Monday, February 9, 2015

Sexual violence with special emphasis on sexual aggression in Oromia Regional State in Ethiopia


By Dr. Baro Keno | February 6, 2015

Love and Honour for our living and fallen heroes who resisted any barbarian act against Oromo nation

AsliAddee Asli Oromo: The first woman in the history of Ethiopian Empire that sentenced to death because of her political vision about Oromo people but released after 18 years in prison as a result of international communities campaign.UrjiiAddee Urjii Dhaabaa: Is one out of many Oromo Women that survived sexual aggression of Ethiopian government military force, police and security agents.
unpo1
unpo2
Thank you Mr, Chairman
Your excellences member of the European parliament, Dear participants, Ladies and Gentlemen, my most heartfelt thanks are extended to the Organising Committee of this seminar. I am particularly grateful to my informants Asli Oromo, Urjii Dhaabaa, Ilfinesh Qano and Dinkinesh Dhereessaa whom I am able to speak to about the agony they endured and who also morally supported of the Oromo women survivors of sexual violence who able to speak to them while their stay in Ethiopian Prison.
Ladies and Gentlemen,

unpo3Ethiopia is the tenth largest country in Africa and it is the second most populated country in Africa with projected population of 100 million by 2020. It has a number of nations/ nationalities with distinct culture. Ethiopia consists of peoples speaking more than 80 different languages (CSA, 2006)[1]. Currently, Ethiopia is classified into nine regional states. Oromia is the largest regional state in land mass and population. Ecologically and agriculturally Oromia region is the richest region in the Horn of Africa. Oromos are accounted for more than 45% of the population of the Ethiopian empire. The populationsize of the Oromo people and their resources makes Oromia the heart of Ethiopia. Failure and progress in Oromia regional state is grossly contribute to the failure and progress to Ethiopia.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Ogaden community in Kenya keeps eye on upcoming Ethiopian May 2015 election


By Ahmed Abdi | January 31, 2015
Ahmed Sadik, Head of the Ogaden Refugee Council
Ahmed Sadik, Head of the Ogaden Refugee Council
Kenya-Ogaden Community in Kenya are doing all possible precautions as they keep on eye on the upcoming Ethiopia elections on 15 May,2015. 
 
Eng. Ahmed Sadik, Head of the Ogaden Refugee Council, has urged the communities and refugee leaders in Kenya to be precautious. 
 
“It is time the communities and refugee leadership to be vigilant and think carefully about who they see,” he said on Wednesday. 
 
Speaking with Radio Xoriyo also known as Radio Freedom, he said Ethiopia exports its domestic problems to the neighboring countries like Kenya, Djibouti and Somalia whenever it feels the burden. 

 
“For Ethiopia, it never be ashamed of attacking refugees mainly Ogaden, Anuak and Oromo community leaders that have fled from its army brutality as the case of the 2010 elections.” 
 
” For instance, when Ethiopian elections was happening in 2010, Ethiopian Security Forces attempted to kill activists, opposition figures and community leaders from Ogaden region, Oromia and Gambella,” Sadik said. 
 
Sadik added that EPRDF-dominated government will get elect itself and that nothing good expects to happen for the May 2015 election.
 
Sadik called on the government of Kenya to be aware activities of Ethiopian assailants and those conspiring with them to ensure that they would not harm any one without the knowledge of Kenya. 
 
The Ogaden community in Kenya numbers approximately 120,000, of whom 100,000 are registered with the UNHCR.
 
Ethiopian assailants occasionally kidnap or kill opposition members within Kenyan soil. 26 January 2014, Sulub Abdi Ahmed and Ali Ahmed Hussein  were abducted by Ethiopian Secret Agents. The two officials were in Kenya to facilitate peace talks with the Ethiopian government.
 
Human Rights Watch accused the Ethiopia’s government of systematically cracking down on media ahead of the May 2015 election. 
 
Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn  asked Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to act as mediator with the ONLF taking advantage of  Erdogan’s visit to Ethiopia, according to Africa Intelligence. 
 
ONLF was founded in 1984, and it has been engaging army struggle with the Ethiopian troops stationed in Ogaden region since 1994, after the Ethiopian government cracked down its members, following after Ogaden parliament overwhelmingly voted yes for

Thursday, January 22, 2015

ኢትዮጵያ፡ መገናኛ-ብዙሃን በመጥፋት ላይ ናቸው



600px-Hrw_logoበግንቦት ወር ከሚካሄደው ምርጫ አስቀድሞ የህግ እና የፖሊሲ ማሻሻያ ማድረግ ወሳኝ ነው
(ናይሮቢ ጃንዋሪ 22፣ 2015 ዓ.ም.) – የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት ነጻ መገናኛ ብዙሃን ላይ በሚፈጽመው ስልታዊ ጫና ምክንያት ከግንቦት 2007ቱ ምርጫ አስቀድሞ ሃሳብን የመግለጽ ነጻነት ላይ ተስፋ አሰቆራጭ ሁኔታ ተፈጥሯል ሲል ሂዩማን ራይትስ ዎች ዛሬ ባወጣው ሪፖርት አስታወቀ። ባለፈው ዓመት መንግስት የጥቃት ዘመቻ ካካሄደባቸው በኋላ ስድስት የግል የህትመት መገናኛ-ብዙሃን ተዘግተዋል፣ ቢያንስ 22 ጋዜጠኞች፣ ጦማሪያን እና አሳታሚዎች በወንጀል ተከሰዋል እንዲሁም ከ30 በላይ ጋዜጠኞች አፋኝ የሆኑ ህጎችን መሰረት አድርጎ ሊፈጸምባቸው የሚችልን እስር በመፍራት ሃገር ለቀው ተሰደዋል፡፡
“’ጋዜጠኝነት ወንጀል አይደለም’፡ የመገናኛ-ብዙሃን የመብት ጥሰት በኢትዮጵያ” በሚል የቀረበው ባለ 76 ገጹ ሪፖርት የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት እ.ኤ.አ. ከ2010 ዓ.ም. ጀምሮ ነጻ ጋዜጠኝነትን እንዴት እንዳሽመደመደው በዝርዝር አቅርቧል፡፡ እ.ኤ.አ. ከግንቦት 2013 ዓ.ም. እስከ ታህሳስ 2014 ዓ.ም. ድረስ ባለው ጊዜ ወስጥ ከ70 በላይ በስራ ላይ ያሉ እና የተሰደዱ ጋዜጠኞችን ሂዩማን ራይትስ ዎች ቃለ-መጠይቅ ሃሳብን የመግለጽ ነጻነታቸውን ስለተገበሩ ብቻ 19 ጋዜጠኞች እንዲታሰሩ እ.ኤ.አ. ከ2010 ዓ.ም. ጀምሮ ከ60 የሚበልጡ ሌሎች ደግሞ ሀገር ለቀው እንዲሰደዱ ያደረገውን የመንግስትን አንድ ወጥነት ያለው የጫና ማሳደር አፈጻጸም ሂደት መረዳት ለመረዳት ችሏል።
“የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት ነጻ መገናኛ-ብዙሃንን ጠቃሚ የመረጃ እና ትንታኔ ምንጭ አድርጎ ከመውሰድ ይልቅ የስጋት ምንጭ አድርጎ በመቁጠር በሃገሪቱ የሚገኙ ነጻ ድምጾች ላይ ስልታዊ በሆነ መንገድ ጥቃት ይፈጽማል::” ያሉት የሂዩማን ራይትስ ዎች የአፍሪካ ምክትል ዳይሬክተር ሌስሊ ሌፍኮው “የኢትዮጵያ መገናኛ-ብዙሃን ለግንቦቱ ምርጫ ወሳኝ ሚና መጫወት አለባቸው፤ ነገርግን በርካታ ጋዜጠኞች የሚቀጥለው ጽሁፋቸው እስር ቤት ያስወረውረናል በሚል ስጋት ውስጥ ነው የሚገኙት።’’ ብለዋል።

