Jan 30, 2018

Oromo: Ethiopian Authorities Pardon Over 2000 Prisoners Involved in 2015/2016 Protests


Photo courtesy of Oromia movies

A few days after the release of Oromo leader Merena Gudina, Oromia region’s President Lema Megersa announced on Friday, 26 January 2018, the pardon of 2345 inmates who have been involved in the unrest in 2015 and 2016. In light of the ongoing protests over land grabbing in the region, this decision is regarded as an effort to allay the tense climate in Oromia. 

The article below was published by Reuters:

Authorities in Ethiopia’s restive Oromiya province have pardoned over 2,000 prisoners jailed for involvement in unrest that gripped the country in 2015-2016, officials said on Friday.

The move is part of government efforts to calm unrest that has lingered since mass protests broke out in the region over accusations of land grabbing.

Hundreds have died in the violence, with protests broadening into demonstrations against political restrictions and perceived human rights abuses.

On Friday, Oromiya regional President Lema Megersa announced that 2,345 inmates had been pardoned, of whom 1,568 had already been convicted and sentenced.

The move followed the release of Merera Gudina, an opposition leader who was arrested on his return from Brussels where he had addressed members of the European Parliament on the violence in Oromiya. He was freed alongside 114 other inmates.

The government in Addis Ababa has long been accused by rights groups of using security concerns as an excuse to stifle dissent and media freedoms. It denies the charges.

Last week the United Nations urged the Horn of Africa country to review the status of a “large number of people” still behind bars.

U.N. human rights spokesman Liz Throssell said the Addis Ababa government should review anti-terror legislation and laws “to ensure that they are neither interpreted nor implemented too broadly, thereby resulting in people being arbitrarily or wrongfully detained”.

Laws placing “undue restrictions” on non-governmental organizations and restricting the media should also be revised, Throssell told a news conference in Geneva earlier this week.