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Human Rights Developments Defending Human Rights The Role of the International Community Eight members of the board of directors of the Human Rights League remained in detention a year after their arrest in October 1997, charged with armed conspiracy with the OLF. On April 8, 1998, security agents raided the offices of the league, took away its office equipment and archives, and sealed the premises. The government refused to register the league following its establishment in December 1996 by members of the Oromo community in Addis Ababa, despite constitutional guarantees of freedom of association. The veteran Human Rights Council continued to function without any form of official recognition or responses to its repeated appeals for human rights improvements. Other monitoring groups, such as the Ogaden Human Rights Committee, the Oromo Ex-Prisoners for Human Rights, and Solidarity Committee for Ethiopian Political Prisoners, were forced underground or into exile, and could onlypublish critical reports abroad, increasingly through the Internet. The government authorized the activities of several civic and human rights education groups. An international human rights conference on the establishment of a human rights commission and office of Ombudsman, sponsored by international donors and organized by the Council of Peoples Representatives, convened in Addis Ababa in May. Notable absentees were the Ethiopian Human Rights Council, the Human Rights League, and also the private press, who were not invited. |
Angola Burundi The Democratic Republic of Congo Ethiopia Kenya Liberia Mozambique Nigeria Rwanda Sierra Leone South Africa Sudan Uganda Zambia Stop the Use of Child Soldiers Abduction and Enslavement of Ugandan Children Human Rights Causes of the Famine in Sudan |
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