አብዛኛዎቹ የኢትዮጵያ የህትመት፣ የቴሌቪዥን እና ሬድዬ ስርጭቶች በመንግስት ቁጥጥር ስር ናቸው፤ የቀሩት ጥቂት የግል የህትመት መገናኛ-ብዙሃን የመዘጋት እጣ እንዳይደርስባቸው ከመፍራት የተነሳ በአሳሳቢ ፖለቲካዊ ጉዳዮች ዙሪያ ለሚሰሯቸው ዘገባዎች ብዙውን ጊዜ በራሳቸው ላይ ቅድመ-ምርመራ ያደርጋሉ፡፡
እ.ኤ.አ. በ2014 ዓ.ም. የተዘጉት ስድስት ነጻ የህትመት መገናኛ-ብዙሃን በመንግስት ባለቤትነት በተያዘው የቴሌቪዥን ጣቢያ ህትመቶቹ ከአሸባሪ ቡድኖች ጋር ግንኙነት አላቸው የሚል ውንጀላ ያለበት ዘገባን ጨምሮ ረዘም ላለ ጊዜ የማሸማቀቂያ ዘመቻ ሲካሄድባቸው ቆይቷል፡፡ ማሸማቀቂያው በህትመቶቹ የስራ ባልደረቦች ላይ ዛቻ እና ማስፈራሪያ ማድረስ፣ በማተሚያ ቤቶች እና አከፋፋዮች ላይ አሉታዊ ጫና መፍጠር፣ የፈቃድ አሰጣጥና እድሳትን ማዘግየት ብሎም በአዘጋጆቹ ላይ የወንጀል ህግ መመስረትን ያካትታል። በደርዘኖች የሚቆጠሩ ሰራተኞች ሃገር ለቀው ተሰደዋል፡፡ ሶስት የህትመት ባለቤቶች የወንጀል ህጉን በመጣስ ጥፋተኛ የተባሉ ሲሆን እያንዳንዳቸው ከሶስት ዓመት በሚበልጥ እስራት እንዲቀጡ በሌሉበት ተፈርዶባቸዋል፡፡ ለክሱ ማስረጃ ሆነው የቀረቡባቸው የመንግስት ፖሊሲዎችን በመተቸት ያተሟቸው ጽሁፎች ናቸው።
ጥቂት ከፍ ያለ ታዋቂነት ያላቸው የኢትዮጵያ ጋዜጠኞች ላይ የሚደርሰው ስቃይ በስፋት የታወቀ ሲሆን በደርዘኖች የሚቆጠሩ በአዲስ አበባ እና በክልሎች የሚገኙ ሌሎች ጋዜጠኞች በደህንነት ባለስልጣናት ስልታዊ ጥቃት ይፈጸምባቸዋል።
በጋዜጠኞች ላይ የሚደርሰው ጥቃት ተመሳሳይ አካሄድ ያለው ነው ያለው ሂዩማን ራይትስ ዎች፤ ትችት ያዘሉ ዘገባዎችን የሚጽፉ ጋዜጠኞች ዛቻ ያለበት የስልክ ጥሪ እና የአጭር ጽሁፍ የስልክ መልዕክት ይደርሳቸዋል፤ እንዲሁም የደህንነት ባለስልጣናት እና የገዢው ፓርቲ ካድሬዎች ወደ ስራና መኖሪያ ቤታቸው በመሄድ ያስፈራሯቸዋል። አንዳንዶቹ በመቶዎች የሚቆጠሩ እንደዚህ አይነት ማስፈራሪያዎች እንደደረሱባቸው ተናግረዋል፡፡ እንደእዚህ የአይነት ማስፈራሪያዎች ጸጥ ሊያሰኟቸው አሊያም በራሳቸው ላይ ቅደመ-ምርመራ እንዲያካሂዱ ሊሸማቅቋቸው ካልቻሉ አብዛኛውን ጊዜ ማስፈራሪያው