Ethiopia’s Eskinder Nega named IPI Press Freedom Hero /IPI/

Ethiopia’s Eskinder Nega named IPI Press Freedom Hero /IPI/

Ethiopian journalist and blogger Eskinder Nega, who has been imprisoned since 2011 after criticising his country’s abuse of anti-terror laws to silence the press, has been named the International Press Institute (IPI)’s 69th World Press Freedom Hero.

IPI also announced today the Afghan Journalists Safety Committee as the recipient of the 2017 Free Media Pioneer Award in recognition of the group’s courageous and trailblazing work to prevent, combat and monitor attacks on journalists in one of the world’s most dangerous media environments.

Both awards, which for the past three years have been given in partnership with Copenhagen-based International Media Support (IMS), will be presented during a special ceremony on May 18 in Hamburg, Germany during IPI’s annual World Congress and General Assembly.Press Freedom HeroIPI’s World Press Freedom Hero Award honours journalists who have made significant contributions to the promotion of press freedom, particularly in the face of great personal risk.Nega has spent over 2,000 days behind bars since his arrest on Sept. 14, 2011, when Ethiopian authorities accused him of “leading a plan to throw the country into serious political chaos through a series of terrorist acts” and linked him to a banned opposition group.

His jailing came shortly after Nega, a persistent critic of Ethiopia’s former long-time ruler and then-Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, published a column questioning the government’s abuse of anti-terror laws to punish journalistic scrutiny.Nega’s comments were preceded by a wave of detentions under Ethiopia’s broad 2009 anti-terror law, including those of journalists Woubshet Taye and Reeyot Alemu – the 2013 recipient of the UNESCO-Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize – as well as Swedish correspondents Martin Schibbye and Johan Persson.An Ethiopian court convicted Nega in June 2012 of “participation in a terrorist organization” and “planning, preparation, conspiracy, incitement and attempt of (a) terrorist act”. He was sentenced to 18 years in prison the following month, a decision the U.N.

Working Group on Arbitrary Detention later said violated international law.IPI Executive Director Barbara Trionfi said the award was a recognition of Nega’s “unflinching dedication to the free exchange of ideas and information and his determination – at the expense of his freedom and separation from his family – not to remain silent in the face of the Ethiopian government’s cynical attempt to use the fight against terrorism to crush legitimate dissent”.She continued:

“This award sends the message that Eskinder Nega’s bravery in relentlessly scrutinising power despite years of intense retaliation has not been forgotten. We renew our call on Ethiopia to free Eskinder and all journalists jailed for doing their jobs or expressing their opinions, and we urge the international community not to ignore Ethiopia’s continued flouting of its international human rights obligations”.

Nega faced frequent official pressure and harassment due to his writing beginning in the early 1990s. In 2005, he and his wife, journalist Serkalem Fasil, were jailed on treason charges for their coverage of a mass government crackdown on popular protests following disputed parliamentary elections won by Zenawi’s Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). Fasil would later give birth to a son behind bars. Authorities released the couple in April 2007 but shuttered their publishing company and banned Nega from practicing journalism.

Fasil, who now lives in exile in the United States with their son, said of IPI and IMS’ recognition of her husband that it was “absolutely heart-warming to know that all his sacrifices and valuable contribution to press freedom are not wasted in vain, but continue to shine a spotlight [on his plight] on the global stage”.She added: ”Although, it remains a bittersweet moment for me (knowing where he is now), it is important to uphold such recognition for the tremendous impact it’s having to those who aspire to follow in his footsteps.

… I truly hope it also expedites his release from imprisonment and brings an end to his suffering.”IPI and its members have previously called for Nega’s release, including during a November 2013 joint mission to Ethiopia with the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA). The Ethiopian government on that occasion denied IPI and WAN-IFRA’s requests to visit Nega and other jailed journalists.

The following year, WAN-IFRA honoured Nega with its Golden Pen of Freedom Award. In 2012, he also received the PEN American Center/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award.In early September 2011, commenting on the arrests of Taye and Alemu, and just days before his own detention, Nega wrote to IPI: “Their arrest has more to do with calculated cultivation of fear. Fear is what dictatorships ultimately rely on to survive.

