Ethiopian court gives
Canadian man life sentence
(Addis Ababa.
August 03, 2009 Ceegaag Online)
The Ethiopian
High Court on Monday sentenced a Ethiopian-born Canadian
citizen to life in prison for being a member of an Ethiopian
rebel group and engaging in terrorist activities.
Bashir Ahmed
Makhtal was given the second-highest penalty to serve as a
deterrent to other members of the Ogaden National Liberation
Front, said a judge, who read the sentence on behalf of a
three-man panel. The judges did not give their names nor did
the statement give their names.
On July 27,
the High Court found the former Toronto resident guilty of
being a member of the political and military central
committees of the ONLF; working to co-ordinate attacks
against the Ethiopian army; and working with the Eritrean
government in recruiting and training insurgents.
"The nature
of these crimes forces the court to impose punishment that
would act as a lesson to deter others. And the court has
decided to impose a life sentence," said the court. The
death penalty is the maximum sentence Makhtal faced.
Thumbing his
rosary, Makhtal remained calm and composed when the sentence
was read.
Last week
Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said Canada would
ask that Makhtal not face the death penalty.
A Canadian
diplomat who attended the session of the court declined to
comment.
The defence
said Makhtal, "was at the wrong place at the wrong time."
Makhtal was arrested at the border of Kenya and Somalia in
early 2007 at a time when Ethiopia had invaded the country
to back the fragile Somali government against Islamic
militants. Ethiopia eventually withdrew in January
Defence
lawyer Gebreamlak, who only gave his first name, later said
they will appeal the judges' verdict and sentence. The
defence has in the past said that Makhtal was caught because
his grandfather, who is deceased, helped found the ONLF.
The group,
which the government brands a terrorists organization, has
been fighting for autonomy in eastern Ethiopia. The
government also accuses Eritrea of supporting the group.
Ethiopia and Eritrea are archrivals with a border dispute
that remains unresolved despite fighting a war and a ruling
on the border by an independent commission.
Human rights
groups have said Makhtal was one of hundreds of people held
in secret prisons in Ethiopia on suspicion of being involved
in terrorism. Makhtal's release after two years was secret
but his subsequent trial was public.
Last week,
Makhtal's Canadian lawyer Lorne Waldman called the Ethiopian
proceedings a "kangaroo court" that ignored important
evidence from Makhtal, who has been locked up for more than
two years.
Makhtal, born
in Ethiopia in 1969, settled in Canada as a refugee. He
later moved to Kenya, opening a used-clothing business and
was working in Somalia when Ethiopian troops invaded in late
2006.
Makhtal fled
back to Kenya, but was detained along with several others at
the Kenya-Somalia border.
New
York-based organization Human Rights Watch says Makhtal was
subsequently deported to Somalia from Kenya on Jan. 20,
2007, and was then shipped to Ethiopia.
With files
from The Canadian Press
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