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Ethiopia continued its transition from a unitary to a federal system of government,
under the leadership of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. According to international
and local observers, the 2000 national elections generally were free and fair
in most areas; however, serious election irregularities occurred in the Southern
Region, particularly in Hadiya zone. The Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Democratic
Front (EPRDF) and affiliated parties held 519 of 548 seats in the federal parliament
(elected in 2000). EPRDF and affiliated parties also held all regional councils
by large majorities. The Addis Ababa regional council remained dissolved at
year's end, with new elections not expected to take place until May 2005. Although
political parties predominantly were ethnically based, opposition parties were
engaged in a gradual process of consolidation. Ethnic conflict continued during
the year in the Gambella region after the December 2003 killing of eight government
workers by unknown assailants and retaliatory killings of Anuak civilians by
local mobs, which included some army and police members. The judiciary was weak
and overburdened but continued to show signs of independence; progress was made
in reducing the backlog of cases. Local administrative, police and judicial
systems remained weak throughout the country.
The security forces consist of the military, federal and local
police, and local militias. The police have primary responsibility for internal
security, but local militias outside police command also operated as local security
forces. The army is responsible for external security but also has some domestic
security responsibilities, particularly along borders with neighboring countries.
The Federal Police Commission and the Federal Prisons Administration are subordinate
to the Ministry of Federal Affairs, which in turn is accountable to the Parliament.
The military consists of both air and ground forces and reports to the Ministry
of National Defense. Military forces continued to conduct a number of low level
operations against the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), the Somalia based Al Ittihad
Al Islami terrorist organization, and elements of the Ogaden National Liberation
Front (ONLF). While civilian authorities generally maintained effective control
of the security forces, there were some instances in which elements of the security
forces acted independently of government authority. Members of the security
forces committed serious human rights abuses.
The economy was agriculture-based, with more than 85 percent
of the estimated population of 71 million living in rural areas under basic
conditions and engaged in small leasehold subsistence farming. Agriculture accounted
for approximately 45 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). GDP grew 6.7 percent
during the year. Inflation remained steady at 5.5 percent, according to the
International Monetary Fund. In urban centers, the majority of economic activity
was in the informal sector. Drought, crop failures, and extensive livestock
losses adversely affected approximately 7 million persons during the year, and
caused GDP growth to slow. Trade regulations were liberalized, but still favored
EPRDF owned businesses. The Government continued to implement an economic reform
program designed to stabilize the country's financial position, promote private
sector participation in the economy, and attract foreign investment; however,
some impediments to investment remained, petty corruption was widespread, and
there were approximately 200 government owned enterprises that had not been
privatized by year's end.
The Government's human rights record remained poor; although
there were improvements, serious problems remained. Security forces committed
a number of unlawful killings, including alleged political killings, and beat,
tortured, and mistreated detainees. Prison conditions remained poor. The Government
continued to arrest and detain persons arbitrarily, particularly those suspected
of sympathizing with or being members of the OLF. Thousands of suspects remained
in detention without charge, and lengthy pretrial detention continued to be
a problem. The Government infringed on citizens' privacy rights, and the law
regarding search warrants was often ignored. The Government restricted freedom
of the press; however, compared with previous years, there were fewer reports
that journalists were arrested, detained or punished for writing articles critical
of the Government. Journalists continued to practice self censorship. The Government
at times restricted freedom of assembly, particularly for members of opposition
political parties; security forces at times used excessive force to disperse
demonstrations. The Government limited freedom of association, but the nongovernmental
organization (NGO) registration process continued to improve. On occasion, local
authorities infringed on freedom of religion. The Government eliminated the
requirement for residents to obtain exit visas before leaving the country. Numerous
internally displaced persons (IDPs) from internal ethnic conflicts remained
in the country. Violence and societal discrimination against women and abuse
of children remained problems. Female genital mutilation (FGM) was widespread
but leadership efforts to curb such practices made some inroads. The exploitation
of children for economic and sexual purposes remained a problem. Trafficking
in persons remained a serious problem. Societal discrimination against persons
with disabilities and discrimination against religious and ethnic minorities
continued. Interethnic clashes resulted in deaths. The Government continued
low-level interference in unions. Forced labor, including forced child labor,
continued to be a problem, particularly in the informal sector.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including
Freedom From:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
Security forces committed many unlawful killings, including
some alleged political killings, during the year. There were numerous reports
of unlawful killings during the year.
The opposition All Ethiopia Unity Party (AEUP) reported that
government militia and soldiers killed l1 of their supporters in the period
from December 2003 to May 2004. For example, on March 29, government militiamen
Gashaw Melese and Dessalegn Damtew reportedly murdered AEUP member Dessalegn
Simegn of Ebinet District, South Gondar Zone. On April 29, government militia
killed AEUP district council member Hailu Zelleke in Gishe Rabel District. On
May 15, government militia murdered AEUP Youth League leader Getiye Alagaw.
No actions were taken against the perpetrators by year's end.
The opposition Southern Ethiopia People's Democratic Coalition
(SEPDC) reported that district police shot and killed one of its supporters,
Aeliso Tieliso, while he was having lunch in his home in Megacho Locality, Giibe
District, Southern Region, on December 28, 2003. The suspected police officer
was not detained and there was no investigation of the killing.
A Parliament-appointed commission investigating ethnic violence
in Gambella Region occurring between December 2003 and May 2004 found evidence
of military involvement in the extra-judicial killings of 13 Anuak civilians.
On March 20 according to unconfirmed reports, soldiers seeking revenge for the
death of a soldier were reported to have summarily executed eight elderly Anuak
men in the village of Chobo (see Section 5).
Unlike in the previous year, there were no reports that persons
died from torture while in government custody.
There continued to be reports of unlawful killings by security
forces, particularly in the Oromiya and the Somali Regions. For example, on
March 1, district police shot and killed Alemu Tesfaye, a ninth-grade student
in Tikur Inchine, Oromiya Region, during a student protest. Amelework Buli,
a female high-school student in Nekemte, Oromiya Region, died from a police
beating she sustained at her high school, although the Government and police
claimed she died from natural causes.
Regional government officials from Somali Region reported that
military personnel fired upon a vehicle carrying civilians on June 15, killing
ten persons, after the military vehicle in which the soldiers were traveling
collided with the civilian vehicle around the town of Gode.
There were no developments in the following cases from 2003:
The death in police custody of Abera Hey; the August killing of two men in Addis
Ababa by Federal Police forces; and the December killings of five persons in
a bar in Addis Ababa by a man in military uniform. Federal Police reported that
the individual was not a solider, but a person with mental disabilities, who
remained in custody at year's end.
There were no developments in the reported 2002 cases of killings
by security forces.
Armed elements of the OLF and ONLF continued to operate within
the country and clashed with government forces on several occasions, resulting
in the death of an unknown number of civilians and government forces.
At year's end, there were approximately 2 million landmines
in the country, many dating from the 1998 to 2000 war with Eritrea. The Government
de-mining unit continued to make limited progress in its survey and de-mining
of border areas. U.N. Peacekeeping Mission in Eritrea and Ethiopia officials
reported that some new landmines were planted on both sides of the Ethiopian
Eritrean border during the year. Through July, officials reported a total of
11 deaths and 10 injuries caused by unexploded landmines and ordnances during
the year.
On April 29, an unidentified person threw a hand grenade into
a television room at Addis Ababa University (AAU) during a Tigrigna language
news program, killing one student and injuring eight others. Police arrested
suspects in connection with the incident, some of whom were AAU students who
had been suspended following January protests (see Section 1.c.). As of year's
end, the suspects were released on bail, but the case remained pending.
On May 3, an unidentified person threw a hand grenade into
a shop owned by a Tigrayan woman in Debre Zeit, Oromiya Region, killing her
Tigrayan relative. Police blamed the OLF for the attack.
There were no developments in the investigation into the July
2003 bombing of the Segen Hotel in Addis Ababa, which injured 31 persons, or
in the September 2003 bombing of a passenger train near Adiquala, which killed
two persons and injured nine.
Ethnic clashes resulted in hundreds of deaths during the year
(see Section 5).
The Federal High Court in Addis Ababa continued to arraign
and prosecute those formally charged with committing genocide and other war
crimes, including extrajudicial killings, under the 1975-1991 Derg regime (see
Section 1.e.).
b. Disappearance
There were some reported cases of disappearances perpetrated
by government forces during the year, some of which may have been politically
motivated. In nearly all cases, security forces abducted persons without warrants
and detained them in undisclosed locations for varying lengths of time ranging
from weeks to months. For example, in May, security forces abducted Jigsa Soressa,
a guard at Mecha and Tulema Association (MTA)-–an influential Oromo political,
social and cultural organization. Soressa was reportedly still being detained
at Addis Ababa Prison at year's end.
There was no new information regarding the whereabouts of Ahmad
Haji Wase, an information officer for the Afar Regional Government, who was
detained in an undisclosed location in December 2003 for a report he wrote about
fighting between Afar rebels and government troops.
The Government reported that Mesfin Itana, Yilma Mosisa, and
Gdissa Mosisa, who were believed to have disappeared after being detained in
connection with the September 2002 bombing of the Tigray Hotel in Addis Ababa,
were in government custody and awaiting trial (see Section 1.a.). Several young
Oromo businessmen remained missing at year's end.
The whereabouts of Oromo singer Raya Abamecha remained unknown
at year's end. The Government stated it had no information about his case and
had not opened an investigation. There was no new information regarding this
case during the year.
There was no information regarding the whereabouts of several
young Oromo businessmen reported missing at the end of 2003.
There was no new information about any of the 39 persons reported
in a March 2003 report by the Ethiopian Human Rights Council (EHRCO) to have
disappeared at the hands of government security forces.
In 2003, the Government conducted an investigation into the
2002 abduction from a bus and subsequent murder of 32 Nuer IDPs. Ten regional
government officials, including four police officers, were arrested in connection
with the murders. This case remained pending at year's end.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment
The Constitution prohibits the use of torture and mistreatment;
however, there were numerous credible reports during the year that security
officials often beat or mistreated detainees. Opposition political parties reported
frequent and systematic abuse of their supporters by police and government militias.
Unlike in the previous year, there were no reports of death
due to torture during the year.
