By Daily Mail
April 11, 2016
- Britain
is giving over a million pounds to train Ethiopia’s security forces
-
Country’s
regime abducted a Briton and holds him under sentence of death
-
Foreign
Office is spending £500,000 on a master’s programme in ‘security sector
management’ run by Cranfield University in Ethiopia
-
£546,500
is being spent on the Ethiopian Peace Support Training Centre
Britain is
giving more than a million pounds to train Ethiopia’s security forces – even
though the country’s repressive regime abducted a British citizen and holds him
under sentence of death.
Andargachew
Tsege, a father of three from North London, was snatched almost two years ago
while travelling through an airport in Yemen. After being forced on to a plane
to Ethiopia, he was paraded on television and held for months in secret
detention.
Yet the Foreign
Office is spending £500,000 on a master’s programme in ‘security sector
management’ run by Cranfield University in Ethiopia – a one-party state accused
of horrific human rights abuses.
Another £546,500
is being spent by the Ministry of Defence to help support the Ethiopian Peace Support
Training Centre, which opened last year.
‘I am furious,’
said Yemi Hailemariam, Mr Tsege’s partner and mother of their children.
‘It’s crazy that
we’re giving aid like this. They say it is to improve human rights there but
then they go and help the security apparatus detaining Andy.’
The funding –
made through the £1 billion Conflict, Security and Stabilisation Fund – emerged
in a Freedom of Information request to the Foreign Office, although it declined
to detail a human rights assessment on the grounds that it might ‘prejudice
relations’.
There are 35
students on the security management course, which includes modules on
intelligence operations.
They include
officials from Djibouti and Rwanda, another repressive state, as well as
Ethiopia.
‘It is deeply
alarming that UK taxpayers appear to be funding the very Ethiopian security
forces responsible for the kidnap and rendition of British citizen,’ said Maya
Foa, from campaign group Reprieve.
Eighteen months
ago, International Development Secretary Justine Greening suspended a similar
programme ‘because of concerns about risk and value for money’.
This followed
the seizure of Mr Tsege, 61, who has lived in Britain since 1979 and been
called his nation’s Nelson Mandela.
His case was
highlighted last month by the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee in a report
condemning the Ethiopian government for back-pedalling on human rights.
Internal emails
obtained by The Mail on Sunday show that shortly after Mr Tsege’s kidnapping,
the Foreign Office’s Africa director complained that a British Minister had
raised the case with the Ethiopian Prime Minister ‘but in the same week that
DFID announced lots of extra aid, which rather mixes messages’.
Mr Tsege fled
Ethiopia after falling out with then-president Meles Zenawi for exposing
corruption and later establishing a pro-democracy party.
Seven years ago
he was branded a terrorist and sentenced to death in absentia for allegedly
preparing a coup, which he denies strongly.
He was abducted
in June 2014 while travelling to Eritrea. After a year in solitary, he was
moved to a prison near Addis Abba called a ‘gulag’ by human rights groups.
He had a broken
thumb when he last met British diplomats, and there have been fears of torture.
Ethiopia, seen as an important ally in the war on terrorism, is the second biggest recipient of British aid, receiving £277 million in direct donations this year.
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