Solidarité internationale et luttes sociales en Afrique subsaharienne |
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Dernière mise à jour : 24 March 2005 |
Ethiopie
Site(s) web : Ethiopian Human Rights Council (EHRC) : Document(s) : Lessons in Repression : Violations of Academic Freedom in Ethiopia - A Report by Human Rights Watch - janvier 2003 (PDF - 494.2 ko)
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Army Impunity and Official Inaction Fuel Abuses (Nairobi, March 24, 2005) - The Ethiopian military has committed widespread murder, rape and torture against the Anuak population in the remote southwestern region of Gambella since December 2003, Human Rights Watch said in a 64-page report released today entitled Targeting the Anuak: Human Rights Violations and Crimes against Humanity in Ethiopia’s Gambella Region. Human Rights Watch said that the abuses detailed in the report could amount to crimes against humanity. [Lire] - 24 March 2005 From today forward there will be no Anuak The attempted elimination of the Anuak people The World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT) has received information from reliable sources concerning of ongoing crimes against humanity and acts of genocide being perpetrated by the Ethiopian Armed Forces and “highlander” militias against the Anuak (or Anywaa) indigenous ethnic group, which comprises around 100’000 persons, in rural areas of Gambella, Ethiopia. [Lire] - 30 August 2004 Concerns about a Commission of Investigation attempting to cover up State involvement in acts of genocide Following its press release on April 13th, 2004, the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT) again wishes to highlight the ongoing crimes against humanity and acts of genocide being perpetrated by the Ethiopian Armed Forces and “highlander” militias against the Anuak (or Anywaa) indigenous ethnic group in rural areas of Gambella, Ethiopia. Although OMCT welcomes the steps that have been taken in order to form a Commission of Investigation - which was established following a ruling by the Ethiopian Parliament on April 12th, 2004 - serious doubts as to its impartiality. [Lire] - 27 April 2004 Investigate Torture by Police Ministers’ Failure to Investigate, Prosecute Makes Them Accomplices The Ethiopian government should launch an immediate investigation leading to the prosecution and dismissal of all federal police involved in the recurring practice of torture of people caught up in mass arrests, Human Rights Watch said yesterday in a letter addressed to the Ethiopian ministers of federal affairs and of justice. [Lire] - 18 March 2004 Stop Harassing Journalists’ Group The Ethiopian government should end its harassment of an association of independent journalists that has frequently criticized the government’s repression of the independent press, Human Rights Watch said today in a letter to Ethiopia’s prime minister. [Lire] - 13 February 2004 Ethiopia’s Educated Suffer Government Repression The Ethiopian government is muzzling educators and students with a policy of harsh repression that includes extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, and widespread denials of freedom of opinion and association, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. [Lire] - 24 janvier 2003 La police tire sur des manifestants non armés Le 24 mai 2002, les forces de sécurité ont tué au moins quinze fermiers - et peut-être jusqu’à trente-huit - qui manifestaient contre un changement dans le statut administratif d’Awassa, la capitale du Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples State. [Lire] - 11 juin 2002 La police tire sur des manifestants non armés Le gouvernement éthiopien doit établir de toute urgence des restrictions claires sur le recours à une force mortelle contre des civils, a déclaré aujourd’hui Human Rights Watch. [Lire] - 11 juin 2002 Faire cesser la répression contre les étudiants oromo Le gouvernement éthiopien doit cesser de persécuter violemment les étudiants de la région d’Oromiya, a vivement encouragé Human Rights Watch aujourd’hui. [Lire] - 22 mai 2002 La liberté d’expression et d’association menacée Amnesty International s’est déclarée vivement préoccupée par le maintien en détention sans inculpation de deux défenseurs des droits humains éthiopiens, Mesfin Wolde-Mariam et Bernahu Nega. [Lire] Amnesty International - 22 mai 2001 |
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