AEUP supporters reported attacks by government militia against
them escalated during the year. Local officials often turned a blind eye to
these attacks or were complicit in them. On May 5, government militia assaulted
Habtamu Baye of Seha Tefases Farmers Association in Shebel Berenta District
as he returned from an AEUP meeting. On May 6, government militiamen Habte Endale
and Bimirew Adal beat AEUP supporter Endashaw Alemu in Enemay District in East
Gojjam Zone, Amhara Region. On May 13, government militiamen beat AEUP party
organizer Damtew Ayele in Rabel District, North Shoa Zone, Amhara Region, according
to AEUP reports. No action was taken against those responsible.
Security forces reportedly beat persons during demonstrations
(see Section 2.b.). In late January, Federal Police responded to peaceful Oromo
student protests at Addis Ababa University (AAU) and arrested approximately
330 students. International NGOs reported that the arrested students were taken
to the Kolfe police training academy, where they were ordered to run and crawl
barefoot over sharp gravel for several hours at a time. The arrested students
were subsequently released and were expelled from AAU for the academic year.
At several Oromiya high schools and universities, police severely
beat students, teachers, and parents according to local reports. In February
and March, violence erupted in schools throughout Oromiya as students protested
the January arrest and expulsion of 330 Oromo students from AAU. The Government
blamed the student unrest in Oromiya on "anti-peace elements" supported
by the OLF, but produced no evidence of such support.
On February 25, violence broke out in Ambo Secondary School
when students demanded to have the school administrator respond to their concerns
about the suspension of the AAU students. Police entered the high school compound
to disperse students, beating several of them. On March 4, students from Ambo
high school and Addis Ketema Primary School marched to the center of town and
were dispersed by members of the Oromiya regional police who fired in the air
and later began beating the students.
On March 17, police beat dozens of high school students engaged
in a peaceful protest in Dembi Dolo, East Wollega Zone, Oromiya Region. Local
observers reported that police also beat students at three high schools in Nekemte
and detained dozens of students and teachers for weeks without charging them
(see Sections 1.d. and 5).
Security forces beat journalists in several incidents during
the year (see Section 2.a.).
Unlike in previous years, there were no reports that security
forces beat or tortured members of religious groups.
No action was taken against security forces responsible for
the January 2003 beating and torture of Nake Abebe; the February 2003 beating
of Ayele Liyew and Habtamu Liyew; the March 2003 beating of a teacher in Addis
Ababa ; the October 2003 beating of Kassa Zewdu and Sinishaw Tegegn; or the
October 2003 beating of Retta Bayih, Awoke Tegegn, Derejaw Ayehou, and Alellign
Ayalew.
There were reports during the year that army members raped
Anuak women during raids on villages in Gambella region. The Government did
not open an investigation into the December 2003 rape of two Anuak women at
gunpoint by soldiers in the town of Echeway, Gambella Region, during the outbreak
of violence against Anuaks (see Section 5), an attack that was reported by credible
witnesses.
On April 15, unidentified persons detonated a hand grenade
inside Ambo Secondary School, injuring 30 students. Police claimed to have taken
eleven suspects into custody in connection with the blast. All suspects were
released on bail at year's end, and the case against them remained pending.
During the year, ethnic clashes resulted in numerous injuries
and some deaths (see Section 5).
Prison and pretrial detention center conditions were very poor
and overcrowding remained a serious problem. Prisoners often were allocated
fewer than 21.5 square feet of sleeping space in a room that could contain up
to 200 persons. The daily meal budget was approximately 25 cents per prisoner
per day, and many prisoners had family members deliver food every day or used
their own funds to purchase food from local vendors. Prison conditions were
unsanitary, and access to medical care was not reliable. There was no budget
for prison facility maintenance. Prisoners typically were permitted daily access
to prison yards, which often included working farms, mechanical shops, and rudimentary
libraries. Prison letters must be written in Amharic, which made outside contact
difficult for non Amharic speakers; however, this restriction generally was
not enforced. In police detention centers police often physically abused detainees.
Diplomatic observers reported firsthand accounts of such beatings from AAU student
detainees in Oromiya. Visitors generally were permitted; however, they were
sometimes denied access to detainees.
There were some deaths in prison during the year due to illness
and disease; however, no statistics on the number of deaths in prison were available
at year's end. Prison officials were not forthcoming with reports of such deaths.
At least one prisoner, a Gambella police officer, died in prison while being
held in connection with ethnic-related violence (see Section 5).
In August, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
finished its nationwide training program for prison directors, and heads of
security, health, and administration on proper treatment of prisoners, including
respect for human dignity, treatment of women and children, and medical treatment
of sick detainees. In November the ICRC began a second, more advanced training
course nationwide.
Female prisoners were held separately from men; however, juveniles
sometimes were incarcerated with adults. There was only 1 juvenile remand home
for children under age 15, with the capacity to hold 150 children. Juveniles
who could not be accommodated at the juvenile remand home were incarcerated
with adults. Pretrial detainees were usually detained separately from convicted
prisoners at local police stations or in the limited Central Investigation Division
detention facility in Addis Ababa until they were charged. The law requires
that prisoners be transferred to federal prisons upon conviction; however, this
requirement sometimes was not enforced in practice.
The Government permitted independent monitoring of prisons
and police stations by the ICRC. Diplomatic missions were also granted access
upon providing advance notification to prison officials. In June, the African
Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights paid one of its occasional visits to
prisons in various parts of the country. The ICRC generally had access to federal
and regional prisons, civilian detention facilities, and police stations throughout
the country during the year, and conducted hundreds of visits involving thousands
of detainees. The ICRC was allowed to meet regularly with prisoners without
third parties being present. The ICRC received government permission to visit
military detention facilities where suspected OLF fighters were detained. The
ICRC also continued to visit civilian Eritrean nationals and Ethiopians of Eritrean
origin detained on national security grounds.
Government authorities continued to permit diplomats to visit
prominent detainees held by the Special Prosecutor's Office (SPO) for alleged
involvement in war crimes and terrorist activities.
d. Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
The Constitution prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention;
however, the Government frequently did not observe these provisions in practice.
The Federal Police Commission reports to the Ministry of Federal Affairs, which
in turn is subordinate to the Federal Parliament. Local government militias
operated as local security forces largely independent of the police and the
military. Petty corruption remained a problem with the police force, especially
among traffic policemen accused of soliciting bribes from motorists. Impunity
also remained a serious problem. The results of any police investigations into
such reported abuses were rarely disclosed publicly. However, in May, a Federal
High Court sentenced Addis Ababa police officer Mesfin Tekeba to 4 years' imprisonment
for soliciting a bribe from a taxi bus driver. The Federal Police acknowledged
that many members of its police force as well as regional police lack professionalism;
a reform process supported in part by major donor governments was underway during
the year.
Following the outbreaks of violence early in the year, due
in part to improved command and control and better training, police forces,
particularly in chronically troubled areas, became more adept at avoiding confrontations
and better at calibrating their responses to avoid escalating spirals of violence.
Police forces also improved their ability to identify tensions earlier and accelerate
their response.
The Government continued its efforts to train police and army
recruits in human rights, and sought assistance from the ICRC in improving and
professionalizing its human rights training and revamping its human rights training
curriculum to include more material on the Constitution and international human
rights treaties and conventions. In September, the ICRC conducted a 2-day human
rights training for approximately 800 local leaders in the conflict-prone Oromiya
region.
Under the Criminal Procedure Code, any person detained must
be informed of the charges within 48 hours and, in most cases, be offered release
on bail. Bail was not available for some offenses, such as murder, treason,
and corruption. In most cases, bail was set between $115 (1,000 Birr) and $1,150
(10,000 Birr), which was beyond the reach of most citizens. Suspects of serious
offenses could be detained for 14 days while police conduct an investigation
if a panel of judges ordered it, and for additional 14 day periods while the
investigation continues. In practice and particularly in the outlying regions,
authorities regularly detained persons without warrants, did not charge them
within 48 hours, and, if persons were released on bail, never recalled them
to court. The law also prohibits detention in anything less than an official
detention center; however, there were dozens of crude detention centers at the
local level used by local government militia. The Government provided public
defenders for detainees who were unable to afford private legal counsel, but
only when their cases came before the court. While in detention, such detainees
were allowed little or no contact with their legal counsel.
There were many reports from opposition party members that
in small towns persons were detained in police stations for long periods without
access to a judge and that sometimes these persons' whereabouts were unknown
for several months. Opposition parties registered many complaints during the
year that government militias beat and detained their supporters without charge
for participating in opposition political rallies (see Section 1.c.).
The AEUP reported that on April 27, government militia detained
three of its members–-Alem Eniyew, Geta Mitiku, and Gebeyu Mitiku–-in
Enessie District, Amhara Region, for refusing to cancel their AEUP membership.
On April 28, Enemay District officials ordered the arrest and imprisonment of
five members of AEUP's executive committee. On May 3, police arrested Mulugeta
Wassie in Metchera town, Fentale District, North Shoa Zone, Amhara Region, for
distributing AEUP information leaflets.
Police also reportedly detained Oromiya National Congress (ONC)
member Olbana Lelisa on suspicion of his support for the OLF. Police kept him
in a crowded room at the police station for nearly 2 months without filing charges
before he was released on July 20. According to his reports, police tried to
coerce him to denounce the ONC publicly and to link the ONC with the OLF in
exchange for an end to police harassment.
No further information was available by year's end about the
May 2003 arrest of three Eritrean members of the Eritrean opposition group Movement
for Democratic Change for their support of the Ethiopia-Eritrea Boundary Commission
ruling.
On April 20, 200 persons, alleged to be members of the opposition
AEUP, were arrested in Northern Shoa, Debre-Sina District and released after
being harassed. Party members Mersha Haile, Wessene Gizaw, Girum Tadesse, and
Minda Gizaw, residents of Northern Shoa were arrested for periods ranging from
7 to 30 days for unknown reasons.
The Government continued its harassment of teachers during
the year, particularly in Oromiya and Tigray. The independent Ethiopian Teachers
Association (ETA) reported that numerous teachers were detained and accused
of being OLF sympathizers, many of who remained in prison at year's end. Some
of the teachers have been in detention for several years without charges. Such
cases were remanded at least 10 to 15 times, for 2 weeks each time, and the
courts allowed police to conduct investigations that continued for months. In
addition, judges were shifted among cases, failed to show up for hearings, or
new judges were not reassigned in time for hearing dates upon the death or incapacity
of assigned judges. While lack of capacity within the judicial system contributed
to this problem, several of the prolonged detentions were suspected to be politically
motivated. During an outbreak of student unrest in schools across Oromiya, police
detained hundreds of Oromo students and teachers for several weeks in detention
centers on suspicion of being supporters of the OLF (see Section 1.c.). For
example, on April 2, police were said to have detained without a warrant Alemitu
Biru, a teacher at Burayu Elementary School in Holleta, Oromiya Region, and
held her incommunicado for over 3 weeks.