”Free Media PioneerThe annual Free Media Pioneer Award was established by IPI in 1996 to recognise news or media organisations that have made innovations that have promoted news access or quality, or benefitted journalists and the media community, thereby ensuring freer and more independent media in their country or region.

This year’s recipient, the Afghan Journalists Safety Committee (AJSC), is a countrywide safety mechanism covering all 34 Afghan provinces that monitors incidents and provides media professionals with advice and practical safety measures. AJSC has local safety trainers that work collaboratively with media houses, press clubs, unions, civil society organisations, local authorities and law enforcement.

Founded in 2009, AJSC made significant achievements in fostering support and solidarity to journalists and Afghanistan’s media community in the face of extreme repression, violence and tragedy.

The stakes around its work are high: when the Taliban took over Kunduz province in 2015 and again in 2016, AJSC helped more than 160 journalists with emergency evacuation, shelter, health and psychological counselling. Over the past eight years, AJSC has assisted in more than 400 cases of violence and intimidation targeting journalists, and it has provided training to more than 600 journalists across Afghanistan.AJSC maintains a 24/7 hotline as well as safe houses across Afghanistan.

It provides training on both journalistic skills and safety – including risk assessment and management, first aid and conflict sensitive reporting, social media and digital security – and offers traumatised journalists support from a team of trauma counsellors.

In keeping with its collaborative nature, AJSC also works to train police and security forces to encourage cooperation on safety.For journalists who must flee the country or who require medical treatment not available in Afghanistan, AJSC maintains a relocation option in India, which offers long-term exiles job training or study at a local university or media house.

“Amid the severe threat to journalists in Afghanistan, the incredibly courageous work of the Afghan Journalists Safety Committee embodies the belief that journalism can and must thrive even in the most hostile corners of the world,” Trionfi said. “Their defiance and determination are helping to ensure that the people of Afghanistan can realise their right to inform and be informed, and their activities offer hope and a model to other societies wracked by conflict.”Jesper Højberg, director of International Media Support (IMS), added; “ASJC has come a very long way and I am confident that their achievements are based not only on hard work but also rooted in the fact that it is a truly Afghan-based safety mechanism – not a donor-driven safety project. ASJC works hard to bring together media, local government, law enforcement as well as civil society to protect journalists and enhance media safety.

Their inclusive and collaborative work makes ASJC a model for media safety work globally.”Notably, AJSC also fulfils a research and advocacy function, recording attacks on journalists and promoting the role of female journalists and increased safety. According to AJSC’s statistics, 2016 was the deadliest year for journalists in the history of Afghanistan, with 101 recorded cases of killings, assault, intimidation and other forms of harm.

Najib Sharifi, director of AJSC, told IPI in response to news of AJSC’s recognition as the 2017 Free Media Pioneer: “My colleagues and I are delighted to hear about this. Such a prestigious award increases our passion, commitment and pride to our work towards protection of journalists, which is critical to preserving freedom of media and freedom of expression in Afghanistan.

”Find out more about past IPI World Press Freedom Heroes and Free Media Pioneers.

IPI’s 2017 World Congress will be held from May 18 to 20 in Hamburg, Germany. To register and view the full programme, please visit the World Congress site.

