repetition of this accusation suggests the government fears students as potential instigators of
dissent:
“I
was in college in Arsi Negele. They said we had to be a member of the government in order to learn
in the college. A lot of students become the government supporter because of that. My brother and I
refused so we and two other students were said to be terrorists who were opposing the government
and were arrested. In the prison, they said if we agreed to be their member [of the ruling party], we
would go back to college; if not, we would be killed. We were told to join the ruling party so many
times. The time when we were arrested, the catalyst was that many students refused. They said we
incited them.”71
The testimony of several former students suggested students suspected of anti-government
opinions and also considered to have influence over other students appear to be particularly
targeted for ruling political party membership, apparently to neutralise a perceived threat. A student
at Adama University who was a local leader of the Oromo traditional religion Waaqeffannaa was
detained for a week at the local police station, interrogated and threatened. He said the people who
interrogated him were federal intelligence officers:
“They
told me unless you become a member of OPDO, you will not graduate from university, this is
your last warning. I said no, I don’t want to be involved in politics. They told me that people were
always reporting on me. He asked why I am not a member of OPDO. This is why they suspect you, he
told me.”72
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 30
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0031.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
One young man told Amnesty International he had been ordered by members of the Kebele
administration to recruit fellow students to join the ruling political party and then prove how many
had converted:
“The
other students said they came to learn, not to be members of the OPDO, so they refused. I had
to go back to the office and say the students refused. They said, so now the problem is with you – we
suspected you were doing some things against your government. I was arrested for two months, in
Chiro prison. I was never taken to court. The police asked the same question every time – why are you
trying to form your own political opinion?”73
Many students arrested on the suspicion of holding dissenting opinions, for refusal to join the ruling
political party or the formation of student societies told Amnesty International that, during
interrogation, it was alleged these activities were underpinned by support for the OLF. A former
student at Awassa University who won a competition to produce a business plan was subsequently
arrested on the accusation the plan was underpinned by political ideas. He was detained for eight
months without charge in Maikelawi and tortured:
“They
said you are doing the business plan to organise the Oromo people, the OLF is behind this. Who
is the member of the OLF in your university? Tell us who is a member of the government or not a
member and who runs the political agenda of the OLF in the campus.”74
VIOLATIONS OF THE RIGHTS TO FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION AND
CULTURAL EXPRESSION
Oromo student societies are treated with hostility on the suspicion their actions are politically
motivated. One former student told Amnesty International:
“They
fear if Oromo are organised, if they come together, that they will be supporters of OLF.”75
Amnesty International interviewed six students who had experienced harassment or arrest based on
their participation in a student society or, in some cases, suspicion of participating in a meeting of
such a society. This included discussions or advocacy about issues relating to students’ rights or
taking part in demonstrations on those issues:
“If
a student asked too many questions about their rights, later the military come and take them.
That is the system.”76
Another Oromo student assigned to Bahir Dar University in Amhara, said they had an Oromia
development association to discuss issues related to students’ rights in the university. As a result of
this, he told Amnesty International, soldiers came with a list of names and arrested four students on
the accusation their activities were political. The remaining students experienced further
harassment and were compelled to sign a commitment they would not do any further political
activities. He said:
“I
don’t know what happened to the four who were arrested, I don’t know where they were taken to
or if they were released. We asked the university but they said that they had asked the military what
happened to them and the military said they didn’t know anything about them.”77
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 31
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0032.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Most students arrested on this basis were accused of being motivated by OLF support. One student
who had been arbitrarily arrested on repeated occasions told Amnesty International he and some
other students had formed a group to discuss how to promote the well-being of the Oromo people:
“One
day the army came and surrounded the meeting. Twenty-two students were arrested. They
took us to Ambo police station for one night and then, in the morning, transferred us to Ambo
detention centre. I was detained for over seven months. After a couple of months of detention, they
gave us the accusation letter of what we were accused of – that we were OLF and were against the
government. We didn’t go to court for seven months. When we did, the court released us because
there was no evidence.”78
Participating in societies to discuss and promote Oromo culture and history also causes harassment
and in some cases, arrest:
“We
had a project of Oromo cultural studies. The government accused us that we are doing an
activity that can link information to the OLF, and to make the government collapse.”79
A young man who was the leader of a student association celebrating Oromo language, history,
culture and structures such as the Gadaa system said he was warned repeatedly to stop his activities
and join the ruling political party, but refused. As a result, he was subjected to arrest and arbitrary
detention on repeated occasions.80
VIOLATION OF THE RIGHT TO EDUCATION
The right to education is protected under international law on a non-discriminatory basis.81
Suspension, expulsion or conditionality placed on access to education based on actual or suspected
political opinions or activities including participation in peaceful protests constitute a violation of this
right.
Oromo students have been expelled or suspended from their education as punishment for their
actual or suspected involvement in political activities, including hundreds expelled or suspended for
participation in peaceful protests on a range of issues. Others have been expelled or suspended
because they were suspected of having anti-government opinions, in some cases after being
arbitrarily arrested for that reason. These acts of suspension or expulsion happen in individual cases
but Amnesty International has also received information from interviewees and other sources of a
number of instances of suspension or expulsion being imposed on groups of students, sometimes in
large numbers.
Students interviewed by Amnesty International believed these decisions were not made by the
school or university administration alone but reflected the involvement of local officials and/or
security services, in the same way that the involvement of local civilian authorities and local and
federal security services was reported in the surveillance and arrest of students suspected of
dissenting tendencies, often in co-operation with academic staff.82 In some cases, the involvement
of government entities was explicit – where conditions imposed on the release of students from
arbitrary detention included not returning to their education.
A student from Awassa University detained in Maikelawi for two and a half weeks because he was
accused of being responsible for protests that had happened in another location said:
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 32
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0033.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“They
released me, but gave me many conditions, including that I was not allowed to study for one
semester.”83
Students also reported that conditions imposed on their release after a period of arbitrary detention
based on their suspected political opinion included a requirement to disengage from any non-
curricular activities. A student from Addis Ababa University briefly arrested in January 2013 had to
sign a number of conditions before he was released:
“They
also forced me to sign a document that I would not participate in any student gatherings or
meetings.”84
Twenty-two students were reportedly dismissed from Ambo University on 1 March 2013 because
they protested the reported expulsion or suspension of 33 Oromo students from Addis Ababa
University after an altercation between Tigrayan and Oromo students.
Some students were not able to return to their education after a period of arbitrary arrest because
the university or college refused to re-register them or to provide the academic papers they required
to pursue the next stage of their education:
“When
I went back to the university after my release, they wouldn’t register me.”85
Another said he was released from arbitrary detention on conditions that he could not fulfil, which
prevented him from returning to his education:
“I
was released under the conditions that I had one month to convert the students to membership of
OPDO. They said if you don’t, there will be consequences for you. I was sure the students would not
agree and also this was not work for a student, I didn’t want to do that, I wanted to study, not do
politics. So I didn’t go back to school.”86
MEMBERS OF OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTIES
The Constitution guarantees the right to freely hold opinions, the right to vote and to be elected,
without distinction or discrimination, and the right to join political parties. These rights are also
protected under international law.87 Any arrest based on someone’s beliefs or the legitimate
expression of political opinion is arbitrary and unlawful under international law.88 Amnesty
International categorises persons arrested on this basis as prisoners of conscience.
Hundreds of members of Oromo opposition political parties have been arrested in Oromia and Addis
Ababa between 2011 and 2014, in large sweeps as well as in individual incidents. Amnesty
International spoke to a number of party officials from Oromo opposition parties who reported
arrests of large numbers of their members. In addition, the organization also interviewed over 20
people who had themselves, or whose spouses had, been arrested based on their involvement with
opposition political parties. The opposition political parties report members at the grass-roots level
are particularly vulnerable to harassment and possible arrest, though high profile members are also
targeted.
In some cases, those arrested were questioned in detention about their activities with legally-
registered opposition political parties. In some cases, security officers alleged links between
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 33
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0034.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
opposition political parties and the OLF and demanded information about the connection. The
pretext of OLF support is used in many of these cases to silence influential political voices which
could pose a – peaceful political – threat to the ruling political party.
The government’s intolerance and fear of dissent manifests in ongoing arrests of members and
supporters of opposition political parties but there appears to be an increase in this pattern around
elections. An OFC opposition political party official told Amnesty International he believes the large
number of opposition members arrested in sweeps in 2014 and 2011 were in part election-related.
Some people interviewed by Amnesty International reported their problems with the government
stemmed from involvement with an opposition political party at the time of the 2010 and 2005
elections. A number of cases were reported of opposition political party members being arrested
around both the 2005 and 2010 elections, because of their peaceful and legitimate activities, and
not being released until the elections were over:
“My
father was detained in Malka Wakena [military camp] from 2005 to 2010 because he supported
Oromo National Congress (ONC).89 He was released in 2010 but soon arrested again because he was
accused of still campaigning for that party. I tried to search for him but the authorities warned that if
I made efforts to find him, I would face consequences. I couldn’t trace him since then. But the police
continued to threaten me saying we are still supporting ONC. This lasted for more than two years
after the election was finished.”90
SWEEPS OF OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTY MEMBERS IN 2014 AND
2011
2014 and 2011 saw large sweeps targeting Oromo opposition political party members, with
hundreds being arrested over a short period.
In the wake of the April and May 2014 ‘Master Plan’ protests across Oromia, the OFC opposition
political party reported that between 350 and 500 of their members had been arrested in May, June
and July 2014.91 Arrests were reported to have taken place in a number of places including Kelem
Wallega, Gimbi, Ambo and Dembi Dollo. Local leadership of the opposition political party, including
party representatives and committee members, were among those arrested.
The OFC also reported that, in June 2014, its office in Dembi Dollo had been broken into and
membership details taken. An OFC official alleged arrests were subsequently made on the basis of
the membership list.92
The party reported that over 200 further arrests, including of OFC members and other people, had
taken place in mid-September 2014, and more still in early October, including several local officials
of the party.93 Hundreds of high-school students, farmers and others were also reportedly arrested
in early October as mentioned in the section on ‘Peaceful protestors’ above. At time of writing a
number of the local party officials were reported to be detained incommunicado, without access to
lawyers or family members, and had not been taken to court. The party also reported that
membership documents had been taken from its office in Darimu woreda in Illubabor Zone at the
beginning of October.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 34
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0035.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
By early October 2014, the OFC reported that some of its members who had been arrested in the
wake of the protests had been released on bail, some had been released without charge, while
others continued to be detained without charge.94 Some OFC members, as well as students and
other people, had been convicted in rapid trials on charges relating to the protests, including a group
in Ambo reportedly convicted in late September and sentenced to periods of imprisonment ranging
from one year to six years. The OFC said some of the charges involved theft and similar crimes
during the unrest, which the party maintained were false allegations. Others were reportedly
charged with ‘inciting unrest to overthrow the government,’ including at least one OFC member,
according to a party official.95
The OFC leadership believes the ‘Master Plan’ protests were being used by the government as a
pretext to begin large-scale harassment and silencing of OFC members before the 2015 general
elections.
Large-scale arrests also took place in 2011. In March and April of that year, between 200 and 300
people were arrested in sweeps in Oromia and in Addis Ababa.96 Arrests were reported from towns
across the region, including Moyale, Jimma, Harar and Nekemte. Amongst those arrested were at
least 89 members of the two largest Oromo opposition political parties – the Oromo People’s
Congress (OPC) and the Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement (OFDM).97 As documented above,
during the same period, large numbers of students were also arrested across Oromia.98 The arrests
were apparently an attempt to discourage the Middle East and North Africa uprisings from being
replicated in Ethiopia. The 89 members of the two opposition political parties who were arrested
were accused of supporting the OLF, charged and tried – discussed later in this report in the section
‘Unfair trial.’ The defendants were accused of various forms of participation in the OLF, including
making financial contributions, participating in or conducting training and recruiting others. Amnesty
International believes the accusation of OLF support was a pretext to target influential members of
opposition political parties and to warn their members. Many of the OFDM and OPC members
arrested had been members of the national parliament or of the Oromia regional assembly from
2005-10 and had also stood unsuccessfully for re-election in the 2010 elections.99 A number of
youth and student members of the two opposition political parties, including a 17-year-old female
OFDM supporter, were also arrested in the March and April 2011 sweeps.
Further arrests in Oromia occurred in late August and early September 2011, including 29 arrests
reported to have taken place on 27 August 2011 alone. At least nine OFDM and OPC members were
among those arrested, including two senior members of the opposition political parties – Bekele
Gerba and Olbana Lelisa – see below.
In the wake of the arrests, opposition political parties and some family members reported they did
not know the whereabouts of some of those arrested. The missing persons were presumed to be in
arbitrary, incommunicado detention.
Subsequently, three cases featuring OFDM and OPC members arrested between March and August
2011 were grouped together and charged – one group of 69, charged in May 2011, one group of 20,
charged in June 2011, and one group of nine, including Bekele Gerba and Olbana Lelisa, charged in
October 2011. The latter trial concluded in 2012 – see below. The trials of the two remaining groups
did not conclude until early 2014 – three years after the arrests. It has not been possible to establish
full details of the outcome of these two trials, but, according to information received by Amnesty
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 35
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0036.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
International, some defendants in both trials were found not guilty and released, having spent three
years in detention. Others were given sentences ranging from one to 13 years’ imprisonment.
Amongst those, some were ruled by the court to have already served their sentence and were
released.
BEKELE GERBA AND OLBANA LELISA – ARRESTED OPPOSITION
POLITICAL PARTY LEADERS
Among those arrested in August 2011, were two key figures from the two opposition political
parties. Bekele Gerba, an English teacher at Addis Ababa University and deputy chair of the OFDM,
and Olbana Lelisa, an OPC party official said by the party to have been popular with young people,
were arrested on 27 August 2011, within days of meeting with Amnesty International delegates.100
The Amnesty International delegates were ordered to leave the country on the same day the arrests
took place. Amnesty International believes the arrests were part of the same crackdown based on
the government’s heightened nervousness about political opposition that year. The two men were
subsequently charged, alongside seven other people, under a group of charges in the Criminal Code
often used in the past against Oromos accused of supporting the OLF – ‘Crimes against the
Constitutional Order and the Internal Security of the State.’101 Both were initially charged under
Article 241 of the Criminal Code ‘Attack on the Political or Territorial Integrity of the State,’ although
at a later date Bekele Gerba’s charges were reduced to the less serious charge of Article 257
‘Provocation and Preparation’ to commit the same. At least two of the other defendants on trial
with Bekele Gerba and Olbana Lelisa were also OPC members.
In November 2012, they were found guilty and, in a subsequent sentencing hearing, Olbana Lelisa
was sentenced to 13 years’ imprisonment and Bekele Gerba to eight years’ imprisonment. In June
2013, these sentences were reduced on appeal by the Supreme Court to 11 years and three years
and seven months respectively.
Their detention and trial were marred by irregularities, including the denial of access to family
members and legal representatives during the initial stages of detention in both Maikelawi and,
later, Kaliti prison. Their lawyer also reported difficulties visiting them in prison at some points
during their trial. According to information received by Amnesty International, there were also
inconsistencies in their trial, including with the validity and admissibility of some witness statements
and the limited evidence presented against the two men. Amnesty International believes Bekele
Gerba and Olbana Lelisa are prisoners of conscience, prosecuted and convicted based on their
peaceful opposition to the government, and should be released immediately and unconditionally.
OTHER ARRESTS OF OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTY SUPPORTERS
Amnesty International also interviewed a number of people harassed or arrested in individual
incidents based on their connection or alleged connection to opposition political parties. A young
man whose father had been arrested in 2005 for his support of the ONC and again in 2010, after
which his family did not know his whereabouts or his fate, continued to suffer himself based on his
presumed political opinion:
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 36
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0037.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“After
the death of the Prime Minister [Meles Zenawi, in August 2012], I didn’t attend where people
were forced to mourn. I was arrested by the police and first taken to the police station, then to the
prison in Shashemene. They accused me of not mourning Meles because, like my father, I supported
the OPC.102 I was detained for eight months and 25 days and never taken to court. I was
interrogated on the support I was giving to the OPC. I was released on condition to provide the
documents they said my father hid belonging to OPC, including his party ID and documents that
showed the donations he made to the party. I was given two days to produce these to the police and
told if I did not I would face severe consequences.”103
One man interviewed by Amnesty International had been a candidate for the ONC in eastern
Hararghe during the 2005 elections. After sustained harassment, he fled the country in 2006 and
sought asylum in Somaliland. In 2012, he was kidnapped from Somaliland and forcibly returned to
Ethiopia where he was detained arbitrarily, interrogated and tortured in a small military camp
before being transferred to a larger camp in Harar. He told Amnesty International:
“In
Harar, they interrogated me about who of the ONC104 candidates were connected with the OLF.
They said ‘tell us the people you organised for that crime,’ and tried to force me to tell them the
names of OLF representatives in Hargeisa [Somaliland]. They said you ONC party are receiving
assistance directly from OLF, so tell us, who has linkages, like you, or others.”105
An OPC candidate in the 2010 elections said he continued to be harassed by the security services
after the poll and was eventually arrested in 2011:
“After
the election, they were still trying to make me join their party. I told them how can I, when I
already have my own party. On 10 June 2011, I was taken from my workplace and taken to
Maikelawi. I spent the next four and a half months in detention.”106
OROMO ARTISTS AND OTHERS CELEBRATING OROMO CULTURE
Under Ethiopian and international law everyone has the right to enjoy, develop and promote their
own culture and therefore no-one may be arrested for the expression of their cultural identity.107
Nevertheless, hundreds of people have been arrested in recent years because of their involvement
in expressions of Oromo culture. The government has exhibited hostility to displays of Oromo
cultural heritage. Oromo artists, including writers and singers, have been harassed, arrested and
tortured. In a number of incidents, the government has shown signs of equating Oromo cultural
expression with anti-government sentiment and fearing cultural expression as a potential catalyst
for political opposition to the government. A former student told Amnesty International:
“If
you talk about your rights, culture and identity as an Oromo, you must be a supporter of OLF.”108
More than 10 people interviewed by Amnesty International said they had been arrested for some
form of cultural expression, in addition to students interviewed by Amnesty International who were
harassed or arrested for their involvement with student cultural societies, as documented above.
The organization also received information from a number of sources about large numbers of arrests
at Oromo traditional festivals and several other cases of singers and artists arrested since 2011.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 37
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0038.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
More than 200 people were reported to have been arrested at the 2012 celebration of the
traditional festival of Irreecha, celebrated in Debre Zeit (which the Oromo call Bishoftu). Some were
reportedly arrested in several locations including Guder, Ambo and Shashemene on 29 September
2012 as they were on their way to the festival and further arrests were reported to have taken place
at the festival itself on 30 September 2012. Some of those arrested were reportedly transferred to
Maikelawi. Reported reasons for arrests included wearing clothes in colours considered as symbols
of Oromo resistance – red and green – or alleged chanting of political slogans during the festival.
Several people reported to Amnesty International they had been arrested because of their
participation in or promotion of the Oromo traditional religion Waaqeffannaa or the traditional
governance system of Gadaa. Over 150 people were reportedly arrested on 23 August 2011, after
the ceremony in the Gadaa tradition when leadership is handed over to the next generation. One of
those arrested, a young man who had been a student at Adama University, told Amnesty
International he had been travelling around the region to document the ceremony but was arrested
on the accusation he had being trying to incite people to rebel against the government. He was
arrested and transferred to Maikelawi, along with six other Adama University students who
belonged to the same cultural society. In Maikelawi, he encountered 20 other students from Adama
University arrested over the same period of a few days.109
In addition to those arrested for wearing green and red clothing at the 2012 celebration of
Irreechaa, other people have been arrested for wearing or selling Oromo traditional clothing:
“There
was a public holiday and some students wore their traditional clothes to express their culture.
The authorities said that we were expressing a political opinion. Eleven of us were arrested and
detained at the police station for five days, beaten and interrogated. They asked us which political
organization was behind us, who we were supporting. They said I was opposing the government and
was inciting the other students against the government.”110
Amnesty International interviewed five Oromo artists – singers and writers – who were subjected to
harassment, arrest and torture. The organization also received information from other sources
about the cases of two other singers. Writing or singing about Oromo history, including the
perception of a history of oppression many Oromos hold, or expressing criticism of the government’s
treatment of Oromos, are met with hostility by the government as expressions of dissent and
perceived to have the intention of inciting others against the government.
One popular Oromo singer told Amnesty International he was arrested twice, on both occasions that
he released an album. After the release of his first album, he was arbitrarily detained for seven
months, on the accusation the album was popular because it was inciting people against the
government. Just before he released a second album, he was arrested again and taken to Maikelawi.
He was detained without charge for 11 months, and was interrogated and threatened about his
songs being political. During his interrogation and torture he said:
“The
guys interrogating me said that I had to sing to praise the government in the future. I couldn’t
sing about Oromo martyrs any more. They made me sign a paper to not sing about Oromo issues and
incite people against the government.”111
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 38
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0039.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Another singer and chair of a cultural music club in Shashemene had a similar experience. He was
accused of inciting people through his music and was also arrested just before he released an album:
“The
government said: ‘we don’t like your club. None of you are members of ruling party so we
suspect you are with another party and have the intention to do bad things and incite people. You
must become our member or we will continue to suspect you. They said if I was an innocent person
why didn’t I join the government?”112
After releasing a second album, the distribution of an arrest warrant along with a photo of him taken
from his album cover forced him to leave the country. He said the owner of the studio where the
album was produced was also arrested and his studio closed down.
Yet another singer told Amnesty International a similar story. She fled the country after being tipped
off that the government was searching for her after the release of an album, on the accusation she
was inciting people against the government through the content of her songs.113
In 2012, an Oromo singer named Kadir Martu, previously arrested based on lyrics criticising the
government’s treatment of Oromos in his songs, was among a group of asylum seekers arrested in
Sudan for unlawful entry and subsequently deported back to Ethiopia.114 Amnesty International
received information that he was re-arrested on return and detained in Maikelawi.
Oromo writers have also experienced harassment or arrest because of books they had written. A
young man who had published a book of poems which he said related to Oromo history, culture and
language was arrested for a week and interrogated about the political intentions of his poems.115
Another man who self-published two books was temporarily detained after the publication of both.
In 2011, after selling copies of his second book at the Irreechaa festival in Debre Zeit, he was
arrested and arbitrarily detained for two months on the accusation he had been attempting to incite
people against the government. He told Amnesty International that, after his second release, he was
threatened with murder if he published anything else.116
GENERAL SUSPICION OF THE OROMO COMMUNITY
All targeting of individuals for harassment, arrest and detention based on their peacefully held
opinion, or based on a suspicion or assumption about the individual’s political opinion is a violation
of the rights to freedom of opinion protected under Ethiopian and international law.117
However, in addition to targeting demonstrators, students, members of opposition political parties
and people celebrating Oromo culture based on their actual or imputed political opinion, there is a
general targeting of individuals based only on their suspected political opinion and the government’s
anticipation of high levels of dissent in Oromia. Amnesty International interviewed over 60 people
from all walks of life, including businesspeople, medical professionals, civil society workers, teachers,
university lecturers, farmers and even members of the OPDO, who were targeted for arrest and
detention – often without charge – based on a suspicion they did not support the government or
conversely, that they supported the OLF:
“I
don’t have any political ideology. But being Oromo itself makes you fall under suspicion.”118
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 39
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0040.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A range of behaviours or factors were reported to Amnesty International as interpreted as indicating
dissent or arousing suspicion of or hostility towards individuals. These included doing work that
involves regular contact or influence with local communities and movement around or in and out of
the region. Some targeting is geographical – based on areas where the OLF has been active. Refusal
to join the ruling political party is a major risk factor. However, while many people expressed to
Amnesty International a belief that joining the ruling political party was a way to protect themselves
from generalised suspicion and hostility, doing so is not always sufficient. Members of the Oromo
political party of the ruling coalition – the OPDO – have also been arrested and detained based on
the expression of dissenting opinions or behaviour within the party, which was not tolerated and,
further, was in some cases claimed to indicate underlying support for the OLF.
In the cases of the significant majority of people interviewed by Amnesty International, individuals
targeted on suspicion of holding dissenting opinions were accused of supporting the OLF. In some
cases, this appeared to be a pretext to warn and control people who had influence over others and
were not members of the ruling political party. But the constant repetition of the allegation suggests
the government anticipates a level of sympathy for the OLF amongst the Oromo population writ
large.
A significant proportion of people arrested for alleged OLF support interviewed by Amnesty
International were not brought to court, charged or tried. Their political opinion or, more
specifically, their alleged support for the OLF, the level and nature of that support, thus remained
unproven. The suspicion or accusation of OLF support is frequently used to arrest and detain people,
but in a high proportion of those cases, it never forms the basis or part of a criminal charge.
Nevertheless, people are detained for months or even years on this basis and, in some cases, are
subjected to repeated arrests based on the same suspicion.
OROMOS IN POSITIONS OF INFLUENCE
The government shows signs of fearing people who might have influence or popularity, even at a
local level, who are not members of the ruling political party. People in positions of local influence
and people who come into contact with many people in their course of their work fall under scrutiny
and seem to be particularly targeted to join the ruling political party. Amnesty International
interviewed around 10 businesspeople and medical professionals arrested and detained on the
accusation of using their profession to assist the OLF. Interviewees believed this was based either on
their exposure to and sometimes popularity with the community, which the government did not like
if they were not a ruling political party member, or on the fact that, in the course of their work, they
may have encountered people who were members or fighters of the OLF.
Under international law, everyone has the right to the highest attainable standard of health, without
discrimination.119 The government is obligated to exercise due diligence to prevent discrimination
in access to health. Further, health professionals have an ethical duty of non- discrimination on any
basis, including political affiliation. Therefore, the government should not punish medical
professionals for fulfilling their ethical or professional responsibilities to deliver medical care.
A pharmacist from Shewa told Amnesty International that, because his business was successful and
he went into the rural areas to deliver treatments, he had ‘popularity with the people.’ As a result,
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 40
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0041.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
he said, the local civilian officials of the government asked him repeatedly to join the ruling political
party. He refused as he did not want to be involved in politics. He told Amnesty International:
“So
after I refused membership they started accusing me of supporting the OLF, that I am treating
OLF, providing them with medicine and that I am going into the bush to treat the wounded OLF
soldiers. I was under a lot of surveillance, they followed every action. Finally, they arrested me for
two months, closed my clinic and refused to renew my license. My three employees were also
arrested.”120
A midwife told Amnesty International he was arrested and detained for two months in a military
camp because he had assisted in a home delivery of a woman whose husband was linked to the OLF:
“The
authorities used this to claim that I was an OLF supporter, even though I told them I was acting
according to medical ethics. They detained me the same day.”121
Businesspeople have also fallen under government suspicion. Amnesty International interviewed a
number of former businesspeople who had been harassed and arrested based on the accusation
they were using their profits to assist the OLF or that their movement around the country – when
buying stock or trading goods – was to benefit the OLF:
“My
problems began because I had property. The local police and the soldiers suspected me for that,
thinking that an Oromo shouldn’t have such property, that I must have it for OLF. I was temporarily
arrested several times. They said I had better tell them the truth, before they did something bad to
me, tell them where I got the property and how it belonged to the OLF.”122
“I
was a businessman – trading goods to various village markets. I was accused by the government of
taking goods and medicines to the OLF. One night the soldiers came to my house. They arrested me
and confiscated all my goods from the store.”123
Amnesty International interviewed or received information about several cases of teachers and
university lecturers who had experienced problems based on their failure to support the ruling
political party or their refusal to relay propaganda about the ruling political party to the students. A
man who had been a mathematics teacher told Amnesty International he had been ordered by the
Woreda administration to teach students about the achievements of OPDO. He said he refused to
bring politics into the classroom and so was arrested on the accusation he was teaching the students
about other political ideas. He was arbitrarily detained, tortured, resulting in the loss of sight in one
eye, and repeatedly questioned about which political party he was working with.124
A young man who had coordinated a youth social group told Amnesty International he had been
arrested based on a general hostility to social gatherings:
“The
authorities repeatedly warned me against such social gatherings as they feared they were
political. The government structure – down to the village level – is very suspicious of anyone who is
organising people. So they need us to cooperate with them. Eventually, in 2013, I was arrested.”125
The Kebele administrator and soldiers came to his house one evening, searched the house, and took
him first to the Kebele office and then to a military camp, where he was detained without charge for
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 41
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0042.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
three months. He was released on condition that he would cooperate with the ruling political party
to coordinate youth in the area in support of the government.