Police entered private residences and arrested people without
court warrants. On April 7, police entered and searched the homes of eleven
teachers in Debre Zeit, Oromiya Region, without a court order. Police later
detained those eleven teachers for several weeks without charging them. On April
9, in the towns of Guder and Ambo in Oromiya Region police entered the homes
of 60 people, mostly teachers, on suspicion that they were supporters of the
OLF. The teachers whose houses were searched include Mosisa Futasa, Abebe Chimdi,
and Dhinsa Serbessa.
Police officials did not respect court orders to release suspects
on bail. For example, on July 22 and 23, the Federal First Instance Court ordered
police to grant bail for Executive Committee members of the MTA. MTA Executive
Committee members Dirbi Demissie, Gemechu Feyera, Sintayehu Workineh, Dabas
Wakjira, and Shiferaw Ansermu had been held in detention for over two months.
They were released on US$1,150 (10,000 Birr) bail on August 9; however, police
rearrested Gemechu and Sintayehu when they went back to the police station to
pick up their personal property. Demissie, Feyera, Workneh and Wakjira were
released on bail at year's end. However, Ansermu was rearrested on his way to
work at Ethiopian Television.
Police detained journalists during the year (see Section 2.a.).
Police detained persons for holding meetings and demonstrations
during the year (see Section 2.b.).
Opposition groups alleged that some of the persons detained
by the SPO were held for political reasons, an allegation that the Government
denied (see Section 1.e.).
In response to attacks by armed opposition groups operating
out of Somalia and Kenya, the military continued to conduct operations around
border areas. The vast majority of military interventions took place in the
Gambella, Somali, and Oromiya Regions. Occasional detentions were reported during
these operations.
Parliamentary immunity protected members of the House from
arrest or prosecution except in the act of committing a crime ("flagrante
delicto").
Berhanu Nega and Mesfin Woldemariam, two prominent academics
and human rights activists charged with inciting AAU students to riot in 2001,
were ordered by the Federal High Court to prepare to present their defense for
a trial in July 2005.
The following detainees remained in custody at year's end:
Alazar Dessie, an American citizen working as a consultant to the Commercial
Bank of Ethiopia, who was arrested and charged with abuse of power (a nonbailable
offense) and has been awaiting trial for over 3 years; 24 businessman and government
officials, who were arrested in 2001 under allegations of corruption but were
never charged formally; and the official driver of the Eritrean Embassy, who
was arrested in 2001 and whose whereabouts remained unknown.
Thousands of criminal suspects reportedly remained in detention--some
for years--without charge. Some of the detainees were teachers and students
from Oromiya accused of involvement in OLF activities or were arrested after
student unrest broke out in Oromiya in February and March.
The Government detained several persons without charge at the
Gondar Prison, some for years, while the police investigated their cases. Muche
Berihun, who was charged with murder although the person whom he allegedly murdered
was killed after he was detained, was held in solitary confinement for 3½
years. His hearing began in 2002; however, the court adjourned and the status
of the hearing was unknown at year's end. He remained in detention at year's
end. Wondante Mesfin has been in detention in Nefas Mewcha Prison in South Gondar
Zone since 1994 and has never appeared in court nor been charged formally. According
to AEUP reports, there was no change in his status during the year.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary; however,
the judiciary remained weak and overburdened. Although the federal and regional
courts continued to show signs of judicial independence, in practice severe
shortages of adequately trained personnel in many regions, as well as serious
financial constraints, combined to deny citizens the full protections provided
by the Constitution.
The Government continued to decentralize and restructure the
judiciary along federal lines with the establishment of courts at the district,
zonal, and regional levels. The federal High Court and federal Supreme Court
heard and adjudicated original and appeal cases involving federal law, transregional
issues, and national security. The regional judiciary was increasingly autonomous,
with district, zonal, high, and supreme courts mirroring the structure of the
federal judiciary. Two three judge benches at the High Court level handled criminal
cases. Prior to 2002, the federal High Court and federal Supreme Court heard
regional cases, due to the lack of well-established regional courts. Due to
the strengthening of the regional courts since 2002, regional cases were more
often heard locally.
Regional offices of the federal Ministry of Justice monitored
local judicial developments. Some regional courts had jurisdiction over both
local and federal matters, as the federal courts in those jurisdictions had
not begun operation; overall, the federal judicial presence in the regions was
limited. Anecdotal evidence suggested that some local officials believed they
were not accountable to a higher authority. Pending the passage by regional
legislatures of laws particular to their region, all judges are guided by the
federal procedural and substantive codes.
To remedy the severe lack of experienced staff in the judicial
system, the Government continued to identify and train lower court judges and
prosecutors, although officials acknowledged that the pay scale offered did
not attract the required numbers of competent professionals.
According to the Constitution, accused persons have the right
to a public trial by an ordinary court of law within a "reasonable time"
after having been charged and the right to be represented by legal counsel of
their choice; however, in practice, lengthy pretrial detention was common, closed
proceedings occurred, and at times, detainees were allowed little or no contact
with their legal counsel (see Section 1.d.). Although the Constitution provides
for a presumption of innocence, defendants did not enjoy this protection in
practice. The public defender's office provides legal counsel to indigent defendants,
although its scope remained severely limited, particularly with respect to SPO
trials. Access to prosecutorial evidence before a trial was routinely denied
to the defense, even though there is no law forbidding this and the law explicitly
stipulates that persons charged with corruption are to be shown the body of
evidence against them prior to their trials.
The Constitution provides legal standing to some pre existing
religious and customary courts and gives federal and regional legislatures the
authority to recognize other courts. By law, all parties to a dispute must agree
before a customary or religious court may hear a case. Shari'a (Islamic) courts
may hear religious and family cases involving Muslims. In addition, other traditional
systems of justice, like councils of elders, continued to function. Although
not sanctioned by law, these traditional courts resolved disputes for the majority
of citizens who lived in rural areas and who generally had little access to
formal judicial systems.
On October 28, the Federal First Instance Court's Seventh Criminal
Branch began operation. The court was established to handle cases of sexual
abuse against women and children. During hearings, victims were physically separated
from the accused, and provided testimony to the court via a closed circuited
television system. By year's end, the court had delivered six guilty verdicts
in sexual abuse cases, and imposed penalties ranging from 4 to 20 years.
Three federal judges sat on one bench to hear all cases of
juvenile offenses. There was a large backlog of juvenile cases and accused children
often remained in detention with adults until their cases were heard.
The outbreak of hostilities with Eritrea in 1998 adversely
impacted the military justice system. Most foreign assistance to train officers
and noncommissioned officers was suspended at the same time that the rapid expansion
of the military greatly increased the need for trained military lawyers and
judges. This training need remained unmet by year's end.
There was no new information on the activities of the SPO,
established in 1992 to create an historical record of the abuses committed during
the Mengistu Government (1975 91, also known as the Dergue regime) and to bring
to justice those criminally responsible for human rights violations. Approximately
1,000 persons remained in detention for Dergue-era offenses. Court appointed
attorneys, sometimes with inadequate skills and experience, represented many
of the defendants.
There were reports the Government detained approximately 100
political prisoners, and the Government permitted ICRC access on a regular basis.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home,
or Correspondence
The law requires judicial search warrants to search private
property; however, in practice, particularly outside of Addis Ababa, police
often searched property without obtaining warrants (see Section 1.d.). Opposition
party representatives claimed that police sometimes used fraudulent warrants
to enter homes and commit criminal acts, including money extortion. There were
reports that members of the Federal Police robbed persons during the year, including
through the use of false warrants.
There continued to be reports that police forcibly entered
the homes of civilians. There also were reports that security forces took persons
from their homes in the middle of the night without warrants. For example, Oromo
students accused of detonating hand grenades at Ambo Secondary School in April
were reportedly rounded up from their residences in the middle of the night.
Opposition party members reported that their homes were burned
down and their offices looted (see Section 3).
The Government arbitrarily monitored private communication
such as Internet communications and phone conversations. All electronic communications
facilities were state owned. The Government also used a system of paid informants
to report on the activities of particular individuals.
There were reports during the year of the forced displacement
of families in rural areas. The Government said that its resettlement program,
which moved families from drought prone areas to more fertile lands, was entirely
voluntary, but opposition parties accused local authorities in some rural areas
of targeting opposition supporters for resettlement by manipulating resettlement
rosters. NGOs such as Doctors Without Borders reported that in several instances,
the Government had resettled persons to areas with no existing infrastructure
or clean water supply, resulting in unusually high rates of infant mortality.
Unlike in previous years, there were no reports that the Government,
in an attempt to "clean up" Addis Ababa, forcibly resettled indigent
persons to areas outside of the city
There continued to be credible reports during the year from
EHRCO and opposition parties that in certain rural areas in the Southern Region,
Oromiya Region, and Amhara Region, local officials used threats of land redistribution
and withholding of food aid and fertilizer to garner support for the ruling
coalition. There were many reports of ruling party or government harassment
intended to prevent individuals from joining opposition parties or from renting
property to them. There were numerous reports of more serious forms of harassment
and violence directed against members of opposition parties in many areas of
the country, including beatings, house burnings, and murder (see Sections 1.c.,
1.d., and 3).
There also were credible reports that teachers and other government
workers had their employment terminated if they belonged to opposition political
parties.
According to the SEPDC, the regional government continued to
dismiss its members--particularly teachers--from their jobs. In response, the
regional government asserted that employees of the Government should implement
government policy. The region accuses employees who were opposition party members
of not carrying out government policy.
The family law code imposes a 6 month waiting period on anyone
seeking to remarry following a divorce or the death of one's spouse (see Section
5). The Government maintained that this waiting period was necessary to determine
whether a woman may still be carrying the child of her former spouse.
