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Ethiopian opposition
leader Bekele Jirata freed on bail
ADDIS ABABA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - A leading Ethiopian opposition
politician was freed on bail on Wednesday after he was jailed last
November when the government accused him of working with rebels, his
party said.
Bekele Jirate, 54, a top official with the Oromo Federalist
Democratic Movement (OFDM), was accused by the authorities of
working "hand-in-glove" with insurgents like the Oromo Liberation
Front (OLF).
"I am very happy because not only is he important for our party, he
is innocent," OFDM leader Bulcha Demeksa told Reuters. He said no
date had been set for Bekele's trial. The OFDM said another leading
opposition politician remains in solitary confinement.
The OLF is one of several rebel groups in the Horn of Africa nation
and has been fighting for independence for the southern Oromo region
since 1993.
Opposition groups accuse Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's government of
harassment, and the OFDM says the security forces have jailed
hundreds of ethnic Oromos in recent months. The government denies
it.
Bulcha called for the immediate release of Birtukan Mideksa, a
former judge who heads the newly created Unity for Democracy and
Justice party. She has been in solitary confinement since December
and went on hunger strike for 13 days last month.
Regional analysts consider the 34-year-old to be the country's
foremost opposition figure.
"She has been jailed because she is a very strong and serious
contender to Prime Minister Meles," Bulcha said.
Birtukan was first jailed after elections in 2005 ended in street
violence that killed 199 civilians. She was pardoned in 2007 after
she agreed, along with other opposition leaders, to take
responsibility for the unrest.
She was rearrested after refusing to retract a speech made in Sweden
last year in which she denied she was involved in the talks that led
to her release.
The OFDM accused the government of intimidation as voters went to
the polls last April for the first time since the 2005 bloodshed. It
said almost all its nominees for the local elections had been
threatened and forced to pull out of the race. Ethiopia will hold
parliamentary elections next year. (Editing by Daniel Wallis and
Matthew Jones)
Sources: Reuter
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