OROMOS WHO REFUSE TO JOIN THE RULING POLITICAL PARTY
A frequently repeated belief among people interviewed by Amnesty International was that the only
way to protect themselves from generalised suspicion was to join the ruling political party:126
“You
need to cooperate and work with the government structure – then you will survive.”127
Refusal to join the ruling political party engenders suspicion and surveillance that may culminate in
arrest and arbitrary detention, on the supposition that, if a person will not join the government, they
must support the OLF or at least hold dissenting opinions or that they might use their activities to
assist the OLF or incite others to anti-government actions:
“These
people from the Woreda administration asked me to be their member. If someone refuses to
join, they report to the police. I refused so I was arrested again in 2012.”128
“The
Woreda authorities insisted that I should become a member of the ruling party. I told them
frankly that I didn’t want to. I was targeted because of this. They said that I was refusing because I
was OLF. From then on the authorities used to call me once a week in the evening to the local military
camp. They kept interrogating me about why I was not joining the party.”129
Failure to attend compulsory meetings can also arouse suspicion. One man described to Amnesty
International:
“The
government wants us to come to meetings of groups it formed. If you don’t participate, they
accuse you of supporting other organizations. There are people who monitor your actions. If you miss
a few meetings, you’re in trouble. Because of this, I was arrested and accused of not supporting the
government but rather supporting the OLF.”130
OROMOS TARGETED IN AREAS OF OLF OPERATIONS
Amnesty International gathered many testimonies about the arrests of farmers for alleged support
of the OLF and also received information from other sources of incidents of individual and multiple
arrests of farmers. A significant part of the economy of Oromia, and the whole of Ethiopia, consists
of small-scale agriculture, so it is not surprising that farmers would number significantly among
those arrested in targeting of the population. Amnesty International was also told about several
incidents where farmers participated in demonstrations on issues relating to development
assistance for agricultural purposes – the availability and price of fertilizer, distribution of seeds and
other issues. As documented above, thousands of farmers were reportedly arrested in one series of
protests in 2012. Farmers – who feared the loss of their land – also participated in the ‘Master Plan’
protests in 2014 and were among the large numbers of people subsequently arrested. At least 13
farmers were reported to be among those transferred to Maikelawi following their arrests after the
protests, according to information received by Amnesty International.
Amnesty International also interviewed around 20 people who were farmers or were the spouse or
child of farmers who had been arrested for alleged OLF support. Several further people interviewed
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 42
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0043.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
by Amnesty International who had worked in various jobs in the local authorities which involved
interaction with farmers, such as agricultural or environmental bureaus, had been arrested for
‘inciting’ farmers. A number of interviewees arrested for different reasons also reported
encountering high numbers of farmers in detention centres.
Interviewees, as well as other sources, reported that the Ethiopian National Defence Forces (ENDF)
targets local communities after an OLF attack on an army base or a skirmish between the OLF and
the army. Communities in areas where the OLF actions have taken place have been questioned,
harassed and subjected to brief periods of arrest – based on suspicion that the community passed
information to the OLF to inform the attack or was aware of it and failed to inform the army prior to
the attack:
“Every
time when the OLF passed through or there was an operation, everyone would be detained,
questioned, houses searched. It was regular and brief.”131
A medical professional told Amnesty International:
“I
owned a pharmacy and I had the requisite permit from the government. But one day the
government soldiers and OLF fought in that area. Afterwards the government started arresting
people they suspected. They accused me of assisting the OLF by giving them medicine and going to
bush to help those who were sick. I was detained for three months.”132
Another man said:
“I was arrested so many times, for one day, two days…they’d ask things like ‘the OLF moved through
here, have you seen them? Have you fed them? Where are they? Have you been informed? If so why
haven’t you informed the government?’ It wasn’t just me, they’d do it to everyone.”133
Several interviewees said they were blamed for incidents happening in their area – ranging from
peaceful demonstrations to OLF attacks on the army – on the accusation the incidents were revenge
for the death of their family members at the hands of the security services:
“The
OLF rebels attacked the Mega militia camp and Hiddi Lola military camp near where we lived. I
was nearby with my cattle. The government said that I was the one who gave the OLF the
information to revenge my brother and his children’s deaths and my detention. The next day they
came to arrest me. So I fled.”134
A number of interviewees including business people and others reported that movement around the
region or travel in and out of the region aroused suspicion as to the purposes of the travel. An OPC
member was reportedly arrested after he spent time in hospital. A fellow OPC member told Amnesty
International:
“He
had been sick and had gone to Sololo hospital for treatment. The government concluded that he
went there to communicate with the OLF. They accused him and threw him in jail.”135
Another man who lived in an area in which the OLF occasionally operated said:
“If
anyone went out of town, they [the government] suspected them of taking food to the OLF and
they might detain them or even shoot them.”136
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 43
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0044.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Return from abroad also arouses suspicion. In 2011, the Government of Somaliland issued a
directive requiring all asylum-seekers to leave the country, which forced some Ethiopian refugees to
return to Ethiopia. One young man who was a victim of these forced returns told Amnesty
International he was arrested shortly after his return:
“I
went to my home in west Hararghe. I stayed five days and then was arrested by local security
agents in civilian dress. They took me to Machara police station. It was the time of the uprisings in
the Arab world, so the government was afraid. They targeted those coming back from abroad, as if
they’d been planning some action against the government. They accused me of doing training
abroad with the OLF.”137
OPDO MEMBERS AND GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES
Although membership of the ruling political party is reported to provide some protection against
suspicion of holding dissenting opinions, members of the OPDO nevertheless fall under suspicion if
they disagree with government policies or object to orders or instructions they are issued. Amnesty
International interviewed over a dozen former OPDO members and public officials arrested on
suspicion of holding dissenting opinions, which in some cases was followed by the accusation of
working for the OLF.
Some of the OPDO members and government employees interviewed said they had fallen under
suspicion because they refused to follow orders they believed were abusive. Such orders reported to
Amnesty International included carrying out surveillance of individuals under suspicion and
identification of people to provide – false – witness against suspects.
An OPDO member arbitrarily detained for two years after the 2010 elections for failing to convince a
sufficient number of people to vote for the ruling political party was arrested again not long after his
release in 2012. He told Amnesty International:
“On
release, I was told to prepare three persons to witness against some people the government
were spying on. I refused. So then I was arrested again in November [2012].”138
Another who was a Woreda officer for community affairs in west Arsi said he became a suspect
because he refused to follow orders he did not believe should be part of his job:
“The
government was targeting various people due to their association with the opposition party. I
was told to identify people for the government to take action against and prepare a case against one
man. I said that I would not bring this man in as he was just a simple peasant and had nothing to do
with any politics.”139
Several cases involved former government employees who, as part of their work, relayed grievances
to the government from sections of the local community, but were then themselves accused of
representing the political opposition or inciting others. One man who worked in the bureau of
agriculture in Kelem Zone for more than 20 years told Amnesty International part of his role was to
listen to farmers’ grievances and report them back. The main grievances repeatedly raised with him
were: discrimination in favour of ruling political party members in the distribution of fertilizer among
farmers, non-ruling political party members being forced to pay for fertilizer when it was too late for
them to use it and calls for the release of farmers arbitrarily detained:
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 44
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0045.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“When
I presented the problems of the farmers to the government, they made accusations that the
questions I was presenting did not come from the farmers but from the OLF. So because of that I
ended up being arrested twice and I lost my job.”140
Another Woreda officer had been petitioned by students about job creation and referred them to
the Zone authorities:141
“The
government said they were creating jobs for graduates but there were no funds for it. Students
came and asked for job creation. I said ‘we don’t have any budget, the money disappeared.’ I told
them to go and ask the Zone authorities if they wanted job creation. So they did, and said they’d got
the information about the lack of funds from my office. They got no response so they held a
demonstration. I was accused of inciting them. So they [the government] ordered my arrest.”142
OROMOS TARGETED DUE TO THEIR FAMILY CONNECTIONS
Over a dozen people reported to Amnesty International they had fallen under suspicion which led to
harassment or arrest and detention, based on previous activities or the actual or suspected political
opinions of family members. This can lead to several members of the same family being arrested,
including parents and children. ‘Inherited suspicion’ reported to Amnesty International related both
to recent cases and activities of family members of those who inherit the suspicion but also, in many
of these cases, dating back to the period the OLF was part of the transitional government between
1991 and 1992. People known to be members of the OLF at that time (though a legal entity at that
point), their families and children continue to suffer on that basis. One young man told Amnesty
International his father had been an OLF supporter during the time the OLF was a recognised
political organization in the transitional government but later stopped supporting the OLF and
campaigned for an opposition political party in the 2010 elections:
“But
they still suspected him of supporting the OLF and, after that election, he was arrested and later
disappeared. Then the police started to suspect that I had links to the OLF too and that I knew people
who had been working with my father. Eventually, I was arrested too, and detained at the police
station for one and a half months.”143
In many of these cases, this ‘inherited’ suspicion was reported to manifest when other incidents
occurred. For example, when the government was looking for suspects who may have instigated a
demonstration, suspicion might fall on people whose parents were known or suspected to have
dissenting opinions. One young man who was arrested for around eight months based on suspicion
of OLF support he had ‘inherited’ from his father said:
“The
students in the school had some kind of demonstration and I was accused of organising the
students. They said my father supported the OLF so I did too and therefore I must be the one who
organised the students. About a week after the demonstration, the police came and arrested
me.”144
Another man told Amnesty International his father had been repeatedly arrested on suspicion of
supporting the OLF until he died shortly after release from his final detention in Kaliti prison in Addis
Ababa, at which point the suspicion transferred to him:
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 45
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0046.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“After
my father was arrested on the allegation that he supported the OLF, they started to
investigate me for the same thing. Whenever a protest happened in our area, they’d come to my
house. I was always the first person they’d come to.”145
One woman said her father and brother had both been accused of supporting the OLF. Her father
died and her brother was subjected to enforced disappearance. But her family continued to be
harassed. She said:
“They
came several times and searched the house and asked which political party or organization we
supported. They said we were doing what our father and brother used to do. They said that we had
weapons which we were hiding to supply to OLF. Finally they arrested me. They interrogated me
about my brother and said he was a member of the OLF and I was supporting him in the bush by
bringing food to him. They asked for information about him which I didn’t have. Mostly they
interrogated me about my family background and my affiliation.”146
In several cases reported to Amnesty International, multiple members of the same family were
arrested based on ‘inherited’ suspicion. One young woman told of how she had successively lost
almost every member of her family. Her father, who had been a member of the OLF during the
transitional government, continued to be targeted on suspicion he still supported the OLF and
eventually died in prison. One of her brothers was killed during an escape attempt from detention
following the 2005 post-election protests. Three other brothers were subsequently arrested for
alleged OLF support. Her mother went to investigate what happened to them and did not return.
The girl was left alone with her two younger siblings and continued to be harassed:
“After my mother was gone, the soldiers came to the house, asking about my mum – where did she
go? Why did she go? They came so many times to pressure me though I said I didn’t know. They
threatened to kill us if I didn’t tell them the information they wanted.”147
Eventually the girl, though only 16 years old, took her two younger siblings and fled the country.
OROMOS ARRESTED IN LIEU OF FAMILY MEMBERS
Under international human rights law, no one may be deprived of their liberty except on grounds
and according to procedures established by law.148 International standards prohibit the imposition
of collective punishments. The African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR), to which
Ethiopia is a party, states: “Punishment is personal and can be imposed only on the offender.”149
Arrests and punishments of family members in place of their relatives violate international human
rights law.
Amnesty International interviewed 19 people who said they had been harassed, arrested or
detained in place of a spouse or close relative whom the government was searching for. These
arrests were carried out by both regional and federal security services. Some people were harassed
at their homes, often on multiple occasions, including being subjected to threats or torture,
including rape and other sexual violence.
In some accounts given to Amnesty International, the arrest of another family member was either an
attempt to incite the wanted person to return or a punishment for the actions of the family
member:
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 46
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0047.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“One
of my brothers was wanted by the authorities. He had gone to look for another brother of ours
who joined the OLF many years ago and we did not have contact with. The soldiers came to take my
brother, but he hadn’t returned. So they took away my mother. I don’t know where she was taken
and I have not seen her since that time.”150
In other cases, family members, particularly spouses, were arrested in lieu of someone else in order
to pressure them to either reveal the whereabouts of the wanted person or to provide incriminating
evidence against them. One young man had been arbitrarily detained for five months in a military
camp because his older brother, a teacher, was wanted for allegedly inciting students against the
government:
“They
took me to Galemso military camp. For three months I experienced interrogation and torture.
They said tell us what your brother has been doing, he’s organising people in the society against us,
so tell us what he has been doing, if you don’t we’ll torture you.”151
A young woman told Amnesty International:
“My
husband had been arrested because he was falsely accused of supporting the OLF. Then they
arrested me for three months in Mieso military camp. They said I had to give them the gun that my
husband owned and the documents he had connecting him with OLF. They interrogated me and beat
me and threatened me with a gun.”152
Another woman told Amnesty International her brother had been arrested to try to force him to
reveal her whereabouts. The woman herself was also not the alleged offender – she was wanted by
the police because they wanted her to provide documents to incriminate her husband who had been
arrested on the allegation of supporting the OLF.153
Family members and spouses also said they were arrested, detained, tortured or harassed as
punishment for the escape from detention or evasion of arrest of a relative. One woman reported
she had been arbitrarily detained for four months and tortured after her husband escaped from
detention during a transfer between military camps:
“They
tortured me to give some information on his whereabouts but I didn’t know where he was so I
couldn’t give any information.”154
After she was released, she was subsequently arrested again and spent nearly three months
detained without charge in Dalo Mana, in Bale Zone. She was again subjected to torture, including
rape, in an attempt to force her to reveal her husband’s whereabouts. At the end of this period, she
told Amnesty International, she signed a condition of release that she would report her husband’s
whereabouts within one month or she would be shot. She fled the country after release.
Several people arrested in lieu of a relative said they were released on condition they would hand
over the wanted person. One woman told Amnesty International her husband had been arbitrarily
detained for two months because his father, arrested on suspicion of supporting the OLF, was said to
have escaped from detention. She and her husband were ordered to ‘produce’ the father to
guarantee their own liberty.155
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 47
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0048.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Another woman was arrested twice in an attempt to force her to reveal the whereabouts of her
husband (who had already left the country after repeated incidents of arbitrary detention). On the
second occasion, she was released after two weeks on the condition that she had five days to hand
her husband over to the government. The impossibility of complying with this caused her to flee the
country.156
In several cases reported to Amnesty International, multiple family members were arrested in
connection to the government’s search for an individual. Children were arrested in some of these
incidents of collective punishment. A young man who had fled from his area to avoid arrest for his
involvement in a peaceful demonstration in Chiro in 2013, later heard that nine members of his
family, including both his parents and seven siblings, were temporarily arrested to reveal his
whereabouts. The youngest was five years old.157
In at least three cases reported to Amnesty International, the family member was arrested when
they went to police stations or detention centres to visit or enquire about relatives. One young man,
whose father had been subject to enforced disappearance after his arrest in 2010, said his mother or
he and his sister went regularly to the police station to ask his whereabouts:
“My
sister and I were arrested when we went to ask about the issue of our father in March [2013].
We were detained in the police station in Shashemene for one month and 13 days. The police said
that we knew some of the people my father had been working with.”158
Another was arrested when trying to visit his father in detention:
“My
father was accused of supporting OLF and was arrested. In January [2013], when I went to the
prison to try and see my father, they arrested me also. I was taken to Harar prison and was kept
there for about seven months. It was terrible. The guards kept telling me that they knew everything I
had been doing and how I was linked with OLF. They interrogated me very roughly and tortured me
repeatedly.”159
In the majority of cases of family members arrested in lieu of a relative reported to Amnesty
International, the detainees were not charged with any offence, brought before a judicial authority
or provided with access to a lawyer. The duration of detention in these cases varied, usually
between several days and several months. The longest detention of a family member held in place of
a relative reported to Amnesty International was one year.
Exacerbating the levels of the human rights violation, in a significant proportion of these cases the
family member originally wanted by the government was targeted for arrest based on the exercise
of her or his human rights or other acts whose criminalization is contrary to international human
rights law.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 48
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0049.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
PART II: ARBITRARY DETENTION, ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE,
EXTRA- JUDICIAL EXECUTIONS AND TORTURE
ARBITRARY DETENTION
“He said: ‘the first time we released you because you were adolescent. Now you are big. Your crime
is big.’ I said: ‘no, the court decides if I’m innocent or guilty.’ He slapped me and said, ‘until we get
what we want from you, you don’t have anything. We are tired of talking to you Oromo people.’” 19-
year-old man detained arbitrarily without charge twice in Maikelawi160
Ethiopian and international law require that no-one is subject to arbitrary detention. The detention
of any person must be subject to review by a judicial or other authority whose status and tenure
afford the strongest possible guarantees of competence, impartiality and independence and all
arrested persons have the right to challenge the lawfulness of their detention before a court at the
outset.161 Arbitrary detention is prohibited in all circumstances, including during armed conflict and
other emergencies. It occurs primarily in three situations: when an individual is deprived of their
liberty without a clear basis in law; where persons are detained solely for the peaceful exercise of
certain rights such as freedom of expression or association; or in cases of sufficiently serious
violations of the right to fair trial. The Constitution states “no one shall be arrested or detained
without being charged or convicted of a crime except in accordance with such procedures as are laid
down by law.”162
Yet, thousands of people in Oromia arrested for actual or suspected dissenting behaviour are
arbitrarily detained during the initial stages of their detention or, in some cases, for the duration of
their detention. Detainees have been held arbitrarily without charge for months and, in some cases,
years. Some are tried and convicted in trials with enough fair trial concerns to render their
subsequent imprisonment arbitrary. Amnesty International interviewed around 150 people who
were targeted for actual or suspected dissent. Of those who were arrested on these bases, the
majority said they were subjected to arbitrary detention without judicial review, charge or trial for
some or all of the period of their detention. A significant proportion said they were never brought to
court or charged with a crime for the duration of their detention. In fewer cases, though still
reported by a notable number of interviewees, the detention was arbitrary – without judicial
oversight, being brought before a court or having access to lawyers and family members – during an
initial period that ranged from a number of weeks to a number of years, before the detainee was
eventually brought before a court. In addition to individuals interviewed, Amnesty International has
received information on large numbers of other cases, such as hundreds of people detained in
relation to the ‘Master Plan’ protests, who were initially not brought before a court and were
detained incommunicado.
As documented earlier in this report, the majority of the actual or suspected dissenters interviewed
by Amnesty International were accused of supporting the OLF. But, in most of these cases, the
individual was detained without charge or trial, meaning the accusation was neither substantiated
nor proved. In many cases, the accusation is merely an informal allegation made during the course
of interrogation. In a number of cases, the questions that former detainees reported they were
asked in detention by their interrogators suggest that examples of their exercise of legal rights –
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 49
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0050.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
such as cultural expression and participation in peaceful protests – are taken to indicate support for
the OLF.
Actual or suspected dissenters arrested in Oromia told Amnesty International they were detained in
police stations, local and regional prisons (at the Zone, Woreda and Kebele levels), federal prisons
and the federal police detention centre Maikelawi in Addis Ababa. Arbitrary detention without
charge and non-observance of due process was reported by interviewees to occur in all these places
of detention. A number of people interviewed by Amnesty International, as well as people in several
further cases about which Amnesty International received information from other sources, were
transferred from different locations across Oromia to Maikelawi, apparently because their cases
were accorded higher priority by the government. Maikelawi has been used for many years to detain
high profile political detainees (hundreds of them prisoners of conscience), and is frequently the site
of arbitrary detention without charge and incommunicado detention, torture and other ill-
treatment, such as the use of underground cells and prolonged solitary confinement.163
In addition, a high proportion of Oromos interviewed by Amnesty International who were detained
for actual or suspected dissent were held in unofficial places of detention – particularly in military
camps around the region or, in a small number of cases, in private houses or buildings. Almost all
people interviewed by Amnesty International who had been detained in military camps or other
unofficial places of detention, said their detention was not subject to any form of judicial review.
The majority of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International whose detention was not
subject to judicial review also experienced denial of other rights of arrested persons in detention. A
high proportion of people interviewed by Amnesty International were also held incommunicado –
denied access to legal representation and family members – for some or all of their period of
detention. In many of these cases, the detention amounts to enforced disappearance, such as where
lack of access to legal counsel and family members and lack of information on the detainee’s fate or
whereabouts place a detainee outside the protection of the law. In numerous cases, former
detainees interviewed by Amnesty International also said their release from arbitrary detention was
premised on their agreement to a set of arbitrary conditions unlawfully imposed by their captors
rather than by any judicial procedure, many of which conditions entailed foregoing the exercise of
other human rights, such as those to the freedoms of expression, association and movement.
Detention without judicial oversight, detention incommunicado – without communication with legal
representatives and family members – and detention in un-gazetted places of detention all place
detainees outside the protection of the law and, further, increase the risk of detainees being subject
to other human rights violations – particularly torture or other ill- treatment, as documented later in
this report.
Some people interviewed by Amnesty International had been detained on repeated occasions,
based on the same suspicion – of holding dissenting opinions – and on a similarly arbitrary basis –
with no recourse to judicial oversight.
In cases of actual or suspected Oromo dissenters that have gone to court, there have been
numerous fair trial concerns.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 50
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0051.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
DETENTION WITHOUT CHARGE OR TRIAL
The Constitution states “everyone shall have the right to be brought before a court of law within 48
hours after his arrest” and every person has the inalienable right to petition the court to order their
physical release where the arresting police officer or the law enforcer fails to bring them before a
court within the prescribed time.164 Any arrested person must be informed promptly of the charges
against them
165
and, if charged, must be tried without undue delay.166
Yet hundreds of people are arbitrarily detained in Oromia, without charge or trial for indefinite
periods. Amnesty International interviewed around 100 people who said they had not been charged
or taken before a court for some or all of the period of their detention. Additionally, the organization
received information on hundreds of cases of arrests, including of protestors and opposition
members, where the individuals or group were subjected to arbitrary detention during the initial
stages or throughout the duration of their detention. Some detainees have been held arbitrarily for
a few weeks. In other cases, detention lasted for a number of years, with no form of judicial review,
without charge or trial or access to a lawyer or a court. A number of people interviewed by Amnesty
International said they had been arbitrarily detained on more than one occasion on the same
allegation, but without at any point being charged with a crime.
One young girl who fled Ethiopia with her father told Amnesty International:
“My
father escaped from detention in 2012. He was detained for 11 years before he escaped. I didn’t
know where he was the whole time he was arrested. When he escaped, he told me that in 11 years
he was never charged and never had a trial.”167
A young man subjected to arbitrary detention without charge on five separate occasions told
Amnesty International about a conversation with his interrogators in Maikelawi:
“I
asked them, why don’t you take me to the court? In the Constitution, it says you go to the court in
48 hours. But I’d been there nine days. They said ‘we are the court, we are the judge, we are the
prosecutor, we are the security, we are the police, we are the government. We are the ones who
arrest you, kill you, we do what we want.’ I stayed in Maikelawi for eight months, without one single
time going to court.”168
A man arrested on suspicion of belonging to an opposition political party because he had not
participated in mourning the late Prime Minister Meles Zenawi169 said:
“It
was police who arrested me and I was initially held at the police station for one week then moved
to prison in Shashemene. I was detained for eight months and 25 days. I was not taken to court at
any point but I was interrogated on the support I was giving to the OPC.”170
A student arrested for participating in a peaceful protest and detained in a military camp told
Amnesty International:
“I was held there for about two months. I never went to court. There is no court there.”171
As these detentions are not subject to judicial review or a judicial decision on sentencing or release,
the length of time individuals remain in detention is also arbitrary – apparently decided by the
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 51
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0052.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
arresting entity – local or federal police, the military, intelligence agents and, in some cases, local
officials:
“There was no court in that Kebele, the decision of how long to keep you and when to release you is
just made by the Kebele administration.”172
Former detainees who were subjected to arbitrary detention told Amnesty International they had no
idea how long they would be detained and when they might be released. In some cases, release was
secured by the detainee agreeing to certain demands or conditions imposed by their captors. In
other cases, there does not appear to have been a reason for release at a certain time.
A young man detained for eight months in Adele military camp said:
“I didn’t ask about when I’d be released or if I’d be taken to court or if I could have a lawyer – there is
no such opportunity there.”173
In some cases, after an initial period of arbitrary detention – without going before a judge, and
without charge – detainees were taken to court and charged or ordered released by the court.
Periods of detention before being taken to court reported to Amnesty International by former
detainees ranged from a number of weeks to a number of years:
“After
three months, we were accused, they opened a file on us in the court as if we were only
arrested the day before. The three months already spent in prison were entirely forgotten.”174
“The
first time I was taken to court was sometime in 2011-12. By then, I had been detained for over
six years. I do not know what was in the court papers - even after a case was brought against me, I
did not have access to a lawyer, but, one day at the end of 2012, the authorities gave me a paper
from the court and told me to go home.”175
As mentioned above, some cases of actual or suspected dissenters apparently considered more
serious, were taken to Maikelawi in Addis Ababa. Former detainees in Maikelawi consistently
reported they were detained without charge during the initial stages of detention, often coinciding
with a period of solitary confinement, interrogation and torture and other ill- treatment. In some
cases, after this initial period or arbitrary detention, the detainee was then charged. Some former
detainees at Maikelawi said, just before being charged, they were moved to the comparably better
area of the prison – jokingly named Sheraton by the detainees in reference to the improvements on
the other parts of the prison – Taola bet (wooden house) and the worst – Chelama bet (dark house):
“I
was three months in Chelama bet in a small room alone, then I was moved to Sheraton for two
days when we were taken to court and charged and then they moved me to Kaliti [a federal prison
near Addis Ababa].176
However, as with the young man quoted earlier, who was detained for eight months without going
to court or having access to a lawyer, some detainees stay for prolonged periods in Maikelawi
without ever being charged or their detention being subject to any form of judicial review.
Testimonies of former detainees suggest there continue to be people in detention around Oromia
who are long-term arbitrary detainees. A number of former detainees told Amnesty International
they met other prisoners in detention who had been held without charge or trial for many years and
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 52
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0053.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
remained in detention when the interviewee was released. A young man detained in Ambo
detention centre on one of his multiple instances of arbitrary detention said:
“There
were many people who had been there for a long time and had not been taken to court and
had no contact with their family. Some had been there for 15 years without any court or any
sentence.”177
Another man who did not know which detention centre he had been held in said:
“There
were 18 people held with me, 17 were Oromo; one was Amhara. They were all like me – in for
political reasons. Some said they had been held for many years without being brought to a court.
Some of them couldn’t walk or talk. I spoke with two of them: one had been held there for 13 years
and the other had been held there for nine years. They had been accused of working for the OLF.
They had never gone to court.”178
It was reported by many interviewees that they had been arrested for actual or suspected dissent on
more than one occasion on the same allegation but each time had not been charged or had evidence
produced against them. A man who had been an OPDO member told Amnesty International he was
arrested for failing to adequately convince people to vote for the ruling political party in the 2010
elections and detained without charge for two years in Sebategna (‘7th’) and Zetenegna (‘9th’)
military camps near Dire Dawa. He was released in 2012 but arrested again a few months later and
spent five more months in arbitrary detention in one of the same camps.179
Several detainees told Amnesty International they did not know where they were held until they
were released or, in some cases, until another prisoner informed them. This is also an indication of
denial of other rights such as contact with a lawyer and family members, which would require the
prisoner to have information on her/his own whereabouts:
“Until
I was mixed with the others, I didn’t even know where I was. The other prisoners told me
where we were.”180
Former detainees arbitrarily held and subjected to other violations in detention, repeatedly told
Amnesty International they could not complain about their treatment or seek justice for what they
had experienced. Interviewees either had no faith in the government to respond to their grievances
or feared they would create further trouble for themselves or their families if they attempted to
raise issues:
“We
have no chance to ask about what happened to my father and to me and my brother. We are
afraid that if we complain they will take even more of our family to jail.”181
ACCESS TO LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES AND FAMILY MEMBERS
Everyone charged with a criminal offence has the right to defend themselves, in person or through a
lawyer.182 In addition, prompt and regular access to a lawyer is an important safeguard against
torture, other ill-treatment, coerced confessions and other abuses.183 The UN Human Rights
Committee has stated “all
persons arrested must have immediate access to counsel.”184
Article 21
of the Constitution provides that all arrested persons have “the right to communicate with, and be
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 53
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0054.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
visited by, spouse(s), close relatives and friends, medical attendants, religious and legal
counsellors.”185
Yet individuals in detention are frequently held incommunicado, with no contact with the outside
world and denied access to legal counsel and family members for the entire duration of their
detention.
