The international human rights system is broken – or perhaps it never worked at all.
For those who live in countries that fail to provide or enforce their own laws protecting freedom of expression, international principles have rarely provided actual recourse. This is the case, today, with the independent Ethiopian blogger collective known as Zone9.
In April of this year, the government of Ethiopia arrested six members of Zone9 and affiliated journalists in Addis Ababa. They were held for months without a formal charge and were denied the ability to communicate.
In July, the Zone9 prisoners were charged under Ethiopia’s Anti-Terrorism Proclamation of 2009 for receiving support from political opposition organizations, defined formally by the government as terrorists, and receiving training from international activists in email encryption and data security from the
The Zone9 bloggers joined other media outlets targeted under similar laws, including Eskinder Nega, who had reported on recent Arab uprisings and the possibility of similar uprisings in Ethiopia. He was arrested and
International appeals from human rights advocacy organizations have had little effect on the case. In May, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay issued a
Nani Jansen, a lawyer for the Media Legal Defence Initiative and the lead signatory in the appeal, writes in an email that both the African Commission and the UN “operate under the cover of confidentiality in the early stages of these matters: when they follow up with a Government, this is done without informing the outside world. Only months and months (often over a year) later, these exchanges with a Government get published in the mechanism’s report to its supervisory body.” Thus any intervention joins the rest of those in the cone of silence that is Zone9—hidden from public scrutiny or participation.
Even if these bodies do follow up with the Ethiopian government, their recourse is limited. In an article on the urgent appeal, Jansen
Since the appeal, the Ethiopian government has proceeded with charges against the accused. The latest details on the trial can be found on the website
Public attempts to highlight the Ethiopian governments’ transgressions against human rights such as the #Freezone9bloggers
The implementation of international commitments seems to rest primarily upon a negotiated process of politics, not a functioning and enforceable system of law. Considering the ease with which national law in Ethiopia is employed or ignored for political ends, it is a grim irony that only political pressure can hope to resolve the case in their favor.
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To read more about the Zone9 bloggers, read our Fall 2014 article
Ivan Sigal is the executive director of Global Voices, a non-profit online global citizen media initiative. He is also a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, where he studies digital storytelling and online communities.
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