Security forces detained family members of persons sought for
questioning by the Government, such as suspected members of OLF.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of speech and press;
however, the Government restricted these rights in practice. The Government
continued to prosecute journalists and editors for publishing allegedly fabricated
information and for other violations of the press law. The Government controlled
all broadcast media. Private and government journalists routinely practiced
self censorship. Nonetheless, the private press remained active and often published
articles that were extremely critical of the Government.
The independent print media were active and expressed a wide
variety of views, although their access to the executive, legislative, and judicial
branches of the Government was restricted and they were subject to intimidation
and harassment by the Government.
Despite the constant threat of legal action, the private press
continued to publish articles critical of the Government and to report on human
rights abuses. While much of the private press continued to lack professionalism
in its reporting, some print media continued developing into more responsible
publications. Several publications were tied to distinct ethnic groups, particularly
the Amharas and Oromos, and severely criticized the Government for being ethnocentric.
The Government continued to control all radio and television
broadcast media. Although the law allows for private radio stations, a regulatory
mechanism was not in place, and there were no independent radio stations. Broadcasting
time on state-run Radio Ethiopia was sold to private groups and to individuals
who wanted to buy spots for programs and commercials. The Government operated
the sole television station and tightly controlled news broadcasts. In September,
the Ethiopian Broadcasting Agency invited interested parties to apply for licenses
for two new private FM stations, although no applications were filed by year's
end. The Broadcasting Law prohibits political and religious organizations from
owning broadcast stations. Foreign ownership is also prohibited.
There were no restrictions on access to international news
broadcasts. Ownership of private satellite receiving dishes and the importation
of facsimile machines and modems were permitted; however, access to this technology
was restricted by its high cost and the limited capacity of the sole telecommunications
entity, the Ethiopian Telecommunications Corporation.
Foreign journalists continued to operate freely and often wrote
articles critical of government policies. They or their local affiliates were
often granted greater access to government officials than were local independent
journalists. Several foreign news organizations staffed offices in Addis Ababa
with local journalists who operated free of government restriction.
There were reports that police harassed, beat, and detained
journalists during the year. For example, on March 29, armed police beat Atnafu
Alemayehu, deputy editor-in-chief of Tobia newspaper and magazine, at Kara Kore
in Oromiya State after Atnafu made enquiries into resident's complaints about
the demolition of their houses. Atnafu was detained for 1 day and was released
after posting bail of $115 (1,000 Birr) at Alemgena police station. Atnafu appealed
to the police station about the beating and confiscation of the tape recorder.
Wondwosen Gebrekiidan, former Editor in Chief of Itop newspaper was arrested
on December 23 and released on December 31. Shiferaw Ansermu was arrested and
released three times durign the year, and at year's end, was detained at Addis
Ababa Prison.
The Government used statutory provisions on the publication
of false information, incitement of ethnic hatred, libel, and publication of
articles offensive to public morality to justify the arrest and detention of
journalists. Independent journalists accused the Government of selectively applying
sections of the penal code to levy charges against them. Journalists were charged,
detained, and fined during the year.
For example, in May, Leul Seboka, editor-in-chief of the Amharic
weekly newspaper Seife Nebelbal, was charged at the Federal High Court for publishing
a poem viewed by the prosecutor as "inciting violence among the public
to secede from a region that is established by constitutional order."
Befekadu Moreda, owner and editor-in-chief of the private Amharic
weekly newspaper Tomar, was indicted in January by the Federal Prosecutor General
for an alleged violation of the Ethiopian Press Freedom Proclamation. The charges
stemmed from an article published in 2001 about a 2000 riot in Addis Ababa.
Wossenseged Gebre Kidan, editor-in-chief of the private weekly
Amharic-language Ethop, was prosecuted during the year for allegedly publishing
a false report in 2002 concerning a terrorist attack on the Tigray Hotel in
Addis Ababa.
In June, Tewodros Kassa, the former editor of the private Amharic-language
weekly Ethop, was nearing the end of his 2-year prison term, but was newly convicted
on 4-year-old criminal defamation charges and sentenced to a further 3 months
in prison, and was released after serving the additional sentence.
In April, Debassa Wakjira and Shiferaw Ansermu, two journalists
of the state-owned Oromo Service of Ethiopian Television, were arrested for
allegedly passing information to the OLF. The two journalists were arrested
with officials of the MTA (see Section 1.d.). All except Shiferaw Ansermu were
released.
At year's end, one journalist was in prison on press charges,
approximately 54 journalists remained in self-imposed exile, and a number of
journalists in the country were facing criminal charges.
There were reports during the year that 10 journalists from
the government media and the private press fled the country or were missing.
There were reports that three Ethiopian Television journalists (Mohammed Ahmed,
Keriyat Ismael, and Lemlem Fanta) had fled the country for Kenya. No details
were available on why the journalists had fled.
All official media received government subsidies; however,
the official media were legally autonomous and responsible for their own management
and partial revenue generation. The Ministry of Information was the Government's
official spokesperson and managed contacts between the Government, the press,
and the public; however, the Government routinely refused to respond to queries
from the private press and often limited its cooperation with the press to the
government-run Ethiopian News Agency, the EPRDF-controlled Walta news agency,
and correspondents of international news organizations. The Prime Minister's
office continued to deny all access to the independent press for coverage of
official events at the Prime Minister's office, limiting such coverage and access
to government media representatives. Reporters admitted that they routinely
practiced self-censorship.
The Ministry of Information required that newspapers show a
bank balance of $1,150 (10,000 Birr) at the time of their annual registration
for a license to publish. This sum effectively precluded some smaller publications
from registering. Permanent residency also was required for publishers to establish
a newspaper. The Government did not require residency for other business owners,
and some independent journalists maintained that the residency requirement was
used as a form of intimidation. The press law requires all publishers to provide
free copies of their publications to the Ministry of Information on the day
of publication.
The majority of private newspapers as well as government newspapers
were printed at government owned presses; however, there were no reports that
the independent media was unable to print articles. Police had the authority
to shut down any printing press without a court order, but did not exercise
that power during the year.
The former Ethiopian Free Press Journalists Association (EFPJA)
and its leadership remained banned throughout the year. A new association, bearing
the same name, was established and new executive officers were elected in January
at a meeting facilitated by the Ministry of Justice. In February, the Ministry
of Justice gave recognition to the newly elected leadership of EFPJA. Representatives
of the old EFPJA continued to protest the Government's ban on the original association
and its leaders, and filed charges against the Ministry of Justice claiming
that the ban was illegal and politically motivated. A court ruled the original
EFPJA had to be reinstated, but the Government had yet to do so at year's end.
The Ethiopian Women's Media Association, which included both
government and private journalists, remained active during the year. The association
organized training and workshops and published a journal.
The Government did not restrict Internet access.
The Government restricted academic freedom during the year.
The Government maintained that professors could do research in any field in
their discipline but that they could not espouse political sentiments. Teachers
at all levels were not permitted to deviate from official lesson plans. AAU
students were prohibited from forming associations on the basis of their ethnicity.
Political activity was discouraged on university campuses. There were unconfirmed
reports that uniformed police officers were visible on campuses and that plainclothes
security officers tried to blend in with the student body. While student governments
were permitted, many students refrained from involvement in any on-campus activity
that could be considered political in nature by the Government. According to
a 2002 survey conducted by the ETA of 280 public universities and secondary
schools throughout the country, nearly 90 percent of the school directors and
vice directors of those schools belonged to the ruling party or its affiliates.
Students and teachers were arrested during the year (see Section 1.d.).
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of assembly; however,
the Government restricted this right in practice. Organizers of large public
meetings or demonstrations must notify the Government 72 hours in advance and
obtain a permit. There were several reports during the year that permits were
denied to opposition political parties. Opposition parties also reported long,
unexplained delays by the regional authorities in issuing permits and last minute
revocations of permits.
Opposition political parties reported that their supporters
were the targets of frequent and systematic violence by ruling party supporters
during the year, often after leaving meetings (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and
3).
The AEUP, SEPDC, and ONC charged the district and regional
authorities with deliberately obstructing their attempts to hold public meetings.
The independent ETA continued to encounter government restrictions while attempting
to hold meetings or demonstrations.
After notifying government officials, MTA organized a peaceful
demonstration on January 4, where approximately 10,000 Oromo residents of Addis
Ababa and its environs gathered at Meskel Square in the city center to urge
the federal Government to reverse its decision to transfer the capital of Oromiya
from Addis Ababa to Adama (formerly known as Nazret). Police reportedly beat
and arrested demonstrators including elders, youth, and women. The Government
claimed that the MTA did not have the required permit to conduct the rally.
All demonstrators were released and no action was taken against the police.
A January protest by Oromo students at AAU resulted in several
hundred arrests and the subsequent expulsion of 330 students. During their 2-day
detention, many of these students were forced to kneel on gravel for hours (see
Section 1.c.).
In March, the residents of Aby Adi, a town in Tigray region,
conducted a peaceful demonstration, protesting the lack of electricity, usable
roads, and running water. Three members of the Tigray People's Liberation Front
(TPLF) Central Committee reportedly threatened to arrest the organizers of the
demonstration if they did not apologize. According to reports, the Government
also sent security agents to prevent any further protests. The Government rejected
requests to hold similar protests in the Tigrayan towns of Maichew and Samre.
In March, police broke up an authorized protest march by students
at Alemaya Agricultural University, protesting the move of Oromiya's capital
to Adama and demanding the release of detained AAU students. Police arrested
some protesters before the protest left the campus, according to press reports.
There were numerous reports of protest-related arrests of students across the
Oromo region early in the year (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 5).
The Government has still not released the results of its investigation
into the 2002 demonstration in Awassa, the capital of the Southern Region, in
which police killed and injured dozens of peaceful protesters. No further information
was available on the status of the individuals arrested in cases related to
the Awassa demonstration and the killing of the head of the Southern Region's
education bureau, some of whom were held incommunicado.
No further action was taken against security forces who forcibly
dispersed demonstrations in 2003 or 2002. It was unknown at year's end if persons
detained in previous years for holding illegal meetings remained in detention.
The Constitution provides for freedom of association and the
right to engage in unrestricted peaceful political activity; however, the Government
limited this right in practice. A number of policy issues regarding NGOs remained
unresolved, including the ability of NGOs to enter into formal network arrangements
that would enable them to pool funds. However, there was some improvement in
transparency of the NGO registration process. The Ministry of Justice administers
primary registration. The Government continued to deny an operating license
to the Human Rights League (see Section 4).