The majority of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International did not have access to a
lawyer at any point during their detention. Even in cases where people were charged or went to
court, several people told Amnesty International they had no contact with a lawyer:
“No-one visited us in the military camp, no lawyer, we suffered a lot.”186
“When I was arrested, my wife and family had no idea where I was. Even after a case was brought
against me, I did not have access to a lawyer.”187
Families are not routinely informed of the arrest of individuals. Numerous former detainees told
Amnesty International their families did not know their whereabouts for the duration of their
detention – whether for weeks or years. Family members of detainees said they did not know where
the arrested persons were or what had happened to them:
“I never saw my husband while he was arrested. For four years and six months, I didn’t know where
he was. After four years and six months, I heard that he had been transferred to Karchele in Chiro, so
I went to visit him there and saw him for the first time. I heard from the neighbours because they also
had someone detained in Karchele.”188
“I was never able to meet any person throughout my detention period or before a judge. My family
also had no idea that I was in Boku [military camp].”189
In some cases, families asked local authorities or detention centres to confirm the whereabouts of
their arrested relatives but were refused any information:
“My mum, dad and I were all arrested but they separated us. When they released me after five
months, my dad was not at home, only my mum was released. She didn’t know where my dad was.
We tried to ask the police officers. They said they were not in charge of his case, they said it was the
government security agents so they wouldn’t tell us anything.”190
However, it was also reported to Amnesty International that some families were too afraid to ask
the whereabouts of arrested relatives for fear of their families getting into further trouble or being
arrested themselves. Relatives of detainees have been arrested and detained themselves when
asking questions about their family members. A young man told Amnesty International he and his
sister had been arrested and detained for a month and a half when they went to the police station
to ask about the fate of their father, who had disappeared:191
“My father was initially detained where we lived in Dodola Woreda. Then he was moved to an
unknown place and we never heard where he was after that. We did not attempt to find out where
he was because we feared the government would suspect us for asking.”192
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 54
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0055.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
In some cases, people get to hear where their family members are because someone who was
detained with them is released and passes on information about their detention and whereabouts to
their family:
“Although my family knew I was detained, they did not know where I was until one prisoner was
released and told them about my presence in that centre. The military did not tell my family
anything. I was not allowed to meet anyone from outside.”193
In several cases, former detainees said their families did know where they were, but were not
permitted to visit them in detention:
“My family knew where I was but they were not allowed to come and visit me.”194
ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE
The International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance defines
enforced disappearance as “the arrest, detention, abduction or any other form of deprivation of
liberty by agents of the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with the authorization,
support or acquiescence of the State, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty
or by concealment of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which place such a person
outside the protection of the law.”195 Ethiopia has not ratified the Convention. However, enforced
disappearances may also violate a number of other human rights, including the right to be free from
torture or other ill-treatment, the right to recognition as a person before the law, the right to liberty
and security of the person and the right to life, which are protected by other treaties to which
Ethiopia is a party and by customary international law, binding on all states.196
Of the former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International, a large proportion of the cases
amounted to enforced disappearance – the government refused to confirm the arrests, concealed
the whereabouts or fate of the disappeared person and the detainee was not brought before a
judicial authority to review the lawfulness of the detention and was held incommunicado without
access to the outside world. All of these conditions place the detainee outside the protection of the
law. All the cases cited above, in which the detainee was subjected to these conditions, amount to
enforced disappearance. Many people reported to Amnesty International that, after their family
members had been arrested, they had never heard from them again. The family continued to be
ignorant of their fate and did not know whether they were alive or dead. Amnesty International has
also received reports from other sources of individuals and groups who have disappeared after
arrest in Oromia since 2011.
As well as cases amounting to enforced disappearance that were reported to Amnesty International
to have occurred in Oromia since 2011, many longer-term cases of enforced disappearance were
also reported by interviewees – in which family members had been arrested years ago and not been
heard of since. In these cases, the families had never received information about the fate of the
persons or justice for what happened to them. It is possible that, in some of these cases, an
individual may have been released from incommunicado detention and immediately fled the
country without contacting their families. A number of interviewees told Amnesty International they
did this themselves, due to the immediacy of their need to flee after release, the difficulties of
contacting their families, and the risk involved for both sides due to the high levels of surveillance of
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 55
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0056.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
communications. However, the high number of people interviewed by Amnesty International who
reported the long-term arbitrary, incommunicado detention of themselves or of fellow detainees, or
reported cases of the deaths in custody of fellow detainees (as documented later in this report),
suggest some of the disappeared persons reported to Amnesty either continue to be arbitrarily
detained or may have died in detention.
SOME CASES OF ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE OF ACTUAL OR SUSPECTED DISSENTERS OVER THE
YEARS OF THE EPRDF’S RULE REPORTED TO AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Many families in Oromia carry the scars of the loss of relatives through enforced disappearances.
“There
was another election in 2010. My father was again a supporter of OPC. But he wasn’t involved
actively in party activity, he was just a supporter. In fact, he was sick because of the experience he’d
had in the first detention. He was receiving treatment for that when he was arrested again. For the
second time, he was accused of supporting the opposition party, he was arrested and, since then,
nobody knows his whereabouts. My mother went and asked the officer but nobody answered where
he is.”197
“My father was arrested five years ago by the police, in 2009. He was a farmer and they accused him
of being a member of OLF. We still don’t know where he is since he was arrested.”198
“My younger brother was arrested in 2010 and for five months he disappeared. We asked in the
prisons, we couldn’t find him. After five months, they brought him back and left him outside the door.
His body was almost worms – it was decaying. They brought him back for us to bury him.”199
“My
father was arrested for being an OLF supporter. Then they came for my mum and me and my
two sisters. We were taken to a military camp. They separated us from our parents. In the morning,
my mother and father were gone. I never saw them again. I don’t know whether they’re dead or
alive, even now.”200
“When I was about three years old, my mum was arrested and we’ve never seen her since that
time.”201
“My brother was arrested because they said he supported the OLF and it is now about seven years
since we have no idea where he is. We have never had any information of him after that.”202
“At the time of the 2004 protests,203 one of my brothers was arrested and then disappeared. I don’t
know what he was accused of. Since that time, I haven’t heard any news about him. My parents
don’t know where he is.”204
“In
2007, my brother was kidnapped by the government security forces. They accused him of
supporting the OLF. We have not heard about him since that time. No one knows where he was taken
and whether he is alive or dead.”205
“The
authorities wanted to arrest my brother. He was not at home when they came to search for
him. So the government soldiers surrounded the house and they took away my mother. I don’t know
where she was taken and I have not seen her since that time.”206
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 56
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0057.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“I
don’t know where my friend is now. His family have searched all over the prisons and they never
found him. They tried in many ways, even to approach the police, and they wrote a letter to the
concerned offices but they never got any information.”207
“My
wife’s parents were arrested but we never knew what happened to them. We don’t know if they
were killed or not.”208
UNOFFICIAL PLACES OF DETENTION
International law and standards explicitly prohibit detention in unofficial places of detention and
provide that people must be detained in officially recognized and supervised places of deprivation of
liberty.209 The UN Human Rights Committee has stated “provisions should be made for detainees to
be held in places officially recognized as places of detention and for their names and places of
detention, as well as for the names of persons responsible for their detention, to be kept in registers
readily available and accessible to those concerned, including relatives and friends.”210
Hundreds of Oromos who are detained for actual or suspected dissent are held in unofficial places of
detention, most frequently in military camps throughout the region. Over 40 of the people arrested
for actual or suspected dissenting behaviour interviewed by Amnesty International reported they
had been detained in one or more military camps. Arrests and detention in military camps
comprised both individual and group arrests. In some cases, people interviewed reported being
detained with large numbers of other people, for example one man said that he and around 500
other people were taken to a military camp after being arrested during a demonstration.
Additionally, Amnesty International has also received information of other cases in which large
numbers of people have been detained in military camps and one police training camp after group
arrests, such as the hundreds of people who were reportedly taken to Senkele police training camp,
after the 2014 ‘Master Plan’ protests. In a much smaller number of cases, former detainees told
Amnesty International they were detained in other unofficial places of detention – in private houses,
offices and other buildings.
The military are responsible for making many of the arrests of actual or suspected dissenters in
Oromia, according to testimonies and eye-witness accounts received by Amnesty International, as
documented in Part I of this report. However, it was also reported in a number of cases that people
arrested by the police or by plainclothed officers who may have been police or intelligence
operatives were also taken to military camps or transferred to a military camp after initially being
detained in a police station or local detention centre. Some people who had been detained in
military camps also told Amnesty International the people who interrogated them in detention were
wearing civilian clothing and were believed by the interviewees not to be members of the military,
but from other branches of the security services. Testimonies of former detainees suggest the
involvement of different branches of the security services in the system of arbitrary detention in
unofficial places of detention in Oromia, and a degree of cooperation and coordination between
intelligence services and the soldiers responsible for detentions in military camps.
Over 25 military camps (some operational and some apparently training camps) and at least one
police training camp around the region were named by former detainees as their places of
detention. Some of these are large and long-established camps such Misrak Iz in Harar, Dedessa in
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 57
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0058.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Ilubabor Zone and Senkele (a police training camp) near Ambo.211 Some appeared from the
description of detainees to be smaller camps and, in some cases, possibly temporary camps.
Locations of military camps named by interviewees as places of detention since 2011 included:
Adama Woreda Kebele 07, Adama Woreda Kebele 19, Adele in east Hararghe, Arsi Negele Woreda,
Ayra Woreda, Badano Woreda, Boku, Dembi Dollo in west Wallega Zone, Didessa Woreda in
Illubabor Zone, Dodola Woreda, Gatiro, Galemso, Guji Zone, Hiddi Lola in Borana Zone, Holota near
Addis Ababa, Malka Wakena in Dodola Woreda, Mieso in Chiro Woreda, Mega in Borana Zone,
Misrak Iz near Harar, Sebategna (‘7th’) near Dire Dawa, Shashemene, Sinja in Goba Woreda,
Zetenegna (‘9th’) near Dire Dawa.212 In most cases the ‘name’ of the camp given was the name of
the Kebele, Woreda or city where the camp was located. It is possible some camps have different
titles. Further, some people said, for example, Malka Wakena in Dodola Woreda, and someone else
said Dodola – these may or may not be the same place. It is possible there is some inaccuracy about
the locations of camps given, based on the lack of information provided to detainees about their
locations. Some interviewees did not find out where they were detained until after they were
released.
The above list is in no way intended to be comprehensive. Due to the lack of transparency over
detention practices, the lack of publically available official information and the proliferation of small
and large military bases in Oromia, it is not possible to compile comprehensive information on
military camps used as places of detention in Oromia.
Military camps in Oromia are under the command of the federal Ministry of Defence. Official
information is not available on the location of military camps in Oromia or the size of the military
presence. However, the testimonies of a large number of the Oromos interviewed by Amnesty
International suggest there is a significant military presence throughout the region. A former
member of the armed forces told Amnesty International that in every Zone in the region there is a
large military base, in addition to a wider presence of smaller bases.213
Some former detainees described being detained in large camps and estimated there may have
been hundreds of other detainees. Some said they were in small camps and did not know if there
were other detainees. In other cases of interviewees who had been detained in a military camp, they
said they did not know how big it was or if there were other detainees because they were not
permitted to leave their cell at any point:
“I don’t know if there were other prisoners because we were never allowed outside the room to see
other parts of the camp.”214
Detention in unofficial places of detention puts detainees at high risk of being beyond the protection
of the law and judicial procedures. It also puts detainees at high risk of torture and ill-treatment. All
former detainees in military camps in Oromia interviewed by Amnesty International experienced
some violations of the rights and protections of due process and a high proportion of all
interviewees who had been detained in a military camp reported torture, including rape, and other
ill-treatment.215
In almost all cases of detention in military camps reported to Amnesty International, the detainees
were not charged or taken to a court for the duration of their detention which, in some cases, lasted
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 58
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0059.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
for many years. A young man detained for eight months in Adele military camp told Amnesty
International:
“Nobody
was taken to court at any point. Even the court doesn’t know that people are detained in
that military camp.”216
Another man detained twice in a military camp in Dembi Dollo said:
“There
is no lawyer in that camp. Nobody is allowed to come to that camp. No visitors. Nobody I was
with was charged with a crime.”217
A man detained for one year in a military camp in Badano said:
“I never went to court or to see a judge. There was no kind of court in the military camp.”218
In the majority of cases of detention in military camps reported to Amnesty International, the
detainees were also held incommunicado – with no access to lawyers or to their families for the
duration of their detention. Families were not informed of their whereabouts and those families
who discovered the whereabouts of their detained relatives were not permitted to see them:
“Our
families were not informed about our arrests by the military. They got to know from some of my
friends who were there when I got arrested. They tried to look for me but it was not easy as the
military camps do not allow people to come there. I never saw anybody from outside and never saw a
judge.”219
“During the three months in that camp, none of our family members were allowed to visit us, they
did not even know where we were. My family were looking for me everywhere but they couldn’t find
me and no-one told them where I was.”220
In a handful of cases, former detainees reported detention in other unofficial places of detention –
in what the detainees believed were private houses or offices. In these cases, the individuals were
held in houses or offices for a short amount of time – several days or up to a week – before being
moved to an official detention centre. In one case reported to Amnesty International, a youth leader
of the OPC was arbitrarily detained for three weeks in a place he believed was a house or an office,
before being released.221
A former OPC member who was kidnapped and forcibly returned to Ethiopia from Somaliland in
2012 told Amnesty International he was initially taken to Dire Dawa, to what he thought were offices
of the security forces:
“I
was in security area ‘Number 1.’ It looks like offices. It is a hundred metres square compound with
five rooms on one side. There is also another building in the centre which I did not enter, I think that
was the residence for the security agents. All those who lived there wore civilian clothes. They locked
me in a small room. There was blood on the walls, on the floor. They said ‘you see the blood of your
friends here, you will die in the same way if you not accept our conditions’ [to work with them]. I
stayed for a week in Number 1 and, then they transferred me to Addis Ababa.
”222
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 59
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0060.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A student subjected to repeated incidents of arbitrary arrest because he was suspected of being
anti-government, was held in one of these locations during one of his terms of detention. He told
Amnesty International:
“They
tied my arms behind me and left me in the office with two security guards. I asked them where
I was. They said it was the security agents’ office, by the immigration offices. I knew that place - it’s
on the road to Hawassa referral hospital. I stayed there one week. They beat me terribly and didn’t
give me any food. Finally, they put me in a car and took me. And I saw a sign so I knew I was in
Maikelawi again.”223
Another man believed he had been detained in a private house:
“They
came to my home around 2 am. They were wearing civilian clothes, not uniforms. They said I’d
return home soon. I don’t know where I was brought. They put a sack over my head. But it was a
personal house, not a police station. I saw a lot of rope and blood on the floor. They were yelling and
they started to beat me. After three days, they put a sack over my head and brought me to a jail, I
don’t know which one.”224
CONDITIONAL RELEASE
Numerous former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International said their release from arbitrary
detention was subject to a set of arbitrary conditions unlawfully imposed by their captors rather
than by a judicial procedure, and many of which conditions entailed foregoing the exercise of other
human rights, such as those to the freedoms of expression, association and movement. Such
coercive restrictions on human rights are contrary to human rights law and any subsequent
detention on the basis of such restrictions is arbitrary.
The number of former detainees who reported this suggests it is a regular practice that when actual
or suspected dissenters are released from arbitrary detention they are forced to sign to conditions.
Over 40 of the people arrested based on their actual or imputed political opinion interviewed by
Amnesty International reported that, upon release from detention, they were given a set of
conditions they were forced to sign to, failure to uphold which, they were told, could lead to re-
arrest or worse. These conditions of release were imposed despite the fact that, in almost all of
these cases, the detainee had not been charged or tried, brought before a court or accessed a
lawyer. In some cases, detainees secured their own release by agreeing and signing to certain
conditions demanded of them during interrogation and torture.
Local and federal police and the military were all reported to have been responsible for imposing
conditions upon the release from detention of actual or suspected dissenters. Sometimes conditions
were imposed in conjunction with local officials or intelligence agents. In no cases reported to
Amnesty International were these conditions imposed by a judicial authority.
Further, many of these detentions were based on accusations about activities that had to do with
the exercise of the rights to the freedoms of opinion, expression or association and whose
criminalization is inconsistent with international human rights law. Therefore, the imposition of
conditions on release from arbitrary detention for arrest on an arbitrary basis, represents multiple
human rights violations.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 60
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0061.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
In addition to this, the majority of the conditions imposed upon release reported to Amnesty
International and the conditions some detainees agreed to secure their release, involved unlawful
infringements on human rights, including unlawful restrictions on the freedoms of expression,
association and movement.225 For example, the conditions imposed on release from arbitrary
detention most frequently reported by interviewees included not participating in demonstrations or
other gatherings, political meetings or student activities. Some people were ordered not to meet
with more than two or three individuals at one time, and some were ordered not to have any
contact with certain people, including spouses or family members wanted by the authorities for
alleged dissenting behaviour. All of these conditions violate the rights to freedom of expression and
association. Many people had to sign a condition not to leave the area they lived in without seeking
permission from local authorities, in violation of the right to freedom of movement.226 As
documented earlier, a number of students told Amnesty International they were not permitted to
return to their studies for certain periods:
“When
we were released, we were given conditions not to participate or be involved in any public
gathering and not to discuss with more than two people at any one time or make any kind of
discussion. Also not to leave the town and go to any other place without the permission of the
government.”227
Some people were required to report at regular intervals to the local (Kebele or Woreda) officials or
police station. A woman accused of providing medicine to the OLF from her clinic said:
“I
was released on a warning to report three times a week to the nearest Kebele. They told me I
couldn’t run the clinic any more, I was not allowed to move from place to place without permission
from local officials. And they made me promise to be their member.”228
A man who had gone to the police to report alleged OLF theft of his cattle, but was then arrested
himself for having contact with the OLF, told Amnesty International:
“I
was given the conditions that I had to report to the militia office three times a day (morning,
afternoon and night), not take part in gatherings or leave the area. I was also told not to talk about
my detention.”229
The imposition of conditions was reported to be often accompanied by either the threat of re- arrest
or the threat of death for failure to fulfil them. A student who had many of the regularly-reported
conditions imposed on his release from Maikelawi told Amnesty International:
“There
were many conditions: 1) to stay only in Hawassa, never go to any other place without
informing them; 2) every Friday I had to report to them about the other students – what they are
talking about, who is a member [of the ruling political party], who is not a member; 3) my email and
Facebook are open for them – I am not allowed to change my passwords so they can continue to
access them; 4) if I don’t fulfil these conditions, they will kill me.”230
While the conditions documented above were imposed upon release, some people were compelled
(often under torture or threat of torture) to agree to certain conditions to secure their release.
These included joining or cooperating with the ruling political party, including by informing on others
or testifying against one or more individuals in a trial:
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 61
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0062.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“One
top security agent came to the detention. He said if you agree to witness you can be released. If
not, you will not be released.”231
“They wanted me to join them as an agent and give information about other students. I was 24 years
old. They told me I would spend another 24 years in jail if I refused to work with them. It was only
when I agreed to work with them that they released me.”232
Some people were released on the condition that they had to produce a certain thing, such as
evidence to incriminate others or a certain person wanted by the authorities, within a given time
period or they would be re-arrested. A student arrested for failing to convince other students to join
the OPDO said he was given one month to convert a number of students to join and to bring proof of
their membership.233 A man arrested for participation in a farmers’ demonstration said upon
release he was given two months to provide the names and information of people who mobilised
the demonstration.234 Another young man was given two days to bring documents relating to his
father’s membership of the OPC, including his membership card and proof of donations he had
made to the party.235
Another condition of release repeated by several former detainees was that, if unrest or political
activity happened in that area, such as demonstrations, expressions of local grievances or OLF
activity, the individual in question would be held responsible:
“After
six months, they released me from the military camp after forcing me to sign to very strict
conditions – including that if there was any trouble in the village, they would hold me
responsible.”236
For some people, this was not a condition but a direct threat:
“The
soldiers said that if something happened, the first one to be shot in the head would be me.”237
For a number of people interviewed by Amnesty International, it was the difficulty of complying with
these conditions and the restricting impact they had on their lives, including on their ability to
exercise their rights to the freedoms of association and movement or fear of the consequences if
they failed to comply, intentionally or unintentionally, that caused them to flee:
“I
was ordered not to move from where I was living and to give the names and information of the
people who mobilised the demonstration. I knew I could not fulfil these conditions and I decided to
leave in order to save my life.”238
Several former detainees forced to sign to accept responsibility for any incidents that happened in
their area, said they fled the country when such an incident occurred because they feared it would
lead to their re-arrest, even where they had had no involvement with the incident. A man arbitrarily
detained for three years on the allegation of passing information to the OLF said:
“I
was given various conditions on my release, including to inform them of any rebel movement. After
my release, there was a clash between government soldiers and OLF. I was scared that I would be
taken again so I fled.”239
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 62
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0063.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
UNFAIR TRIAL
Under Ethiopian and international law everyone charged with a criminal offence is entitled to a fair
trial, guaranteed through the observance of a number of rights enumerated in the Constitution, the
ACHPR, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and other international law
and standards. The Constitution guarantees everyone the rights inter alia to be tried in a public
hearing without undue delay, to be presumed innocent until proved guilty by a court of law and to
defend themselves through legal assistance.240 The Constitution also guarantees detainees the right
not to be forced to make any confessions or admissions of any evidence that may be brought against
them during trial and states no evidence obtained in such a manner shall be legally admissible.241
The UN Human Rights Committee has stated that “the presumption of innocence, which is
fundamental to the protection of human rights, imposes on the prosecution the burden of proving
the charge, guarantees that no guilt can be presumed until the charge has been proved beyond
reasonable doubt.”242
The violations of due process in the pre-trial stages, documented above, often negatively impact on
individuals’ right to receive a fair trial. In addition, the testimonies of people interviewed by Amnesty
International, as well as information received from a number of other sources and legal documents
seen by the organization, indicate a number of fair trial rights are regularly violated in cases of actual
or suspected dissenters that do go to court, including the rights to a public hearing, to not be
compelled to incriminate oneself, to be tried without undue delay and the right to presumption of
innocence.
The significant majority of actual or suspected Oromo dissenters interviewed by Amnesty
International, and in other cases documented by the organization, were accused of supporting the
OLF. As documented above, although this accusation was levelled against the majority of those
interviewees who were detained, in a high proportion of those cases, the accusation did not
translate into a criminal charge and the individual was detained arbitrarily without charge
throughout their detention. However, some actual or suspected dissenters are charged – in many
cases after initial periods of arbitrary detention in which they are denied due process rights,
including being promptly brought before a court and given access to legal representatives and family
members. Individuals charged on this basis are usually charged under the group of charges in the
Criminal Code entitled ‘Crimes against the Constitutional Order and the Internal Security of the
State.’243 This group of charges has been used countless times in the past against actual or
suspected dissenters. Although the OLF was proscribed as a terrorist organization by parliament in
June 2011, it appears – based on the cases known to Amnesty International – to remain uncommon
for alleged OLF supporters to be charged under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, though it is being
used with increasing frequency against other alleged dissenters, including independent journalists
and members of other opposition political parties.244
All of the actual or suspected dissenters interviewed by Amnesty International who were charged
with a crime when arrested, were charged based on alleged membership of or connections to the
OLF.
In a handful of the cases that were brought to court, people told Amnesty International they were
not represented by a lawyer for some or all of their trial hearings. It is a regular practice for large
groups of Oromos to be charged together. Oromos who were charged and tried in a group of people
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 63
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0064.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
have often reported they had never met some or all of the people they were tried alongside before
they were charged together and went to court, although in these cases the defendants are alleged
to have perpetrated crimes as a group.
As documented above, detainees may be subject to prolonged periods of pre-trial detention before
proceedings commence. Defendants also reported trials lasting for long periods, up to several years
in some cases, which may violate the right to be tried within a reasonable timeframe. This can affect
the defendants’ right to receive a fair trial in other ways. For example, in the case of two large
groups of OPC and OFDM members – one group of 69 defendants and one group of 20 defendants –
who were arrested and charged with OLF- related charges in 2011, as documented earlier in this
report, the trials did not conclude until early 2014.
Amnesty International received consistent reports from several cases of actual or suspected
dissenters that significant parts (and sometimes the entirety) of the evidence presented by the
prosecution consisted of confessions allegedly extracted under duress and the statements of a small
number of witnesses, sometimes only one. Numerous former detainees interviewed by Amnesty
International said that during interrogation and torture, they were repeatedly compelled to ‘confess’
their alleged crimes, to sign confessions and sometimes other incriminating documents.245 Some
former detainees reported that during interrogation, sometimes under torture, they were forced to
reveal their email passwords. The contents of individuals’ email accounts have been cited as
evidence against them during trial.246
Amnesty International is aware of cases where confessions and other information elicited by torture
have been admitted as evidence in trials of suspected dissenters. In the case of 69 members of the
OFDM and OPC opposition political parties documented above, of 48 pieces of documentary
evidence cited in support of the charge of ‘Provocation and Preparation’ for Crimes against the
Constitution or the state, 38 items were written confessions from defendants made in Maikelawi. A
large proportion of these confessions were reportedly extracted under duress. The remaining pieces
of documentary evidence cited by the prosecution included poems, tracts and papers written by
defendants, including one called ‘What can we learn from the Egyptian civil disobedience?’ and
another called ‘Oromo is a struggle against slavery.’
Amnesty International has received repeated information from different cases of the use of coerced,
false witnesses in trials against actual or suspected dissenters. A number of people told Amnesty
International they were compelled to testify against someone else to secure their own release from
detention or that the purpose of their own arrest was to force them to testify against someone else:
“The
officer, Mesay, took me out from the interrogation room and showed me some people and
asked me if I knew them. I said I did know some of them, they were my neighbours and classmates.
He said, ‘The reason you are arrested is that those people are seven OLF militia members and you
have to be a witness against them. If you don’t, you are already reported as dead and I’m going to
actualise that into reality.’ I was scared they would kill me so I agreed to become a witness.”247
A former OPDO member who fled the country when he himself fell under suspicion told Amnesty
International that intelligence officers would identify the ‘politically disobedient’ for the police,
provide a list of individuals and order the police to
“incriminate them, bring them to court and
organise witnesses.”248
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 64
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0065.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
In a number of cases, former defendants in trials told Amnesty International the only witnesses
against them were the security officers who arrested them. The involvement of the security services
in human rights violations against actual and suspected dissenters makes the validity of those
testimonies a point of concern, particularly where no other evidence was presented against the
defendants:
“One policeman witnessed against me. He was the only witness.”249
“I
was taken to court only once, after a month of detention. The court said I had to choose fine or
imprisonment. I did not have a lawyer and the three police who arrested me were the only witnesses
against me. Their accusation was completely false.”250
Major concerns have also been reported in a number of cases over the evidence accepted by the
court. Two reliable sources present at trials told Amnesty International of incidents in which alleged
witnesses were not able to identify in court the persons they were testifying against. Amnesty
International also received information of instances where the prosecution failed to prove the
witnesses knew the defendant, when the defendant denied any acquaintance. A number of sources,
including a legal professional, told Amnesty International that, in the trial of Bekele Gerba and
Olbana Lelisa, one witness was proven to have perjured himself in court yet his evidence was
nevertheless deemed admissible by the court.251
In conjunction with these reports, several people told Amnesty International that, while they were
detained themselves, they were compelled to agree to provide – false – testimony against others,
under the threat of continued detention or torture or the promise of release for those who
complied:
“Junedin
Sado’s252 wife was detained and three security officers came to my school to get witnesses
against her. I was a youth leader of my class. They collected three youth leaders and told us that we
should witness against her, say she was teaching children in the school about religious issues. I
refused to witness on her, so they left, but they returned the following day, and took me from the
school to detention. I was 17 at this point.”253
Amnesty International interviewed a handful of former government employees and ruling political
party members who told how they were expected as part of their work to testify against people
suspected of involvement with the OLF. A former member of a Kebele militia told Amnesty
International how he and his fellow militia members received training in identifying OLF supporters
and:
“Then they told us that if someone was suspected as OLF we were all expected to witness against
them.”254
EXTRA-JUDICIAL EXECUTIONS
“I know the military could kill me because they killed my husband and my mother. They can do
whatever they like. There are no limits.”
38-year-old woman
255
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 65
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0066.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Extra-judicial executions – unlawful and deliberate killings carried out by order of a government or
with its complicity or acquiescence – violate the right to life protected in international law256 and
international standards on the use of force by security services.257
Dozens of extra-judicial executions have been reported in Oromia between 2011 and 2014, including
of peaceful protestors, students, suspected OLF supporters, other suspected dissenters and family
members of suspects. Victims have been killed in custody, in their homes, in the course of military
operations and during peaceful demonstrations. Children have been among the victims of extra-
judicial executions. These killings continue to take place in an environment of impunity for
perpetrators.
