Ethiopia must stop 'digital attacks on journalists abroad'

March 10, 2015 | International Business Times | By Ludovica Iaccino

The Ethiopian government is allegedly using international grade spyware to impede foreign journalists by hacking into computers and sabotaging accounts, according to a new report by 
Human Rights Watch (HRW).
HRW urged the Ethiopian government to stop digital attacks on journalists; the rights groupsaid foreign surveillance technology sellers should investigate alleged abuses linked to their products.

The report cited a claim by the Toronto-based research centre Citizen Lab, that Ethiopian authorities
hacked into computers and accounts of employees at the Ethiopian Satellite Television (ESAT) -
an independent television and radio station, which is run from the US.
A similar claim was also made in December 2013. 
The Ethiopian government applies widespread censorship on media in the country. As a result many
Ethiopians have turned to ESAT and other foreign stations to obtain independent news and analysis.
"Ethiopia's government has over the past year intensified its assault on media freedom by
systematically trying to silence journalists," said Cynthia Wong, senior Internet researcher at Human
Rights Watch. "These digital attacks threaten journalists' ability to protect the safety of their sources
and to avoid retaliation."
The report also added that at least 22 journalists, bloggers, and publishers have been criminally
charged and at least six publications have closed amid a campaign of harassment in 2014. 
The HRW report comes a few weeks after the Ethiopian Federal High Court charged six bloggers
and three independent journalists with terrorism.
The defendants were arrested in April 2014 and were accused of plotting with the Ginbot 7,
a political party classified as a terrorist organisation in Ethiopia.
Last September the UN issued a statement urging Ethiopia to stop abusing its laws, which HRW
deemed  "deeply flawed". A draconian system is employed by the country's leaders to target
journalists who are then imprisoned, sometimes tortured and not guaranteed a fair trial.

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