As provided by law, the Government required political parties
to register with the National Election Board (NEB). Parties that did not participate
in two consecutive national elections were subject to deregistration. There
were approximately 69 organized political parties; 13 were national parties,
and the remainder operated in limited areas. There were no reports during the
year that any political party had its registration revoked.
During the year, the Government repeatedly arrested persons
allegedly involved with the MTA, including the president, vice president, members
of the executive committee and staff, and two gate guards. Some arrests appear
to have been made without warrants, and some detentions continued despite court
orders to release suspects (see Section 1.d.). The organization complained of
illegal searches of its premises. In July, the Government suspended the MTA's
permit to operate, effectively banning the organization, on the basis of its
alleged involvement in organizing several acts of violence, including a grenade
attack in AAU that killed a student.
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the
Government generally respected this right in practice; however, on occasion
local authorities infringed on this right. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church (EOC)
and Islam are the dominant religions, accounting for nearly 90 percent of the
population.
The Government required that religious groups be registered.
Religious institutions register with the Ministry of Justice and must renew
their registration every year. However, the EOC has yet to register and has
never suffered ramifications for not registering. Similarly, the Ethiopian Islamic
Affairs Supreme Council (EIASC), after registering in 1995, reportedly has never
reregistered after it protested this requirement to the Prime Minister. Protests
from other religious groups over these exceptions have not resulted in equal
treatment from the Government.
Under the law, a religious organization that undertakes development
activities must register its development wing separately as an NGO. Religious
groups were given free government land for houses of worship, schools, hospitals,
and cemeteries; however, the title to the land remained with the Government,
and the land, other than that allocated for prayer houses or cemeteries, could
be taken back at any time.
Minority religious groups reported discrimination in the allocation
of government land for religious sites. A traditional animist Oromo religious
group was banned after being found to be involved in unspecified illegal activities.
The group's leaders were suspected of having close links to the OLF and MTA.
Protestant groups occasionally reported that local officials discriminated against
them when seeking land for churches and cemeteries. Evangelical leaders reported
that because they were perceived as "newcomers" they remained at a
disadvantage compared with the EOC and the EIASC in the allocation of land.
The EIASC reported that it had more difficulty obtaining land from the government
bureaucracy than the EOC while others believed the EIASC was favored for mosque
locations. Many mosques were built by squatters without city government approval
and since have been targeted for demolition.
The Government did not issue work visas to foreign religious
workers unless they were attached to the development wing of a religious organization.
While some Muslim leaders complained in the past that public
school authorities sometimes interfered with their free practice of Islam because
they prohibited the wearing of headscarves in schools, the leaders reported
that the Ministry of Education has accepted the practice of headscarves in schools
not only in Addis Ababa but also in regional areas.
Some religious property confiscated under the Mengistu regime
has not yet been returned.
Unlike in previous years, there were no violent interfaith
clashes during the year.
For a more detailed discussion, see the 2004 International
Religious Freedom Report.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Travel, Emigration,
and Repatriation
The Constitution provides for these rights; however, the Government
restricted some of these rights in practice.
In the Gambella region throughout the year, the Government
monitored and sometimes controlled the passage of relief supplies and access
by humanitarian organizations, explaining that it was doing so as a matter of
safety and security for those planning to travel in the region. For a period
following the December 13, 2003 incident, travel was restricted.
The law requiring citizens and residents to obtain an exit
visa before departing the country was eliminated in July. Eritreans and Ethiopians
of Eritrean origin had their status regularized by the Government.
Exile is prohibited and there were no reports of forced exile
during the year. A number of persons remained abroad in self imposed exile,
including 54 journalists (see Section 2.a.).
During 2003, 1,579 cases of Eritrean civilians waiting to return
to Eritrea in the country were pending with the ICRC. There were several ICRC
overseen returnee occasions during the year. Most Eritreans and Ethiopians of
Eritrean origin were registered with the Government and held identity cards
and 6 month residence permits that allowed them to gain access to hospitals
and other public services. However, there were unsubstantiated anecdotal reports
that indigent Eritreans were denied the right to seek free medical services
by government officials at the local level.
In 2002, the Government transferred at least 200 Eritrean military
deserters who had been held at the Dedesa detention center to a northern refugee
camp. UNHCR processed 178 cases in 2002 and 94 during the year for resettlement
to third countries. At year's end, it was unknown whether additional cases were
still pending. As a result of the 1998 to 2000 war with Eritrea, thousands of
persons were displaced internally. Of the approximately 350,000 IDPs resulting
from the border war, approximately 225,000 IDPs have been resettled.
Due to violent clashes between different ethnic groups during
the year, thousands of persons were killed, injured, or internally displaced
(see Section 5).
The law provides for the granting of asylum or refugee status
in accordance with the 1951 U.N. Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
or its 1967 Protocol, and the Government has established a system for providing
such protection. Parliament passed a national refugee law during the year, but
the law has not yet been published in the national gazette and thus has not
yet taken effect. In practice, the Government generally provided for protection
against refoulement, the return of persons to a country where they feared persecution,
and granted refugee status or asylum. The Government generally cooperated with
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian
organizations in assisting refugees and returning citizens.
As of September, the country hosted approximately 121,000 refugees,
down from 128,610 refugees at the end of 2003. Of these, some 89,000 Sudanese
refugees were located in 5 refugee camps in the west. As the result of the ongoing
repatriation program in the eastern camps, the number of Somali refugees decreased
to about 23,000 at 2 camps, Aysha and Kebribeyah. The Hartishek camp closed
in July. The Government, in cooperation with the UNHCR, continued to provide
temporary protection to refugees from Sudan and Somalia.
Approximately 24,500 Nuer and Dinka refugees remained in Fugnido
camp in Gambella Region at year's end. Plans to move all Nuer and Dinka refugees
from Fugnido camp were delayed indefinitely after unknown assailants, allegedly
local ethnic Anuaks, attacked a vehicle carrying local government refugee officials,
and killed eight persons in December 2003; the officials were enroute to the
proposed new camp site in the Odier-Bol area (see Section 5).
In May, Eritrean refugees were moved from the Wa'ala Nhibi
temporary camp to a new permanent refugee camp further from the border. The
new camp, Shimelba, holds approximately 8,200 Eritrean refugees, approximately
4,200 of whom were ethnic Eritrean Kunamas. The Shimelba camp had only marginal
health, education, water, and sanitation facilities.
The conflict between ethnic groups in the Gambella Region complicated
UNHCR refugee protection efforts (See section 5). Food deliveries to refugees
continued in spite of the crisis in the west; however, humanitarian organizations
were unable to adequately monitor food deliveries due to travel restrictions.
Early in the year, there were unconfirmed reports of conflicts
between refugees and local residents over scarce resources.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens
to Change Their Government
The Constitution provides citizens with the right to change
their government peacefully, and citizens exercised their right to vote in the
2000 national elections that were generally free and fair in most areas but
were also marred by serious irregularities. The Constitution grants universal
adult (18 years of age) suffrage, establishes periodic elections by secret ballot,
and allows citizens to take part in the conduct of public affairs, directly
and through freely chosen representatives; however, in practice the EPRDF ruling
party dominated the Government.
According to observers organized by EHRCO, local U.N. staff,
diplomatic missions, political parties, and domestic NGOs, the 2000 national
elections and the 2001 regional elections were generally free and fair in most
areas but were marred by serious irregularities, including killings, disappearances,
voter intimidation and harassment, and unlawful detentions of opposition party
supporters, particularly in the Southern Region.
Opposition parties accused the NEB of being an instrument of
the ruling party and of failing to take meaningful action upon being informed
of electoral irregularities, including ballot stuffing, vote count fraud, bribery,
killings, beatings, and widespread intimidation and harassment by ruling party
supporters during the 2000 and 2001 elections.
The constitutionally mandated national census, which determines
popular representation in the Federal Parliament, was scheduled to be held during
the year but was postponed indefinitely due to lack of funds. There were great
disparities in regional representation in the Federal Parliament, based on 1994
census figures and 1995 voter registration. In 2003, the State Minister of Federal
Affairs publicly acknowledged that the country's nomadic communities, estimated
at 7 million persons, were still being excluded from effective democratic representation.
Of 548 seats in the House of Peoples' Representatives (HPR),
the ruling EPRDF coalition or its affiliate parties held 496 seats. The EPRDF
itself continued to be dominated by the Tigrayan ethnic group. The EPRDF affiliated
TPLF occupied 40 seats, but its influence in politics was far greater than its
numbers would suggest. The EPRDF, its affiliates, and EPRDF supporters controlled
all seats in the 108 member House of Federation, whose members were appointed
by regional governments and by the federal Government. In the Southern Region,
opposition party members held approximately 7 percent of the seats in the Regional
Council.
Elections for the Somali Region that were originally scheduled
for 2001 were finally held on January 25. EHRCO reported the regional election
was marred by significant irregularities; however, the NEB reviewed the allegations
and disputed them.
Membership in the EPRDF conferred advantages upon its members,
and the party owned many businesses and awarded jobs to loyal supporters. In
addition to the Government, only the TPLF was allowed to operate radio stations
(see Section 2.a.).
The major opposition parties continued a slow process of consolidation.
The Ethiopian Medhin Democratic Party, 1 of the 15 political organizations that
constituted the Union of Ethiopian Democratic Forces (UEDF), opened its first
office in the country in June.
In August, the Government announced that it was willing to
talk to the UEDF about concerns that the EPRDF had previously rejected outright,
such as a restructuring of the NEB to remedy a perception of bias in its composition,
the equitable distribution of media airtime access among competing parties,
the presence of international observers at the May 2005 national elections,
and revision of electoral laws the UEDF believes unfairly advantage the EPRDF.
After meeting with the UEDF in October, the EPRDF accepted many of the UEDF's
requests such as access to media airtime and international observers.
Registered political parties must receive permission from regional
governments to open local offices. Opposition parties, such as the AEUP and
the Konso Peoples Democratic Union (KPDU), reported that the pattern of widespread
intimidation and violence directed against members of opposition political parties
by local government officials continued throughout the year. Hundreds of cases
were reported by the AEUP, KPDU, and other parties or by the press. Such cases
ranged from public insults of opposition party members by local officials at
civic events to bombings, house burnings, property confiscation, and murder.
