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Hefty fines for Ethiopian
publishing houses
The Committee to Protect
Journalists
New York,
March 11, 2010 - The Ethiopian Supreme Court reinstated fines on Monday against
four newspaper publishing companies over their coverage of the disputed 2005
national election. The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on Ethiopian
authorities to end their continuing pursuit of politically motivated charges
related to the election.
Judge Dagne Melaku, presiding over a panel of three-judge panel, upheld fines
initially imposed in July 2007 against the Fasil, Serkalem, Sisay, and Zekarias
publishing houses for antistate crimes related to their newspapers' reporting on
Ethiopia?s 2005 elections, according to local journalists.
Monday's ruling overturned a February 2009 High Court decision that had struck
down the fines. The High Court said that a July 2007 presidential pardon,
granted to numerous journalists and political dissidents who were facing
anti-state charges related to the election, also applied to the four publishing
houses.
The publishing houses and their newspapers were forced to close in 2005 and were
later banned by the government. The principals in the companies were acquitted
of individual charges of anti-state activity, although they spent 17 months in
pretrial detention, according to CPJ research.
In its ruling on Monday, the Supreme Court ordered the principals in the
publishing companies to pay the fines immediately or face the freezing of their
assets, according to local journalists. Principals in the Serkalem publishing
house, which owned Asqual, Menelik, and Satanaw newspapers, face a fine of
120,000 birrs (US$8,800); officials of Sisay Publishing and Advertising
Enterprise, which produced Ethiop and Abay, face a fine of 100,000 birrs
(US$7,400); principals in Zekarias, publisher of Netsanet, face a fine of 60,000
birrs (US$4,400), and officials of Fasil, publisher of Addis Zena, face a fine
of 15,000 birrs (US$1,100). By Ethiopian economic standards, the fines are
substantial.
The administration has used legal and administrative means to harass the owners
of the four publishing companies ever since they were acquitted, according to
CPJ research. In 2007, government prosecutors asked the Supreme Court to
reinstate genocide charges against principals in the companies, but the
government eventually dropped the effort. The government later blocked two of
the publishers, award-winning journalist Serkalem Fasil and editor Sisay Agena,
from launching new publications.
"The government continues to use the courts and administrative means to settle
political scores against journalists who were acquitted after the 2005
election," said CPJ Africa Program Coordinator Tom Rhodes. "We call on Prime
Minister Meles Zenawi to end his administration's unrelenting harassment of
these journalists, which contradicts his public statements in 2007 that the
government did not harbour a "sense of revenge" toward its critics in the
press."
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The Committee to Protect Journalists is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization
dedicated to defending press freedom worldwide. Please visit us online at
cpj.org.
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