Amnesty International received information on cases or possible cases of extra-judicial execution
that took place between 2011 and 2014 from family members of victims, eye- witnesses and from
other sources. Over 40 people interviewed by Amnesty International reported a case of extra-judicial
execution. Some of these cases took place since 2011, but many interviewees also reported older
cases, including a number of people reporting the extra-judicial execution of one or both parents
when they were young.
As documented earlier, there have been a number of allegations of the police and military using
unnecessary force against peaceful protestors in Oromia in recent years. These incidents have taken
place in response to the 2014 ‘Master Plan’ protests, the 2012-13 Muslim protest movement and
during individual protests around the region. There have also been allegations of the use of
excessive force in incidents where violence has flared between protestors and security services.
The killing of peaceful protestors – where the response of the law enforcement officials258 is
disproportionate to any threat posed and the use of lethal force was unnecessary – falls into the
category of extra-judicial executions. The killing of protestors during several demonstrations since
2011 amount to extra-judicial executions.
As documented earlier in this report, in a number of incidents during the 2014 ‘Master Plan’
protests, the security services were reported by victims and eye-witnesses to have used unnecessary
force against unarmed protestors. A woman who witnessed one of the protests in Guder town told
Amnesty International:
“On
the third day of protests, the military came to the street and were waiting for them. When the
kids came to protest again, the military just started to shoot at them.”259
A man at an incident of reported unnecessary use of force in 2013, relating to the Muslim protest
movement, told Amnesty International:
“With
no warning, the military just started shooting. They didn’t even shoot towards the sky, they
shot at the people who were running away.”260
A number of people were reported to have died in the incident, including a child under two years old
who died on the back of her mother. The mother also died. Another man told Amnesty International
he went to collect the body of his 14-year-old brother, who had been killed in the local mosque.
According to his brother, the boy had seven bullet wounds in his chest.261
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 66
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0067.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Another man told Amnesty International of an incident in the context of a local protest:
“We
were marching to the office of the governor of the province in Ayra and the police opened fire on
the protestors. One student was killed, many people were injured. I was shot in the leg. The protest
dispersed.”262
In some cases, it was suggested that, during the shooting of protestors in peaceful demonstrations,
specific people were intentionally targeted by those doing the shooting.
The OFC reported that in early March 2014, a former member of an Oromo opposition political
party, Seifu Oda, who had fled the country after the 2005 elections due to the harassment he
experienced, but had recently returned to his home in Ginmir town in Bale, was taken from his home
by the police and shot in the mouth. According to the OFC, the following day an OFC supporter, Abdi
Bilya, was shot dead by security services while leading a demonstration to protest against the killing.
An OFC official told Amnesty International:
“They specifically aimed at him and shot him.”263
Another man who witnessed the police using unnecessary force against protestors at an incident in
2012 also reported intentional targeting by the security services:
“The
students were demonstrating because another student had been shot by government soldiers
as he was going home from school. The military started arresting and shooting the protestors. One of
the students I was arrested with before was shot because they said he organised the
demonstration.”264
Extra-judicial executions are also reported to take place in detention. A number of former detainees
reported to Amnesty International that one of their fellow-detainees had been killed by the security
services while they were in detention. A young man detained in an unofficial detention centre in
Nekemte in 2012 told Amnesty International:
“There was another prisoner called Fekede from eastern Wallega, they shot him in front of me.”265
Further, some deaths in detention or shortly after release from detention have resulted from torture
or poor conditions of detention, sometimes in conjunction with the denial of medical treatment.
Where intentional and deliberate, some of these deaths may amount to extra- judicial
executions.266 Several people told Amnesty International that their family had been informed of the
death of a relative in detention, but were not informed of the cause of death.
A number of incidents were reported to Amnesty International by interviewees where unnecessary
or excessive force during an arrest or attempted arrest by the police or the military resulted in the
death of the suspect or the death of a family member of the suspect:
“My
mother cried and pled with them. She said you can’t take my son; please take me instead. She
threw a cup of tea at one of the security people. Our community had gathered and was protesting
my arrest. One of the soldiers shot his gun and my mother was killed. She was 50 years old.”267
The ‘Students’ section of this report cites the case of a young man who had been arrested along with
his brother and two other students because they refused to join the ruling political party in their
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 67
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0068.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
college and allegedly incited others to do the same. He told Amnesty International that, in late
October 2012, after 49 days in the prison in Arsi Negele, he, his brother and one other student
attempted to escape. While trying to escape, his brother was shot dead.268
In another incident reported to Amnesty International, at the end of November 2011 in Tikur Inchini
Woreda in west Shewa, soldiers came to arrest members of an Oromo student society who had
petitioned the local authorities for some land to use for their activities:
“Two
days after we submitted the request to the Woreda administrator, the military came and
surrounded our house. They arrested my brother and another of our members and they killed
another member, Feyisa, who was running away. He was one of the committee and a member of our
church. They shot him.”269
In many of the cases reported to Amnesty International, the victim of shooting was wanted for
arrest based on the actual or suspected possession of dissenting opinions or was a family member of
a person wanted on that basis. The victim could not therefore be considered to constitute a risk in
the sense of perpetrating a dangerous crime or posing a threat to others, which would justify the use
of lethal force.270 Shootings in these circumstances therefore constitute unnecessary use of lethal
force by the police or military and amount to extra- judicial executions.
Many people interviewed by Amnesty International expressed a belief that the security services act
with impunity – they are ‘free’ to kill or detain people without charge and the victims and their
families have no recourse to justice or assistance. One woman said:
“I
knew they could kill me. Killing is very easy for the government. I saw them kill people. When there
was a protest, the police shot protestors.”271
In all cases of extra-judicial executions reported to Amnesty International, the family member or
friend reporting said no investigation took place and that it was not possible to ask for an
investigation or even any information on what happened to their relatives.
The lack of investigation into incidents of unnecessary force against peaceful protestors,
unnecessary and excessive use of force during arrests, deaths of suspects in custody and other
fatalities at the hands of the government, demonstrates impunity and the acquiescence of the
government in the killing of actual or suspected dissenters.
TORTURE AND OTHER ILL- TREATMENT
“Under
torture I signed the paper. They just showed me where to sign. I didn’t even know the
content. You confess anything under torture.”
Oromo singer detained arbitrarily without charge in
Maikelawi for 11 months272
The Constitution prohibits the use of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.273
Torture is also absolutely prohibited under the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT), the ACHPR and the ICCPR, to which Ethiopia
is a party, as well as under customary international law.274
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 68
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0069.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
The definition of torture in Article 1 of the CAT includes both physical and mental suffering, stating
“any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a
person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession,
punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or
intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any
kind.”275
The Constitution also states “persons
arrested shall not be compelled to make confessions or
admissions which could be used in evidence against them. Any evidence obtained under coercion
shall not be admissible.”276
However, torture takes place in federal and regional detention centres and prisons, police stations,
including Maikelawi, military camps and other unofficial places of detention. Amnesty International
received repeated, consistent reports of treatment of detainees amounting to torture and other
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. Torture and other forms of ill-treatment are reported to be
used for the purposes of interrogation, coercion and punishment.
Amnesty International interviewed over 75 people who had been subjected to torture, in most cases
repeatedly, while in detention or had been subjected to treatment that amounts to torture or ill-
treatment in and around their homes. The significant majority of all former detainees interviewed by
Amnesty International reported they had been subjected to torture.
The most frequently reported methods of torture were beating, particularly with fists, rubber
batons, wooden or metal sticks or gun butts, kicking, tying in contorted stress positions often in
conjunction with beating on the soles of the feet, electric shocks, mock execution or death threats
involving a gun, beating with electric wire, burning, including with heated metal or molten plastic,
and rape, including gang rape.
Other regularly reported methods of torture included chaining or tying hands or ankles together for
extended periods (up to several months), mock drowning, whipping, being forced to walk on knees
over rough ground, forced physical exertion and extended solitary confinement.
As detailed in previous chapters, a high proportion of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty
International were detained arbitrarily – without charge and without judicial oversight of their
detention. Many were detained in unofficial places of detention, including military camps and
private buildings; and many were detained incommunicado – without contact or access to legal
representatives or family members. All of these conditions increase the risk of detainees being
subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. The significant restrictions on
access for independent human rights organizations to monitor places of detention also exacerbates
the risk of torture or other ill-treatment for detainees.
PURPOSES AND CIRCUMSTANCES OF TORTURE
According to former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International, torture takes place primarily
for the purpose of and during interrogation – to extract confessions or other information. Although a
high proportion of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International were never charged or
taken to court, almost all were interrogated in detention. Interrogation sessions are reported to
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 69
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0070.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
regularly involve torture. Torture is used or threatened to coerce detainees into giving information,
if detainees fail to give information or do not give the answers desired by interrogators:
“They just kept up the interrogations until we would give them the information that they wanted. The
beatings were very serious at the beginning and then they became less frequent.”277
Former detainees consistently reported that during interrogation and torture sessions they were
repeatedly asked to provide information about the ‘offence’ they were alleged to have committed or
been involved with, such as who organised the demonstration they took part in, the whereabouts of
a relative wanted by the authorities or their connections with the OLF:
“They hit me in the face and said tell us who you gave money to, who are your contacts? Who do you
support?”278
A high proportion of former detainees also reported they were compelled to confess their alleged
crimes, often under torture or the threat of torture. In many cases of former detainees interviewed
by Amnesty International, although they were not charged and never went to court, they were still
compelled to confess:
“They
wanted me to confess that I had a connection with OLF and that I was behind the
demonstration.”279
“My
elbows were tied behind my back, then they dropped the melted plastic on me when I refused to
confess.”280
A number of interviewees said they confessed to things they were innocent of as a result of torture.
Several interviewees said that their interrogators tried to force them to sign a blank piece of paper.
A foreign journalist who temporarily shared a cell in Maikelawi with an Oromo detainee accused of
supporting the OLF told Amnesty International the man was being forced to write down everything
he knew about the OLF, as part of his confession. But as he did not know anything about the OLF he
was asking his cell-mate if he knew anything he could write.281
Torture is also used for the purpose of extracting information to incriminate others:
“Their
main aim in beating and threatening me was to extract names of other people who I allegedly
worked with for the OLF so that they could also arrest those people.”282
Detainees are also tortured to compel them to cooperate with a demand put to them by their
captors. Demands reported to Amnesty International by multiple interviewees included, inter alia, to
join the ruling party, collaborate with the government in reporting on others, including fellow
students or community members, implicate others or testify against others in trials.
One man arbitrarily detained based on his OPC membership and accused of working for the OLF told
Amnesty International:
“In
that room, I saw blood on the walls, on the floor. They told me if I accepted their condition to
work with them, I would get released. If I did not accept, I would die. They said ‘you see the blood of
your friends here, you will die in the same way if you do not accept our conditions.”283
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 70
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0071.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A man who had fled to Somaliland after spending 13 years in prison because he had been a
supporter of the OLF at the time of the transitional government, was kidnapped and forcibly
returned to Ethiopia in 2011. He was arbitrarily detained in Jail Ogaden in Jijiga, and lost two toenails
as a result of beatings in detention. He told Amnesty International:
“They
took me back to that ARRA [Administration for Refugee and Returnee Affairs – the state
refugee agency] office. There were two generals. They said they needed me to work with them to
trace the rest of the OLF in Somaliland. They made me sign that I would spy on other refugees in
Somaliland. They said ‘If you don’t comply with this you’ll be killed without any conditions.”284
Torture is also used as punishment for suspected or actual anti-government tendencies, with victims
being asked during torture sessions why they did not support the government and why they were
trying to oppose the government.
Former detainees subjected to torture or other ill-treatment predominantly reported torture took
place during the initial stages of detention or took place most frequently during that period. This was
widely reported to coincide with the main period of interrogation for the purposes of extracting
information and confessions of guilt. The length of this initial period of interrogation and torture can
vary from the first few days of detention to several months. Many former detainees said torture
sessions would take place every few days during the initial stages of detention though in some cases
it was reported to be more frequent – every day in some instances – or less frequent. Most former
detainees interviewed by Amnesty International said torture occurred less frequently as the
detention continued:
“This
happened once or twice a week. It continued for the first four months, while they tried to get
information from me.”285
“In
the beginning, the beatings and interrogations happened regularly but, because they didn’t get
any information from me, the frequency reduced.”286
However, there were some cases in which former detainees reported that torture continued to take
place occasionally throughout detention periods that lasted from several months to a number of
years:
“The
torture was every three to five days throughout the whole five months detention.”287
Almost all former detainees who had experienced torture interviewed by Amnesty International said
torture took place in a different room to the one in which the detainee was held, usually some sort
of interrogation room and usually with only one prisoner tortured in a room at one time:
“During
the interrogation, we would be separated. They would take us to separate rooms. It would
be usually two or three soldiers who would do the interrogation and torture.”288
A young man who was repeatedly harassed and arrested for his activism with the OPC said of one of
his detentions in the police station:
“They
would take me from the prison room to the office. They shut the doors and then they do what
they like.”289
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 71
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0072.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
The exception to this was in the small number of cases reported to Amnesty International where
detainees were held in unofficial places of detention such as offices or private houses, where torture
would take place in the same room in which the detainee was held:
“It
was a personal house, not a police station. In that room, I saw a lot of rope, and blood on the
floor.” They said tell us the truth or you’re going to die. They started to beat me, hit me in the face,
then they used rope on me.”290
The significant majority of people interviewed by Amnesty International said torture sessions took
place at night. Three former detainees reported incidents where they were tortured until they were
unconscious and awoke back in their cells:
“I
might be interrogated and tortured by three different people during the night. When one of them
tired, another would take over. They would generally take me from my cell at about 9 pm and then
take me back in the morning.”291
Former detainees reported torture in police stations, including in Maikelawi, regional and local
prisons, military camps and other unofficial places of detention. Incidents of torture reported to
Amnesty International were carried out by federal and local police, the military and plainclothed
operatives some of whom were believed by some detainees to be part of the intelligence service:
“It
was soldiers doing the interrogation, wearing uniforms.”292
Former detainees told Amnesty International of incidents where different branches of the security
and intelligence services appeared to cooperate in the interrogation and torture and ill-treatment of
detainees in police stations, detention centres, military camps and other unofficial places of
detention:
“It
was security people doing it. Some with uniforms, some with civilian clothes.”293
A young man detained arbitrarily in a military camp in Harar and interrogated about OLF activities in
the area, told Amnesty International:
“Every
day there would be different people who would interrogate, different people who would
torture, but they were all federal military and the questions always remained the same.”294
METHODS AND EXPERIENCES OF TORTURE
Many former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International exhibited scars on parts of the body,
including head, arms, wrists, legs, feet, torso and back, missing body parts (parts of fingers, ears),
missing or broken teeth, burn scars, damaged eyes (including where the lids were fused or the eye-
ball sunken in the socket) and badly-healed broken bones, all of which were reported to result from
torture. A number of interviewees reported ongoing pain or physical difficulties as a result of
torture, including hearing impairment from beatings, kidney problems and problems urinating,
including as a result of rape of women. Several interviewees reported the deaths of family members
after release from detention as a result of torture.
Beating was the most regularly reported form of torture. This was with hands, fists or, frequently,
with objects – wooden or metal sticks, gun butts or other items. The most frequently reported
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 72
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0073.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
object used in beating was the black rubber baton carried by police. Over 20 interviewees specified
being beaten with this item. A young woman arrested for a second time and arbitrarily detained for
13 days for interrogation about her husband, who had fled the country after being harassed and
arbitrarily detained on suspicion of supporting the OLF because his father had, told Amnesty
International:
“They
beat me with electric wire and they had a black object that most policemen hold that they use
to beat people with. About one and half inches in diameter.”295
Another interviewee with an eye that did not open fully told Amnesty International that was a result
of being beaten on the head:296
“They
would use ropes and tie my hands behind my back and beat me with sticks.”297
Beating with electric wire was also reported by multiple interviewees. A young man detained
without charge for over eight months for allegedly supporting the OPC, initially for a week in a police
station and then in prison in Shashemene, told Amnesty International:
“In
the prison, there was a dark room where I was taken and beaten with electric wire. There was no
interrogation at this point, it was pure punishment. I was beaten with electric wire and sometimes
the plastic/rubber stick which the police carry. In the police station, I was beaten in the evening for
the whole week. After I transferred to prison, I was beaten every night for the first month.”298
Several interviewees told Amnesty International they had been handcuffed or tied by one or both
wrists to a point high on the wall or the ceiling so their feet barely touched the floor, putting
pressure on their wrists. A young man arrested repeatedly because he was a youth leader in the OPC
and accused of ‘inciting’ young people against the government showed Amnesty International scars
circling both wrists as a result of this treatment during one period of arbitrary arrest.299
In addition, around 15 interviewees told Amnesty International they had been subjected to
prolonged periods of permanent handcuffing, chaining or tying of their hands. In some cases, this
was reported to last up to four or five months. An Oromo singer arbitrarily detained at Maikelawi for
11 months, showed Amnesty International a scar on his ankle which he said was from being chained
at the ankles for the duration of his detention.300
A man arbitrarily arrested after the OLF stole his cattle, and detained without charge in Boku
military camp for three years, who said his hands were tied with rope almost constantly during his
detention
Tying in stress positions was reported by 17 former detainees. In a number of these cases, former
detainees, detained in different detention centres across the region and in Addis Ababa, described
to Amnesty International the same contorted position they had been subjected to, involving the
wrists and ankles being tied together and a pole inserted between the elbows and the knees, which
is then used to suspend the prisoners upside-down.301 Detainees were left in this position for up to
one hour. While suspended, they were subjected to beating on the soles of their feet and,
sometimes, on other parts of their bodies. Tying and suspension in this way makes the whole body
accessible for beating. Some reported they were told to give a signal, often raising a finger, if they
wished ‘to tell the truth’ and be released from the position.302
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 73
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0074.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A businessman, detained arbitrarily without charge in a military camp because he was accused of
collecting funds for the OLF, described being subjected to this same treatment on more than one
occasion:
“They
tied my wrists and then tied them with my ankles. Then they put a stick through my arms and
under my knees. They turned me upside- down and then they beat me. They would leave me like that
for an hour or more. It is very severe. You can hardly breathe in that position. They said whenever you
want to tell the truth raise your finger. I raised my finger because I couldn’t breathe.”303
A man arrested on the accusation he had provided medicine from his pharmacy to the OLF and
arbitrarily detained without charge in another military camp described his treatment on the first day
he was arrested:
“Immediately when they took me to the military camp, they tied my hands around my legs and put a
pole through over my arms and under my knees, made of wood, and turned me upside-down and
suspended it between two metal objects, and then they started beating my feet. They beat with
metal wire. For half an hour I was kept in that position. It makes your feet bleed and after that they
made you walk…the thing with the pole happened again in my second month of detention when my
feet had just about recovered from the first time.”304
As well as beating with electric wire, multiple former detainees reported they were subject to
electric shocks. A man detained in a military camp in Harar showed Amnesty International a small
round scar on the inside of each heel, which he said was where electric shocks had been
administered.305 A man arbitrarily detained for six months in a military camp in Harar and
questioned about OLF activities in the area, explained the use of electric shocks during torture:
“They made me sit in a chair and tied both hands on the side. They had an electric shock machine and
one man would keep putting the wires on me. They put dirty cloth in my mouth to stop me from
screaming. Another man would be pointing a gun at me. They would give shocks and then the man
would stop, ask some questions and then restart. In all, I was taken for electric shocks on six
occasions. They would give three to four shocks each time.”306
Several former detainees said rags, a sock or other material was forced into their mouths during
torture to prevent them from screaming. Others said the torturers were immune to screams. A
young woman detained at a military camp for several years with her two sisters because of her
father’s alleged affiliation with the OLF and forced to act as labour for the soldiers, showed Amnesty
International disfiguring and extensive scarring that covered her entire stomach. She said:
“Two soldiers did this. They came at night into the room and tied up our hands and made us lie down
on our backs. They put coals on our stomachs. Our clothes melted on us. We screamed but the soldier
didn’t care. They’re accustomed to screaming.”307
Young girl whose stomach was burnt with hot coals whilst she was arbitrarily detained in a military
camp because her father was accused of supporting the OLF
Burning with different objects including coals, heated metal or molten plastic was reported in
several cases. A number of people interviewed showed scarring consistent with burning on different
parts of their bodies. A young man showed Amnesty International scars on his legs and said he had
molten plastic dropped onto his legs when he refused to confess that he had incited other students
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 74
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0075.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
to refuse to join the ruling political party.308 Others showed Amnesty International scarring on their
back, torso and buttocks reported to be from the same cause.309 Another man told Amnesty
International that he was flogged and burnt with a plastic rope which had been heated in coals:310
Businessman, arrested on the accusation he gave money to the OLF, and arbitrarily detained
and tortured in an unofficial place of detention in a private house, before being taken to a prison
A handful of people told Amnesty International they had been cut or stabbed with knives, bayonets
or other objects during interrogation and torture. Amnesty International interviewed one man who
was blind in his right eye. That eye-ball was collapsed and sunken in the socket and its surface was
glazed and grey. He said he had been stabbed in the eye with a bayonet during torture.311 Another
showed Amnesty International a scar on his neck he said was the result of being cut with a knife
during interrogation.312
Six male former detainees reported having a plastic bottle filled with water tied around and
suspended from their penis or genitalia. One man interviewed by Amnesty International said his
brother had had to have 70% of his penis removed after release from detention as a result of being
subjected to this treatment:313
“Because of the torture carried out on his private parts, the parts had become decayed. The doctors
said that if we did not remove the diseased part it might spread to the rest of his body so it was
necessary to cut off his private parts.”314
A former ONC parliamentary candidate kidnapped and forcibly taken back to Ethiopia from
Somaliland in 2012 and arbitrarily detained said he was subjected to torture every night for the first
25 days of his detention and regularly during the following 20 days. His interrogators told him to
admit his connection to the OLF, give names of OLF coordinators in Somaliland and tell them which
ONC/OPC candidates were connected to the OLF. He told Amnesty International:
“Every
night there was torture. They beat me with legs, fists, sticks. They kicked me on my joints.
Sometimes they administered electric shocks. And in my private parts they tied a one litre bottle of
water.”315
In several cases, former detainees said they were subjected to mock drowning, either where their
torturer forcibly held their heads down in a tank of water or where material was placed over their
face and water then poured over it. Several former detainees also reported being subjected to cold
stress through being forced to stand or sit in cold water for long periods of time:
“During interrogation, they have rooms where a [tank] is filled with cold water. They put you in the
there. You can’t sit in the cold water so you have to stand up for a long time. You can’t sit down
because the water would come over your head so you were forced to stand…for hours.”316
RAPE
Amnesty International received reports from women that torture by an act of rape is used as a form
of coercion or punishment. Rape also occurs as a result of security services exploiting situations
where women are held arbitrarily, incommunicado and sometimes in unofficial places of detention –
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 75
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0076.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
which all place the women beyond the protection of the law and at heightened vulnerability to
sexual violence.
Amnesty International interviewed over 15 people who reported one or more incidents of rape. This
included women reporting rape against themselves and men reporting incidents of rape against
their wives. Rape was reported to take place in detention and in people’s homes, perpetrated by
members of the military or police force. In a number of these cases, women reported being raped by
two or more perpetrators. Most women who reported rape in detention said it occurred on
repeated occasions. Several reported they had had children as a result of rape and two women who
were visibly pregnant during interviews told Amnesty International their pregnancies resulted from
rape by security services in detention or in their homes:
“That was the time when I was raped while in detention. It was not during interrogation. Two people
came at night and raped me.”317
“I was raped several times during the month. It was more than one person at one time - it might be
three or four soldiers. One would rape me and the other would stand and wait.”318
One woman arbitrarily detained without charge for nine months in a military camp in Shinile told
Amnesty International:
“During
the interrogation, I was thoroughly beaten. I cried for help saying that I was not guilty and
should not be killed. One night three men came to my cell and said that I was being taken for
interrogating but they just took me to a room and all raped me. After that, they just threw me back
into the cell. I was not the only one – they would do the same to the other women there.”319
Women detained in military camps arbitrarily and incommunicado – outside the protection of the
law - are especially vulnerable to rape and other sexual violence at the hands of the soldiers
stationed there:
“I
was raped by three men – one after the other. I remember them very clearly and can identify them.
Rape happened several times over the nine months. This was not unique to me, the other women in
the cell had the same experience. There were so many soldiers in the camp and they were all taking
advantage of the situation. They had no shame.”320
Interviewees also reported to Amnesty International incidents of rape taking place in people’s
homes by members of the security services who came to threaten or intimidate them, search for
evidence or demand information. Rape is used as a form of torture against the victim to threaten her
or her relatives, as punishment for the alleged activities of her relatives or to coerce her into giving
information.
PSYCHOLOGICAL TORTURE
Some forms of physical torture documented above also have a psychological element – for example,
genital torture can be accompanied by threats on the part of the torturer or fear on the part of the
victim of permanent damage to sexual or reproductive functions.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 76
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0077.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
In addition to this, several other forms of psychological torture were reported by former detainees.
Over 20 former detainees reported that, during interrogation and torture sessions, they had been
threatened with death if they did not provide information that their interrogators wanted, did not
incriminate others, agree to conditions which included working with the government to monitor and
report on others or testify against others in court cases:
“They
said tell us where you got the property and how it belonged to the OLF. Tell us the truth or
you’re going to die.”321
A number of former detainees said they had been threatened with death or subjected to a mock
execution during their detention, causing psychological suffering. Several people, detained in
different locations, told Amnesty International they had been taken to a location outside the
detention centre or military camp, in the bush, and made to get into a hole dug in the ground by the
soldiers detaining them:
“They
took us to the bush and dug a hole and made us lie in it. They pointed the gun at us and said
tell us the truth. We said we don’t know anything about the things you are asking us.”322
A number of former detainees reported they had been subjected to sustained periods of solitary
confinement. The longest period reported by a former detainee was 11 months.323 Prolonged
periods of solitary confinement constitute ill-treatment and the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture
has found prolonged solitary confinement, can, on a case-by-case basis, amount to torture. The
Special Rapporteur also found solitary confinement, when used for the purposes of punishment,
cannot be justified for any reason and violates the absolute prohibition on torture or other ill-
treatment.324 Of the former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International who had been
detained at Maikelawi, the majority reported being in solitary confinement in the initial stages of
their detention.325 Among detainees who reported this treatment, there was a clear pattern of the
period of solitary confinement coinciding with the period during which detainees were interrogated
and subjected to torture. There are indications that solitary confinement, as well as the poor
conditions of their cells, were used as a further means of coercion and punishment to make
detainees confess or provide information desired by their interrogators.
MAIKELAWI, ADDIS ABABA
For many years, Amnesty International has received numerous reports of torture and other cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment at the Federal Police Crime Investigation and Forensic Sector
known as ‘Maikelawi’ in Addis Ababa, which is under the authority of the federal police. Large
numbers of political detainees – perceived dissenters, political opposition party members and
supporters and alleged supporters of insurgent groups – are detained in Maikelawi. As is reportedly
the case in the six federal prisons,326 many former detainees at Maikelawi, including Oromos,
members of other ethnic groups and, in some cases, foreign nationals, have reported the majority of
inmates at Maikelawi are Oromos.
Actual or suspected dissenters whose cases are higher profile, who are suspected to be the
organisers or instigators of protests or are considered of high importance for other reasons have
been transferred to Maikelawi from locations across Oromia. In the aftermath of the April and May
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 77
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0078.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
2014 ‘Master Plan’ protests, students and others believed to have been instigators of the protests or
under particular suspicion for other reasons were transferred to Maikelawi.
Detainees often undergo pre-trial interrogation in Maikelawi and are then transferred to other
detention centres – often the federal prison of Kaliti – after being charged. However, some actual or
suspected dissenters interviewed by Amnesty International were detained at Maikelawi for
sustained periods – up to 11 months – and then released without charge. Some former detainees at
Maikelawi have reported encountering other prisoners who have been detained for a number of
years without charge or trial.
