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Qinati Abdisa, 50, a regional leader of Ethiopia’s Oromo Federal
Democratic Movement, was arrested
Ethiopian election officials are predicting more
than 20 million voters will register for parliamentary elections in
May. The process is now underway for both candidates and voters in
all areas except the troubled Somali region. But opposition parties
are complaining their supporters are being harassed, intimidated,
and in some cases jailed.
Qinati Abdisa, 50, a regional leader of Ethiopia’s Oromo Federal
Democratic Movement, was arrested at his home this month on a
weapons possession charge. He was convicted and sentenced to three
months in jail. His family says the weapon was planted by security
agents who searched their house.
OFDM chairman Bulcha Demeksa charges Qinati’s arrest was timed to
prevent him from registering as a candidate for parliament. “The
period of registration will end in about three weeks. If you are not
registered, you cannot campaign. If you don’t campaign, you don’t
get elected. So Qinati Abdisa is finished as far as the election is
concerned, unless the Supreme Court of Oromia reverses their
decision,” he said.
Oromos are the largest of Ethiopia’s many ethnic groups. They make
up about 40 percent of the population. But Oromia is also home to a
nationalist insurgent group, the Oromo Liberation Front. Bulcha says
he is receiving reports that police are searching the homes of other
opposition figures and finding documents linking them to the OLF.
“I know in other cases, they have taken documents and left them in
their houses and have gone in and taken it and charged them with
association with OLF. I know this. I’ve seen cases where it is
absolutely true,” he said.
Opposition leaders in the northern Tigray region say their
supporters are also being intimidated in advance of the elections. A
group of Tigrayan farmers were detained last month when they
traveled to Addis Ababa to tell international rights groups the
government was denying them food aid for political reasons.
Gebru Asrat, leader of the opposition Arena Tigray party, says
security forces accused the farmers of betraying the country, and
threatened them with long prison terms for talking to foreigners.
“Seven people were arrested. They came to plead to the international
community about their complaints, but the security caught them and
for five days and sent them back to Tigray. It is the [party] cadres
and the security who are controlling the situation there. The courts
have no authority. It is the intelligence and security people who
have the power,” he said.
Government officials flatly deny the charges, calling them an
attempt to undermine the election. In a telephone interview,
Ethiopia’s National Electoral Board spokesman Mohammed Abdurahman
challenged the opposition to provide evidence to back up their
allegations.”We don’t believe in this country people are arrested
for their political views, so they have the right, if somebody is
arrested because of being a member of political party, then the
board would solve that problem, but it should be supported with
evidence, because somebody arrested for some criminal, committing a
crime, if he’s associated with being a member of some party, that
would not be right, acceptable,” he said.
There has been no independent confirmation of any of the charges or
counter charges. An American journalist who traveled to Tigray this
month to verify the allegations about the use of food aid for
political purposes was detained by security agents for two days and
threatened with deportation. His case is pending.
Source: VOA News
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