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SWEDES ON TRIAL IN ETHIOPIA

OGADEN

Journalists deny being trained by rebels

Two Swedish journalists on trial in Ethiopia Tuesday admitted contact with an outlawed rebel group but rejected accusations they received weapons training.

Journalists deny being trained by rebels

The journalists dismissed video evidence presented by the prosecution earlier as proof they were trained by rebels.

In the video the journalists are seen holding automatic rifles, but which they said belonged to a security guard and not a member of the rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF).

“This video doesn’t show some bizarre training with weapons in a parking lot, it shows another day at the office for a foreign correspondent,” one of the accused, Martin Schibbye told the judge.

Reporter Schibbye and photographer Johan Persson — both freelancers — were arrested in Ethiopia’s Ogaden region on July 1 after entering the country from Somalia.

They were arrested after a gun battle erupted between Ethiopian troops and ONLF fighters, and are charged with supporting a terrorist group and entering the country illegally. They face up to 15 years in jail if found guilty.

Charges of participating in terrorism were dropped last month due to a lack of evidence.

The journalists both testified they were in Ethiopia to report on the activities of the Swedish oil company Lundin Oil in the Ogaden.

They said they met ONLF chiefs in London and Nairobi before meeting with about 20 members of the group in Ethiopia, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the Somali border.

Persson said the purpose of meeting ONLF contacts was for professional reasons only. “I came to Ethiopia for one purpose, that’s to do my job as a journalist,” he said.

Sweden’s ambassador to Ethiopia, Jens Odlander, said he was happy the accused had a chance to provide a statement in court, which he said they had been “preparing for weeks.”

“We have always believed at the Swedish embassy that they are journalists,” he told AFP after court Tuesday.

The ONLF has been fighting for independence of the remote south-eastern Ogaden region since 1984, claiming they have been marginalised from Addis Ababa.

The trial continues.

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ETHIOPIA

Swede ‘beaten in Ogaden’ housed at embassy

A Swedish-Ethiopian politician from Gothenburg, assaulted on a trip to Ogaden, has been safely housed at the Swedish embassy in Addis Ababa were immediate arrangements are being made for him and his family return home.

Dayib Mohamud, a part-time Green Party politician from Gothenburg, was detained and beaten in front of his children, the man’s brother told Swedish media on Monday. Ogaden is a restive region where two Swedish journalists were arrested two years ago on suspicion of abetting terrorists.

Dayib Mohamud landed in the Ethiopian capital on Tuesday along with one of his children.

“They’re now at the Swedish embassy to discuss arrangements for a trip home to Sweden,” his brother Qualinle Dayib told news agency TT.

Dayib Mohamud has lived in Sweden for almost three decades and is a Swedish citizen. He had returned with his nine children, all born in Sweden, to Ethiopia to visit their native Ogaden region, according to the brother.

The man told his brother on the phone that he had been assaulted and thrown from a moving vehicle by eight soldiers, before being taken to a house where the beating continued.

“He is very badly hurt and is having problems moving. There are no hospitals in the area,” the brother added.

The rest of the family, eight children and the mother, were expected to arrive in Addis Ababa by bus on Tuesday evening and plans are being made for the entire family to return home to Sweden as soon as possible.

The Ogaden region between Ethiopia and Somalia has been contested for more than a century. Since 1984, the Ogaden National Liberation Front has taken up armed combat with security forces. The Swedish Foreign Ministry (Utrikesdepartementet – UD) advises Swedish citizens to stay clear of the region.

The Local/cd

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