Former detainees in Maikelawi interviewed by Amnesty International consistently reported patterns
of torture and other ill-treatment of detainees held at the detention centre, including beating with
sticks, electric wire and other objects, kicking, burning with heated objects, tying and suspension in
contorted positions and death threats:
“I was tied with my hands behind me and tied to my legs and then suspended from the ceiling so that
I was facing the floor. I was left in this position for about an hour. Then they beat me on the bottom
of my feet and on my hands.”327
“They
beat me with a big hard strip of rubber which cut straight in to my skin. They tied my hands
behind me, put a cloth in my mouth and beat me so hard. On another occasion, they made me stand
with my arms outstretched and my mouth open for seven hours. At the end of it, I could not close my
mouth. Another time I was chained by one wrist from the wall so that my toes only just scraped the
floor and left me there for two hours.”328
Many of the former Maikelawi detainees interviewed by Amnesty International said they were in the
underground section during the initial period of their detention, called Chelama bet (dark house) by
the inmates. Some of those detained underground were also in solitary confinement. In several
cases, both underground detention and solitary confinement were reported to have lasted for
several months or longer. Amnesty International received a number of reports that cell number
eight, in the underground section of Maikelawi, has the worst conditions. Cell number eight is
divided into four separate cells, in which people are detained in solitary confinement. The four cells
are all small – one to two metres squared and are reported to be completely dark. Other cells in the
underground section are reported to have small openings through which light comes in:329
“In the four departments of number eight, you cannot move, you cannot stretch your legs. For the
first three months in that small room, I was alone in the dark. Only when police came for
interrogation did they switch on the light, to take you from the room at night. Then they had many
materials to make you suffer.”330
“In number eight, there is no hole to let in light, it is totally dark. Later I was moved to number seven
and number three [also in Chelama bet], in those there is a very small hole close to the roof so it only
lets in a tiny bit of light.”331
Several detainees in the cells of number eight said their hands and, in some cases, their feet were
chained for the duration of their time in those cells. One student told Amnesty International his
hands were tied constantly for the five months that he spent in the underground section.332 These
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 78
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0079.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
conditions are used to exert additional pressure on detainees to extract confessions or other
information:
“In that underground, you even want to hear the sound of the shoes coming. Because there is no
sound and you are alone. When they come, it is only for two reasons, food or punishment. You only
know it’s morning because they give you tea and bread. That’s the only way you count the days. And
if they say ‘out’ you know it’s evening and you are going to be beaten.”333
The conditions of prolonged solitary confinement and detention underground, and their use to exert
pressure on detainees, is in violation of the absolute prohibition on torture or other ill-treatment of
punishment under international law.
TORTURE OUTSIDE DETENTION, IN HOMES
Amnesty International received a number of reports of people in Oromia being subjected to
treatment amounting to torture in their own homes by the military or the police. Interviewees
reported acts that could amount to torture taking place during the arrests of suspects, including
beatings and the firing of live ammunition. Family members of people who were wanted by the
government on suspicion of dissenting behaviour or allegedly supporting the OLF were also
subjected to beating, death threats, rape and other acts that constitute physical or psychological
torture or other ill-treatment. Interviewees who were relatives of wanted or detained persons said
members of the security services came to their homes and harassed or threatened them to either
reveal the persons’ whereabouts or to hand over documents or other evidence that would
incriminate them.
Amnesty International received several reports of death or injury resulting from police or military
personnel using firearms against an unarmed suspect or a family member of a suspect during arrest.
A woman arrested on the allegation of providing food to the OLF showed Amnesty International
small scars either side of her wrist, which she said occurred while she was being taken from her
home:
“They shot me in the wrist with a pistol while they were arresting me.”334
Some incidents reportedly resulted in the death of a suspect of family member. A killing through the
use of unnecessary or excessive force during arrest may amount to extra-judicial execution. One
woman, whose husband was affiliated with the OLF and had been subjected to an enforced
disappearance, told Amnesty International that after her husband was taken away, the military
brought his blood-stained clothes to the house and told her if she did not give up her husband’s
documents she would face the same fate:
“They would come frequently. They would beat me. They put a pistol in my mouth to frighten me.
They also beat my mother. On one of these occasions, after they beat her, she died.”335
Another man, who had gone into hiding because the government suspected he supported the OLF,
based on his father’s support, said his wife was harassed in his absence:
“So when they couldn’t find me, they arrested and beat my wife and pointed a gun at her.”336
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 79
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0080.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Another man, who had gone into hiding after release from detention on the accusation of being in
contact with the OLF, said federal police came to his home looking for him:
“My
brother was there but he was afraid and he ran away and they shot him and his leg was broken
by the bullet. He is still now limping.”337
In several of the cases of this nature reported to Amnesty International, it was the spouse of the
individual in question who was harassed in this way, sometimes over a number of different
occasions. Rape of women in these circumstances was reported to Amnesty International. A woman
whose husband had been arrested and subjected to enforced disappearance on suspicion of
affiliation with the OLF told Amnesty International soldiers came to the house after her husband had
escaped from detention. She said:
“The
government soldiers came looking for him and surrounded our home. They beat me, they raped
me and they asked me about my husband. Two soldiers raped me, the other was searching the
house. Then they warned me not to talk about the things that happened to me and they just left.”338
Another woman told Amnesty International that she was repeatedly harassed by soldiers after her
husband fled the country after his release from detention on the accusation that he supported the
OLF:
“They would come to the house and ask me about my husband’s connection to OLF and where he
was. I was beaten very badly, several times.”339
She showed Amnesty International scars on several parts of her body, including on her upper arms
which she said were from her arms being tied while she was interrogated, and scars on her legs from
being beaten with sticks.
Woman beaten during interrogation in her home about her husband’s whereabouts
CONDITIONS IN DETENTION
“The cell was so small and it was very overcrowded – there were about 100 people stuffed into it.
There were ventilation slits but no windows. There was no place for anyone to lie down – we were all
sleeping on top of each other.”
A student arrested and detained for three weeks in a military camp because he and other students
complained about government restrictions on the rights of students in his university to hold
meetings.340
All people deprived of their liberty must be treated with humanity and with respect for the inherent
dignity of the human person.341 The obligation to treat detainees with humanity and respect for
their dignity is a fundamental and universally applicable rule, which cannot depend on the
availability of material resources.342 International standards and Ethiopian laws set out specific
requirements for the treatment of prisoners. The UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of
Detainees requires that all accommodation for prisoners should meet all requirements of health,
with particular regard to minimum floor space, heating and ventilation. The Rules also provide for a
window to provide natural light and fresh air, adequate sanitary and bathing arrangements, a bed
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 80
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0081.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
with sufficient bedding, adequate nutritional food and no limitations on drinking water, access to
fresh air and the provision of medical services.343 The Ethiopian Federal Prisons Commission
Establishing Proclamation echoes the requirements of accommodation with fresh air and sufficient
light, sufficient food and medical care344 and the Council of Ministers’ Regulations on the
Treatment of Federal Prisoners additionally provides for every prisoner to receive a bed and bedding
and the provision of toilet facilities and enough water and materials for cleanliness.345
However, accounts of former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International consistently
demonstrate conditions in detention in regional and federal police stations, regional and federal
prisons, military camps and other unofficial places of detention, violate international law and
national and international standards.
The size of cells and numbers of detainees held together varies between detention centres and also
within the same detention centre – from isolation cells to large rooms holding many people. In some
detention centres, including federal prisons, up to 200 prisoners were reported to be held in the
same room.
A former government employee detained on the accusation of having incited local farmers, was
detained at a military camp in Dembi Dollo. He described the conditions of detention:
“The
building was big and had many rooms. In the room where I was, there were more than 200
people. The room was made from wood. We got food and water once a day. There was no blanket or
mattress – we just slept on the floor. In the morning, we got to go to the toilets.”346
Over-crowding was reported in many cases, often to the point it was not possible for all detainees –
who slept on the floor – to lie down simultaneously. A young man arbitrarily detained for three
months in a military camp in Bale based on a suspicion of OLF membership he had ‘inherited’ from
his father, told Amnesty International:
“We
were about five prisoners in the room where I was. It was a very small, approximately 2.5m x
1.5m. There was not enough room for us all to lie down to sleep. We had to curl up all squashed
together. We took it in turns to stand so that others could sleep.”347
The nature of cells reported to Amnesty International varied, particularly in military camps. Some
said their cell was made of stone, some reported cells made of iron sheets with earth floors or walls
made of mud with iron sheet roofs, particularly in smaller military camps:
“In the military camp, I was kept in a cell with about 15 detainees. The cell was made of iron sheets,
the floor was rough. It was about 2m x 3m.”348
Many of the former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International said they had to sleep on the
floor, often with no mattress or bedding provided, in police stations, prisons and military camps.
Former detainees complained of the cold, particularly in underground cells and those who had to
sleep on the bare concrete floor:
“The cell was made of cement and was very cold. There were no windows but some holes for
ventilation. They gave us small blankets, but often we could not sleep because the floor was very
cold.”349
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 81
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0082.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
It was frequently reported that cells and detention rooms had no windows or only a small window to
provide light for a large room. A man detained in a military camp in Negele Borana told Amnesty
International:
“The walls of the cell were made of iron sheets. It was very small and we were many people in there.
There was no place to lie down. We’d be standing most of the time and huddled when trying to sleep.
The floor was rough. There were no windows, but some ventilation due to gaps between the iron
sheet wall and the iron sheet roof.”350
Underground cells are used in several locations, including in a number of military camps. As
documented above, Maikelawi in Addis Ababa has underground cells in the section which the
prisoners refer to as Chelama bet (‘dark house’), in which conditions are reported to be appalling.
After initial periods in Chelama bet, many prisoners are moved to the section of the prison they refer
to as Sheraton, given the better conditions in that section. In Sheraton, detainees share cells with
other prisoners, have access to daylight, can move around and have access to a small exercise yard:
“Then I was moved to Sheraton. Sheraton is not dark, it’s a relatively good place compared to the
other cells. Most of us considered that we were freed when we were in Sheraton because you can get
sunlight, you can talk to each other, you can move in the compound.”351
Underground cells were also reported in some military camps. A young man arrested during a
demonstration over the perceived marginalisation of Afan Oromo (the Oromo language) was
detained underground in a local detention camp in Gololcha Woreda in Arsi Zone. He told Amnesty
International:
“Around 250 people were arrested, about 150 were students. According to their ‘crime,’ some people
were detained in the compound, some were underground, some in a building in the dark. Those
underground and in the dark room were the ones accused of organising the demonstration, already
targeted by the government or the strongest voices. I was among the people under the ground. There
were about 80 people in the cell with me.”352
A significant proportion of detainees held in both official and unofficial detention centres said they
did not leave their cells at any point during the day, except for interrogation sessions, which usually
took place at night and, in some cases, detainees were permitted to leave their cell to use the toilet,
at allocated times, either once or twice during the day. Some detainees also said they were taken
from their cells to fetch drinking water. But many who were detained in military camps, police
stations and in the underground section of Maikelawi said they did not leave their cell at any point,
including during detention periods of many months or even longer. Many detainees are therefore
denied adequate access to natural light, the open air and exercise as provided in national and
international standards:353
“Let alone going to court, you’re not even allowed to go outside the cell.”354
“When we were underground, we never left the cell, except to go to investigation, which is only at
night. So we never got sunlight. After three weeks of this, I got sunlight for 20 minutes.”355
“We were only allowed out of the room for two reasons – interrogation, and to fetch drinking water
every two days.”356
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 82
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0083.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A man arbitrarily detained for three months at a military camp Gedo in west Shewa, described his
conditions of detention:
“Except when we went for torture, they didn’t allow us out of the cell except once at 5 am and once
in the evening they would take us out of the cell to use the toilet.”357
Almost all former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International reported they received
inadequate amounts of food in detention and it was of poor quality, whether detained in official or
unofficial places of detention. Some believed they had been subjected to food deprivation as a form
of torture. The majority of former detainees reported they received bread and tea, either once or
twice a day. In some cases, a second meal in the day consisted of injera358 instead of bread:
“In the morning, we got tea and a piece of bread, one injera for lunch and some unclean water. Some
detainees suffered diarrhoea because of this.”359
“Sometimes you cannot sit because you have nothing on your body, just bones. You cannot sit, you
cannot lie down; it is too painful because there is nothing on your bones so you have to crouch or curl
in a ball like a child.”360
It is common in Ethiopia that families bring food to detention centres and prisons for their relatives,
to supplement prison rations. However, as a significant proportion of former detainees interviewed
by Amnesty International had been held incommunicado or subjected to enforced disappearance –
their families did not know their whereabouts – it was not possible for families to bring
supplementary food.
Many former detainees reported they were given little drinking water and, in many cases, detainees
said it was dirty and unsafe. A man detained in several different prisons over the course of eight
years’ arbitrary detention without charge told Amnesty International:
“In the prison there is no sufficient water and the water is not clean. So the prisoners are subject to
many diseases.”361
Detainees in official and unofficial detention centres are denied adequate access to toilet facilities.
In some cases, detainees are permitted to leave their cells at one or two designated times during the
day to use toilets. However, numerous former detainees told Amnesty International they were
provided with a jerry can or a bucket or even a plastic water bottle in the cell to use as a toilet. Often
one jerry can or bucket was shared by many inmates in a cell. Access to washing facilities was
reported to be limited or denied altogether for many former detainees:
“For a toilet, they gave us a jerry can which was in the cell with us and that was our only toilet. We
were not given one opportunity to wash at any point that I was in the camp.”362
A young man detained for two months in Chiro allegedly because he failed to recruit his fellow
students for the OPDO party, described the toilet facilities:
“The room was about 7 x 10m. We were about 40 - 50 prisoners inside. You had to urinate inside that
room. There was one jerry can but, when it was full, people just had to urinate on the floor. People
lived in that room like animals.”363
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 83
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0084.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
A man arbitrarily detained in a military camp for five months because his brother, a teacher, was
wanted by the authorities for allegedly inciting his students to stage an anti-government
demonstration, told Amnesty International:
“In the room where I slept, there were about 10 people who were with me. There was a bucket in the
room for all of us to use as a toilet.”364
A number of people said they could not change their clothes throughout detention periods that
lasted many months. Several women mentioned they were not provided with any sanitary
equipment for menstruation while in detention in military camps.365
A high level of illness was reported to Amnesty International in official and unofficial detention
centres because of the conditions of detention and the poor quality of food and water:
“We
were about 80 people in the cell. There were two toilets inside the room. We were not permitted
out of the room. We were given bread in the morning, injera with sauce in the evening. We had a
piece of sheet to sleep on. Because of these things people got sick.”366
A young man whose mother had been arbitrarily detained in lieu of and to provide information on
her husband, for one year in Dodola Woreda, said:
“The
food was very little, she was starving. She was detained with so many women in the room so it
was extremely hot and illnesses were rampant because of the conditions. They allowed her to be
released in the end because she was sick.”367
In 2012, the EHRC published a report on research conducted in 114 of 119 detention centres
throughout Ethiopia, including the six federal prisons. The scope of the report did not include police
stations, Maikelawi (which is under the federal police) or unofficial places of detention such as
military camps. The report acknowledged shortcomings with detention conditions which reflect the
accounts of former detainees given to Amnesty International. The report documented that many
detention centres were dilapidated and that most were congested, devoid of sufficient air and
light;368
“detainees
in most of detention centres reported that the food was not sufficient and poor in
quality;”369
there was serious water scarcity in 33 prisons;370 in the majority of prisons “there
is no
bedding of any sort, no mattress and other necessary materials;”371
all detention centres have
toilets, but except for 26 of them, they are usable only during daytime and the absence of toilets
which are usable during the night forces detainees to use buckets.372
FORCED LABOUR
The ICCPR provides “no-one
shall be required to perform forced or compulsory labour.”373
It does,
however, state this does not preclude “the
performance of hard labour in pursuance of a sentence to
such punishment by a competent court,”374
and that forced labour does not include, inter alia,
“any
work or service… normally required of a person who is under detention in consequence of a lawful
order of a court, or of a person during conditional release from such detention.”375
The international
Forced Labour Convention also exempts from prohibitions on forced labour work by prisoners where
that work or service is “exacted
from any person as a consequence of a conviction in a court of law
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 84
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0085.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
[and] provided that the said work or service is carried out under the supervision and control of a
public authority.”376
The Ethiopian Federal Prison Commission Establishing Proclamation provides for prisoners to be
assigned to work that
“suits his ability and vocation.”
This provision applies to convicted prisoners in
recognised places of detention. The provision further provides that prisoners assigned to work under
this provision will receive remuneration.377
The Abolition of Forced Labour Convention provides that states should not make use of any form of
forced or compulsory labour “as
a means of political coercion or education or as a punishment for
holding or expressing political views or views ideologically opposed to the established political, social
or economic system.”378
In almost all cases of detention in military camps reported to Amnesty International, the detention
was not subject to judicial oversight and detainees did not go to trial. They were therefore neither
subject to legally imposed convictions and sentences nor to other lawful orders of a court. The
compulsion of arbitrarily detained prisoners in these circumstances to conduct tasks of physical
labour therefore amounts to unlawful forced labour.
A number of former detainees in military camps reported being forced to perform labour tasks in
detention. The sort of tasks reported to Amnesty International usually related to construction or the
day-to-day running of the camp. Tasks reported by several former detainees, held in at least seven
different locations, included collecting firewood, fetching water, breaking stones, cooking food for
the soldiers, washing soldiers’ clothing and cleaning the compound:
“They forced us to work cutting trees and breaking stones.”379
A young man detained at Sabategna military camp near Dire Dawa said he and other prisoners were
made to wash the soldiers’ clothes and collect firewood.380 Another man arbitrarily detained in a
military camp for two years reported he and his fellow prisoners were forced to chop wood.381
DEATH IN DETENTION
Cases of death in detention were reported to Amnesty International by former fellow detainees or
family members of detainees. These deaths were reported to result from torture, poor detention
conditions and lack of medical assistance. Some of these cases may amount to extra-judicial
executions, where the detainees died as a result of torture or the intentional deprivation of food or
medical assistance. All allegations of death in custody should be subject to independent and
impartial investigations to establish the facts with a view to ensuring accountability for perpetrators
and justice and compensation for victims.
A number of former detainees told Amnesty International they had seen fellow detainees die in
detention as a result of conditions, poor food and poor sanitation, which exacerbated the spread of
illnesses between prisoners. A former member of the ruling political party, detained in Didessa
military camp on the accusation of assisting the political opposition, told Amnesty International:
“There were 47 people in the room with me. Two died while I was there.”382
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 85
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0086.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Another former detainee said:
“The
water they gave us to drink was very dirty. Because of the poor sanitation, some detainees died.
Two of those were my friends from school, both were around 20 years old. They died after five
months in detention. I don’t think the families even knew they had died – they did not even know
where we were being held.”383
Other detainees were reported to have died as a result of torture:
“One
of the women who was on trial with me died in hospital as a result of beating. She was a
businesswoman who they accused of funding the OLF.”384
“One
of my cellmates died from of the injuries she suffered as a result of being gang-raped.”385
In August 2013, Tesfahun Chemeda, an Oromo engineer, died in Kaliti federal prison. The cause of
death was unconfirmed. Chemeda had been forcibly returned from Kenya in 2007, where he had
had refugee status. He was subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment for membership of the
OLF. He was reported to have been subjected to prolonged solitary confinement in detention. A
friend of Tesfahun Chemeda who had visited him in 2012 told Amnesty International he had
reported to her about being subject to repeated torture in detention.386
Other interviewees told Amnesty International a relative or friend of theirs had died in detention or
shortly after being released from detention. A young man from eastern Hararghe told Amnesty
International:
“My
father was arrested. They took him to Addis, to a place called Kaliti. They suspected he was OLF
but he wasn’t OLF. He was there for over a year. They broke his back and leg. He was released a
broken man and died soon after due to this mistreatment.”387
One young man told Amnesty International how his father died after release from two years
detention in Sinja military camp in Goba, in Bale:
“They did so many things to him in the jail and, as a result, he died. We were not permitted to visit
him. We only found out where he had been after he was released. He was released in January [2013]
and five months later he passed away. Then they came to me and accused me of carrying on the
activities of my father and arrested me.”388
In several cases, family members of former detainees reported they did not know what happened to
their relatives after they were no longer permitted to visit them in detention or were told they had
been moved. One former detainee told Amnesty International:
“When the family came to visit a person who had died, they’d tell him that the person had been
transferred.”389
Some people said that they did not get to see the body of a relative who had reportedly died in
detention or receive it for burial:
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 86
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0087.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“My father was detained by the military. One month into his detention, we were told to come to the
hospital but by the time we got there he had already passed away. We could not even see the
body.”390
Due to the lack of transparency over detention practices, lack of independent monitoring and lack of
investigations into deaths in custody, it is not possible to know how many detainees have died in
Ethiopia’s prisons.
ACTIONS AND RESPONSES OF THE GOVERNMENT OF ETHIOPIA IN
RESPECT OF ARBITRARY DETENTION AND TORTURE AND THE
MONITORING OF DETENTION FACILITIES
Access to detention facilities for independent human rights organizations is restricted in Ethiopia. No
independent human rights organizations are currently monitoring and publicly documenting
conditions and violations inside Ethiopia’s detention centres.
The 2009 Charities and Societies Proclamation (CSP) placed severe restrictions on the work and
ability to function of human rights organizations, including restrictions on the ability of organizations
to work on the ‘advancement of human and democratic rights’ and the promotion of the ‘efficiency
of the justice and law enforcement services.’391 The law prevents organizations working on human
rights from receiving more than 10% of their funding from foreign sources. In practice, this has
negatively impacted human rights organizations, with many either shutting down, changing their
mandate to no longer work on human rights or reducing their work, closing offices and laying off
staff. Human rights organizations have also been subjected to other restrictions under the law.
Before the law was passed in 2009, the Human Rights Council (HRCO), Ethiopia’s oldest human rights
monitoring and documenting organization, used to conduct prison monitoring visits and also used to
regularly conduct human rights training, including on torture, with law enforcement and prison
officials. Since the law was passed, HRCO has had to significantly reduce its work and has not had the
capacity to conduct regular training of officials. Further, in recent years, HRCO made a number of
requests to access Maikelawi, but received no response.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) regained access to federal prisons in 2013. The
ICRC’s access to federal prisons and to facilities under the jurisdiction of the Federal Police Crime
Investigation Sector (CIS) – Maikelawi – had been suspended in 2005. Access to the six federal
prisons was reinstated in 2013 and the organization said it conducted regular visits to federal prisons
during the year. During 2013, the ICRC also resumed visits to regional prisons in Oromia and
Amhara.392 However, under the terms of its mandate, the ICRC does not disclose its findings to any
party other than the Government of Ethiopia. The ICRC continues to be denied access to Maikelawi.
The organization does not currently have, nor is it currently requesting, access to military camps.
The EHRC has accessed Maikelawi, federal prisons and more recently, police stations, to conduct
monitoring visits. The Federal Police Commission has also reportedly conducted monitoring visits in
Maikelawi.393
The EHRC is mandated to document violations but lacks independence and political space to act as
an objective voice.394 It has consistently failed to highlight or comment on human rights violations
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 87
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0088.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
perpetrated by the government. A 2012 report on prisons acknowledges a number of shortcomings
in relation to prison conditions. With respect to torture, the report stated “detainees also spoke of
instances where in certain prisons they are arbitrarily beaten by some prison wardens,” but the
accusations were denied by prison administrators. The report concluded “the acts were not of
institutional nature, nor were they ordered by public officials.”395 The report did not cover police
stations, the federal police detention centre of Maikelawi or military camps, where the most
frequent and severe incidents of torture are reported to take place in pre-trial or pre-charge
interrogation. In addition, the scale of torture in prisons found by the EHRC in its report and the
responsibility attributed for incidents of torture are inconsistent with both the findings of national
and international human rights organizations and the testimonies of numerous former detainees
obtained by Amnesty International and other human rights organizations.
In 2011, Ambassador Tiruneh Zena, the Chief Commissioner of the EHRC, led a visit to Maikelawi in
response to complaints made in court by opposition political party members and journalists that
they had been tortured in detention. A press release after the visit announced the team found no
concerns relating to torture or ill-treatment or arrested persons not being brought promptly before
a judicial authority to review the detention.396 The press release announced that all prisoners the
team had spoken to were happy with their treatment and had no complaints of ill-treatment.
However, the Chief Commissioner and his team had not actually spoken to any of the prisoners who
had alleged – in court and in front of local and international media – they had been tortured. The
Commission’s visit thereby undermined the detainees’ complaints. Those complaints were not
investigated beyond the visit of the Chief Commissioner and his team to the detention centre. Again,
the findings of the EHRC’s visit to Maikelawi were inconsistent with both the findings of many
human rights reports concerning Maikelawi and the testimonies of numerous former detainees in
Maikelawi who have consistently reported patterns of denial of due process rights and the use of
torture and other ill-treatment in the centre.
An NGO, the Justice for All-Prison Fellowship Ethiopia, maintains access to detention centres due to
its having a good relationship with the government. The organization is one of few organizations
granted exemptions from the 10% funding rule contained in the CSP. The organization works on
improvement and capacity building in the justice sector and detention conditions for prisoners.
However, it does not cover issues of torture and ill-treatment and does not conduct monitoring and
documenting of violations.397
UN human rights mechanisms and other entities have also been denied access to detention centres.
Requests to visit Ethiopia from the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and the Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention remain outstanding.398 Diplomats in Ethiopia do not have access to visit
detention centres. In 2011, during Amnesty International’s last research trip to Ethiopia, the
delegation requested permission to visit Maikelawi, which was denied.399 In 2013, a delegation
from the European parliament’s human rights committee was refused entry to Kaliti federal prison,
although the visit had previously been confirmed by the Ministry of Federal Affairs.400
Torture is prohibited under the CAT, the ICCPR and the ACHPR, to which Ethiopia is a party, as well
as under customary international law. However, important safeguards against torture are lacking in
Ethiopia. In 2010, the UN Committee against Torture expressed concern that the use of the term
‘improper methods’ in the Ethiopian Criminal Code is more limited in scope than the international
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 88
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0089.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
definition of torture contained in the CAT and called for an amendment.401 The Committee further
expressed ‘deep concern’ at “numerous consistent reports about the State party’s persistent failure
to investigate allegations of torture and prosecute perpetrators, including members of the ENDF and
military or police commanders” and called on Ethiopia to ensure all allegations of torture and ill-
treatment are promptly and impartially investigated and perpetrators prosecuted.402
Ethiopia has not signed the Optional Protocol to the CAT which provides for the establishment of a
system of regular visits undertaken by independent international and national bodies to any place of
detention; and the maintenance, designation or establishment of one or several independent
national preventive mechanisms for the prevention of torture at the domestic level.403
The response to Amnesty International’s findings received from the Oromia Justice Bureau specified
that “Federal and regional police commissions as well as prison administrations have incorporated
the right to human dignity and prohibition against torture and inhuman treatment into the curricula
of their respective training institutions. They provide continuous on-job training to their members in
order to ensure that they do not commit violations and are able to prevent violations by third
parties.”404
The response referred to the findings of the EHRC prison monitoring report cited above, stating that
“some occasional cases [of torture] have occurred in a very few detention centres and disciplinary
actions have been taken.” The response cited the conclusion of the EHRC that instances of “arbitrary
beatings of detainees… appeared due to lack of awareness or understanding.” The Justice Bureau’s
response further asserted that “legal and disciplinary measures are always taken against
investigative police officers and prison wardens that are found to have beaten detainees.” The letter
did not specify any details of any disciplinary measures or any investigations that have been
conducted, or their outcomes.
In 2013, parliament adopted the National Human Rights Action Plan (NHRAP) – a two-year plan to
“ensure the full implementation of fundamental and democratic rights guaranteed under the
Constitution.”405 However, the plan does not use the word ‘torture’ and fails to adequately
acknowledge the extent and scale of torture and other ill-treatment in Ethiopia. The report of the
Government of Ethiopia to the UN Universal Period Review (UPR) in January 2014 similarly failed to
mention torture. The repeated failure to acknowledge the existence of torture demonstrates a
concerning lack of political will to tackle the prevalent use of torture in Ethiopia.
The NHRAP acknowledges delays in justice in many cases, which is attributed to a shortage of public
prosecutors and judges and continuing problems with providing legal representatives to arrested
persons before their cases reach a court of law or before charges are filed, again attributed to a lack
of capacity. These capacity issues, the NHRAP acknowledges, cause delays in charging people or
bringing them to trial, which could account for the delays in some cases documented by Amnesty
International. But the plan does not acknowledge or address the issue of arbitrary detention in
Ethiopia – where neither the detention nor the release of an individual are subject to judicial review
– demonstrating an entrenched practice of detaining people without a legal framework or oversight.
