Government cracks down on largest ethnic group: party

By Barry Malone, Reuters | March 26, 2010



Bulcha Demeksa

They are cracking down on the Oromos, says Bulcha Demeksa, a leading opposition figure.

* Oromos forced out of politics, opposition says

* Civil servants ‘transferred to prevent campaigning’

* Government says no intimidation of candidates

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) – Ethiopia’s most populous ethnic group is being targeted in a government crackdown ahead of the country’s first national election since a disputed 2005 poll, an opposition party said on Friday.

The Horn of Africa country’s last election results were challenged by the opposition and international observers. About 200 protesters were killed by security forces in street riots and the main opposition leaders imprisoned. Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said they were trying to oust him.

“They are cracking down on the Oromo ethnicity because we are such a large group, not only many in men, but the Oromia region contains a lot of resources,” Bulcha Demeksa, leader of the Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC) said.

Ethnic Oromos, who make up 27 million of the country’s 80 million people, have not held power in modern Ethiopian history. Ethiopia has more than 80 ethnic groups.

The nine considered the most powerful by the government, including the Oromos, administer their own federal regions.

Meles comes from the Tigryan ethnic group, who make up only 6 percent of the population but dominate the political and military elite.

The OFC, part of eight-party coalition Medrek, said candidates were beaten and tortured to scare them into leaving the party. It said opposition civil servants in Oromia had been transferred to remote regions and refused time off to campaign.

“We in OFC appeal today to friendly countries and their envoys in Ethiopia, and to the people of Ethiopia at large, to support us,” the party said in a statement.

The Ethiopian government says opposition candidates are not intimidated.

“This is a democracy,” Bereket Simon, government head of information, told Reuters this week. “We are continuously widening political space.”

Analysts say Medrek — or the Forum — is the main threat to the 19-year-old government of Meles, but his Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition is expected to easily win the May 23 poll.

The opposition says this is because they are harassed and jailed. The government says the opposition is trying to discredit a poll it has no chance of winning. (Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Ethiopian opposition accuses government of intimidation

ADDIS ABABA (DPA) – An Ethiopian opposition coalition on Friday accused the government of intimidation, just two days after an international lobby group warned that upcoming elections are unlikely to be free and fair.

“After passing through several stages of intimidation and harassment, we are faced at this stage with new techniques of mistreatment”, Gebru Gebre Mariam Uttura of opposition umbrella group MEDREK told journalists in Ethiopias capital Addis Ababa.

“We have cases of individual members who have been tortured, beaten and threatened and have left our parties.”

Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Wednesday accused the government of suppressing political opposition and the media.

It said that the expected landslide victory for Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) in elections set for May 23 would be a “vindication of a strategy of oppression and control.”

Around 200 protesters were shot following the last elections in 2005 and an unknown number of opposition figures, including Birtukan Mideksa, head of the Unity for Democracy and Justice party, remain imprisoned.

While Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC) leader Bulcha Demeksa, one of the most outspoken opponents of the government, said his party did not expect May’s elections to be free and fair, he said he did not expect a repeat of the post-election violence.

“None of us wants violence and the prime minister knows that,” he said.

Ethiopia has consistently denied it suppresses the opposition and rejected the HRW report.

“There is no suppression of the opposition whatsoever. The elections ill be free and equal,” Bereket Simon, Ethiopia’s information minister and a top adviser to Zenawi, told the German Press Agency dpa on Wednesday.


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