Temesghen Desalegn, owner of the
Sources close to Temesghen, including two who visit him in prison, told CPJ that Temesghen suffers from stomach and back pain for which he used to receive weekly medical support before he was jailed. The sources said that Temesghen has been denied medical access since he was imprisoned and that his back pain has worsened to the point that walking is difficult for him.
The
CPJ’s calls to the Ethiopian justice ministry in Addis Ababa, and CPJ’s calls and emails to the Ethiopian embassy in Washington, were not answered.
Earlier this year, prison authorities denied Temesghen prison visits from friends and family for more than a month, according to a
Temesghen often criticized the authorities in his articles. In 2012, he wrote two articles that discussed the peaceful struggles of Ethiopian youth movements for political change, according to the charge sheet that CPJ reviewed. He also wrote two columns that criticized alleged government efforts to violently suppress student
“Temesghen Desalegn has not committed any crime. He is being punished for his criticism of the Ethiopian government,” said CPJ East Africa Representative Tom Rhodes. “We call on authorities to stop harassing Temesghen and allow him immediate access to medical care.”
Ethiopian authorities were holding at least 17 journalists in jail–more than twice the number as the year before–when CPJ conducted its annual