The NHRAP provides for the continued monitoring of police detention centres and prisons by senior
police and prison administration officials, prosecutors and House of Peoples’
Representatives/Regional Council members. It does not, however, provide for access for
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 89
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0090.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
independent human rights organizations. Law enforcement agencies are themselves regularly
accused of human rights violations and are regularly implicated in torture and other violations in
Oromia as well as in other parts of the country. The judiciary has shown repeated signs of being
subject to influence in political trials. In its 2010 report the UN Committee Against Torture also
called upon Ethiopia to “take the necessary measures to ensure the full independence and
impartiality of the judiciary in the performance of its duties in conformity with international
standards; … ensure that the judiciary is free from any interference, in particular from the executive
branch, in law as well as in practice… [and] promptly and impartially investigate and prosecute cases
where judges were harassed, intimidated or unfairly dismissed.”406 Issues relating to political
influence over the judiciary have manifested in the many fair trial concerns witnessed in trials of
actual or suspected dissenters.407 It has also been reported by former employees in the judicial
system, including prosecutors and judges, a number of whom have fled the country due to
harassment from government and ruling party officials that they experienced in the course of their
work. Therefore, the bodies cited in the NHRAP cannot be considered sufficiently independent to
monitor the prevention of human rights violations in detention.
The Oromia Justice Bureau is responsible for detainees and prisoners in regional detention
centres.408 The response from the Oromia Justice Bureau to Amnesty International reports that the
“Public Prosecutor and the regional police together visit detention centres on a daily basis to inquire
into whether a person has been arrested unlawfully and to secure their release where such is the
case.” It also reports that periodic monitoring is conducted by the Chaffe – the Oromia Regional
Assembly, as well as the Administrative and Legal Committee of the House of Peoples’
Representatives, as provided for in the NHRAP, which, it states, has resulted in recommendations on
corrective measures being made to concerned bodies.
The Oromia Justice Bureau further asserts that “appropriate investigations and inquiries are
conducted when claims of disappearance are brought to the attention of the Police
Administrations.” No details or examples of such an investigation were provided.
The response from the Oromia Justice Bureau laid out the accountability framework at the regional
and federal levels, specifically citing the provision in the Regional Police Commission Members Code
of Conduct Regulations No. 32/1995 that police officers in breach of their duties will be held
accountable both administratively and legally, and the provision in the federal Criminal Code that
any public servant responsible for an instance of arbitrary detention shall be held to account. No
details were provided of any instances where a regional or federal official has been held accountable
for a violation of the rights of a detainee or prisoner.
The NHRAP states a large number of police stations and investigation centres across the country
have set up ethics control and complaints reception offices within their premises to receive citizens’
complaints of human rights violations and to take necessary administrative measures against
perpetrators.409
Despite referring to instances of “unlawful punishment of detainees,” “arbitrary beatings,” and
“claims of disappearance,” the response from the Oromia Justice Bureau also asserts that there are
no complaints lodged regarding allegations of inhuman treatment, torture and extra-judicial
detentions.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 90
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0091.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Interviewees repeatedly told Amnesty International they could not make a complaint or pursue
justice for cases of arbitrary arrest and detention, enforced disappearance, torture or extra-judicial
execution due to distrust of and lack of faith in the police and other officials and fear of
repercussions for even trying to ask. However, other interviewees said they did attempt to make
inquiries about the fate of a relative, but were refused information when they asked, or that they fell
under suspicion or even were arrested themselves for asking.
CONCLUSION
As documented in this report, patterns of human rights violations in Oromia, including arbitrary
arrests, restrictions on freedoms of expression, opinion and association, detention without charge,
incommunicado and without other aspects of due process, enforced disappearance, extra-judicial
execution and torture and other ill-treatment, are widespread and appear to be entrenched.
A multiplicity of both regional and federal actors are involved in committing human rights violations
against actual or suspected dissenters in Oromia, including civilian administrative officials, local
police, federal police, local militia, federal military and intelligence services, with cooperation
between the different entities, including between the regional and federal levels.
The federal ministries of Defence, Federal Affairs and Justice and the regional government of Oromia
should investigate all allegations of human rights violations committed by actors or within structures
falling under their respective jurisdictions, and where sufficient evidence of the commission of
violations is found, perpetrators should be held to account. Instead, the violations documented in
this report take place in an environment of almost complete impunity for the perpetrators. Victims
of violations or family members of victims repeatedly told Amnesty International that there was no
point in trying to complain or seek justice for violations they had experienced, that they feared
repercussions if they attempted to do so, that they were refused information about the fate of a
relative when they asked, or that they fell under suspicion or even were arrested themselves for
asking. According to available information, none of the incidents of alleged use of excessive and
unnecessary force documented in this report have been subject to investigations. Complaints of
torture made by defendants in court have similarly gone un-investigated.
As Ethiopia heads towards general elections in 2015, it is likely that the government’s efforts to
suppress dissent, including through the use of arbitrary arrest and detention and other violations,
will continue unabated and may even increase. The previous two general elections – in 2005 and
2010 – were the scenes of a raft of human rights violations, some of which are mentioned in this
report in relation to the arrest and detention of opposition members. Urgent measures are needed
to reduce violations of civil and political rights in general, and particularly against actual or suspected
government opponents before the elections.
The UN Principles on the Effective Investigation and Documentation of Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment410 provide that states shall ensure complaints and
reports of torture or ill-treatment are promptly and effectively investigated. The principles state that
“in cases in which the established investigative procedures are inadequate because of insufficient
expertise or suspected bias, or because of the apparent existence of a pattern of abuse…States shall
ensure that investigations are undertaken through an independent commission of inquiry or similar
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 91
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0092.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
procedure.” The UN Principles on the Effective Prevention and Investigation of Extra-Legal, Arbitrary
and Summary Executions also require states to pursue investigations through an independent
procedure where established investigative procedures are inadequate.411
As documented above, the judiciary, the EHRC and other public institutions lack adequate
independence, and local human rights organizations have been effectively disbanded over the last
five years under the CSP.412 In late 2005, a Commission of Inquiry was established by parliament to
investigate violence, including killings, during demonstrations in June and November of that year
against alleged rigging of the general elections in May 2005. The Commission’s investigations were
apparently conducted effectively and impartially. However, before the Commission presented its
report to parliament, the Commission chair said that they were called to meet the Prime Minister,
who told them to reconsider their conclusion that police had used excessive force in response to the
demonstrations. The chair and the vice-chair of the Commission subsequently fled the country,
saying they had received threats and feared for their lives. The final report of the Commission
reversed the decision on excessive use of force, which led to the security forces being given blanket
impunity for the use of lethal force on a large scale and without distinction of particular
incidents.413
In light of these considerations, Amnesty International believes that existing domestic investigative
and accountability mechanisms have proved not capable of carrying out investigations that are
independent, adequate, prompt, open to public scrutiny and which sufficiently involve victims.414
Amnesty International therefore believes there is a substantial and urgent need for intervention by
regional and international human rights bodies to conduct independent investigations into
allegations of widespread arbitrary arrest, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance, extra-
judicial executions and torture in Ethiopia. Investigations should be pursued through the
establishment of an independent commission of inquiry, fact-finding mission or comparable
procedure, comprised of independent international experts, under the auspices of the United
Nations Human Rights Council or the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To the government of Ethiopia Particularly to the federal ministries of Defence, Federal Affairs and
Justice, and the government of the regional state of Oromia
Arbitrary arrest – freedoms of expression and association n Immediately and unconditionally
release all prisoners of conscience – those detained because of their peaceful exercise of their rights
to freedom of expression, freedom to hold opinions without interference or freedom of association,
including because of their peaceful opposition to the government, criticism of government policies,
participation in peaceful protests, expression of their cultural identity, their identity as a family
member of someone who is wanted by the authorities or because of their imputed political opinion;
n Take effective measures to ensure no-one is arrested, detained, charged, tried, convicted or
sentenced on account of the peaceful exercise of their rights to the freedoms of expression,
association and assembly, including the right to peacefully assemble to protest, as guaranteed by the
Constitution and international and regional treaties ratified by Ethiopia;
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 92
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0093.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
n End the use of politically-motivated charges and trials, particularly the use of the accusation of
OLF support as a pretext, to silence members and leaders of opposition political parties and other
dissenting voices;
n Ensure that no students suffer a suspension or termination of their education as a result of their
peaceful exercise of their human rights, including the right to peacefully assemble to protest, and
reinstate any students who have been subjected to such penalties;
n In the lead-up to the 2015 general elections, guarantee the ability of all Ethiopians, including
Oromos, to exercise their right to hold and express a political opinion without fear of arrest or other
repercussions; immediately remove all restrictions on free and open political participation, including
restrictions on the independent media, civil society organisations and political opposition parties;
n Amend the 2009 Charities and Societies Proclamation to remove restrictions on the work of
human rights organizations, to facilitate independent, non-governmental monitoring of human
rights violations, including monitoring of detention centres, and other relevant activities such as
human rights training for law enforcement bodies and the provision of legal aid to victims of human
rights violations.
Arbitrary detention n Take effective measures to bring an immediate end to the unlawful practices
of arbitrary detention without charge or trial, incommunicado detention without access to the
outside world and detention in unofficial detention centres;
n Ensure any detainee suspected of a recognizable criminal offence is promptly charged and tried
within a reasonable time in a fair and public trial which complies with international fair trial
standards or else is immediately released. Where such proceedings do not take place within a
reasonable time, detainees should be released pending trial, particularly those who have to date
been detained for prolonged periods without charge;
n Immediately provide detainees’ families with information on their whereabouts and fate,
including their current health status or official confirmation of any deaths in custody. In the latter
case, there must be independent and impartial investigations into the deaths to establish the facts
with a view to ensuring those responsible are held accountable and the families afforded reparation,
including compensation;
n No-one should be held in a place which is not an officially recognised place of detention,
interrogation should take place only at official detention centres; all persons currently detained in
military camps or other unofficial places of detention must be immediately transferred to a
recognised place of detention and either promptly charged with a criminal offence or immediately
released;
n Ensure no conditions are imposed upon the release of a person from detention where that
person has not been brought before a judicial authority and charged with an offence consistent with
international human rights law; any conditions imposed on the release of a prisoner must be
imposed by a judicial authority and consistent with international law;
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 93
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0094.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
n An up-to-date register of detainees must be maintained in all places of detention and centrally.
The information in such registers must be made available to courts and other competent authorities,
detainees’ families and lawyers and others with a legitimate interest in the information;
n Ensure that anyone who is detained:
n is able without delay to inform or have the authorities notify their families or another third party
of their detention, including information on the place of detention and any transfers;
n is given prompt access to family members, including the right to receive visits, a lawyer of their
choice, with whom they must be able to communicate privately and confidentially, and medical care;
n is brought within 48 hours before a judicial or other authority whose status and tenure afford the
strongest possible guarantees of competence, impartiality and independence and is able to
challenge the lawfulness of their detention before a court at the outset or at any time thereafter and
to have the lawfulness of their detention reviewed by a court or other authority at reasonable
intervals;
n Ensure that the Criminal Procedure Code is brought fully in line with international standards of
fair trial, including by establishing clear rules on admissibility of evidence, standards and burden of
proof, advance disclosure of witnesses, right to present a defence, confidential consultation with
legal counsel, inadmissibility of evidence obtained by coercion, including all forms of torture and
other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and obligations of judges to thoroughly
investigate allegations of torture and other ill- treatment and bring perpetrators to justice;
n Make nationwide and genuine efforts to facilitate access to justice for victims of human rights
violations and their families, including by enabling victims and their families to seek information,
make complaints or pursue judicial remedy for violations experienced without fear of repercussions.
Enforced disappearances n Any prisoners whose current status in detention amounts to enforced
disappearance must be immediately given full access to family members and legal representatives
and, if currently held in an unofficial place of detention, must be immediately moved to a recognised
detention centre; such persons must be promptly charged with a recognisable criminal offence or
else released immediately and unconditionally;
n Immediately provide detainees’ families with accurate information on their whereabouts and
fate, including their current health status or official confirmation of any death in custody;
n Any case of death in custody must be officially confirmed to the detainee’s family and must also
be subject to a thorough and impartial investigation;
n To facilitate access to information and to justice for detainees and for family members of people
who have been subjected to enforced disappearance, a national database should be compiled of all
reported cases of disappearance. Effective steps must be taken to ensure anyone who reports a case
of enforced disappearance is not subjected to repercussions;
n Thorough and impartial investigations should be conducted into all cases or possible cases of
enforced disappearance, including any cases not accounted for in the comprehensive list of
detainees to establish the fate of the disappeared persons; where sufficient evidence exists that a
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 94
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0095.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
person has committed, ordered, solicited or induced the commission of, or attempted commission
of, or was an accomplice to or participated in, an enforced disappearance, they must be brought to
justice in proceedings that meet international standards for fair trial;
n Ratify the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced
Disappearance.
Extra-judicial executions and excessive use of force n Disclose all names of any person extra-
judicially executed. All such cases must be subject to independent and impartial investigations to
establish the facts with a view to ensuring those responsible are held accountable, with the families
afforded reparation, including compensation;
n Immediately instruct the security services to cease using deadly force against peaceful protestors.
All incidents involving allegations of the unnecessary or excessive use of force by security services
against peaceful protestors must be urgently and properly investigated, including incidents during
the 2014 ‘Master Plan’ protests and incidents during the 2012- 2013 Muslim protest movement.
Where admissible evidence of crimes is found, suspected perpetrators should be prosecuted in
effective trial proceedings that meet international standards;
n Ensure that the use of force, including lethal force, by security forces complies with human rights
standards at all times to protect the right to life. Any police or military response to peaceful protests
must comply with international requirements of necessity and proportionality in the use of force, in
line with the UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials;
n Thorough, prompt and impartial investigations must be conducted into all suspected cases of
extra-legal, arbitrary and summary executions, including cases where complaints by relatives or
other reliable reports suggest unnatural death in situations in which deaths occur in custody, or in
situations of excessive or unnecessary use of force by a public official or other person acting in an
official capacity or a person acting at the instigation or with the consent or acquiescence of such
persons;
n Any persons identified by investigations as having participated in extra-legal, arbitrary or
summary executions must be brought to justice in proceedings that meet international standards for
fair trial; the families and dependents of victims of extra-legal, arbitrary or summary executions shall
be entitled to fair and adequate compensation within a reasonable period of time.
Torture, other ill-treatment and conditions in detention n Immediately issue clear orders for the
cessation of all use of torture and other ill- treatment, in line with the prohibition in the Constitution
of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and Ethiopia’s obligations under
international law, including the CAT. Ensure all detainees are treated humanely and in accordance
with international human rights standards, particularly the Body of Principles for the Protection of
All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment, and the UN Standard Minimum Rules for
the Treatment of Prisoners;
n Bring an immediate end to the practice of holding prisoners in underground cells;
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 95
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0096.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
n Extend access to all prisons and other places of detention and to all prisoners, to appropriate
independent, non-governmental bodies, including international human rights bodies, to allow such
bodies to independently inspect and monitor prison conditions and treatment in detention;
n Ensure all allegations of torture or other ill-treatment are promptly, impartially, thoroughly and
effectively investigated in a way which is capable of leading to the identification and punishment of
those responsible; perpetrators must be prosecuted in proceedings which comply with international
fair trial standards and, irrespective of whether perpetrators are identified, victims must receive
reparation, including rehabilitation and compensation;
n Ratify the Optional Protocol to the CAT to provide for the establishment of a system of regular
visits undertaken by independent international and national bodies to any place under the
government’s jurisdiction and control where persons are or may be deprived of their liberty; and to
provide for one or several independent national preventive mechanisms for the prevention of
torture;
n Provide all detainees with adequate shelter, food and clean drinking water, and sanitation
facilities and access to medical care, in line with Ethiopian laws and international standards,
including the recently-adopted Guidelines on the Conditions of Arrest, Police Custody and Pre-Trial
Detention in Africa.
Fair trial n Ensure trial proceedings never commence against a defendant without a legal
representative present; ensure that all defendants are afforded a public hearing without undue
delay, are presumed innocent until proved guilty by a court of law, can defend themselves through
legal assistance, are afforded time to prepare a defence and access to evidence presented against
them;
n Guarantee no statement of confession made by a person deprived of liberty, other than one
made in presence of a judge or a lawyer, has a probative value in court; and that any evidence
obtained from a detainee in an unofficial place of detention and not confirmed by the detainee
during interrogation at official locations is not admitted as evidence in court;
n Ensure all court proceedings observe the right of the defendant to be presumed innocent until
proven guilty and that the prosecution bears the burden of proving guilt beyond reasonable doubt;
n Ensure any allegations or reports that evidence, including confessions and signatures on
incriminating documents, were extracted under duress are immediately investigated, thoroughly
and impartially, and unless the prosecution can establish beyond reasonable doubt that evidence did
not arise as a result of torture or coercion, such evidence must be excluded by the courts;
n Immediately end any current trials of actual or suspected dissenters where the defendants are
being prosecuted solely on account of their lawful exercise of their rights to the freedoms of
expression, association and peaceful assembly or their imputed political opinion; and immediately
and unconditionally release anyone detained on charges based on these activities.
Cooperation with the UN human rights mechanisms n As a member of the UN Human Rights
Council, comply with the obligations to “uphold the highest standards in the promotion and
protection of human rights” and to “fully cooperate with the Council” by agreeing dates for visits by
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 96
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0097.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
the Special Procedures that have requested to visit Ethiopia, giving priority to the Special
Rapporteurs on Torture, Extra- judicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions, Freedom of Expression
and Freedom of Association and Assembly, and the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention;
n Provide the UN Human Rights Council with a mid-term update on follow-up steps taken by the
government of Ethiopia on recommendations accepted under the Universal Periodic Review, with
particular attention to recommendations relating to guaranteeing political rights, including freedom
of expression, association and assembly, ensuring that legitimate acts of political dissent are not
criminalized, taking necessary measures to enable all citizens to fully take part in the democratic
process in advance of the 2015 elections, and respecting the right to fair trial.
To the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission
n Conduct unannounced visits to Maikelawi, federal prisons and other places of detention,
including military camps in Oromia, to conduct robust investigations into allegations of torture and
other violations taking place within detention facilities, and make public the findings of the
monitoring;
n Conduct thorough investigations into allegations of widespread, entrenched patterns of human
rights violations in Oromia;
n In order to bring the EHRC into full compliance with the Paris Principles, implement the
November 2013 recommendations of the International Coordinating Committee of National Human
Rights Institutions' Sub-Committee on Accreditation, including to:
n Advocate for changes to its legislation to make clear its power to make unannounced visits to all
public and private places of detention or confinement;
n Respond within a reasonable time to human rights concerns, including in connection with the
Charities and Societies Proclamation and the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation;
n Present all its reports to parliament, including reports on politically sensitive issues, to circulate
them widely, and to promote their discussion and consideration by the authorities in a timely
fashion.
To the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC) and the African Commission on Human and
Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR)
Due to the apparent existence of an entrenched pattern of violations in Ethiopia and due to
concerns over the impartiality of established domestic investigative procedures, Amnesty
International believes that the UN HRC and the ACHPR should accord the situation in Ethiopia the
highest possible level of scrutiny, including by pursuing investigations, individually and/or jointly,
into allegations of widespread violations through appropriate procedures, such as independent
international commissions of inquiry or similar mechanisms.
To the ACHPR
n During the upcoming consideration of Ethiopia’s periodic report on the implementation of the
African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights in Ethiopia, accord particular attention to issues of
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 97
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0098.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
arbitrary arrest and detention, enforced disappearance, extra-judicial execution and torture and
other ill-treatment, and request substantive responses from the Government of Ethiopia on the
widespread perpetration of these violations;
n Request access for a fact-finding mission led by the Committee for the Prevention of Torture or
another relevant mechanism of the Commission to investigate widespread violations of human
rights in Oromia and the rest of Ethiopia;
n Individual mechanisms of the ACHPR, including the Committee for the Prevention of Torture, the
Special Rapporteur on Prisons and Conditions of Detention, the Working Group on Death Penalty
and Extra-Judicial, Summary or Arbitrary killings in Africa and the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of
Expression and Access to Information, should also request invitations to conduct missions relating to
their specific area of expertise.
To member and observer states of the United Nations Human Rights Council
n Address the human rights situation in Ethiopia, including the entrenched pattern of violations, in
debate in the Human Rights Council and through the creation of an international commission of
inquiry or similar mechanism.
To the international community
Amnesty International calls on the European Union and governments having close political and
economic relations with Ethiopia, including members of the Development Assistance Group, all of
which have made commitments and developed policies including respect for human rights in their
aid programmes and political relations, to:
n Conduct monitoring of trials of actual or suspected Oromo dissenters accused of supporting the
OLF, including members of Oromo opposition political parties, peaceful protestors, students and
other categories of cases highlighted in this report, through representatives of the international
community based in Addis Ababa; make findings of the monitoring publically available and share
with relevant stakeholders;
n Request the Government of Ethiopia to provide unhindered access to detention centres for UN
and AU human rights mechanisms and independent human rights organizations;
n Call upon the Government of Ethiopia to allow for independent and impartial investigations to be
conducted into serious, widespread allegations of human rights violations in Oromia;
n Ensure any training or reform programmes planned or implemented with the security services,
including the military, federal or regional police, or the judiciary, within development assistance
efforts, contain guarantees, inter alia, of human rights accountability, independent monitoring of
human rights violations, accessible mechanisms through which people can pursue grievances and
access to detention centres for reliable, independent human rights monitoring entities; financial
assistance programmes to the military should include components of monitoring of military camps
to ensure the military are not responsible for detaining persons arbitrarily and using torture and
other ill-treatment in military facilities;
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 98
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0099.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
n Donors with existing funding programmes working with federal and regional police, with the
military or with the prison system, should carry out immediate, thorough and impartial
investigations into allegations of human rights violations within those institutions, to ensure their
funding is not contributing to the commission of human rights violations;
n Publically and privately raise concerns with the Ethiopian government, and particularly the
federal ministries of Defence, Federal Affairs and Justice, and the regional government of Oromia,
about violations documented in this report, and urge those bodies to adopt systems to end the
violations, with particular reference to the questions to those entities contained within Amnesty
International’s letters to the government annexed to this report;
n Treat with the utmost seriousness the detention of political activists, members and leaders of
opposition political parties, peaceful protestors and other suspected or actual dissenters; the
detention of opposition political party members during the lead-up to the 2015 general elections
and over the election period – as happened in 2010 – must be taken into account in any assessment
of the elections.
END NOTES
1 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
2 Available via the Central Statistical Agency:
http://www.csa.gov.et/images/general/news/icps%202012%20report.pdf
.
3 The kebele is a small administrative division of local governance in Ethiopia. Each region is divided
into zones, zones, in turn, are divided into woredas and woredas are divided into kebeles. (In Afan
Oromo Zone = godina, woreda = aanaa, kebele = ganda).
4 According to President Negasso, this figure was reported to the Executive Committee of the
Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO), the Oromo party in the ruling coalition, from the
Oromia regional administration.
5
http://www.ethiopia.gov.et/stateoromia
.
6 See endnote 2 above. Note: Some Oromo live in other regions of the country and some members
of other ethnic groups live in Oromia.
7 p39, Table 3, Human Rights Protection Monitoring in Ethiopian Prisons Primary Report (July 2012),
Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC),
http://www.ehrc.org.et/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=1uE7TO6QzbQ%3d&tabid=117.
The report also
contains a list of regional detention centres in Oromia, Table 1, pp26-28.
8 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
9 Article 29(1), Constitution: “Everyone shall have the right to hold opinions without any
interference;” Article 29(2): “Everyone shall have the right to freedom of expression without
interference;” and Article 39(2): “Every nation, nationality and people shall have the right to speak,
write and develop its language and to promote its culture, help it grow and flourish, and preserve its
historical heritage.” Article 19(1), International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR):
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 99
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0100.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
“Everyone shall have the right to hold opinions without interference;” Article 19(2): “Everyone shall
have the right to freedom of expression;” and Article 27: “In those States in which ethnic, religious or
linguistic minorities exist, persons belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the right, in
community with the other members of their group, to enjoy their own culture, to profess and
practise their own religion, or to use their own language.”
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx#
. Article 15(1a), International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR): “The States Parties to the present
Covenant recognize the right of everyone: To take part in cultural life.”
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CESCR.aspx.
10 Amnesty International has information on cases of individual and group arrests totalling over
1000 people since 2011. In addition to these incidents, several thousand people were reported to
have been arrested during and in the wake of the 2014 protests against the Addis Ababa ‘Integrated
Master Plan’, and well over 1000 were reported to have been arrested in Oromia in the context of
the Muslim protest movement in 2012. (Note: arrests in relation to this movement also took place in
other parts of the country). Around 1000 further arrests were reported to have taken place in seven
different incidents of peaceful protests between 2011 and 2014 reported to Amnesty International
in the course of this research. Several thousand people were reported to have been arrested in
relation to coordinated protests staged by farmers in ten locations across Oromia in 2012, though
most were quickly released. Around 500 were reported to have remained in detention. Several
hundred members of Oromo opposition political parties were arrested in sweeps in 2011 and
between 350 and 500 were reported to have been arrested in the aftermath of the 2014 ‘Master
Plan’ protests.
11 See for example, Amnesty International, Dismantling Dissent: Intensified Crackdown on Free
Speech in Ethiopia, AFR 25/011/2011, (December 2011).
12 For example, more than 200 people were reported to have been arrested at the 2012 celebration
of the traditional festival of Irreecha in Debre Zeit (known as Bishoftu by the Oromo). 150 were
reportedly arrested at another traditional festival in 2011. Amnesty International also received
information about a number of individual cases of arrests relating to expression of Oromo cultural
identity. See in more detail below.
13 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 32, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
14 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
15 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 28 April 2014.
16 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 24, Nairobi, Kenya, 19 July 2013.
17 Amnesty International phone call, Oromo, m, specific location withheld, Ethiopia, August 2013
(specific date withheld).
18 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 October 2013.
19 Article 5 (1, b) of the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation (No. 652/2009), ‘Rendering Support to
Terrorism’ prohibits, inter alia, the provision of “moral support.”
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 100
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0101.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
20 Any restrictions on freedom of expression “to be characterised as a ‘law’, must be formulated
with sufficient precision to enable an individual to regulate his or her conduct accordingly.” UN
Human Rights Committee General Comment No. 34, para. 25. Article 15(1) of the ICCPR also imposes
a more general requirement of legality for criminal offences, stating in part, “No one shall be held
guilty of any criminal offence on account of any act or omission which did not constitute a criminal
offence, under national or international law, at the time when it was committed;” See also, Amnesty
International, Dismantling Dissent: Intensified Crackdown on Free Speech in Ethiopia, AFR
25/011/2011, (December 2011).
21 Article 29(1), Constitution and Article 19(1) ICCPR: “Everyone shall have the right to hold opinions
without any interference.”
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
See also
General Comment 34 of the UN Human Rights Committee, para. 46: ‘States parties should ensure
that counter- terrorism measures are compatible with paragraph 3. Such offences as
“encouragement of terrorism” and “extremist activity” as well as offences of “praising”, “glorifying”,
or “justifying” terrorism, should be clearly defined to ensure that they do not lead to unnecessary or
disproportionate interference with freedom of expression.” http://daccess-dds-
ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G08/422/35/PDF/G0842235.pdf? OpenElement.
22 The kebele is a small administrative division of local governance in Ethiopia. Each region is divided
into zones, zones, in turn, are divided into woredas and woredas are divided into kebeles. (In Afan
Oromo Zone = godina, woreda = aanaa, kebele = ganda).
23 Part II, Book III, Title I, Chapter I – Crimes against the National State, (Articles 238-260) Criminal
Code. See for example, Amnesty International, Dismantling Dissent: Intensified crackdown on free
speech in Ethiopia, (December 2011), which documents cases against 98 members of the Oromo
Federalist Democratic Movement (OFDM) and the Oromo People’s Congress (OPC) political parties
under this group of charges, as well as in two additional cases of people from other ethnic groups
arrested and charged for actual or suspected dissent or dissenting behaviour also charged under this
group of charges.
24 Constitution, Article 30: Freedom of Assembly, Public demonstration and the Right to Petition –
(1): “Everyone shall have the freedom, in association with others, to peaceably assemble without
arms, engage in public demonstration and the right to petition.”
25 See response from the Oromia Justice Bureau, in annex at the end of this report.
26 Principle 9, UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/UseOfForceAndFirearms.aspx.
Article 3, UN
Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/LawEnforcementOfficials.aspx.
While not
legally binding on their own, the core provisions on the use of force are an elaboration of legal rules
applicable to states by way of their treaty obligations or obligations under customary international
law. The process of their development and adoption involved a very large number of states and at
least the substance of article 3 of the Code of Conduct and principle 9 of the Basic Principles reflects
binding international law (see, for example, UN Special Rapporteur on Extra-judicial Executions
(EJEs), UN Doc A/61/311, para 35; see also Nigel Rodley, The Treatment of Prisoners under
International Law, 3rd ed, p.257-8).
