/ 23 May 2005

Ethiopia’s election furore sparks boom for free press

The uproar over Ethiopia’s hotly contested general elections last week and confusion and delays in releasing the results have sparked a massive boom for the country’s nascent independent press.

With the government and opposition trading claims of victory and allegations of fraud and abuse amid relative silence from election authorities, the publishers of about 40 general-interest newspapers have reported a huge surge in circulation as Ethiopians clamour for information about the recent polls.

Some claim phenomenal increases of up to 2 500%, while others report more modest spikes of 700%. Although such figures are not audit certified, there are noticeably more newspapers on the streets of Addis Ababa than before.

Meanwhile, the circulations of the country’s two state-run newspapers, Addis Zemen and the Ethiopian Herald, have remained steady at 5 000 to 7 000, observers said.

And, as state-run television and radio have stopped providing equal time to the opposition as they did during the campaign, it is clear that the government’s political foes have turned to new news outlets.

”The growth of newspaper circulation is not only because of their accuracy and consistency, but because of the public’s curiosity to know the results of their vote in the election,” said Tamrat Giorgis, publisher of the independent business weekly Fortune.

”There a critical bottom line the public is looking for, which [none of] the parties, the national election board or the state media are able to provide,” he said.

Tamrat said the circulation of his English-language publication has soared from 3 000 to 5 000 before the election to 40 000, a 700% increase.

But that is nothing compared with the boost claimed by Ethiopi, a weekly newspaper in Amharic, the country’s national language, which says it printed 2 500% more copies of its last edition than its usual 5 000.

”We are leading the print media in circulation,” said Tesfu Tegegn, Ethiopi‘s managing editor. ”We printed 130 000 copies in one go and in the evening there was still demand for copies.”

He added: ”The reason is the public thinks that information about the opposition can be found in private papers, as the private papers were the ones that covered the opposition even before the voting.

”The public knows who he has cast his vote for and he wants to know if it goes by the book, and he believes the private media is the right place, as the state media is not providing information of the opposition.”

More than 90% of Ethiopia’s 26-million voters turned out for the May 15 polls and at least in the capital, the balloting went heavily for the opposition, something even the government has conceded.

Desperate for information amid the swirl of conflicting claims, rumours and wild speculation, Addis Ababa residents are buying newspapers in droves, often doubling the cost of a single paper.

”I am sometimes confused about what to read or to listen to,” said Abdu Hajji, holding three different newspapers in his hands at an Addis Ababa café. ”Every day after voting day I hear different things.”

At a nearby table, businessman Mekonnen Abebe says he understands the difficulties that have led to a delay in the official election results, but he also sympathises with the public’s impatience with the process.

”To people who came out en masse to exercise their right, delays of the results and claims and counter-claims have opened room for rumours, they want news,” he says, opening one of several papers on his table.

But the luxury of newspapers is not something all people in this impoverished nation can afford, particularly as newsstand prices have risen from an average of three birr (R2,29) to six birr (R4,65).

The publishers deny being behind the price hikes and have instead blamed unscrupulous street-corner vendors, whom they also accuse of selling cheap photocopies of the papers if they run out of original stock.

”I have never sold more than 10 to 15 copies a day, but nowadays I am making a good fortune out of these papers,” said newspaper vendor Tedla Mulugeta with a smile.

”I sometimes go to the publishers to give me some more copies,” he said, ducking the question about the increased prices. ”Sometimes I’m lucky and I get some more, but many times more I’m not so lucky.” — Sapa-AFP