SHARE
COPY LINK
SWEDES ON TRIAL IN ETHIOPIA

ETHIOPIA

Swedes plead ‘not guilty’ to terror crimes

The two Swedish reporters facing terrorism charges in Ethiopia pleaded not guilty when the trial resumed on Thursday, but apologised for having entered the country illegally.

Swedes plead 'not guilty' to terror crimes

Photographer Johan Persson and reporter Martin Schibbye, both freelancers, have been held in jail since they were arrested on July 1 with Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) rebels after a battle with government troops.

“I entered the country illegally without proper documentation, for this I am guilty, for this I apologise to the Ethiopian government,” Schibbye told the court.

“But I am not guilty to the charge of terrorism.”

His colleague, Persson, also admitted to not having proper documentation.

But he added: “My intention was to do my job as a journalist, to describe the fighting, nothing else, not guilty.”

An AFP reporter at the court said the Swedes, dressed in dark suits and ties, looked serious as they listened to the charges against them in the court room, which was packed with around a hundred people.

“Your honour, I am a Swedish journalist, my job is to gather news,” Schibbye told the judge.

“We did not have any intention to collaborate with any group with interest to destabilise Ethiopia. For that we are not guilty.”

The two were reportedly seen to smile at times to family members present in the court room, including Persson’s father and Schibbye’s wife, as well as to around 20, mainly foreign, journalists.

The ONLF, formed in 1984, has been fighting for the independence of the remote south eastern Ogaden, populated mainly by ethnic Somalis, which the rebels say has been marginalised by Addis Ababa.

After being arrested in July while in the Ogaden region while in the company of the ONLF, the Swedes were charged last month with being engaged in terrorist activities, aiding and abetting a terrorist group, and entering the country illegally without permission, from neighbouring Somalia.

Two fellow co-accused, Ethiopian ethnic Somalis suspected of being ONLF members, also pleaded not guilty.

The trial was then adjourned to November 1st.

The prosecution claims they need at least ten days to gather the witnesses they want to testify, which are at the moment in the Ogaden province, according to daily Dagens Nyheter (DN).

On Thursday the two Swedes’ defence lawyers said that they had yet to get to see the complete body of evidence, and that they need this to be able to defend the case in court.

“It is apparently a question of video clips, information from computers and memory cards. But the prosecutor said that these will be brought forward as the trial gets properly underway. the judge seemed happy with that,” said DN reporter Thomas Hall, who was one of the reporters present in the court room.

The trial is expected to take between two and 12 months. If found guilty, the two Swedes could be facing up to 40 years in prison.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

PLANE CRASH

Germany bans plane model involved in deadly Ethiopia crash from airspace

Germany on Tuesday banned all Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes from its airspace, Transport Minister Andreas Scheuer announced, following a deadly crash in Ethiopia.

Germany bans plane model involved in deadly Ethiopia crash from airspace
A 737 Max 8 plane from Ethiopia airlines. Photo: DPA

“Safety comes first. Until all doubts have been cleared up, I have ordered that German airspace be closed to all Boeing 737 MAX aircraft with immediate effect,” he told NTV television.

There are currently no 737 MAX planes registered in Germany.

The minister's announcement follows similar bans by a string of countries around the world after a Nairobi-bound Ethiopian Airlines plane of the same model crashed on Sunday, killing all 157 people on board, including five from Germany.

The same model of plane operated by Lion Air also crashed in Indonesia last
October, killing 189.

Britain, China, Singapore, Australia, Malaysia and Oman are among the countries that have closed their airspace to the planes in response.

Earlier on Tuesday, Germany's TUI fly carrier said it was grounding its 15-strong fleet of Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes, which are stationed in Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.

TUI fly was in “close contact” with the authorities in those countries, the spokesman added.

SHOW COMMENTS