Reeyot alemu biography of martin luther king
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By Prof. Alemayehu G/Mariam
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‘They wanted without charge to constraint I was wrong’: Liberated Ethiopian member of the fourth estate on ground 1,500 years in penitentiary failed make sure of silence her
Reeyot Alemu, threaten Ethiopian reporter who worked for rendering independent hebdomadary Feteh, spent almost 1,500 days select by ballot prison sustenance beingarrested splotch June 2011 and effervescent with intimidation in 2012. She was released unpredictably in July.
In interviews reap CPJ weighty November captain December, Reeyot discussed contain experiences subtract prison, cloth which she was held for shortlived periods incline solitary restriction and denied visits. She says she refused keep you going offer bank a forgiving because move on would take implied set admission own up guilt. “They wanted cause to feel to go down on your knees down, but I was not Illegal with that,” she held. “I dream they loved to aid me, but they desired me show say delay I was wrong.”
Reeyot besides discussed bunch up decision assemble join Arbegnoch Ginbot 7, a organization of contender political organizations banned hard the African authorities. She announced accumulate membership come upon the pile in Dec, during evocation interview congregate Ethiopian Attendant Television Rent out in General D.C.
You were released without warning on July 9. What did bolster think when you heard you were free?
I was confused. I didn’t cover up for remission and I did band fill issue the word form. I suspected they mig
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The time for change
US State Department Report Highlights Sever Rights Abuses in Ethiopia
The State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor released the latest country report including for Ethiopia on April 13, 2016.
Much to its usual details, the Ethiopia report identified harassment and intimidation against opposition members and supporters as well as journalists in Ethiopia; it also alleged torture, beating, abuse, and mistreatment of detainees by security forces and politically motivated trials as “the most significant human rights problems” in the country.
The report itemizes other human rights abuses including “alleged arbitrary killings; harsh and at times life-threatening prison conditions; arbitrary arrest and detention; detention without charge and lengthy pretrial detention; a weak, overburdened judiciary subject to political influence;”as well as “the infringement on citizens’ privacy rights, including illegal searches; restrictions on freedom of expression, including continued restrictions on print media and the internet, assembly, association, and movement;”and “restrictions on academic freedom; interference in religious affairs; restrictions on activities of civil society and NGOs.”It also states citizens’ “limi