In many of the cases reported, opposition members were allegedly told they must
resign from or denounce their party membership if they wanted access to fertilizer,
other agricultural benefits, health care, or other benefits controlled by the
Government. Party meetings were often disrupted or unlawfully banned.
The KPDU reported that in late 2003 and early in the year,
the EPRDF closed KPDU offices in Fasha, Toka, Kamale, Fichucha, and Tara, and
dissolved the KPDU-dominated Abaroba and Jarsso Local Councils. These were replaced
with councils dominated by EPRDF members. Arrests and beatings of KPDU members
also were reported.
According to AEUP reports, on February 29, stones were thrown
at the house of AEUP member Bekele Tadesse, a resident of Ankober. On March
7, a bomb was thrown at the house of Zemedkun Gebre Kidane, chairman of the
AEUP organizing committee in Ankober District.
Political participation remained closed to organizations that
have not renounced violence and do not accept the Government as a legitimate
authority.
The Addis Ababa Municipal Council was dissolved by the Government
in October 2002, and members were replaced by interim members belonging entirely
to the ruling party. Under the Addis Ababa Charter, elections to fill those
seats should have been called within one year of the council's dissolution.
These elections did not take place by year's end.
The Ministry of Justice has primary responsibility to combat
corruption. According to the U.N., there was relatively little bureaucratic
corruption, although bureaucratic delays and difficulties existed. A combination
of social pressure, cultural norms, and legal restrictions were used to combat
corruption. Nevertheless, the lack of transparency in the frequent cancellation
of telecommunications, power, and other infrastructure tenders raised suspicions
of corruption. In addition, it was believed that government officials manipulated
the privatization process as state- and party-owned businesses receive preferential
access to land leases and credit.
Since its establishment in 2001, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption
Commission has arrested officials, including managers of the Privatization Agency
and the state owned Commercial Bank of Ethiopia, and private businessmen and
charged them with corruption; however, there have been no major arrests in the
last 2 years. It is a criminal offense to give or receive bribes.
The Government publishes its laws and regulations in the national
gazette prior to their taking effect.
Of the 19 members of the Council of Ministers, 1 was a woman;
2 other women held ministerial positions, and a number of women held senior
positions. There were 42 women in the 548 seat HPR, and 9 of 113 members in
the House of Federation were women. Of the 14 members of the Supreme Court,
3 were women.
The government policy of ethnic federalism led to the creation
of individual constituencies to ensure representation in the HPR of all major
ethnic groups. Nevertheless, small ethnic groups were not represented in the
legislature. There were 23 nationality groups in 6 regional states that did
not have a sufficient population to qualify for constituency seats; however,
individuals from these nationality groups competed for 23 special seats in the
548 seat HPR in the 2000 elections.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International
and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
A number of domestic and international human rights groups
operated with limited government restriction, investigating and publishing their
findings on human rights cases. The Government generally was distrustful and
wary of domestic human rights groups; however, its relationship with international
NGOs appeared to improve during the year. Two of the most prominent domestic
human rights organizations were EHRCO and the Ethiopian Women Lawyers Association
(EWLA). The Government routinely discounted EHRCO's reports and labeled it a
political organization. The EWLA's primary function was to represent women legally.
These and numerous other groups primarily engaged in civic and human rights
education, legal assistance, and trial monitoring. However, the Government neither
shared information about nor acknowledged the existence of human rights abuses
with members of the domestic NGO community.
The Government continued to investigate the Human Rights League
at year's end for its alleged ties to the OLF. The League's offices remained
closed, and the Government still had not responded to its registration request,
despite a court order to do so.
The Government's relations with international human rights
NGOs appeared to improve during the year. Several international human rights
groups visited the country during the year, and had unrestricted access to areas
needing emergency humanitarian assistance. A senior level Amnesty International
delegation visited the country for the first time in 10 years, and the African
Union's Special Rapporteur on Prisons visited prisons in various parts of the
country (see Section 1.c.). The Government cooperated with international governmental
organizations on human rights issues. Officials of the Federal Security Authority
generally were more responsive to requests for information from the diplomatic
community.
The Government is required under the Constitution to establish
a Human Rights Commission, and an Office of the Ombudsman with the authority
to receive and investigate complaints with respect to misadministration by executive
branch offices. In August, the Government named Kassa Gebre Haiwot as Human
Rights Commissioner and Abay Tekele as Ombudsman. Neither entity was fully operational
by year's end.
During the year, the Ministry of Justice began a 3-year program
of human rights training workshops for judges, prosecutors, and police as well
as community members around the country.
A Parliamentary committee investigated potential government
human rights abuses in conjunction with ethnic violence in the Gambella region
late 2003 and during the year (see Section 5).
Section 5 Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking
in Persons
The Constitution prohibits discrimination based on race, color,
sex, language, national origin, political or other opinion, or social status;
however, in practice the Government did not effectively enforce these protections.
Women
Domestic violence, including wife beating and marital rape,
was a pervasive social problem. There is no specific law regarding domestic
violence or sexual harassment. While women had recourse to the police and the
courts, societal norms and limited infrastructure prevented many women from
seeking legal redress, particularly in rural areas. Social practices obstructed
investigations and prosecutions in rape cases, and many women were not aware
of their rights under the law. It was estimated that there were more than 1,000
rapes a year in Addis Ababa. The press continued to regularly report on rape
cases, particularly where injury to minors resulted. Rape sentences were handed
down in line with the 10 to 15 years prescribed by law. During the year, the
EWLA conducted research on the number of rapes committed and the number of rape
convictions handed down; however, the results had not been released by year's
end.
During the year, a court was established to try cases of sexual
abuse against women and children (see Section 1.e.).
Although illegal, the abduction of women and girls as a form
of marriage continued to be practiced widely in the Oromiya and the Southern
Regions, despite the Government's attempts to combat this practice. Forced sexual
relationships often accompanied most marriages by abduction, and women often
were physically abused during the abduction. Many of those girls married as
early as the age of 7, despite the legal marriage age of 18. Abductions led
to conflicts among families, communities, and ethnic groups. In cases of marriage
by abduction, the perpetrator was not punished if the victim agreed to marry
him (unless the marriage was annulled); even after a perpetrator was convicted,
the sentence was commuted if the victim married him. There were some signs of
growing public awareness of the problem of attacks on women and early marriage;
in August a public demonstration took place in Dessie to protest the problem.
The majority of girls underwent some form of FGM. Clitoridectomies
typically were performed 7 days after birth and consisted of an excision of
the labia. Infibulation, the most extreme and dangerous form of FGM, was performed
at any time between the age of 8 and the onset of puberty. According to the
findings of a government national baseline survey released in 2003 on harmful
traditional practices, 90 percent of women undergo one of four forms of FGM
circumcision, clitoridectomy, excision, and infibulation. The National Committee
on Harmful Traditional Practices reported that, according to a national baseline
survey, harmful practices against women, including FGM, abduction, and early
marriage have declined from over 90 percent to 73 percent since 1992.
The Constitution and the penal code prohibit bodily injury;
however, these provisions did not specifically outlaw FGM. The Government continued
to update the penal code during the year. The Government also worked to discourage
the practice of FGM through education in public schools and through broader
mass media campaigns.
The Government took some measures to help eradicate FGM. For
example, an official from South Omo Zone, Southern Region, said in July that
an official from Hamer District was removed from office for forcing his wife
to undergo FGM. The Hamer official subsequently was brought to justice by the
District women's affairs bureau. The South Omo Zone Mobilization and Social
Affairs Department Deputy Head reported that committees to eradicate harmful
traditional practices were established in 197 localities through South Omo Zone.
In Eastern Harerge Zone, police arrested 4 women who had allegedly circumcised
62 girls in 1 day; local residents allegedly tipped off the police following
an intensive media campaign on the harmful effects of circumcision. Charges
against the women were pending at year's end.
Sex workers routinely reported poverty was the underlying cause
for resorting to prostitution. Prostitution was generally legal, although it
was prohibited for persons under the age of 18. Pimping and benefiting from
prostitution was also illegal. Prostitution was a problem.
There were credible reports from the EWLA and the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) that many female workers who traveled to the
Middle East as industrial and domestic workers were abused (see Section 5, Trafficking).
In August, the Government opened a new consulate in Dubai, in part to assist
Ethiopian women workers who were abused.
The Constitution states that all persons are equal before the
law; however, the Government has not yet fully put into place mechanisms for
the effective enforcement of these protections. The Family Law sets the legal
marriage age for girls at 18, the same as for boys; elevates civil law above
customary and religious law; allows for the legal sharing of property for unmarried
couples who live together for at least 5 years; eliminates family arbitrators
as a means of settling marital disputes in lieu of the court system; allows
for the joint administration of common marital property; requires the courts
to take into account the situation of children or the weakest member of the
family in the event of divorce or separation; and imposes a 6 month waiting
period on women seeking to remarry following divorce or the death of a spouse.
However, regional councils had authority to determine family law for their respective
regions.
Discrimination against women was most acute in rural areas,
where 85 percent of the population lived. The civil code and the penal code
contained discriminatory regulations, such as the recognition of the husband
as the legal head of the family and the sole guardian of children over 5 years
old. Domestic violence was not considered a serious justification to obtain
a divorce. There was only limited juridical recognition of common law marriage.
Irrespective of the number of years the marriage existed, the number of children
raised, and joint property, the woman was entitled to only 3 months' financial
support if the common law relationship ended. A husband had no obligation to
provide financial assistance to his family and, as a result, women and children
sometimes were abandoned when there was a problem in the marriage. The law states
that any property owned before marriage belongs to the spouse that had it. Any
property gained during marriage is shared equally by the husband and wife. Thus
a widow is entitled to her 50 percent share of property gained during the marriage;
however, a wife does not have inheritance right to her deceased husband's share.
All land belonged to the Government. Although women could obtain
government leases to land, and the Government had an explicit policy to provide
equal access to land for women, this policy rarely was enforced in rural communities.
According to the EWLA, in nearly all regions women do not have access to land.
They cannot inherit land, and the only way for them to gain access to land was
via marriage. However, when the husband dies, other family members often take
the land from the wife.
In urban areas, women had fewer employment opportunities than
men, and the jobs available did not provide equal pay for equal work.
In July, at the urging of a group of activists on women's issues,
the head of the NEB publicly endorsed the candidacies of women for Parliament.