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 101
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0102.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
27 The April-May 2014 events were reminiscent of events in 2004 when months of protests broke
out across Oromia and in Addis Ababa by college and school students demonstrating against a
federal government decision to transfer the regional state capital from Addis Ababa to Adama (also
known as Nazret), a town 100 km south-east of Addis Ababa. The transfer was perceived to be
against Oromo interests. Police used live ammunition in some incidents to disperse demonstrators,
killing several students and wounding many others, which led to further protests. Hundreds of
students were arrested and detained for periods ranging from several days to several months,
without charge or trial. Many were beaten when police dispersed protests or in detention.
Subsequently, hundreds were expelled or suspended from university and many suffered long-term
repercussions such as repeated arrest based on the residual suspicion of holding dissenting opinions.
28 A parliamentary Commission of Inquiry established in November 2005 found that 193 civilians
had been killed in the demonstration violence (including 19 previously arrested criminal prisoners
killed by guards at Kaliti prison on 3 November) and six police officers; that 763 civilians and 71
police had been wounded (including 99 women and 65 riot police); and that property worth just
over half a million US dollars had been damaged, including several public buses and some
government property. Most of the civilians were killed by bullets fired by police officers, backed up
by soldiers. 30,000 people were detained, most of whom were beaten by police. For more
information, see for example, Amnesty International, Justice Under Fire: Trials of opposition leaders,
journalists and human rights defenders in Ethiopia, AFR 25/002/2011, (July 2011),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/002/2011/en/2cf63b00-1346-4997-b679-
1141a150b797/afr250022011en.pdf
; Amnesty International, Ethiopia: Over 30 reported dead and
several hundred detained in fierce crackdown, AFR 25/016/2005, (November 2005),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/016/2005/en/8705d8c7-fa14-11dd-999c-
47605d4edc46/afr250162005en.pdf
; Amnesty International, ETHIOPIA: Recent arrests of opposition
leaders and police killings of 46 demonstrators, AFR 25/019/2005, (November 2005),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/019/2005/en/e7f72855-fa13-11dd-999c-
47605d4edc46/afr250192005en.pdf
.
29 This is documented in chapters on protests and on extra-judicial executions later in this report.
30 See below ‘Extra-judicial executions’ - The killing of peaceful protestors, where the response of
the law enforcement officials is disproportionate to any threat posed and the use of lethal force was
unnecessary falls into the category of extra-judicial executions.
31 Constitution, Article 49(4): “The special interest of the state of Oromia with respect to supply of
services or the utilization of resources or administrative matters arising from the presence of the city
of Addis Ababa within the state of Oromia shall be protected. Particulars shall be determined by
law.”
32 Amnesty International telephone interviews with individuals in seven locations in Oromia
between 6 – 16 May 2014 (details and locations withheld for security reasons).
33 Amnesty International telephone interviews with individuals in seven locations in Oromia
between 6– 16 May 2014 (details and locations withheld for security reasons).
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 102
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0103.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
34 Large numbers of these arrests were reported to be members of the main Oromo political
opposition party, the Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC) – see below on opposition political party
members.
35 Amnesty International e-mail exchange (source and location withheld for security reasons), 10-12
July 2014.
36 Amnesty International phone calls with two OFC officials, September and October 2014 (specific
date and location withheld).
37 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, August 2013 (specific date withheld).
38 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, August 2013 (specific date withheld).
39 See Amnesty International, ‘Ethiopia: Government continues to target peaceful Muslim protest
movement,’ (November 2012),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/016/2012/en/17ccd118- 26bf-447a-a875-
42df354ce753/afr250162012en.pdf
, ‘Ethiopia: Widespread violations feared in clampdown on
Muslim protests,’ (July 2012),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/010/2012/en/add94f7e-d5ed-4377-9ea8-
83d37347158f/afr250102012en.pdf
, and ‘Ethiopian repression of Muslim protests must stop,’
(August 2013),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/ethiopian-repression-muslim-
protests-must- stop-2013-08-08
. Excessive or unnecessary force was also allegedly used by security
forces in at least three other incidents in relation to the protest movement in 2012, one in the town
of Gerba, in Amhara region and two in Addis Ababa.
40 See Amnesty International, ‘Ethiopia: Government continues to target peaceful Muslim protest
movement,’ (November 2012),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/016/2012/en/17ccd118- 26bf-447a-a875-
42df354ce753/afr250162012en.pdf
.
41 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 22, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
42 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 October 2013.
43 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
44 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
45 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
46 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
47 For more detail, also see Amnesty International, Dismantling Dissent: Intensified Crackdown on
Free Speech in Ethiopia, AFR 25/011/2011, (December 2011).
48 Comprehensive information on these arrests and the fate of those arrested was not established.
49 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 21 September 2012.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 103
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0104.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
50 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 24 September 2012.
51 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
52 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014
53 Geographic location withheld for security purposes.
54 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya 15 July 2013.
55 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
56 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya 15 July 2013.
57 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 27, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
58 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 34, Nairobi, Kenya, 24 July 2013.
59 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 22, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
60 There is a high level of surveillance throughout the country, particularly of actual or suspected
dissenters, but also of the population more widely. This includes physical surveillance, carried out by
the large numbers of employees and networks of informers of the intelligence services, and also
surveillance of telephone and digital communications. This surveillance is regularly reported by
human rights activists, actual and suspected dissenters, and other actors, and has been experienced
directly by Amnesty International staff, including during the last research visit to Ethiopia in 2011.
For more information see, for example, Human Rights Watch, “They Know Everything We Do”:
Telecom and Internet Surveillance in Ethiopia, (March 2014),
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2014/03/25/they-know- everything-we-do.
61 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 13 August 2013.
62 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
63 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
64 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
65 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
66 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 22, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
67 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
68 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 21, Nairobi, Kenya, 19 July 2013.
69 People from many other walks of life also reported problems based on their refusal to join the
ruling political party, as documented later in this report.
70 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
71 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
72 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 13 August 2013.
73 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
74 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
75 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 13 August 2013.
76 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
77 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, 22, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
78 Amnesty International interview, Oromo man, 24, Nairobi, Kenya, 19 July 2013.
79 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 18, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 30 April 2014.
80 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 13 August 2013.
81 Article 13 of the ICESCR:
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CESCR.aspx.
82 The United States (US) State Department report on human rights practices in 2013 on Ethiopia
stated “The government restricted academic freedom, including through decisions on student
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 104
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0105.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
enrolment, teachers’ appointments, and the curriculum. Authorities frequently restricted speech,
expression, and assembly on university and high school campuses.”
http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/#wrapper.
83 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
84 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 27, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
85 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
86 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
87 Constitution, Article 29(1), “Everyone shall have the right to hold opinions without any
interference,” Article 38(1), “Every citizen, without distinction on the basis of race, colour, nation,
nationality, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, or discrimination based on any other
status shall have the right: (a) to take part in the conduct of public affairs, directly or through freely
chosen representatives; (b) to vote and to be elected at genuine periodic elections which shall be by
universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret ballot; guaranteeing the free expression of
the will of the electors;” and Article 38(2), “Subject to the general and special rules of membership
of the organization concerned, the right of everyone to join political parties, trade unions, chambers
of commerce, employer's and professional associations is guaranteed.” Article 19(1) and Article 25 of
the ICCPR contain the same wording as Articles 29 and 38 of the Constitution.
88 The ICCPR specifies caveats where the rights to freedom of expression and to seek, receive and
impact information may be “subject to certain restrictions, but these shall only be such as are
provided by law and are necessary: (a) For respect of the rights or reputations of others; (b) For the
protection of national security or of public order (ordre public), or of public health or morals” (Article
19). Article 20 also specifies that “1. Any propaganda for war shall be prohibited by law. 2. Any
advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility
or violence shall be prohibited by law.”
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx
89 The ONC contested the 2005 elections, but subsequently, due to political divisions in the party,
former ONC Chairman Merera Gudina was forced to re-register his party under the new name
‘Oromo People’s Congress’ before the 2008 local elections. A few people interviewed by Amnesty
International still used the old name of the party, or called it “Merera Gudina’s party.”
90 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
91 Amnesty International phone calls with OFC official, various dates between May – July 2014.
92 Amnesty International phone call with OFC official, July 2014 (specific date withheld).
93 Amnesty International phone calls with two OFC officials, September 2014 (specific dates
withheld).
94 Amnesty International phone calls with OFC officials, September and October 2014 (specific dates
withheld).
95 Amnesty International was not able to confirm the charges before publication. This may have
been Article 255, ‘Attempted Incitement and Assistance,’ under ‘Crimes Against the Constitution or
the State.’
96 The government was not able to provide more specific information on numbers arrested,
numbers charged or numbers released without charge. The two Oromo political parties had
information on their own members who were affected, but comprehensive information on these
arrests has not been available.
97 In July 2012, the OPC and the OFDM merged to form the OFC.
98 Arrests of opposition members from other political parties and ethnic groups as well as critical
journalists were also made in Addis Ababa during the year, but the significant majority of the arrests
took place in Oromia.
99 For instance Berhanu Emiru, arrested in April 2014, is a member of the Executive Committee of
the OFDM, and a high school physics teacher. Berhanu Emiru campaigned in the 2010 elections and
authored documents such as statements and media articles for the political party. Thirty-two of
those arrested, including Asfaw Ngasso, Gutu Mulesa and Mengesha Tolesa, were OPC candidates in
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 105
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0106.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
the 2010 elections. Asfaw Ngasso and Gutu Mulesa were also members of parliament between 2005
and 2010 (at that time the party they represented was the ONC – the name under which the party
contested the 2005 elections).
100 During interrogation in detention, both men were questioned about their meetings with
Amnesty International.
101 Part II, Book III, Title I, Chapter I – Crimes against the National State, (Articles 238-260) Criminal
Code.
102 Between the 2005 and 2010 elections the ONC had changed its name to the OPC, as described
above.
103 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
104 A few people interviewed by Amnesty International still used the old name of the party, or
called it “Merera Gudina’s party.”
105 Amnesty International interview, Oromo m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
106 Amnesty International interview, Oromo m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
107 Constitution: Article 39(2): “Every nation, nationality and people shall have the right to speak,
write and develop its language and to promote its culture, help it grow and flourish, and preserve its
historical heritage.” ICCPR: Article 27: “In those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic
minorities exist, persons belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the right, in community
with the other members of their group, to enjoy their own culture, to profess and practise their own
religion, or to use their own language.”
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx#.
Article 15(1a), ICESCR: “The
States Parties to the present Covenant recognize the right of everyone: To take part in cultural life.”
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CESCR.aspx.
108 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 16 August 2013.
109 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 16 August 2013.
110 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 27, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
111 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 16 July 2013.
112 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
113 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Nairobi, Kenya, 16 July 2013.
114 Amnesty International is aware of a number of incidents where Sudan has arrested and
deported asylum seekers, in violation of the right to claim asylum and the obligation to ensure no
person is returned to a country where they face a risk of persecution, covered in the 1951
Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol. Sudan’s own laws bar the
government from removing from Sudan any person with a fear of persecution in their country of
origin. See for example, Amnesty International ‘Sudan must end forced returns of asylum seekers to
Eritrea’,
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR54/039/2012/en/ad11d911-8915-488b-b5c9-
3831f4694b9e/afr540392012en.pdf
115 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 16 August 2013.
116 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 20 September 2012.
117 Article 29(1) of the Constitution states: “Everyone shall have the right to hold opinions without
any interference.” This right is also enshrined in Article 19(1) of the ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
118 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
119 Article 12 (1), ICESR: “The States Parties to the present Covenant recognize the right of everyone
to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health,”
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/cescr.aspx.
120 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
121 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
122 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 58, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
123 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 41, Kampala, Uganda, 29 September 2013.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 106
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0107.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
124 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
125 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 28, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
126 Many students also said this was the only way to protect themselves from the suspicion of
Oromo students in universities and colleges.
127 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 28, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
128 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
129 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
130 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 32, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
131 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 23 July 2013.
132 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 45, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
133 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 24 July 2013.
134 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 54, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
135 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 23 July 2013.
136 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
137 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 23 July 2013.
138 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 26 July 2013.
139 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 27, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
140 Amnesty International interview, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
141 The Zone is the administrative division above the Woreda (district) division.
142 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 16 July 2013.
143 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
144 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
145 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 35, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 Sept 2013.
146 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
147 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 17, Kampala, Uganda, 29 September 2013.
148 Article 9, ICCRR,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CCPR.aspx.
149 Article 7(2), African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR),
http://www.achpr.org/instruments/achpr/#a7
.
150 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Nairobi, Kenya, 24 July 2013.
151 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
152 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
153 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 38, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 18 September 2013.
154 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 21, Nairobi, Kenya, 20 September 2012.
155 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
156 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
157 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
158 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
159 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kampala, Uganda, 28 September 2013.
160 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013
161 Article 9(3, 4), ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx
.
162 Article 17(2), Ethiopian Constitution. This right is also enumerated in Article 9 of the ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
163 See for example, Amnesty International, Justice Under Fire: Trials of opposition leaders,
journalists and human rights defenders in Ethiopia, AFR 25/002/2011, (July 2011),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/002/2011/en/2cf63b00-1346-4997-b679-
1141a150b797/afr250022011en.pdf
; Amnesty International, Ethiopia: Submission to the United
Nations Human Rights Committee, AFR 25/003/2011, (June 2011),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/003/2011/en/f28f0376-dc7c-4749-80d7-
72bee711d779/afr250032011en.pdf
. Many other Amnesty International documents also detail the
use of torture, arbitrary detention and other human rights violations at Maikelawi for many years,
for example, Amnesty International, Ethiopia: Accountability past and present: human rights in
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 107
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0108.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
transition, AFR 25/006/1995, (April 1995),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AFR25/006/1995/en
. See also Human Rights Watch, “They
Want a Confession”: Torture and Ill-treatment in Ethiopia’s Maekelawi Police Station, (October
2013),
http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/ethiopia1013_ForUpload.pdf
.
164 Articles 19(3, 4), Constitution.
165 Article 19(1), Constitution; and Article 9(2), ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
166 Article 20(1), Ethiopian Constitution; and Article 14(3, c), ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
167 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 18, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
168 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
169 Amnesty International received a number of reports of individuals being harassed, arrested and
tried and convicted for not showing sufficient grief over the death of Meles Zenawi, or refusing to
join in public mourning or contribute money to mark his death.
170 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
171 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
172 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
173 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
174 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
175 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
176 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
177 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Nairobi, Kenya, 19 July 2013.
178 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 58, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
179 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 48, Nairobi, Kenya, 26 July 2013.
180 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 54, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
181 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 24, Nairobi, Kenya, 19 July 2013.
182 Article 20(5) Constitution; Article 14(2, d), ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx
.
183 UN Human Rights Committee General Comment 20, paragraph 11; Report of the UN Special
Rapporteur on torture, (E/CN.4/1992/17), 17 December 1991, paragraph 284. http://daccess-dds-
ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G08/422/35/PDF/G0842235.pdf? OpenElement.
184 Concluding Observations of the UN Human Rights Committee: Georgia, UN Doc.
CCPR/C/79/Add.74, 9 April 1997. para.28.
185 Article 21(2), Constitution.
186 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
187 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
188 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
189 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 28, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
190 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
191 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
192 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Nairobi, Kenya, 16 July 2013.
193 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 55, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 October 2013.
194 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Nairobi, Kenya, 19 July 2013.
195
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/CED/Pages/ConventionCED.aspx
.
196 Fact Sheet No. 6 (Rev.2), Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances,
http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Publications/FactSheet6rev.2en.pdf.
197 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
198 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 22, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
199 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
200 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 21, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 18 September 2013.
201 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 18, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 108
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0109.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
202 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 30 April 2014.
203 See endnote 22.
204 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 39, Nairobi, Kenya 15 July 2013.
205 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kampala, Uganda, 28 September 2013.
206 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Nairobi, Kenya, 24 July 2013.
207 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 30 April 2014.
208 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 October 2013.
209 Article 10(1), UN Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance:
“Any person deprived of liberty shall be held in an officially recognized place of detention and, in
conformity with national law, be brought before a judicial authority promptly after detention,”
http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/47/a47r133.htm
; also Article 17(1, 2), International
Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/hrbodies/ced/pages/conventionced.aspx
.
210 General Comment 20 on Article 7 of the ICCPR: “It should be noted that keeping under
systematic review interrogation rules, instructions, methods and practices as well as arrangements
for the custody and treatment of persons subjected to any form of arrest, detention or
imprisonment is an effective means of preventing cases of torture and ill-treatment. To guarantee
the effective protection of detained persons, provisions should be made for detainees to be held in
places officially recognized as places of detention and for their names and places of detention, as
well as for the names of persons responsible for their detention, to be kept in registers readily
available and accessible to those concerned, including relatives and friends. To the same effect, the
time and place of all interrogations should be recorded, together with the names of all those present
and this information should also be available for purposes of judicial or administrative proceedings.
Provisions should also be made against incommunicado detention. In that connection, States parties
should ensure that any places of detention be free from any equipment liable to be used for
inflicting torture or ill-treatment. The protection of the detainee also requires that prompt and
regular access be given to doctors and lawyers and, under appropriate supervision when the
investigation so requires, to family members.”
211 The US State Department Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 2013 on Ethiopia stated
that in addition to federal and regional prisons, “There also were many unofficial detention centers
throughout the country, including in Dedessa, Bir Sheleko, Tolay, Hormat, Blate, Tatek, Jijiga, Holeta,
and Senkele. Most were located at military camps.”
http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/#wrapper
212 These are the names/locations of camps cited by detainees as being places of detention during
and since 2011. Some may have closed since that time. It is also possible some have different names
and the locations are not exact.
213 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kampala, Uganda, 29 September 2013.
214 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
215 Torture and ill-treatment in military camps is documented later in this report.
216 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
217 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
218 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 38, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
219 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, 3 October 2013.
220 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 45, Kakuma refugee camp, 2 May 2014.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 109
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0110.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
221 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m (date and location withheld).
222 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
223 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
224 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 58, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
225 As protected in the Constitution, Article 29, the right to freedom of expression, Article 30, the
right to freedom of assembly, Article 31, the right to association and Article 32, the right to freedom
of movement; and the ICCPR, Article 19, the right to freedom of expression and Article 22, the right
to freedom of association, http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
226 The right to freedom of movement is enshrined in Article 12 of the ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
227 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
228 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
229 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 28, Kakuma refugee camp, 3 October 2013.
230 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, 1 October 2013.
231 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
232 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, 1 October 2013.
233 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 24, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
234 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 46, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
235 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
236 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 33, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
237 Amnesty International interview, Oromo man, 20, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
238 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 46, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
239 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 28, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
240 Constitution, Article 20 (1-7), ‘Rights of the Accused.’ Also, ICCPR, Article 14 (1) “All persons shall
be equal before the courts and tribunals. In the determination of any criminal charge against him, or
of his rights and obligations in a suit at law, everyone shall be entitled to a fair and public hearing by
a competent, independent and impartial tribunal established by law (…). (2) Everyone charged with a
criminal offence shall have the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.
(3) In the determination of any criminal charge against him, everyone shall be entitled to the
following minimum guarantees, in full equality: (a) To be informed promptly and in detail in a
language which he understands of the nature and cause of the charge against him; (b) To have
adequate time and facilities
for the preparation of his defence and to communicate with counsel of his own choosing; (c) To be
tried without undue delay; (d) To be tried in his presence, and to defend himself in person or
through legal assistance of his own choosing; to be informed, if he does not have legal assistance, of
this right (…); (…) (g) Not to be compelled to testify against himself or to confess guilt,”
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx. See also ACHPR, Articles 3, 6 and 7,
http://www.achpr.org/instruments/achpr/#a7.
241 Article 19(5), Constitution.
242 UN Human Rights Committee, General Comment Number 32, on Article 14 of the ICCPR, (2007),
paragraph 30: “The presumption of innocence, which is fundamental to the protection of human
rights, imposes on the prosecution the burden of proving the charge, guarantees that no guilt can be
presumed until the charge has been proved beyond reasonable doubt, ensures that the accused has
the benefit of doubt, and requires that persons accused of a criminal act must be treated in
accordance with this principle.” http://daccess-dds-
ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G08/422/35/PDF/G0842235.pdf?OpenElement.
243 Part II, Book III, Title I, Chapter I – Crimes against the National State, (Articles 238-260) Criminal
Code.
244 See for example, Amnesty International, Dismantling Dissent: Intensified Crackdown on Free
Speech in Ethiopia, AFR 25/011/2011, (December 2011), ), Amnesty International, Ethiopian
repression of Muslim protests must stop, (August 2013), Amnesty International, Statement on
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 110
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0111.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
freedom of expression to the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, AFR 01/009/2014,
(May 2014), Amnesty International, Ethiopia: Release Prisoners of Conscience Immediately and
Unconditionally AFR 25/004/2014 (July 2014 ).
245 This is documented in more detail in relation to torture and the purposes of torture later in this
report.
246 It was reported to Amnesty International that during the trial of Berhanu Emiru, one of the
OFDM officials arrested in 2011, emails were cited as evidence against him which later proven to
have been fabricated. The emails were written from Berhanu’s e-mail account after he had been
arrested and was already detained in Maikelawi. The emails were withdrawn as evidence.
247 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 29, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
248 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 21 September 2012
249 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 24 July 2013.
250 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 22, Nairobi, Kenya, 26 July 2013.
251 Amnesty International interview, Ethiopian activist, 2013 (specific date and location withheld).
252 Junedin Sado is a former government minister who fled to Kenya in early 2013. His wife, Habiba
Mohamed, was arrested in 2012, and in October of that year was charged alongside 28 people in
connection to the long-running Muslim protest movement of that year. Her co-defendants included
members of the committee appointed by the community to represent their grievances to the
government and at least one journalist.
253 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 18, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
254 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 24 July 2013.
255 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 38, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 18 September 2013.
256 Article 3, Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR): “Everyone has the right to life, liberty
and security of person,”
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Pages/Language.aspx?LangID=eng
;
Article 6(1), ICCPR: “Every human being has the inherent right to life. This right shall be protected by
law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life,”
http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx
. See also Report of the Special
Rapporteur on extra-judicial, summary or arbitrary executions,
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/14session/A.HRC.14.24.Add6.pdf and
Human Rights Committee, General Comment No. 6, HRI/GEN/1/Rev.6 (1982), para. 3,
http://daccess-dds- ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G08/422/35/PDF/G0842235.pdf?OpenElement. A
State killing is legal only if it is required to protect life, making lethal force proportionate, and there
is no other means, such as capture or non-lethal incapacitation, of preventing that threat to life.
257 Inter alia, Principle 9, UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/UseOfForceAndFirearms.aspx
and Article 3,
UN Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/LawEnforcementOfficials.aspx
. The Basic
Principles state the “intentional lethal use of firearms may only be made when strictly unavoidable
in order to protect life.”
258 The definition of law enforcement officials involves the military when they are involved in
policing functions such as the policing of demonstrations.
259 Amnesty International phone call, Oromo, f, Ethiopia, May 2014 (specific date withheld).
260 Amnesty International phone call, Oromo, m, specific location withheld, Ethiopia, August 2013
(specific date withheld).
261 Amnesty International phone call, Oromo, m, specific location withheld, Ethiopia, August 2013
(specific date withheld).
262 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
263 Amnesty International phone call, OFC official, location withheld, Ethiopia, April 2014 (specific
date withheld).
264 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 October 2013.
265 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 111
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0112.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
266 See also ‘Death in detention’ later in this report.
267 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
268 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
269 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 24, Nairobi, Kenya, 19 July 2013.
270 The UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by law enforcement officials states:
“law enforcement officials shall not use firearms against persons except in self-defence or defence of
others against the imminent threat of death or serious injury, to prevent the perpetration of a
particularly serious crime involving grave threat to life, to arrest a person presenting such a danger
and resisting their authority, or to prevent his or her escape, and only when less extreme means are
insufficient to achieve these objectives. Intentional lethal use of firearms may only be made when
strictly unavoidable in order to protect life.” Principle 9, UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and
Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/UseOfForceAndFirearms.aspx
. According to
the UN Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials (1979) those “who exercise police powers,
especially the powers of arrest and detention” are law enforcement officials. When performing
policing functions, military and other state security forces fall within this definition.
271 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 32, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
272 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 16 July 2013.
273 Article 18, Constitution.
274 Convention against Torture (CAT),
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CAT.aspx
.
275 Article 1(1), CAT,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CAT.aspx
.
276 Article 19(5), Constitution.
277 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
278 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
279 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
280 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
281 Amnesty International phone interview, Swedish journalist Martin Schibbye, 16 October 2012
282 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 30, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
283 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
284 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 26 September 2012.
285 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 33, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
286 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 30, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
287 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
288 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 45, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
289 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m (date and location withheld).
290 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 58, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
291 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
292 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
293 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
294 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 32, Kampala, Uganda, 29 September 2013.
295 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
296 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
297 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
298 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 21, Nairobi, Kenya, 25 July 2013.
299 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25 (location and date withheld for security
reasons).
300 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 16 July 2013.
301 This use of this torture position has been documented in many countries around the world and
has a number of names, including ‘parrot’s perch’ – Amnesty International phone call with medical
forensics expert, 26 June 2014. The parrot’s perch is documented in the Istanbul Protocol - Manual
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 112
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0113.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
on the Effective Investigation and Documentation of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment,
http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Publications/training8Rev1en.pdf
.
302 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
303 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 38, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
304 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 45, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
305 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
306 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 32, Kampala, Uganda, 29 September 2013.
307 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 20, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 19 September 2013.
308 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 29, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
309 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013 and
Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, 4 October 2013.
310 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
311 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
312 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Hargeisa, Somaliland, September 2013.
313 This may have been due to necrosis – death of cells, caused by infection. Amnesty International
interview with medical forensics expert, 26 June 2014.
314 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013. The victim of this
treatment was present at the interview but did not speak, according to his brother because he
continues to suffer from mental trauma from his experiences during detention.
315 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
316 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 33, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
317 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Nairobi, Kenya, 26 July 2013.
318 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
319 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 33, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
320 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 30 April 2014.
321 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
322 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 45, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
323 Oromo singer detained in Maikelawi for 11 months. Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m,
Nairobi, Kenya, 16 July 2013.
324 Paragraph 72, Interim report of the Special Rapporteur of the Human Rights Council on torture
and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, 5 August 2011,
http://solitaryconfinement.org/uploads/SpecRapTortureAug2011.pdf
. See also the Istanbul
Statement on the Use and Effects of Solitary Confinement (2007)
http://www.solitaryconfinement.org/istanbul.
325 A number of other prisoners of conscience, including members of opposition political parties
and journalists have reported being held in solitary confinement cells during initial stages of their
detention at Maikelawi.
326 The six federal prisons are Kaliti, Dire Dawa, Ziway, Shewa Robit, Kilinto (maximum security) and
the women’s prison.
327 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
328 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
329 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 13 August 2013.
330 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
331 Amnesty International telephone interview, Oromo, m, Sweden, 13 August 2013.
332 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 28 April 2014.
333 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 28 April 2014.
334 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
335 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 38, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 18 September 2013.
336 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 23 July 2013.
337 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 18 July 2013.
338 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 113
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0114.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
339 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 40, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
340 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 27, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
341 Article 10, ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CCPR.aspx
.
342 Human Rights Committee, General Comment 21, concerning humane treatment of persons
deprived of liberty, paragraph 4, available in http://daccess-dds-
ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G08/422/35/PDF/G0842235.pdf?OpenElement.
343 Articles 9–26, UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners,
https://www.unodc.org/pdf/criminal_justice/UN_Standard_Minimum_Rules_for_the_Treatment_of
_Prisone rs.pdf
.
344 Articles 26 and 27, Proclamation to Provide for the Establishment of Federal Prisons Commission
(No. 365/2003), http://www.fsc.gov.et/resources/Negarit%20Gazeta/Gazeta-
1995/Proc%20No.%20365- 2003%20Federal%20prisons%20commission%20Establishment.pdf .
345 Articles 8 and 9, Council of Ministers Regulations Number 138/2007 on the Treatment of Federal
Prisoners,
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B4f0l6J9WQrBZDg1MzA3MzctMjJkOS00NTE0LWIyNzItMmM3YzEyO
Dgw MGU5/edit?hl=en_GB&pli=1 .
346 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 50, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
347 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
348 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 25, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 October 2013.
349 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 35, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 October 2013.
350 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
351 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
352 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
353 Articles 11(a) and 21(1), UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners,
https://www.unodc.org/pdf/criminal_justice/UN_Standard_Minimum_Rules_for_the_Treatment_of
_Prisone rs.pdf
.
354 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 45, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
355 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 19, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 28 April 2014.
356 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
357 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 22, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 5 May 2014.
358 Injera is the traditional staple food of Ethiopia eaten daily by most people. It is a spongy pancake
made from the grain teff.
359 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 27, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
360 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
361 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 38, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
362 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
363 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, 45, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 2 May 2014.