የበለጠ ተጠናክሮ ይቀጥላል አሊያም እስር ይከተላል፡፡ በአብዛኛው ከሽብር ጋር በተያያዙ ክሶች የጥፋተኝነት ውሳኔ የተላለፈባቸው እና ፍትሃዊ ያልሆነ እና በተራዘመ የፍርድ ሂደት ያለፉ ጋዜጠኞች የወንጀል ጉዳዮች ላይ የፍርድ ቤቶች ገለልተኛነት እመብዛም ነው ወይም ጭራሹንም የለም።
“ተገቢ ባልሆኑ የወንጀል ክሶች እና ሌሎች ማሸማቀቂያ መንገዶች ነጻ ድምጾችን በማፈን ኢትዮጵያ በዓለም ላይ ከፍተኛ ቁጥር ያላቸውን ጋዜጠኞች ከሚያስሩ ሀገሮች አንዷ እየሆነች ነው፡፡” የሚሉት ሌፍኮው “መንግስት ያለአግባብ የታሰሩ ጋዜጠኞችን ባስቸኳይ መፍታት አለበት እንዲሁም የመገናኛ-ብዙሃን ነጻነትን ለመጠበቅ የህግ ማሻሻያ ማድረግ አለበት፡፡”ብለዋል።
በኢትዮጵያ የሚገኙ አብዛኞቹ የሬድዮ እና የቴሌቪዥን ጣቢያዎች ከመንግስት ጋር ትስስር ያላቸው ናቸው፣ መንግስት ከሚያራምዳቸው አቋሞች ብዙም አያፈነግጡም፤ እንዲያውም የመንግስት ፖሊሲዎችን ያስተዋውቃሉ፣ የልማት ውጤቶችን ያወድሳሉ፡፡ ከ80 በመቶ የሚበልጠው የኢትዮጵያ ህዝብ የሚኖረው በገጠራማ አካባቢዎች በመሆኑ እና ሬድዮ እስከአሁን ድረስ ዋናው የዜና እና መረጃ ማግኛ ምንጭ ከመሆኑ አንጻር ሬድዮን መቆጣጠር ለፖለቲካው ከፍተኛ አስፈለጊነት አለው። የፖለቲካ ክስተቶችን የሚዘግቡ ጥቂት የግል ሬድዮ ጣቢያዎችም በአካባቢ የመንግስት ባለስልጣናት ስራዎቻቸው የሚታረሙበት እና ለስርጭት የቅድሚያ ፈቃድ የሚያገኙበት አሰራር አለ። ፈቃድ ካገኘው ይዘት የሚያፈነግጡ አሰራጮች ጥቃትና ወከባ ይደርስባቸዋል፣ ይታሰራሉ፣ በበርካታ አጋጣሚዎችም ሃገር ለቀው ለመሰደድ ይገደዳሉ።
መንግስት በዲያስፖራ ባለቤትነት የተያዙ የውጭ የሬድዮ እና የቴሌቪዥን ስርጭቶች አየር ሞገዶችን በተደጋጋሚ ያፍናል፤ ድረ-ገጾቻቸውንም ኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ እንዳይታዩ ያደርጋል።፡፡ ለእነዚህ ብሮድካስተሮች የሚሰሩ ሰራተኞች ዛቻ እና ማስፈራሪያ ይደርስባቸዋል፤ እንዲሁም የመረጃ ምንጮቻቸው እና በዓለም ዓቀፍ መገናኛ-ብዙሃን ቃለመጠይቅ የተደረገላቸው ሰዎች ማስፈራሪያ ይደርሳቸዋል። እነዚህን ስርጭቶች የተመለከቱ ወይም ያዳመጡ ሰዎችም ጭምር ለእስር ተዳርገዋል፡፡
