INTERNATIONAL
Islamists Receive Life
Sentences for Ethiopia
Church Attacks
Church appeals
‘secretive’ ruling;
three officials said to
be instigators remain
free.
By Peter Lamprecht
ISTANBUL,
In a snap
ruling that surprised
local Christians, an
Ethiopian court has
sentenced three Muslim
men to life imprisonment
for a deadly machete
attack on two churches
last March.
At the initial hearing
on March 26, the West
Arsi Zone Higher Court
handed down four
sentences – life in
prison for three
attackers, and a
three-month suspended
sentence for an
accomplice – for the
March 2 assault in south
Ethiopia that killed one
and injured 17. The
victims’ families said
they had been told the
hearing would take place
on April 25 and only
learned of the
sentencing after their
right to appeal had
expired.
“Usually, cases will
take months and years to
pass such a sentence,
but this one was
dramatically ended so
fast and secretly,” said
one observer in Addis
Ababa.
Christians from Nensebo
Chebi village, 240 miles
south of Addis Ababa,
overcame bureaucratic
red-tape to appeal the
verdict out of concern
over the “secretive” way
the case had been
handled.
Of another 17 people
initially arrested for
the attack in the
Muslim-majority area,
six remain in prison
while the rest have
reportedly been set
free. Local Christians
said they have been
refused information
regarding whether these
people will be tried.
Three local Muslim
officials arrested on
suspicion of involvement
in the attack are now
back in their government
positions even as a
separate investigation
against them continues,
local Christians said.
“The appeal’s objective
is to get the attention
of higher officials,”
said the observer. “The
church members are
afraid that if it is not
seriously handled, then
in the near future it
can be taken to a
[local] government body
to give parole or pardon
for the [attackers].”
The court in Shashemene
city handed life
sentences to the three
Muslims at the March 26
hearing for the attack
in Nensebo Chebi. Gemeda
Beriso, 20, Kedir Beriso,
20, and Keyrudin
Muhammad, 19, were
convicted of “deliberate
brutal killing.”
Judges Ashenafi Tesfay,
Haji Shalo and Bejiga
Kefeni found a fourth
Muslim man guilty of
cooperating with the
criminals. Hajji Kuma
Ngero was given a
suspended three-month
jail sentence based on
his need to remain free
to care for his 12
children, the verdict
noted. Ngero will only
serve time if convicted
of another crime within
the next two years.
During the Sunday
morning attack on March
2, men wielding knives
and machetes
simultaneously broke
into two churches, half
an hour’s walk apart
from each other, and
began hacking
worshippers. One man
died instantly from a
machete blow to his neck
while two others lost
hands, and another 15
people sustained wounds
on their necks, legs,
arms, shoulders and
backs.
The four men convicted
of the crime reportedly
confessed while in
police custody to
attacking the Kale Hiwot
and Birhane Wongel
Baptist churches.
Survivors said that
during the attack the
assailants cried, “Allahu
Akbar,” Arabic
for “Allah
is greater.”
Having only learned of
the verdict on April 13,
church leaders faced a
number of irregularities
in their attempts to
appeal, local sources
said.
The Christians
immediately traveled to
Shashemene, where court
officials appeared
unaware that a ruling
had taken place. The
court registrar, who
typically files all
court documents, did not
have a copy of the
verdict. It was
eventually found in the
hands of the state
prosecutor.
“What we have seen in
the court office tells
us that there was a
deliberate action to
stop us from appealing
and taking it to the
highest level for better
treatment,” a local
Christian said.
The Christians also
faced difficulties
appealing the case to a
higher court in Addis
Ababa because the 15-day
period for making an
initial complaint had
passed. But after citing
extenuating
circumstances, including
the Christians having
been unaware of the
hearing and having been
preoccupied with caring
for the wounded, an
Addis Ababa prosecutor
accepted the appeal.
Official Involvement in
Attack
Christian sources have
named three local Muslim
officials they believe
instigated the attack.
Hussein Beriso, house
speaker of the Nensebo
District Council, forced
church members at
gunpoint to bury the
murdered victim, Tula
Mosisa, just hours after
the attack, Christian
sources from the area
said. After Christian
leaders protested,
security forces exhumed
the body and sent it to
Awasa for an autopsy.
Local Christians have
also accused Beriso of
buying and distributing
machetes for men
involved in the church
attacks. They said that
Beriso had made public
comments against
Christians in February,
warning the village’s
Muslims to resist any
attempts to convince
them to leave Islam.
Located in the
predominantly Muslim
Oromiya state, both
Baptist churches have
members who converted
from Islam to
Christianity.
Christian sources also
named Nensebo district
militia leaders Zerihun
Tilahun and Sheik Kedir
as having instigated the
violence.
A Christian district
politician who attempted
to expose the role of
these three men in the
attacks has been removed
from his position, a
local source said. Getahun
Bekele, Nensebo district
deputy administrator,
was fired in May
ostensibly for being
unable to “mobilize the
public for development
endeavors,” the source
said. But Christians
suspect the real
motivation for his
dismissal was his
attempt to report
Hussein Beriso’s
involvement in the
church attack to his
superiors.
“In the meeting he
exposed his colleagues
for their failure to
fulfill their duties to
prevent the March 2
incident,” one Christian
said. “We feel [he] is
deposed just because he
spoke in favor of us.”
Federal Police spokesman
Cmdr. Demsash Hailu
declined to comment
regarding the
investigation against
the three local
officials suspected of
involvement in the
attack.
Provided by
Compass Direct News