Children
The Government supported efforts by domestic and international
NGOs that focused on children's social, health, and legal issues, despite its
limited ability to provide improved health care and basic education.
Education is compulsory through grade six. By law, primary
education is tuition free; however, despite the increase in the number of schools
during the year, there were still not enough schools to accommodate the country's
youth, particularly in rural areas. In addition, the cost of uniforms and schools
supplies was prohibitive for many families. The Government used a three shift
system in most primary and secondary schools in urban areas to maximize the
utilization of classrooms and to provide an opportunity for working children
to attend school. In 2003, approximately 43 percent of primary and 70 percent
of secondary schools operated in two shifts to maximize the utilization of classrooms.
Only 74.4 percent of male primary school age children and 59.1 percent of female
primary school age children attended school. Girls attended school in fewer
numbers than boys, except in Addis Ababa, where girls' attendance was slightly
higher at 52.9 percent. Government reports showed that 28.7 percent of the children
who attended school left the system before they reached the second grade. Only
22.1 percent of children who began first grade completed eighth grade. The literacy
rate, according to the 2001 Child Labor Survey, was 20.6 percent of women, compared
with 42.7 percent of men.
In Addis Ababa's police stations, there were 10 Child Protection
Units that were staffed by members of an NGO to protect the rights of juvenile
delinquents and juvenile victims of crime. Some police officers completed training
on procedures for handling cases of child abuse and juvenile delinquency.
Societal abuse of young girls continued to be a problem. FGM
was performed on the majority of girls (see Section 5, Women). Other harmful
traditional practices included uvulectomy, milk teeth extraction, early marriage,
marriage by abduction, and food and work prohibitions (see Section 5, Trafficking).
In the Afar region of the east, young girls continued to be
married to much older men, but this traditional practice continued to come under
greater scrutiny and criticism. Indigenous NGOs, such as the Kembatta Women's
Self Help Center and the Tigray Women's Association, also affected societal
attitudes toward harmful traditional practices and early marriage. Media accounts
suggested increasing awareness of the problem. An account in February from a
rural district noted that 74 children in the district had been rescued from
marriages at ages as young as 9, through the intervention of the schools and
local officials. Pregnancy at an early age often led to obstetric fistulae and
permanent incontinence. Treatment was available at only 1 hospital in Addis
Ababa that performed more than 1,000 fistula operations a year. It estimated
that for every successful operation performed, 10 other young women needed the
treatment. The maternal mortality rate was extremely high, partly due to food
taboos for pregnant women, poverty, early marriage, and birth complications
related to FGM, particularly infibulation.
There were some unconfirmed reports that children from the
south were transported into Kenya by child traffickers operating adoption rings,
and adopted as other nationalities.
Child prostitution continued to be a problem and was widely
perceived to be growing. There were a few reports that children were trafficked
out of the country in adoption schemes (see Section 5, Trafficking).
Child labor remained a serious problem (see Section 6.d.).
Official government estimates put the number of street children
in the country at 150,000 to 200,000, with approximately 50,000 to 60,000 street
children in Addis Ababa. UNICEF estimated that there were probably close to
600,000 street children in the country and over 100,000 in Addis Ababa. UNICEF
believed the problem was growing worse because of the families' inability to
support children due to parental illness and decreased household income. These
children begged, sometimes as part of a gang, or worked in the informal sector
(see Section 6.d.). Government and privately run orphanages were unable to handle
the number of street children, and older children often abused younger children.
Due to severe resource constraints, abandoned infants often were overlooked
or neglected at hospitals and orphanages. Children sometimes were maimed or
blinded by their "handlers" to raise their earnings from begging.
Trafficking in Persons
The law prohibits trafficking in persons; however, there were
numerous reports that persons were trafficked to, from, and within the country.
Child prostitution was a problem, particularly in urban areas. The penal code
applies only to women and children trafficked for the purposes of prostitution;
such trafficking was punishable by up to 5 years imprisonment and a fine of
$1,150 (10,000 Birr). Laws provide for fines and prison sentences of up to 20
years. Despite the arrests of suspected traffickers during the year, there were
no successful prosecutions of traffickers in persons by year's end.
Training programs for police officers on the criminal aspects
of trafficking were ongoing during the year. These institutions have limited
resources and jurisdiction to protect or intervene in cases of prosecution of
offending employers.
The country was a source country for women, children, and to
a lesser extent men, trafficked for the purposes of sexual exploitation and
forced domestic and commercial labor, primarily to the Gulf States and Lebanon.
NGOs estimated that between 20,000 and 25,000 persons annually were trafficked
internationally. Internal trafficking was also a serious problem. Children and
adults were trafficked internally from rural areas to urban areas, principally
for involuntary domestic servitude, and also for prostitution and forced labor,
such as street vending. There were reports that Ethiopian women may have been
trafficked onward from Lebanon to Europe.
NGOs reported that impoverished girls as young as age 11 were
recruited to work in houses of prostitution where they were kept uninformed
of the risks of HIV/AIDS infection and other sexually transmitted diseases.
A 2003 Family Health International Report indicated that customers targeted
younger girls because they were believed to be free of sexually transmitted
diseases.
According to an NGO report, 60 percent of commercial sex workers
were between the ages of 16 and 25. Underage girls worked as hotel workers,
barmaids, and prostitutes in resort towns and rural truck stops. Pervasive poverty,
migration to urban centers, early marriage, HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted
diseases, and limited educational and job opportunities aggravated the commercial
sexual exploitation of children. A few NGOs aided child victims, including the
Forum on Street Children Ethiopia, which provided children forced into prostitution
or commercial sexual exploitation with shelter, protection, and return to their
families.
IOM reported that trafficking was "increasing at an alarming
rate." A 2003 study by a foreign government on the problem of internal
trafficking of women and children confirmed that the problem was pervasive.
The overwhelming majority of respondents confirmed that they were trafficked
from rural areas to Addis Ababa and other urban centers, lured by false promises
of employment. Of the 459 respondents, 46 percent were illiterate and 49 percent
had completed no more than a grade 8 education. Upon arrival at their new destinations,
54 percent worked as domestic servants, but that number dropped to 9 percent
as the trafficked women and children took jobs in bars, became sex workers,
or begged on the street.
Although illegal, the abduction of women and girls as a form
of marriage still was practiced widely in Oromiya regions and the Southern Region
(see Section 5).
Private entities arranged for overseas work and, as a result,
the number of women sent to Middle Eastern countries, particularly Lebanon,
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates, as domestic or industrial
workers remained a significant problem during the year. These women typically
were trafficked through Djibouti, Yemen, and Syria. The Chief of the Investigation
and Detention Center in Lebanon reported that 30,000 Ethiopian women worked
in Beirut, the vast majority of whom were trafficked. During the year, the Government
also began registering persons seeking employment overseas. Approximately 50
percent of these women were not able to return legally to their home country.
There was almost no government assistance, in the form of counseling
or other support services, to trafficked victims who returned to the country.
The government provided limited consular assistance in a few cases. EWLA provided
limited legal assistance to such victims. The Federal Police's Women's Affairs
Bureau, in collaboration with the media, continued to implement a public awareness
program on the dangers of migrating to Middle Eastern countries.
The National Steering Committee Against Sexual Exploitation
of Children was chaired by the Children, Youth, and Family Affairs Department
of the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs. There were some government initiatives
during the year to combat trafficking, including government consultation with
IOM to try to resolve the problem. During the year, the Ministry of Labor and
Social Affairs reviewed the contracts of prospective domestic workers planning
to work overseas and declined approval if the contracts did not appear satisfactory.
Immigration officials at the airport also inspected the employment contracts
of prospective workers traveling to the Middle East. The Ministry of Labor and
Social Affairs had limited success in regulating employment agencies that sent
migrant workers to Middle Eastern countries. Some illegal employment agencies
escaped government scrutiny and continued to operate. The consulate in Beirut
continued to assist women who were trafficked to Lebanon, and a new consulate
was opened in Dubai to assist women in the United Arab Emirates.
Persons with Disabilities
The law mandates equal rights for persons with disabilities;
however, the Government had no established mechanisms to enforce these rights.
Persons with minor disabilities sometimes complained of job discrimination.
The Government did not mandate access to buildings or require government services
for persons with disabilities. Although the Constitution provides for rehabilitation
and assistance to persons with physical and mental disabilities, the Government
devoted few resources to these purposes.
There were approximately 6 million persons with disabilities
in the country, according to local NGOs. The conflict with Eritrea resulted
in numerous soldiers losing limbs, many from landmine explosions. Wheelchairs
were not widely available throughout the country. Although there were approximately
800,000 persons with mental disabilities, there was only 1 mental hospital and
only approximately 10 psychiatrists in the country. There were approximately
70 NGOs that worked with persons with disabilities. For example, the Amhara
Development Association provided vocational training to war veterans with disabilities
in Bahir Dar. The Tigray Development Association operated a center in Mekelle
that provided prostheses and seed money for business development, training,
and counseling for persons with disabilities. The international NGO Landmine
Survivors Network provided a number of services to victims of landmine explosions,
including counseling and referrals to rehabilitation services.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
There were more than 80 ethnic groups living in the country.
The Oromo were the largest single group, accounting for 40 percent of the population.
Although many groups influenced the political and cultural life of the country,
Amharas and Tigrayans from the northern highlands played a dominant role. The
federal system has boundaries drawn roughly along major ethnic lines, and regional
states had much greater control over their affairs. Most political parties remained
primarily ethnically based.
The military remained an ethnically diverse organization; however,
diversity was less common in the higher ranks among officer personnel, which
was dominated by members of the Tigrayan ethnic group. There were unconfirmed
reports that soldiers targeted Oromos for abuse during the year.
There were occasional reports that teachers and other government
workers had their employment terminated if they were not of the dominant ethnic
group in the region.
There were continued incidents of ethnic conflict during the
year, particularly in the western, southern, and eastern parts of the country.
The Oromo group and the Government engaged in many clashes. There were also
clashes among ethnic groups in Gambella, Southern Nations, and Somali regions.
Kidad Gacha, arrested for killing a woman and a child during
inter-clan clashes in Bench-Maji Zone in June 2003, continued to await trial
at year's end.
