Spouse(s)Dr. Selam Aschalew, MD | NameAndualem Aragie | |
Born4 November 1972 (1972-11-04)Debre Tabor, Gondar OccupationVice President and Press Secretary for the Unity for the Unity for Democracy and Justice party ChildrenTwo sons, Nolawi Andualem and Ruh Andualem Parent(s)Father: Aragie Wale, Mother: Kassanesh Gebeyehu | ||
Andualem Aragie (also spelled Arage, አንዱዓለም አራጌ) ( November 4, 1972) is the Vice President and Press Secretary for the Ethiopian-based Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJP) party. Andualem is currently serving a life sentence on terrorism charges after being imprisoned on September 14, 2011 along with prominent journalist Eskinder Nega and opposition party members and reporters. His arrest has been ascribed by human rights organizations as a crackdown on dissent. Human Rights Watch also reported his detention as well as other members of the opposition and the potential for serious abuse during his imprisonment.
Andualem aragie s letter from kaliti prison mpeg2video
Contents
- Andualem aragie s letter from kaliti prison mpeg2video mpg
- ጠ/ሚ/ሩ እና እስክንድር ነጋ ሊቀራረቡ ይገባል አንዷለም አራጌ | Ethiopia
- Childhood, Education and Career
- Politics
- World reaction to imprisonment
- Current Status
- References
ጠ/ሚ/ሩ እና እስክንድር ነጋ ሊቀራረቡ ይገባል – አንዷለም አራጌ | Ethiopia
Childhood, Education and Career
Aragie was born in Fart’a county, Gondor, Ethiopia. He was the first son (second child)of Aragie Wale and Kassanesh Gebeyehu. He attended Meskerem Elementary School, Addis Ababa, while living with his Aunt.
Aragie initially attended Kokebe Tsibah High School in Addis Ababa finishing grades nine and ten, but transfererred to Saint Joseph High School in Ethiopia, when he won a competitive scholarship. Upon graduation in 1996, he went on to study history at Addis Ababa University. In 1999, he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history.
His first job after graduation was at the World Bank where he was a researcher. He later worked for the Ethiopian Economic Association.
Politics
Aragie started his political career in 2000 as a founding member of the Ethiopian Democratic Party (EDP). He was later elected to the position of Deputy General Secretary of EDP. In 2005, he was an officer of a large coalition of opposition parties formally known as the Coalition for Unity and Democracy or informally as Kinijit. The Kinijit was made up of the All-Ethiopian Unity Party, the Ethiopian Democratic Party, the Rainbow Party, and the Ethiopian Democratic League Party.
In 2005, he ran for parliament representing his district in South Gondar Zone and the Coalition for Unity and Democracy. He also participated in some of the election debates representing the CUD, as reported at the time by Addis Fortune. In the election disputes that followed shortly after the Ethiopian government announced that it had won the election and banned demonstrations, Mr. Aragie was imprisoned for more than two years at Kaliti Prison along with journalists, more than 200 opposition party leaders, independent election observers, and civil society activists. International election observers, while praising the lead up to the elections, mostly condemned the election results which the opposition claimed to have won both at the national, local, and parliamentary level. The Carter Center declared that “there were a considerable number of the constituency results that had significant problems and whose credibility was in question.” The European Union Election Observation Mission started its final report by stating that “EU observers witnessed cases that suggested serious irregularities with election results, including figures that were implausible.
After his negotiated release from prison in 2007, along with the rest of opposition members, he continued his political career by co-founding, on June 20, 2008, the Unity for Democracy and Justice party. In 2009, he was elected Vice President and Press Secretary of the new party. Andualem ran for parliament representing UDJ.
Andualem remained the Vice Chair and the Head of Public Relations of his party until his re-arrest and imprisonment by the Ethiopian government on September 14, 2011 on terrorism charges. Despite international pressure for his release from the European Union and the United States of America, he was sentenced to life in prison on June 27, 2012. The official government news agency also announced the guilty verdict stating that the defendants “were attempting to dismantle the constitution.”
World reaction to imprisonment
- Human Rights Watch, September 16, 2011, called for his release.
- Amnesty International, September 16, 2011, called on the Ethiopian government to end crackdown on government critics, listed Mr. Aragie as one of the victims of the government crackdown
Current Status
- In 2013 Aragie is held at the Kaliti Prison.