/ 26 October 2006

Ethiopian probe into post-poll violence contradicts govt

An Ethiopian parliamentary probe has determined the death toll from post-election violence last year was triple the government’s earlier figure but found no evidence of excessive force by authorities, officials said on Thursday.

A panel investigating two explosions of unrest after the disputed May 2005 polls said 199 people, 193 civilians and six police, died in Addis Ababa and other cities, more than three times the original official number of 54.

The figure matches that given by the committee’s ex-vice chair who is now in hiding, but officials dispute his contention that security forces violated human rights during the unrest and were guilty of committing a ”massacre”.

The panel said some rights were ”infringed,” but stressed it believed that Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s government had ”tried to do its best” to protect the population during the June and November violence.

”There were very unpleasant incidents in connection with the May 15 2005, election,” chairperson Mekonene Disasa told reporters at a news conference called after his former deputy alleged the government was suppressing the truth.

”The commission is deeply saddened about what happened,” Mekonene said, adding that Meles’s government, which has expressed regret for the deaths but insisted its reaction was appropriate, had not acted illegally.

”The commission doesn’t believe excessive force was used,” he said, maintaining that the response to violence that erupted during election protests had been ”legal and necessary”.

”It prevented the country from going into worse conditions,” Mekonene said. ”Human rights conditions were infringed, the commission believes. But it believes the government tried to do its best in [protecting] human rights.”

At the weekend, Wolde-Michael Meshesha, a judge and former vice-chairperson of the commission, accused the government of having threatened him and coerced the panel into changing its original determination of wrongdoing by authorities.

”According to our findings, this is a kind of massacre,” he told Agence France-Presse from Europe where he is now in hiding. ”The government violated the [people’s] human rights.”

Wolde-Michael also said Meles had pressured the group — eight out of 10 of whom agreed that excessive force had been used, he claimed — to change the results and that he fled after refusing and receiving death threats.

But Mekonene denied the commission had come under any pressure to alter its report, which is to be sent to Parliament next week.

”The commission knows itself and believes that it has done what it could freely and extensively,” he said. — AFP

 

AFP