1 COMMENT

  1. This regime sends innocent individuals like Obbo Eskinder to jail for more than 10 years just for saying something Sebhat Nega does not like and caught-in-act terrorists get only 6 years? Folks, that is what you get from any group that seizes power through violence especially a gangsters outfit honed its skills on the bankrupted Marxism/Leninism. I don’t think they succeeded in their objective by sending Obbo Eskinder to a extended jail term. We can confidently assume and expect that his imprisonment has opened the eyes thousands more. Now instead one, hundreds are talking and what they are talking about is not good news for the Sebhat Nega’s in all. You see. Despots somehow never learn. They think they have figured it all out. They think they where other despots erred. I bet you that if you ask them what that demon Mengistu’s(Their predecessor) problem was, they will tell you everything about it. They say he feared critics. Ok. Now? And they say, he never felt secured. Ok. Now? Folks, you see what I am saying. Dictators never learn from their predecessors or their contemporaries who met their ugly demise. I bet you with the last penny I have. If you tell Sebhat, Mesfin and all those in their inner circle what Gaddafi was doing or happened to him, everyone of them will confirm to you that they ain’t him. They ain’t Mobutu either. They ain’t Park, Pinochet and all the juntas of Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Uruguay, the Philippines in all. You see. Pinochet had done a remarkable job when it comes to the economy. Park was peerless for what he had done to South Korea economically. But they are all gone and exited in undignified ways. What makes the Sebhats different is they have found a deep seated hinge in the society. They are using the ethnicity card from the bottom of the deck fantasizing any imagined or dreamed up victimization as an ethnic group. They have forgotten(or conveniently sidelined) the fact that it was our Amhara brothers and sisters in Gondar, Gojjam and Wollo who blanketed them from the harms of Mengistus army. It was many of my own Oromos who greeted them with open arms when passing through their villages on their way to Addis(Finfine). Otherwise they could have been stuck in Tigray who knows for how long. They preached this poison to their countrymen and you can tell how many of them here among us taken by that. They have disconnected themselves from the rest of the Diaspora just like those in Jawar’s congregations. They are living a hermit’s life. I am saying this because I have seen it myself. You see I have a good friend who hails from Tigray and we have known each other since I came here in the early 1970’s. He was a member of the Emperor’s armed forces. He was sent here for technical training and he went AWOL. I met him when we both were trying to learn our ropes and navigate through the concrete jungle of Good Ole USA. We married and raised families together. He is what you call Best Friend For Life. When he comes to my house he usually finds my friends who are Oromos and Amharas mostly from the Chercher Highlands and along the old railway lines. But when I go to his place and if there are other people they are all Tigrigna speaking people. I have seen that for years. Remember he never encounters any problem with my friends when he comes to my house. In fact, he was very comfortable with everyone of them. So a few years ago I brought my observation to his attention. How come his friends are not diversified? He said others hate me. Then I said I don’t. My friends don’t hate you. Well he said you guys are different from a different region/era. I told him that is an excuse. But one thing he brought to my attention is what is being said and written about the people of Tigray on websites and forums. He reads sheer hate. He told me that he never supported the TPLF since some of his close relatives were victimized by it. But after what he read being said about Tigray he is scared and has no choice but to feel unwanted or seen as an enemy by others. Folks, many of them have turned recluse hermits. I can also see his dilemma. He is married to a Shewan Amhara. His kids are just like mine and don’t give a hoot about the heavy ethnicity burden upon us. They are more interested at who Weeknd or Beyonce is wearing or about the daily advances and declines in the market. I think the solution for this is in the hands of elders in all communities among us. Elements in the Tigrayan communities should stop this fantasy of taking themselves as the sole victims during the previous regimes. Poverty was not the sole identity of the people of Tigray. There were and still there are extremely poor people in very town and every locality in the country. Amharas never conspired with my own Oromos to let poverty run amuck in Tigray. That is the historical fact unless someone chooses to go on a trip of fantasy. Hurling wholesale insults at any ethnic groups should stop. I believe owners/editors of all websites among our Diaspora should know the serious ramifications of letting ethnicity tinged derogatory rants ride on such public forums. The danger of an all out deadly ethnic conflict is real. They should clean up their websites from such vile elements. It looks like that Al-Toweel Isaias he let his operatives loose all over our platforms. They are fanning the flame. Sebhat’s operatives know very well that they only way they can prolong their rule is by pitching our Amhara brothers and sisters against our Tigrayan good folks and vice versa. They want Oromos like me to hate Amharas, Tgrayans, Afars, Somalis and others. And they have found outside help by way of Jawar’s in all. This is the reality that we should all understand and confront it with all the force we can muster. That is my two cent of opinion and no apology about it.

LEAVE A REPLY