Ethiopian
security forces have re-arrested a number of recently freed politicians
and journalists as they gathered for a social event outside the
capital, Addis Ababa, with family and friends, a lawyer said Monday.
Amha Mekonnen has represented a number of the detainees. The lawyer told the Associated Press
the arrests Sunday afternoon occurred because they were accused of
displaying a prohibited national flag. "I also understand they were
accused of gathering en masse in violation of the state of emergency
rule."
Under
Ethiopia's latest state of emergency declared earlier this year, people
are prohibited from such gatherings without authorities' prior
knowledge. A proclamation regarding the use of the Ethiopian flag
prohibits the display of the flag without the emblem at its center and
those contravening the law could be sentenced to up to a year and a half
in prison.
Among
those arrested are journalists Eskinder Nega and Temesgen Desalegn,
politician Andualem Aragie and prominent blogger Befekadu Hailu.
Government officials were not immediately available for comment.
In a
surprise move early this year, Ethiopia's Prime Minister Hailemariam
Desalegn announced that members of political parties and other
individuals would be released from prison in an effort to open up the
political space for all after months of the worst anti-government
protests in a quarter-century.
Several
dozen journalists, politicians, activists and others arrested under a
previous state of emergency were freed. Since then, however, the prime
minister announced his plans to resign, and Ethiopia introduced a state
of emergency for the second time in two years.
A new prime minister is expected to be installed by the ruling coalition in the coming days.
Ethiopia
is one of Africa's most prominent economies, Africa's second most
populous country and a key security ally of the West but is often
accused by rights groups and opposition groups of stifling dissent and
arresting opposition party members, journalists, activists and bloggers.
AP
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