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Ethiopia passes controversial ‘hate speech’ law

ADDIS ABABA: Ethiopia on Thursday passed a law punishing “hate speech” and “disinformation” with hefty fines and long jail terms, despite fears by rights groups it undermines gains in free speech.

Nearly 300 lawmakers voted in favour of the bill, with 23 votes against and two abstentions.

The new law defines hate speech as rhetoric that fuels discrimination “against individuals or groups based on their nationality, ethnic and religious affiliation, sex or disabilities”.

Penalties for disseminating such speech include fines of up to 100,000 Ethiopian birr ($3,100) and prison terms of up to two years. But when hate speech or “disinformation” results in “an attack on individuals or groups”, jail terms can stretch to five years.

“This, however, should not in any way affect people’s right to express their opinions,” said Adhana Haile, a member of parliament from the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). “We also have to make sure this bill won’t be applied with the wrong motives, against individuals with different ideas and perspectives,” Adhana said.

That view echoes concerns by foreign experts, who criticised a draft bill in December.

“The draft’s excessive vagueness means that officials at the federal and regional level would have practically unbounded discretion to determine whom to investigate and prosecute,” David Kaye, the UN’s special rapporteur on freedom of expression, said in December.

Kaye said that the draft version of the hate speech law could “exacerbate ethnic tension, which may in turn fuel further violence”.

The law passed on Thursday appeared to be largely unchanged from the draft Kaye criticised.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) also warned in December that the law could be used to target people who share content on social media or private messaging apps.

“Ethiopia should be removing legal provisions that restrict free expression, not adding more vague provisions that risk stifling critical public debate on important issues,” HRW’s Laetitia Bader said at the time.

The Ethiopian government is also under increasing pressure to respond to rising communal violence that has at times been exacerbated by speeches and statements shared online, she had said in December. But an ill-construed law that opens the door for law enforcement officials to violate rights to free expression is no solution.

“Politicians or activists or others will be forced to be cautious, afraid that their speech might fall into the definition of hate speech or can be considered as false information,” said Amnesty International’s Ethiopia researcher Fisseha Tekle.

Prime Minster Abiy Ahmed, last year’s Nobel Peace Prize laureate, has been praised for reforms hoped to foster a more open political and media environment.

But domestic critics accuse him of authoritarian tendencies, including locking up political opponents.

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