መንግስት የጋዜጠኞች ማህበራት ለመመስረት የሚደረግ ጥረትን በማደናቀፍ፣ ለግል መገናኛ-ብዙሃን የሚሰጥ ፈቃድ ወይንም እድሳትን በማዘግየት፣ ባሉት ጥቂት ማተሚያ ቤቶች እና አከፋፋዮች ላይ አሉታዊ ጫና በማሳደር እንዲሁም በመንግስት መገናኛ-ብዙሃን የስራ ቅጥርን ከገዢው ፓርቲ አባልነት ጋር በማያያዝ በርካታ በግልጽ የማይታዩ ግን ደግሞ ውጤታማ የሆኑ አስተዳደራዊ እና ከቁጥጥር ጋር የተያያዙ ገደቦችንም ስራ ላይ ያውላል።
ማህበራዊ ድረገጾችም ከፍተኛ ገደብ ይደረግባቸዋል፤ እንዲሁም በዲያስፖራዎች የሚመሩ በርካታ የኢንተርኔት ጦማሮች እና ድረ-ገጾች ኢትዮጵያ ውስጥ እንዳይታዩ ተደርገዋል። በሚያዚያ ወር ዞን ዘጠኝ በመባል የሚታወቁ እና በሃገሪቱ ማህበራዊ፣ ፖለቲካዊ እና ሌሎች ጉዳዮች ዙሪያ በተለይ ለወጣት ኢትዮጵያዊያን ትንታኔ የሚያቀርቡ የኢንተርኔት ጦማሪያን ስብስብ አባላት የሆኑ ስድስት ጦማሪያንን መንግስት አስሯል። በሃገሪቱ የጸረ-ሽብር አዋጅ እና የወንጀል ህግ መሰረትም ክስ ተመስርቶባቸዋል። ከሌሎች ታዋቂ ጋዜጠኞች ጋር በአንድነት እየታየ የሚገኘው ክሳቸው ፍትሃዊ የፍርድ ሂደትን ሊያዛቡ የሚችሉ በርካታ ግድፈቶች ተስተውለውበታል። እ.ኤ.አ. በጃንዋሪ 14 የፍርድ ሂደቱ ለ16ኛ ጊዜ ቀጠሮ ተሰጥቶበታል። ተከሳሾቹም ከ260 ቀናት በላይ በእስር ላይ ይገኛሉ፡፡ የዞን ዘጠኝ ጦማሪያን እስር እና ክስ በተለይ ተችት የሚያቀርቡ ጦማሪያን እና የኢንተርኔት ላይ ተሟጋቾችን ጨምሮ በኢትዮጵያ ሃሳብን የመግለጽ ነጻነት ላይ የፍርሃት ድባብ እንዲሰፍን አድርጓል።
እየጨመረ የመጣው መገናኛ-ብዙሃን ላይ የሚፈጸም አሉታዊ ጫና በግንቦት ወር በሚካሄደው ምርጫ የሚኖረውን የመገናኛ-ብዙሃን ይዞታ ያለጥርጥር ይጎዳዋል ብሏል ሂዩማን ራይትስ ዎች፡፡
“ከግንቦቱ ምርጫ አስቀድሞ መንግስት የመገናኛ-ብዙሃን ነጻነትን በተመለከተ ከፍተኛ ማሻሻያ ለማድረግ አሁንም ጊዜ አለው::” ያሉት ሌፍኮው “አፋኝ ህጎችን ለማረም እና የታሰሩ ጋዜጠኞችን ለመፍታት የሚያስፈልገው የፖለቲካ ቁርጠኝነት እንጂ ረጅም ጊዜ ወይንም ከፍተኛ ሃብት አይደለም፡፡” ብለዋል።


“የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት ነጻ መገናኛ-ብዙሃንን ጠቃሚ የመረጃ እና ትንታኔ ምንጭ አድርጎ ከመውሰድ ይልቅ የስጋት ምንጭ አድርጎ በመቁጠር በሃገሪቱ የሚገኙ ነጻ ድምጾች ላይ ስልታዊ በሆነ መንገድ ጥቃት ይፈጽማል። የኢትዮጵያ መገናኛ-ብዙሃን ለግንቦቱ ምርጫ ወሳኝ ሚና መጫወት አለባቸው፤ ነገርግን በርካታ ጋዜጠኞች የሚቀጥለው ጽሁፋቸው እስር ቤት ያስወረውረናል በሚል ስጋት ውስጥ ነው የሚገኙት።”
ያሉት የሂዩማን ራይትስ ዎች የአፍሪካ ምክትል ዳይሬክተር ሌስሊ ሌፍኮው

Saturday, January 17, 2015


Ethiopia is One of the Top Ten Worst Jailers of Journalists



December 17, 2014
More than 200 journalists are imprisoned for their work for the third consecutive year, reflecting a global surge in authoritarianism. China is the world’s worst jailer of journalists in 2014. A CPJ special report by Shazdeh Omari.
The Committee to Protect Journalists identified 220 journalists in jail around the world in 2014, an increase of nine from 2013. The tally marks the second-highest number of journalists in jail since CPJ began taking an annual census of imprisoned journalists in 1990, and highlights a resurgence of authoritarian governments in countries such as China, Ethiopia, Burma, and Egypt.
China’s use of anti-state charges and Iran’s revolving door policy in imprisoning reporters,
bloggers, editors, and photographers earned the two countries the dubious distinction of being the world’s worst and second worst jailers of journalists, respectively. Together, China and Iran are holding a third of journalists jailed globally—despite speculation that new leaders who took the reins in each country in 2013 might implement liberal reforms.
The 44 journalists in Chinese jails are a jump from 32 the previous year, and reflect the pressure that President Xi Jinping has exerted on media, lawyers, dissidents, and academics to toe the government line. In addition to jailing journalists, Beijing has issued restrictive new rules about what can be covered and denied visas to international journalists. Coverage of ethnic minority issues continues to be sensitive; almost half of those jailed are Tibetan or Uighur, including academic and blogger Ilham Tohti and seven students imprisoned for working on his website, Uighurbiz. Twenty-nine of the journalists behind bars in China were held on anti-state charges. (Read detailed accounts of each imprisoned journalist here.)
The administration of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has also maintained repressive measures against the press. This year, Iranian authorities were holding 30 journalists in jail, down from 35 in 2013 and a record high of 45 in 2012. CPJ’s 2014 International Press Freedom Award winner Siamak Ghaderi was released from prison in July, but that same month, Iranian authorities jailed Jason Rezaian, a Washington Post reporter. By late 2014, the government had still not disclosed the reason for Rezaian’s arrest or the nature of charges against him.
The list of the top 10 worst jailers of journalists was rounded out by Eritrea, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Syria, Egypt, Burma, Azerbaijan, and Turkey. The prison census accounts only for journalists in government custody and does not include those in the captivity of nonstate groups. For example, CPJ estimates that approximately 20 journalists are missing in Syria, many of whom are believed held by the militant group Islamic State.
Turkey, which was the world’s worst jailer in 2012 and 2013, released dozens of journalists this year, bringing to seven the number of journalists behind bars on the date of CPJ’s census. However, on December 14, Turkey detained several more journalists—along with television producers, scriptwriters, and police officers—and accused them of conspiring against the Turkish state, according to news reports. The detentions were born of a political struggle between President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the ruling party and the movement led by U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gülen, and included the editor-in-chief of one of Turkey’s largest dailies, Zaman, which is aligned with Gülen.
In Eritrea, which has consistently ranked among the world’s worst jailers and is ranked third this year, authorities are holding 23 journalists, all without charge, and have refused to disclose the prisoners’ health or whereabouts. In 2014, CPJ conducted a fresh investigation into the status of long-held prisoners in the extremely repressive country; the probe led to the addition or removal of a handful of cases but yielded little information about many of those long jailed.
