Thursday, May 13, 2010

Ethiopia Will Keep Opposition Leader in Prison Beyond Elections

By Jason McLure

May 13 (Bloomberg) -- Ethiopia’s government will ignore foreign and domestic pressure to free opposition leader Birtukan Mideksa from prison and keep her incarcerated beyond this month’s elections, Communications Minister Bereket Simon said.

“We are not in a position to intervene in any legal affair,” Bereket told reporters yesterday in Addis Ababa, the capital, in response to a question about the jailed leader of the Unity for Democracy and Justice party. “The government has repeatedly declared its position is not to budge to any foreign or local pressure.”



Birtukan, 35, has spent 500 days in prison since she was arrested on Dec.

29, 2008, after the government accused her of violating the terms of a

pardon under which she was released in 2007. She was originally jailed on

treason charges following protests after Ethiopia’s disputed 2005 elections.

Her continued imprisonment comes amid claims by government critics that the

May 23 vote won’t be free and fair.





“The best evidence that these elections cannot be genuine democratic

elections is that this woman, who should be running, is unable to do so

because she is jailed for life,” Ana Gomes, a Portuguese member of the

European parliament who headed the EU’s electoral mission to Ethiopia in

2005, said in a May 11 phone interview.





Earlier this year, the U.S. State Department labeled Birtukan a political

prisoner, and the United Nations Human Rights Council listed her as a victim

of arbitrary detention.





Her supporters say the former federal judge was jailed because she was the

opposition leader most likely to organize a successful nationwide challenge

to Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic

Front, which has ruled the country since 1991.





“Had she been part of the election, not only the people here but the whole

country would have voted for her,” Leulseged Wubeshet, a 23-year-old

Birtukan supporter, said from her home neighborhood in northern Addis Ababa.

“She’s more popular than the others.”





--Editors: Paul Richardson, Philip Sanders.





To contact the reporter on this story: Jason McLure in Addis Ababa via

Johannesburg at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net.





To contact the editor responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin in

Johannesburg at asguazzin@bloomberg.net.

No comments: