By KEVIN J KELLEY
In Summary
- Human Rights Watch says Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia have failed to make progress on core human rights issues.
- Report says Kenya's "longstanding pattern" of failing to respond to allegations of killings and enforced disappearances on the part of security forces worsened in the wake of the Garissa attack.
- The rights body offers a gloomy appraisal of human rights conditions throughout the region, with the exception of Tanzania, which is not among the 90 nations included in the global survey.
Governments of East African countries continued last
year to deny many basic freedoms to their citizens, Human Rights Watch
said in its 2016 world report published on Wednesday.
The New York-based monitoring group offers a gloomy
appraisal of human rights conditions throughout the region, with the
exception of Tanzania, which is not among the 90 nations included in the
global survey.
The "shocking low point" in East Africa last year
was reached in Burundi, HRW finds. A government crackdown on free
expression as part of "a political and human rights crisis" involved the
closure of Burundi's four most popular private radio stations and a
suspension of the activities and bank accounts of 10 independent
organisations, the report notes.
"But key regional powers, like Ethiopia, Uganda and
Kenya, also failed to make progress on core human rights issues,
including torture and killings by their security forces," said HRW
Africa director Daniel Bekele.
The report also points to acute violations on the
part of Al-Shabaab. HRW says the Somalia-based militants killed at least
226 unarmed people in Kenya between November 2014 and July of last
year.
Al-Shabaab is further cited for its "indiscriminate attacks" in Somalia.
In addition, the country's government "hasn't been
able to provide basic security for the civilian population in areas
under its control," the NGO states.
Killings and disappearances
The Kenyan government's "longstanding pattern" of
failing to respond to allegations of killings and enforced
disappearances on the part of security forces "worsened in the wake of
the April attack against students at Garissa University College which
killed 148 people," HRW adds.
The reported deterioration in respect for human
rights in Kenya in 2015 is part of what HRW highlights as a global trend
in which governments react to the reality or fear of terrorist violence
by violating the rights of peaceful dissenters.
Intimidation and threats against journalists and
activists increased in Uganda in the run-up to elections scheduled for
next month, the report observes.
Rwanda is said to have maintained "tight control on
dissenting views" in a year that saw President Kagame move to extend
his 16-year-long grip on power.
Widespread violence in South Sudan was accompanied by abuse of fundamental rights of thousands of citizens, HRW notes.
Ethiopia's May elections were peaceful, "but
utterly non-competitive due to years of repression," the report says.
The ruling party swept all 547 seats in Parliament.
More recently, "scores were killed and injured"
when Ethiopian authorities responded violently to protests in the Oromia
region over threats of forced displacement from farmland, HRW says.
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