A state crackdown on independent publications and bloggers in Ethiopia this year more than doubled the number of journalists imprisoned to 17 from seven the previous year, and prompted several journalists to flee into exile, according to CPJ research.
For the first time since 2011, Burma had journalists in jail on the date of CPJ’s census: at least 10 were imprisoned, all on anti-state charges. In July, five staff members of the Unity weekly news journal were sentenced to 10 years in prison each under the 1923 Official Secrets Act. Rather than reforming draconian and outdated security laws, President Thein Sein’s government is using the laws to imprison journalists.
In Azerbaijan, authorities were jailing nine journalists, up one from the previous year. Amid a crackdown on traditional media, some activists took to social networking sites in an attempt to give the public an alternative to state media. CPJ’s list does not include at least four activists imprisoned in Azerbaijan this year for creating and managing Facebook groups on which they and others posted a mix of commentary and news articles about human rights abuses and allegations of widespread corruption.
Egypt more than doubled its number of journalists behind bars to at least 12, including three journalists from the international network Al-Jazeera.
In recent years, journalist jailings in the Americas have become increasingly rare, with one documented in each 2012 and 2013. This year, the region has two: a Cuban blogger was sentenced to five years in prison in retaliation for his critical blog, and in Mexico, an independent journalist and activist for Mayan causes has been charged with sedition.
Other trends and details that emerged in CPJ’s research include:
The 220 journalists jailed around the world compares with the 211 CPJ documented behind bars in 2013. The 2014 tally ranks the second highest behind 2012, when CPJ documented 232 journalists jailed in relation to their work.
Worldwide, 132 journalists, or 60 percent, were jailed on anti-state charges such as subversion or terrorism­. That is far higher than any other type of charge, such as defamation or insult, but roughly in line with the proportion of anti-state charges in previous years.Twenty percent, or 45, of the journalists imprisoned globally were being held with no charge disclosed.
Online journalists accounted for more than half, or 119, of the imprisoned journalists. Eighty-three worked in print, 15 in radio, and 14 in television.
Roughly one-third, or 67, of the journalists in jail around the world were freelancers, around the same proportion as in 2013.
The number of prisoners rose in Eritrea, Ethiopia, China, Bangladesh, Thailand, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Egypt, Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and Saudi Arabia. Countries that appeared on the 2014 prison census after jailing no journalists in the 2013 survey were Cameroon, Swaziland, Mexico, Cuba, Burma, and Belarus.
CPJ defines journalists as people who cover the news or comment on public affairs in media, including print, photographs, radio, television, and online. In its annual prison census, CPJ includes only those journalists who it has confirmed have been imprisoned in relation to their work.
CPJ believes that journalists should not be imprisoned for doing their jobs. The organization has sent letters expressing its serious concerns to each country that has imprisoned a journalist. In the past year, CPJ advocacy led to the early release of at least 41 imprisoned journalists worldwide.
CPJ’s list is a snapshot of those incarcerated at 12:01 a.m. on December 1, 2014. It does not include the many journalists imprisoned and released throughout the year; accounts of those cases can be found at http://www.cpj.org. Journalists remain on CPJ’s list until the organization determines with reasonable certainty that they have been released or have died in custody.
Journalists who either disappear or are abducted by nonstate entities such as criminal gangs or militant groups are not included on the prison census. Their cases are classified as “missing” or “abducted.”
Shazdeh Omari is CPJ’s news editor. She was the former copy chief for The Village Voice and has worked as a reporter and editor in the United States and Greece.
CPJ Report