Friday, July 11, 2008

Could Dictatroship be one of the factos of persistent famine in Africa?

Ethiopia convicts 'butcher' dictator of mass genocide
Share Digg del.icio.us Google Stumble Upon Facebook Reddit Print Email Text Size
NormalLargeExtra LargeArticlesTopicsArticles
African dictators on trial
Africa even closer to Mary's heart after horror
Steer Ireland's aid from the grasping fists of monsters
Troops may be set for peace role in Darfur
Troops may be set for peace role in Darfur
Red Cross to review security after abduction
Police accused of brutality
Topics
Ethiopia
Mengistu Haile Mariam
Addis Ababa
Harare
Zimbabwe
Robert Mugabe
London
Also in Africa
Global net closes on Mugabe's gang
Troops save aid workers in Chad drama
Mercenary gets 34 years for bungled coup
Censure Mugabe or trade will suffer, G8 tells leaders
Mugabe row 'infecting' Africa
Africa Home
By Mike Pflanz


Wednesday December 13 2006

MENGISTU Haile Mariam, Ethiopia's former Marxist dictator was yesterday convicted of genocide by a court in Addis Ababa after a 12-year trial.
The 69-year-old was tried in absentia because he fled to Zimbabwe in 1991 where he lives in luxurious exile in a suburb of Harare, the capital. President Robert Mugabe has said he is a "refugee" and has refused to extradite him to Ethiopia.

Along with 72 key associates, Mengistu was accused of genocide, illegal imprisonment and abuse of power for leading a series of blood-soaked purges against political opponents during the "Red Terror" of 1977 and 1978. No one knows how many died, but the prosecution estimated that 2,000 were killed in the campaign.

During his 17-year rule, up to 1.5 million people were killed, tortured or detained by henchmen from his Derg, or "committee". "Members of the Derg who are present in court today and those who are being tried in absentia have conspired to destroy a political group and kill people with impunity," presiding Judge Medhen Kiros said in his ruling yesterday.

The guilty verdict - a rarity in Africa where former tyrants seldom face prosecution - carries the death sentence, but Mengistu is likely to live out his days in comfort.

The court began its hearings in 1994 and has since convicted 1,018 people, despite difficulties collecting evidence and the deaths of dozens of witnesses.

A further 6,426 await trial, although more than 3,000 of them live in exile. Colonel Mengistu Haile Mariam was an obscure junior army officer until 1974, when he headed the junta of low-ranking soldiers which toppled emperor Haile Selassie in a bloody coup. (©Daily Telegraph, London)

- Mike Pflanz

No comments: