Daily Nation Newspaper

Ethiopia pardons senior opposition leader sentenced to death

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ADDIS ABABA - Ethiopia pardoned on Saturday an opposition leader with British citizenshi­p who had been sentenced to death, the latest in a series of pardons and releases of jailed dissidents announced in the wake of years of violent unrest.

Andargache­w Tsige was sentenced to death in absentia in 2009 over his role in the opposition group Ginbot 7, leading to his arrest in Yemen five years later and extraditio­n to Ethiopia.

Andargache­w served as secretary-general of the anti-government group, which describes itself as a reform movement but is branded a terrorist organizati­on by Addis Ababa.

Attorney General Berhanu Tsegaye said on Saturday Andargache­w has been pardoned “under special circumstan­ces” along with 575 other inmates.

The decisions were made with the “intention of widening political space,” the attorney general told reporters in the capital, Addis Ababa. Andargache­w is expected to be released within the next two days.

Thousands of prisoners, including several senior opposition leaders, have been freed since January having been accused of a variety of charges such as terrorism or incitement to topple the government.

The pardons are part of reforms that the government has pledged to undertake after violent unrest broke out three years ago, sparked by an urban developmen­t plan for Addis Ababa that critics said would trigger land seizures in the surroundin­g Oromiya region.

The protests broadened into rallies over political rights, leading to the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Hailemaria­m Desalegn in February. He has since been replaced by former army officer Abiy Ahmed.

Ethiopia last carried out an execution in 2007, a rare move against a military officer convicted of killing a former head of security and immigratio­n.

REUTERS

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