364 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 27 July 2013.
365 For example, Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, 27, Nairobi, Kenya, 26 July 2013.
366 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 48, Nairobi, Kenya, 26 July 2013.
367 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 22, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 May 2014.
368 Page 112, Human Rights Protection Monitoring in Ethiopian Prisons Primary Report,
http://www.ehrc.org.et/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=1uE7TO6QzbQ%3d&tabid=117
.
369 Pages 104-5, ibid.
370 Page 108, ibid.
371 Page, 115-6, ibid.
372 Pages 125-6 ibid.
373 Article 8(3), ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CCPR.aspx
.
374 Article 8(3,b), ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CCPR.aspx
.
375 Article 8(3,c(i)), ICCPR,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CCPR.aspx
.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 114
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0115.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
376 Article 2(2), Forced Labour Convention (C29), 1930,
http://www.ilo.org/dyn/normlex/en/f?p=NORMLEXPUB:12100:0::NO:12100:P12100_ILO_CODE:C02
9. Ethiopia is a party to both this Convention and the 1957 Abolition of Forced Labour Convention
(cited below).
377 Proclamation to Provide for the Establishment of Federal Prisons Commission (No. 365/2003),
http://www.fsc.gov.et/resources/Negarit%20Gazeta/Gazeta-1995/Proc%20No.%20365-
2003%20Federal%20prisons%20commission%20Establishment.pdf .
378 Article 1(a), Abolition of Forced Labour Convention (C105), 1957,
http://www.ilo.org/dyn/normlex/en/f?p=NORMLEXPUB:12100:0::NO::P12100_ILO_CODE:C105
.
379 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 34, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 17 September 2013.
380 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 4 October 2013.
381 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 42, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 18 September 2013.
382 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 15 July 2013.
383 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 23, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 October 2013.
384 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, Nairobi, Kenya, 17 July 2013.
385 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, f, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
386 Amnesty International meeting with Oromo refugee, f, location withheld, 11 December 2013.
387 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
388 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 26, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 3 May 2014.
389 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 35, Hargeisa, Somaliland, 16 September 2013.
390 Amnesty International interview, Oromo, m, 20, Kakuma refugee camp, Kenya, 1 October 2013.
391 Article 14 (2, j & n), Charities and Societies Proclamation (621/2009).
392 Access to regional prisons was not suspended between 2005 and 2013, but visits to prisons in
these two regions had not been conducted due to limited organizational resources.
393 Federal Police Commission Establishment Proclamation, Number 720/2011, which supplanted
previous establishment acts Federal Police Proclamation, Number 207/2000, and Federal Police
Commission Proclamation, Number 313/2003.
394 According to available information, in the ten years since it was established the Commission has
not reported on any serious human rights violations that it found were the responsibility of the
government or government institutions, despite the widespread nature of serious violations
perpetrated by the Ethiopian government. The findings of the Commission are contrary to the
findings of numerous national and international human rights reports. The EHRC is currently
accredited with B status by the International Coordinating Committee (ICC) of National Human
Rights Institutions, indicating that it is not fully in compliance with the Principles relating to the
Status of National Institutions (The Paris Principles). In November 2013 the ICC Sub-Committee on
Accreditation, made a number of recommendations to the EHRC to bring it into full compliance with
the Principles.
http://nhri.ohchr.org/EN/AboutUs/ICCAccreditation/Documents/SCA%20NOVEMBER%202013%20FI
NA L%20REPORT%20ENGLISH.pdf .
395 pp98-101, ‘Human Rights Protection Monitoring in Ethiopian Prisons Primary Report,’ EHRC, July
2012,
http://www.ehrc.org.et/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=1uE7TO6QzbQ%3d&tabid=117
396
http://www.ehrc.org.et/PressReleasesandSpeeches/PressReleases/tabid/121/Default.aspx
397
http://www.jfa-pfe.org.et/home.php
398 Country and other visits by Special Procedures Mandate Holders since 1998 A-E, UN Office of
the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR),
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/SP/Pages/countryvisitsa-e.aspx
Request to visit from the
Special Rapporteur on Torture were made in 2005, 2007, 2010 and 2013 -
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Torture/SRTorture/Pages/Visits.aspx
; the request from the
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention was made in 2005 and renewed in 2007, 2009 and 2011.
Requests from a number of other UN Special Procedures also remain outstanding
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 115
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0116.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
399 This was Amnesty International’s last research visit to Ethiopia which was cut short when the
delegation was instructed to leave the country immediately, August 2011.
400 See for example
http://www.capitalethiopia.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3312:eu-human-
rights- experts-refused-access-to-kaliti-prison&catid=35:capital&Itemid=27
401 Paragraph 9,
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/cat/docs/CAT.C.ETH.CO.1.pdf
402 Paragraph 11,
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/cat/docs/CAT.C.ETH.CO.1.pdf
403 At the UN Universal Periodic Review (UPR) consideration of Ethiopia’s human rights
performance from 2009-14, in May 2014, a number of states recommended to Ethiopia to ratify the
Optional Protocol to the CAT, but those recommendations were rejected by Ethiopia. The
recommendation made by: Tunisia, Uruguay, Denmark, Estonia, Togo, Hungary, Paraguay, pp24-25,
Report of the Working Group on the UPR: Ethiopia July 2014,
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/UPR/Pages/ETSession19.aspx
404 Response from the Oromia Justice Bureau to Amnesty International, annexed to this report.
405 Available at
http://www.ehrc.org.et/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=E2YA0XI%2bSHM%3d&tabid=115
406 Paragraph 22,
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/cat/docs/CAT.C.ETH.CO.1_en.pdf
,
407 See, for example, Amnesty International, Justice Under Fire: Trials of opposition leaders,
journalists and human rights defenders in Ethiopia, AFR 25/002/2011, (July 2011),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/002/2011/en/2cf63b00-1346-4997-b679-
1141a150b797/afr250022011en.pdf
; Amnesty International, Ethiopian repression of Muslim
protests must stop, (August 2013), http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/ethiopian-repression-muslim-
protests-must- stop-2013-08-08; and Amnesty International, Ethiopia: Conviction of government
opponents a 'dark day'
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
137
for freedom of expression, (June 2012), http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-
releases/ethiopia- conviction-government-opponents-dark-day-freedom-expression-2012-0.
408 Under the Proclamation to Provide for the Powers and Duties of the Executive Branch of the
Regional Government, No. 163/2011, as cited in the response from the Oromia Justice Bureau to
Amnesty International annexed to this report.
409 Page 28, National Human Rights Action Plan (NHRAP), available at
http://www.ehrc.org.et/PublicationsandReports/Publications/tabid/115/Default.aspx
410http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/EffectiveInvestigationAndDocumentation
OfTorture.as px
411 Paragraph 11, http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/i7pepi.htm.
412 See for example, Amnesty International, Stifling human rights work: The impact of civil society
legislation in Ethiopia, (Index AFR 25/002/2012),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AFR25/002/2012/en on the impact of the 2009 Charities
and Societies Proclamation on human rights organizations in Ethiopia.
413 For more information see Amnesty International, Justice Under Fire: Trials of opposition leaders,
journalists and human rights defenders in Ethiopia, AFR 25/002/2011, (July 2011),
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/002/2011/en/2cf63b00-1346-4997-b679-
1141a150b797/afr250022011en.pdf
, particularly pp67-69. Other inquiries have led to similar
concerns over issues of impartiality and impunity for perpetrators of violations. For example, a
Commission of Inquiry to investigate killings of ethnic Anuak in Gambella in 2003, concluded that the
number of dead was much lower than the number reported by survivors, eye-witnesses and other
sources. The Commission made no recommendations regarding prosecution of those responsible,
whether police, military or civilians. See for example, Human Rights Watch, World Report 2005,
http://www.hrw.org/world-report-2005/ethiopia
.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 116
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0117.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
414 For example, the Human Rights Commissioner of the Council of Europe has listed in detail
factors necessary for effective police complaints mechanisms,
https://wcd.coe.int/ViewDoc.jsp?id=1417857#P97_5903
ANNEXES: CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE ETHIOPIAN GOVERNMENT
1. Letter from Amnesty International to the federal Ministry of Defence
2. Letter from Amnesty International to the federal Ministry of Federal Affairs
3. Letter from Amnesty International to the federal Ministry of Justice
4. Letter from Amnesty International to the President of the Oromia Regional State
5. Response from the Oromia Regional Justice Bureau to Amnesty International
1
A REPLY PREPARED FOR AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CONCERNING HUMAN RIGHTS SITUATIONS IN
THE REGIONAL STATE OF OROMIA
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 117
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0118.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
10 October 2014
INTRODUCTION
Ethiopia adopted policy, legislative and institutional measures with a view to promote and
protect the rights, freedoms and duties enshrined in the Constitution of the Federal
Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (FDRE) and international Human Rights instruments. The
FDRE Constitution is the foundation of the country’s democratic system of governance. The
building of a democratic system has been a necessity for the very existence of the country and
provides the basis for strong and lasting peace, development and good governance, all of
which serve as the foundations for the promotion and protection of human rights. The
Constitution, as the supreme law of the land and as the basic legal framework for the
promotion and protection of human rights in Ethiopia, sets forth the affirmative commitments
of the country to the cause of human rights.
The fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals have been given recognition both in the
Federal and Regional Constitutions. Article 13(1) of both the Federal and Regional
Constitutions declare the responsibility and duty of all Federal and State legislative, executive
and judicial organs at all levels to respect and enforce the human rights recognized in the
Constitutions. In addition, both the Federal and Regional Constitutions, under Article 12,
state that the conduct of affairs of government shall be transparent and that any public official
or an elected representative is accountable for any failure in official duties. Accordingly, the
duties of government officials to respect the rights and freedoms of citizens and their
accountability in the event of any form of breach of their duties are provided for in the
Constitution.
The allegations that are contained in the Amnesty International letter are untrue and far from
the reality. Ethiopia promotes human rights as they are pillars of our democratic system. The
so-called interviews are not credible as the information contained in the draft you send fail to
reflect the reality. Had there been any names of those who gave testimonies and had it been
possible to impeach their statements, it would have been possible to invalidate the claims of
harassment, arrest or detention, torture …etc. There had been no pattern of targeting a certain
group that was opposing the government. This response clearly demonstrates that no single
individual has been subjected to any form of harassment, arrest or detention, incommunicado
detention, torture..etc.
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION, OPPINION AND ASSOCIATION
The FDRE Constitution provides that everyone has the right to hold opinions and the right to
freedom of expression without any interference. These rights are promoted in Ethiopia by
enabling citizens to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of
frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in form of art, or through any media of one’s
choice. Freedom of the press and other mass media and freedom of artistic creativity, which
is guaranteed in the constitution, is implemented through detailed legal instruments. In
Ethiopia journalists are not subjected to any form of censorship and full access to information
of public interest. The FDRE Constitution states that in the interest of the free flow of
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 118
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0119.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
information, ideas and opinions which are essential to the functioning of the democratic
public order, the press shall, as an institution, enjoy legal protection to ensure its operational
independence and its capacity to entertain diverse opinions. The FDRE Constitution provides
that every person has the right to freedom of association for any cause or purpose except in
the case of organizations formed in violation of appropriate laws, or those formed
2
to illegally subvert the constitutional order, or which promote activities that are prohibited. It
also provided that everyone has the right to assemble and to demonstrate together with others
peacefully and unarmed, and to petition. Appropriate regulations are put on place in the
interest of public convenience relating to the location of open-air meetings and the route of
movement of demonstrators or, for the protection of democratic rights, public morality and
peace during such a meeting or demonstration. It is, however, important to remember that this
does not exempt organizers from liability under laws enacted to protect the well-being of
youth or the honor and reputation of individuals, and laws prohibiting propaganda.
The Government fully recognizing the indispensable role to be played by a free, independent
and diverse mass media took measures to strengthen their activities. The private media is
expected to acquire high ethical standards and professional competence in the national
endeavor to build a fully democratic order. The Government issued the Freedom of Mass
Media and Access to Information Proclamation (Proclamation No. 590/2008). The Freedom
of Mass Media and Access to Information Proclamation, which creates enabling conditions to
nurture free and independent mass media, provides that citizens have the right to create and
establish mass media services. This legislative measure is taken with the view to ensuring the
diversity and pluralism of opinion in the overall mass media platform. In conformity with the
Constitutional provision that every person has the freedom of association for any legal
purpose; the country’s various policies, strategies and related detailed laws have internalized
reference and adherence to this right.
Thus, citizens, in strict adherence to the law, and on the basis of politics, gender, age,
profession, trade, development, charity, special needs or other diverse areas, have formed
associations of their choice. These include: political organizations; micro and small-scale
development enterprises; mass-based and cooperative associations such as farmer‟
cooperatives, housing associations, consumers, savings and credit cooperatives; trade unions,
women’s associations, youth associations, elders associations, association of persons with
disability; professional associations; and others groups both at Federal and Regional as well
as City Administration Levels. The Federal Charities and Societies Agency, Federal and City
Administration Cooperative Societies Agency/Bureaus, Micro and Small-scale Enterprises
Development Agency/Commission, Ministry and Bureaus of Trade, the National Electoral
Board and Ministry of Federal Affairs have been given the task of ensuring citizens right of
freedom of association.
The House of Peoples' Representatives of the FDRE adopted the Anti-Terrorism
Proclamation which was specifically enacted in line with the FDRE Constitution and
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 119
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0120.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
international human rights instruments as a central element in strengthening the national
effort to tackle dangers posed by terrorist activities. The Government believes that the
proclamation took into account the challenges of combating terrorism while protecting
human rights. Thus, cases that are brought against those who were engaged in terrorist acts
could not be taken as violation of freedom of expression, but rather those who incite violence
were charged for violating the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation. The Government would like to
emphasize that prohibition of providing support to a terrorist act or organization cannot be
interpreted as against the right of freedom of expression and the right of journalists to express
their ideas. Peaceful expression of opposition or criticisms of the government are not
prohibited. Individual cases could not be taken to show pattern and in the absence of any
clear evidence of violations such claims are unacceptable.
RIGHT TO HUMAN DIGNITY, LIBERTY, SECURITY AND PROHIBITION OF
TORTURE AND INHUMAN TREATMENT
The FDRE Constitution under Articles 24 provides that “everyone has the right to respect for
his human dignity, reputation and honor.” In addition, Article 16 and 17 of the Constitution
guarantee all citizens the right of protection against bodily harm and deprivation of the right
to liberty, except on such grounds and in
3
accordance with such procedures as are established by law. No one shall be subjected to
arbitrary arrest, and no person may be detained without a charge or conviction against him.
Article 18 of the FDRE Constitution provides that everyone has the right of protection against
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and no one shall be held in slavery or
servitude or be subject to human trafficking.
The FDRE Criminal Justice Policy (2011) constitutes a key policy framework that seeks to
promote citizens right to human dignity, security, liberty and the prohibition of torture and
inhuman treatment. Legislative measures have also been taken to protect citizen’s right to
Human Dignity, Security, and liberty which lay down the foundation for the protection from
torture and inhuman treatment. These laws elucidate the basic concept of human dignity
which is tied to inherent nature of the human person and the honor and respect to be accorded
to human beings and protections offered to each person. The Government has established the
necessary organs charged with the administration of justice. The Courts of Law, Ministry of
Justice, Bureaus of Justice in the regions, the Federal Police Commission and Regional Police
Commissions took measure to promote the right to human dignity, security, liberty and the
prohibition of torture and inhuman treatment. Federal and regional police commissions as
well as prison administrations have incorporated the right to human dignity and prohibition
against torture and inhuman treatment in the curricula of their respective training institutions.
They provide continuous on-job training to their members in order to ensure that they do not
commit violations and are able to prevent violations by third parties.
Ethiopia ratified the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment in 2002 which now an integral part of the law of the
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 120
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0121.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
land. In considering the issue of inhuman treatment and punishment in prisons, the
government conducted focused investigations on whether there have been acts of torture
against detainees.
The Ethiopian Human Rights Commission has recently conducted monitoring mission in
federal and regional prisons and reported that while there have been instances of unlawful
punishment of detainees, there was no indication that this was of an institutional nature, nor
was this ordered by public officials. The monitoring, and the data collected, also shows that
acts of torture were not inflicted against detainees at any institutional level. Some occasional
cases have occurred in a very few detention centers and disciplinary actions have been taken.
A few instances of arbitrary beatings of detainees by some wardens in some detention centers
even at the regional level appeared to be due to lack of awareness or understanding.
Nevertheless, legal and disciplinary measures are always taken against investigative police
officers and prison wardens that are found to have beaten detainees.
TREATMENT OF DETAINEES
It is enshrined both under the FDRE Constitution and the Constitution of the Regional State
of Oromia that no person may be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention without a charge or
conviction against him. Moreover, the right of an arrested person to be brought before a court
within 48 hours of their arrest is a fundamental right recognized. Based upon these
constitutional provisions, various legal and working mechanisms have been put in place to
protect the rights of citizens. Detailed legislations are enacted in order to implement the
fundamental rights and freedoms recognized by the constitution. In relation to the question
raised by Amnesty, laws that regulate investigation of crimes, prosecution and the process of
conviction are enacted and are under implementation in such a way as to secure the principle
of accountability enshrined in the Constitution. In particular, the Proclamation to Provide for
the Powers and Duties of the Executive Branch of the Regional Government, Proclamation
No. 163/2011, has provided for a crime investigation procedure in which the Public
Prosecutor and the Police are made to work together beginning from receiving tipoff’s to the
stage where the suspect is convicted.
4
The Region’s Justice Bureau is responsible under article 22(28) of the above proclamation, to
ensure that the rights of detainees and prisoners in the investigation of alleged crimes is
respected and that no one is subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention without sufficient
evidence. Furthermore the proclamation provides under Article 22(29) the right of a suspect
who is arrested to be released on bail unless bail is prohibited for the crime with which he is
charged or sufficient evidence is brought against him that he will not comply with the orders
of the court.
The introduction of the joint operation of the Public Prosecutor and the Police, having kept
intact their institutional and professional independence, in the investigation of crimes has
resulted in an improved protection of the rights of individuals, and has enabled the justice
sector to provide for an environment where the investigation of crimes is conducted in a
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 121
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0122.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
responsible manner and where officials are held accountable in connection with their duties.
Various reform measures have been adopted and are being implemented. These reform
measures have enabled to provide quality services in a short period and in creating an
atmosphere of accountability. Furthermore, monitoring and follow up mechanisms are put in
place to strengthen the implementation of the laws and the operations.
In relation to the powers and duties of the Police, the Regional Police Commission Members
Code of Conduct Regulations No. 32/1995 has provided that the Police shall, in the conduct
of investigations, respect the human rights and freedoms enshrined in the Region’s
Constitution and that any Police officer in breach of his duties will be held accountable both
administratively and legally. Article 423 of the Federal Criminal Code provides for the
accountability of any public servant who, contrary to law or in disregard of the forms and
safeguards prescribed by law, arrests, detains or otherwise deprives another of his freedom.
This proves the existence of a framework to hold a person accountable in relation to breaches
in connection with the investigation of crimes and arrests.
ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE
The act enforced disappearance is prohibited under the Constitution and the Criminal Code of
the Federal democratic Republic of Ethiopia as well as the Constitution of the Region of
Oromia. Accordingly, the act of arresting, confining, detaining or otherwise restraining the
freedom of another contrary to law or without lawful order is prohibited. Any public servant
who, contrary to law or in disregard of the forms and safeguards prescribed by law, arrests,
detains or otherwise deprives another of his freedom will be accountable for his actions and
prosecuted accordingly. The Public Prosecutor and the regional police together visit detention
centers on a daily basis to inquire into whether a person has been arrested unlawfully and to
secure their release where such is the case. These daily routines have enabled the Prosecution
and the Police to hear and address the complaints of detainees and prisoners. Moreover,
appropriate investigations and inquires are conducted when claims of disappearance are
brought to the attention of the Police Administrations. Besides theses, there exists no
institutional or sponsored act of enforced disappearance both at the regional and federal
levels.
FOLLOW UP OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS CONDITIONS IN DETENTION CENTERS
AND PRISONS
Offices of the Public Prosecutors at all levels have the responsibility to oversee the conditions
of detention of persons who are accused or convicted. Remedial actions are taken whenever a
violation of the human rights of detainees or convicted persons is brought to the attention of
the Justice Bureau of the Region.
Apart from this, periodic monitoring and follow up on human rights of convicted and
suspected persons is
5
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 122
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0123.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
also made by those concerned Regional and Federal Government organs especially, by the
Administrative and Legal Committee of the House of Peoples‟ Representative and Chaffe
(The Assembly of the Oromia Region). These organs have given recommendations on the
corrective measures that need to be taken concerned bodies.
In addition to the governmental bodies, non-governmental organizations, like the
International Red Cross and Justice For All, who operate in the region also monitor and make
regular visits regarding the human rights situation of convicted and suspected persons. In
light of these, the Administration and Legal Affairs Standing Committee of the Chaffe, has
given recommendations to the President’s Office of the Region, the Regional Justice Bureau
and Regional Police Commission by reviewing the works of the regions justice organs.
It is important to note that, the reports submitted by those governmental and non-
governmental organizations do not indicate the existence of alleged human rights violations
indicated in the Amnesty International report. Even if there are some challenges observed in
investigations and court proceedings, there are no findings of such human rights violations at
Regional Government level. Moreover, there are no complaints lodged regarding these
alleged human rights violations pointed out in so-called findings by Amnesty International
such as; inhuman treatment, torture and extra-judicial detentions. In general, those criminal
investigation procedures are aimed at protecting human rights and anyone who feels that his
rights are violated can lodge a complaint.
THE JURISDICTIONS OF THE FEDERAL AND THE REGIONAL GOVERNMENT IN
RELATION TO THE ARREST OF SUSPECTS
It is known that Ethiopia has a federal form of government. In this regard the Federal
Constitution under article 50(2) provides that both the Federal and Regional Governments
will have legislative, executive and judicial powers. In connection with this, sub-article 8 of
the same provision provides that the States shall respect the powers of the Federal
Government and the Federal Government shall likewise respect the powers of the States.
Based upon this constitutional principle, the Federal Courts Proclamation No. 25/1996 has
provided for the criminal jurisdictions of the Federal Government under article 4. Besides the
powers that are exclusively granted for the Federal Government in the various criminal
legislations, all the residual jurisdictions are the criminal jurisdictions of the Regional
Government.
It is a matter of principle that the Federal Government will not intervene in the matters of the
Regional Government except in accordance with the article 62(9) of the Federal Constitution
where the Federal Government is ordered by the House of the Federation to intervene in any
State, which in violation of this Constitution, endangers the constitutional order. Article
51(14) of the FDRE Constitution further states that the Federal Government will deploy, at
the request of a State Administration, Federal defense forces to arrest a deteriorating security
situation within the requesting State when its authorities are unable to control it. A
Proclamation to provide for the „System for the Intervention of the Federal Government in
the Regions Proclamation No. 359/2003‟ is enacted to provide details of this constitutional
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 123
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0124.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
principle. Accordingly, the Federal Government may intervene where there is an activity that
disturbs the peace and safety of the public, or where an act is committed in a Region in
violation of the provision of the human rights stipulated in the Constitution and laws
promulgated pursuant to the Constitution, and the law enforcement agency and the judiciary
of the Region are unable to arrest the security problems in accordance with the law. In this
regard the Federal Government assumes the command responsibility in the event of
intervention.
The Ethiopian police system consists of the Federal Police Service and nine Regional Police
forces as well as the Police forces of Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa which have a special
status. The Federal Police
6
Commissioner is accountable to the Minister of Federal Affairs. The Regional States are free
to organize their police forces as they see fit, though, all State police forces in fact have a
structure similar to that of the Federal Police. The regional forces are accountable to the
Bureaus of Regional Affairs of their respective States. The Commissioners of Addis Ababa
and Dire Dawa are accountable to the Mayors of those cities and to the Minister of Federal
Affairs. Police training takes place at the Training Centre for Federal Police, at the Police
College and at Regional Training Centers. A Police Commissions‟ Joint-Forum has been
established to coordinate the actions, evaluate and resolve problems of the various forces and
improve conduct and integrity.
THE RIGHT TO CULTURE
Every individual has the right to culture. Under the Constitution, equality of languages and
preservation of historical and cultural legacies are guaranteed. Under Article 39 of the
Constitution which provides for the rights of nationalities, states that “Every Nation,
Nationalities and Peoples of Ethiopia have the constitutional right to speak, write and develop
their own language; to express, to develop their culture and to preserve their history.”
Significant efforts have been undertaken to preserve heritage and cultural sites in many parts
of the country. The constitution provides that the Government shall have the duty to support,
on the basis of equality, the growth and enrichment of all cultures and traditions that are
compatible with fundamental rights, human dignity, democratic norms and the ideals and
provisions of the Constitution. Article 91 of the Constitution, gives the Government the duty,
to the extent its resources permit, to support the development of the arts, science and
technology.
Article 19 of the Proclamation No. 251/2001 provides that “any Nation, Nationality, or
People who believes that its self identities are denied, its right of self-Administration is
infringed, promotion of its culture, language and history are not respected, in general its
rights enshrined in the constitution are not respected or, violated for any reason, may present
its application to the House through the proper channel.”
SUMMARY
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 124
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0125.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
As briefly described above, both at the Federal and Regional levels, the promotion and
protection of human rights is one of the concrete foundations of the building of democratic
system in Ethiopia. In this regard, the Government and citizens will continue to build upon
the successes that are already achieved.
In Ethiopia both the federal and regional Governments are committed to promote and protect
human rights of citizens. Peaceful expression of opposition or criticisms of the government
are not prohibited. As indicated in this response no single individual has been and would not
be subjected to any form of harassment, arrest or detention, torture for exercising the freedom
of expression or opinion. There had been no pattern of targeting a certain group that was
opposing the government. The allegations that are contained in the so-called findings of
Amnesty International are inaccurate and far from the truth. The assertions are not reflections
of the reality on the ground. The testimony of those unidentified individuals could not be
credible. Individual cases could not be taken to show pattern and in the absence of any clear
evidence of violations such claims are unacceptable.
whetheR In A hIgh-pROFILe COnFLICt OR A FORgOtten CORneR OF the gLOBe,
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CAmpAIgnS FOR juStICe, FReeDOm AnD DIgnItY FOR
ALL AnD SeeKS tO gALVAnIZe puBLIC SuppORt tO BuILD A BetteR wORLD
WHAT CAN YOU DO? Activists around the world have shown that it is possible to resist
the dangerous forces that are undermining human rights. Be part of this movement. Combat
those who
worldwide movement campaigning for an end to human rights violations. Help us make a
Together we can make our voices heard.
I am interested in receiving further information on becoming a member of Amnesty
International
name
address
country
email
I wish to make a donation to Amnesty International (donations will be taken in uK£, uS$ or
€)
amount
please debit my
number
expiry date
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 125
Visa
mastercard
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1424081_0126.png
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF ETHIOPIA
signature
please return this form to the Amnesty International office in your country.
For Amnesty International offices worldwide: www.amnesty.org/en/worldwide-sites If there
is not an Amnesty International office in your country, please return this form to:
Amnesty International, International Secretariat, peter Benenson house, 1 easton Street,
London wC1X 0Dw, united Kingdom
amnesty.org
I WANT TOHELP
‘BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ SWEEPING REPRESSION IN THE OROMIA REGION OF
ETHIOPIA
Between 2011 and 2014, at least 5000 Oromos have been arrested based on their actual or
suspected peaceful opposition to the government.
These included thousands of peaceful protestors and hundreds of opposition political party
members, but also hundreds of other individuals from all walks of life – students, farmers,
medical professionals, civil servants, singers, businesspeople and people expressing their
Oromo cultural heritage – arrested based on their expression of dissent or their suspected
political opinion. The government anticipates a high level of opposition in Oromia, and signs
of dissent are sought out and regularly, sometimes pre-emptively, suppressed.
In numerous cases, actual or suspected dissenters were detained without charge or trial, often
for periods of many months or even years. Many were detained incommunicado – without
access to lawyers or family members. Hundreds of people are detained in unofficial places of
detention in military camps. Many have been subject to enforced disappearance. Fair trial
rights are regularly violated in cases of actual or suspected Oromo dissenters that have gone
to court.
Former detainees interviewed by Amnesty International reported widespread torture in
federal and regional detention centres, including beating with sticks, electric wire and other
objects, tying in contorted stress positions, electric shocks, mock execution, burning and rape.
Conditions in detention frequently violate national and international law and standards.
Dozens of actual or suspected dissenters have been killed by security services, during
protests, during arrests, and while in detention.
Index: AFR 25/006/2014 Amnesty International October 2014
page 126