There were multiple clashes early in the year between police
forces and Oromo students at a number of schools and universities, including
institutions in Addis Ababa, Ambo, Alemaya, Nazereth, Awassa, Dilla, Debre Zeit,
Jimma, and Bahir Dar (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.). Protests were directed in
part at the Government's decision to move the capital of the Oromo Region from
Addis Ababa to Nazaret (Adama). Following protests by Oromo students at several
schools and the expulsion from AAU of 330 students (see Section 2.b.), there
were several incidents that resulted in deaths and injuries. In Ambo, hand grenades
exploded in a school, killing several students and injuring others. At Alemaya
Agricultural College and Adama Technical College, riots between Oromo and Tigrayan
students armed with knives and sticks resulted in some severe injuries. A number
of reports indicated that some of the Oromo students expelled from their universities
were arrested on return to their home areas. In April, approximately 600 Oromo
students fled across the border to Kenya. Violence decreased during the latter
half of the year, although tensions remained high. By year's end, almost all
of the students were reported to have returned.
In some instances, security forces were involved in ethnic
clashes during the year, most prominently in the Gambella disturbances that
began in December 2003 and continued until May. In December 2003, unknown assailants,
presumed to be Anuaks, ambushed a vehicle near the village of Itang, Gambella
Region and killed eight government officials of ethnic groups not indigenous
to Gambella Region. For 3 days, civilian mobs, with police and military present,
killed more than 100 members of the Anuak tribe in retaliation. Parliament appointed
a commission to investigate the killings and the possible involvement of the
military in killing civilians. The parliamentary commission found that 65 persons
had died, and that government soldiers killed 13 of them. Other accounts, including
from a Parliament member from Gambella who witnessed the incident, indicated
the number killed by the military was considerably higher.
Sporadic episodes of violence in the Gambella region between
armed indigenous Anuaks on one side, and government forces and settlers from
highland areas on the other, continued throughout the first half of the year.
Some incidents were severe: Fighting between soldiers and Anuaks near Fugnido
in late January reportedly resulted in 50 deaths, including civilians, and clashes
near Dimma on January 29 and 30 left 196 persons dead. Many schools and clinics
in the area outside Gambella were looted and burned; and farming was all but
abandoned.
On June 9 and 10, 54 persons died in clashes between the Ogaden
and Mejerti tribes in Warder Zone, Somali Region. The cause of the clashes remained
unclear at year's end.
By year's end, there were no further developments in cases
of ethnic violence from previous years. According to SEPDC, 12 of 127 members
detained in connection with the 2003 violence in Tepi were released from jail
in October. The rest were charged with inciting a riot and their cases remained
pending at year's end.
Unlike in previous years, there were no reports of ethnic conflicts
between refugees and local residents.
Unlike in previous years, there were no official reports of
discrimination against Eritreans.
Other Societal Abuses and Discrimination
Homosexuality is illegal and punishable by simple imprisonment
and in defined aggravated cases for not less than 3 months or more than 5 years.
Where children under 13 years of age are involved, imprisonment of 5 to 25 years
is provided. While homosexuality was not widely accepted by society, there were
no reports of violence against homosexuals.
Societal discrimination against persons with HIV/AIDS continued
during the year.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
The Constitution provides most workers with the right to form
and join unions; however, the law specifically excludes teachers and civil servants,
including judges, prosecutors, and security service workers, from organizing
unions. There was government interference in unions during the year.
The minimum number of workers required to form a union was
20. All unions had to be registered; however, the Government retained the authority
to cancel union registration. There were no reports that the government used
this authority during the year. The law stipulates that a trade organization
may not act in an overtly political manner. Approximately 300,000 workers were
union members.
Seasonal and part time agricultural workers were not organized.
Compensation, benefits, and working conditions of seasonal workers were far
below those of unionized permanent plantation employees.
The independent ETA was a target for government harassment.
Although the Government recognized ETA, all public school teachers were required
to subsidize the government created and controlled teacher's union (also called
ETA) with mandatory monthly contributions of $0.23 (2 Birr) that were automatically
withheld from their monthly salaries.
In late 2003, the Federal High Court settled a 10-year-old
court case, ruling that the Government's ETA had no legal standing or claim
on the property of the independent ETA, and that the assets of the independent
ETA's should be returned to it and its offices reopened. The new ETA appealed
to the Supreme Court early in the year. The Supreme Court instructed the federal
High Court to reinvestigate the case, and that investigation continued at year's
end.
Complete government control of the Confederation of Ethiopian
Trade Unions (CETU)'s executive committee continued throughout the year.
The law prohibits anti union discrimination by employers against
union members and organizers; however, unions reported that union activists
frequently were fired. Unlawful dismissal legal suits often took years to resolve
because of case backlogs in the labor courts. According to labor leaders, a
number of court cases in which workers were terminated for union activities
were pending after 4 or 5 years. There were grievance procedures for hearings
on allegations of discrimination brought by individuals or unions. Employers
found guilty of anti union discrimination were required to reinstate workers
fired for union activities.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The Constitution protects the right of collective bargaining
for most workers, and in practice the Government allowed citizens to exercise
this right freely. Labor experts estimated that more than 90 percent of unionized
workers were covered by collective bargaining agreements. Wages were negotiated
at the plant level. Some efforts to enforce labor regulations were made within
the formal industrial sector. There are no export processing zones.
In November 2003, the Parliament ratified amendments to Labor
Proclamation 42, the main body of labor laws in the country that strengthen
workers' positions in the event of termination; allow for multiple unions in
the same undertaking; and restrict the definition of "essential services"
as concerns the right of workers in those professions to strike.
Labor Proclamation 42 explicitly gives workers the right to
strike to protect their interests; however, it contains detailed provisions
that make legal strike actions difficult to achieve, such as a minimum of 130
days advance notice before striking. There has not been a legal strike since
1993. The law requires aggrieved workers first to make efforts at conciliation
before striking and includes a lengthy dispute settlement process. These applied
equally to an employer's right to lock out workers. Strikes must be supported
by a majority of the workers affected.
Workers nonetheless retain the right to strike without resorting
to either of these options, provided they give at least 10 days notice to the
other party and to the Ministry, make efforts at reconciliation, and provide
at least a 30 day warning in cases already before a court or Labor Relations
Board.
The law also prohibits workers who provide essential services
from striking, including air transport and railway service workers, electric
power suppliers, bus operators, gas station personnel, hospital and pharmacy
personnel, bank employees, firemen, postal and telecommunications personnel,
and urban sanitary workers.
The ILO has noted that the complex regulations of the proclamation
and the insufficient resources of the judicial system caused labor disputes
to drag on for months and years.
The law prohibits retribution against strikers, but labor leaders
said that most workers were not convinced that the Government would enforce
this protection. Labor officials said that due to high unemployment and long
delays in the hearing of labor cases, some workers were afraid to participate
in strikes or other labor actions.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The law prohibits forced or compulsory labor, including by
children; however, there were reports such practices occurred (see Sections
5 and 6.d.) Forced labor could be used by court order as a punitive measure.
d. Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
There were laws against child labor; however, child labor remained
a serious problem, both in urban and rural areas. Under the law, the minimum
age for wage or salary employment is 14 years; this age is consistent with the
age for completing primary school educational requirements. Special provisions
cover children between the ages of 14 and 18, including the prohibition of hazardous
or night work. By law, children between the ages of 14 and 18 years were not
permitted to work more than 7 hours per day, work between the hours of 10 p.m.
and 6 a.m., work on public holidays or rest days, or perform overtime work.
The Government defined hazardous work as work in factories or involving machinery
with moving parts, or any work that could jeopardize children's health.
The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs is designated to enforce
child labor laws. While the Government made some effort to enforce these regulations
within the formal industrial sector, social welfare activists, civic organizers,
government officials, and employers agreed that child labor was pervasive throughout
the country, particularly in agrarian areas and in the informal sector. In urban
areas, numerous children worked in a variety of jobs, including shining shoes,
sewing clothes, hustling passengers into cabs, working as porters, selling lottery
tickets and other small items, and herding animals. In rural areas, children
worked on family and commercial farms and as domestic laborers.
In February 2003, the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs
released the findings of a 2001 ILO funded survey on child labor. The survey
found that 40 percent of children start work before the age of 6. It also found
the average number of hours worked by children ages 5 to 17 during a 1 week
reference period was 32.8 hours. Approximately 13 percent of boys and girls
between the ages of 5 and 9 worked from 58 to 74 hours a week. More than two
thirds of all children surveyed were giving either all or part of their earnings
to their parents or guardians. Reduced household income from poor crop harvests
and school dropouts were two contributing factors for the increased incidence
of child labor.
Child laborers often were abused. A 1999 study concluded that
physical and emotional abuse were twice as common among child workers compared
with nonworkers, sexual abuse was five times as common, and neglect was eight
times as common. Among child workers surveyed, rapes occurred exclusively among
child domestic laborers.
The Government's definition of worst forms of child labor included
prostitution and bonded labor. During the year, there were reports of forced
or bonded labor of children who had been trafficked from the Southern and Oromiya
Regions to other regions of the country, to work as domestic servants (see Section
5). Young girls reportedly were forced into prostitution by family members (see
Section 5).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The law mandates a minimum wage of approximately $14 (120 Birr)
per month for all wage earners in both the private and public sectors; in addition,
each industry and service sector established its own minimum wage. For example,
public sector employees, the largest group of wage earners, earned a minimum
wage of approximately $20 (175 Birr) per month; employees in the banking and
insurance sector had a minimum wage of $23 (200 Birr) per month. According to
the Office of the Study of Wages and Other Remuneration, these wages did not
provide a decent standard of living for a worker and family. Consequently most
families needed to have at least two wage earners to survive, which forced many
children to leave school early. In addition, only a small percentage of the
population was involved in wage labor employment, which was concentrated largely
in urban areas.
Labor Proclamation 42 stipulates a 48 hour legal workweek,
consisting of 6 days of 8 hours each, with a 24 hour rest period. In practice,
most employees worked a 40 hour workweek of five 8 hour days.
The Government, industry, and unions negotiated to set occupational
health and safety standards; however, the inspection department of the Ministry
of Labor and Social Affairs enforced these standards ineffectively due to a
lack of resources. Enforcement also was inhibited by a lack of detailed, sector
specific health and safety guidelines. Workers had the right to remove themselves
from dangerous situations without jeopardizing their employment; however, most
workers feared losing their jobs if they were to do so.
Labor laws also protect legal foreign workers.
Source: State |