Reporters Without Borders
Ethiopia’s justice ministry has announced that it is bringing
criminal charges
ranging from “dissemination of false rumours with the intent of overthrowing the government” to “undermining
public trust
in the government and
attempts
at fostering ethnic and religious divisions” against six
news weeklies.

In a communiqué released on 5 August, the ministry
accused the six
weeklies – Lomi, Enqu, Fact, Jano, Addis Guday and Afro-Times – of “
encouraging
terrorism, endangering
national security
, repeated incitement of ethnic and religious hate, and smears against officials and public institutions.”
Two of
the weeklies
,
Addis Guday and Fact, are among Ethiopia’s leading privately-owned
newspapers and have often covered events or published stories that have
generated political controversy. One of Addis Guday’s journalists,
Asmamaw Hailegiorgis, has been held on a terrorism charge since 25
April.
The ministry said it had been “patient” with the six weeklies but had
finally decided to bring charges in response to public pressure for
corrective
action. It also
warned
that it was ready to bring charges against other publications engaging in similar “subversive”
activity
.
“
Prime
Minister Hailemariam Desalegn’s government must
end
the harassment of
independent
media that it has been orchestrating for the past few months,” said
Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire.
“With the 10 journalists and bloggers already accused of terrorism and now this prosecution threat, the government is
sending
a much tougher message to news providers. Prosecuting journalists for
‘undermining public trust in the government’ is totally illegitimate.”
Ethiopia is ranked 143rd out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders
press
freedom index
Ze-Habesha
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