By AFP
The White House demanded that Ethiopia stop using its
controversial anti-terror law to jail journalists Wednesday, in an
unusually stark rebuke for a key US ally in Africa.
National Security Council spokesman Ned Price did not name the
reporters the United States is concerned for, but he spoke amid a harsh
Ethiopian crackdown on dissent.
"We are deeply concerned by the recent arrests of other journalists in Ethiopia," Mr Price said.
"We urge the Ethiopian Government to release journalists and all
others imprisoned for exercising their right to free expression," he
added.
The White House urged Ethiopia "to refrain from using its
Anti-Terrorism Proclamation as a mechanism to silence dissent and to
protect the rights of journalists, bloggers, and dissidents to write and
speak freely as voices of a diverse nation."
On December 19, Human Rights Watch reported that Ethiopian
security forces had killed at least 75 demonstrators with live fire
during weeks of regional anti-government protests.
ALSO READ: Blood and terror on the streets as protests grip Ethiopia, govt vows to 'act without mercy'
Dissident bloggers
US President Barack Obama visited the Ethiopian capital Addis
Ababa, the seat of the African Union, in July, and Washington is seen as
close to the government, headed by Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn.
But, while admiring Ethiopia's strong economic growth and
welcoming its role in peacekeeping missions, Washington has been
cautious not to endorse its rights record.
In October, Washington welcomed the release of a previous group
of dissident bloggers and journalists, but on Wednesday the White House
warned Ethiopia against new arrests.
"The United States has consistently applauded Ethiopia for being a model and a voice for development in Africa," Mr Price said.
"But such gains must rest on a foundation of democratic governance and respect for human rights if they are to be sustainable."
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