By Samson Seifu:
2 November 2012
Arrest of a Sudanese Refugee
Spy: a defining historic moment
The Police Security Service
(PSS) locally known as PST has arrested a Sudanese man accusing him of refugee
espionage in Norway. PST said the man, on several occasions, secretly collected
information about Sudanese in Norway, and sent the information to the
authorities in Sudan. Among his own countrymen, he has been considered to be a
refugee, but PST believes he has always spied on them.
A number of Ethiopians in
Trondheim, Norway have also claimed to have been approached and spied by the
accused spy according to adressavisen.no.
According to PST this is the
first arrest for refugee espionage in Norway since the 1970s. and the man is
charged under Norwegian Penal Code 91a.
PST’s definition of refugee
espionage is a foreign intelligence activities directed against foreigners in
Norway. The aim of this type of activity is to undermine, neutralize or
eliminate political opposition through monitoring, controlling, and threatening
dissidents in exile in different ways. Several countries are spying on their
own citizens who traveled to Norway, and among others Eritrea and Ethiopia are
in the police spotlight.
The Ethiopian Refugee
Espionage in Norway: Both systematic and comprehensive
Rune Berglund Steen is a
communications officer at the Anti-Racist Center in Norway and author of the
book ‘’ The Black Book of Norwegian Asylum Policy’’. Rune Berglund Steen has
also worked on the Ethiopian spying in Norway issue for many years.
According to Rune Steen,
representatives of the Ethiopian dictatorship run a systematic monitoring of
Ethiopian refugees in Norway. At least 50 Ethiopians in Norway have experienced
direct threats from the so-called refugee spies since 2005, according to Steen.
Based on the information he
has collected since 2004/2005, it appears that the Ethiopian refugee espionage
is both systematic and comprehensive. It is simply shameless and extensive,
says Berglund Steen to Nrk.no (Norwegian National Media). He says the spies
must be punished, this has been going fairly overtly long and that regime loyal
Ethiopians allow themselves this because it has not been linked with
consequences for them here in Norway. This must change, says Steen. Activities such
as this must simply get consequences. It must be shown that one can’t with
impunity behave like a dictator’s thugs on Norwegian soil. It should be a basis
for several criminal cases against them here in Norway, says Berglund Steen.
It is also understood that
some who have been granted stay permit based on false information, are regime
loyal who have cheated to be opposition, and that when they get stay permit
continue their works for the regime. If this is the case, it is an obvious
ground for withdrawing their stay permits, he adds.
To what threats are Ethiopian
refugees and dissidents in Norway exposed to?
Threats can be about what
will happen when they return to Ethiopia, or it may be directed toward family
members in Ethiopia, including death threats, says Steen. The spies, according
to Steen, are active with taking pictures of peoples taking part in
demonstrations and threatening of oppositions on the street, via e-mail and
anonymous phones. There are also attempts at infiltration of opposition groups
and parties. Dissidents have told Rune Steen that they suspect hacking. In
several cases, it has also lead to street fighting, for example, when the
opposition was trying to stop taking of photographs of demonstrations.
Former guerrilla soldiers
According to Berglund Steen,
the Ethiopian dictatorship maintains power through systematic persecution of
dissidents in Ethiopia and this systematic persecution is also set in the
system beyond Ethiopia’s borders. Several documents which have been leaked from
Ethiopian embassies show this, says Steen.
Several of those who have
central position in monitoring in Norway have background as guerrilla soldiers
at the time the current Ethiopian regime was still a guerrilla movement.
This is all about ensuring
that the ethnic group that controls the country to retain power. Since this
group – Tigreans constitute only about 6 percent of the population, and this is
only possible through systematic oppression. Control in Ethiopia is extensive,
where the regime has generally very good control. The regime seems concerned,
therefore, is what kind of resistance that may emerge, he concludes.
Woyanne -TPLF informants in
Norway cry foul: my conclusive perspective
TPLF’s cyber propaganda
Medias like ‘’aigaforum.com’’, ‘’abesha.no’’ and ‘’Geza tegaru paltalk
rom’’ were crying foul attempting to divert the current important and
promising issue which the Norwegian Police Security Service (PST) is taking
seriously.
The renowned Ethiopian
refugee cases expert Mr. Rune Berglund Steen has excellently elaborated the
issue. On the contrary the Woyanne-TPLF informants called the commentaries by
Mr. Steen ‘’a recipe for genocide’’ in their discussion forum as well as in
their articles posted on aigaforum.com and abesha.no websites. In fact, Mr.
Steen’s mention of the ‘’Tigrean People’’ in his commentaries is to make clear
to the Norwegian public and authorities that the Tigrean people which the
liberation movement TPLF claims to have liberated and assumed power constitute
only 6% of the Ethiopian people.
One may not be surprised
given their background as the informants of the TPLF regime if they try to turn
and twist the genuine claim by hundreds of Ethiopian refugees in Norway by
trying to link it as they claim with ‘’genocide incitement’’. They know very well that the issue at hand actually refers to them and that
is why they cry foul.
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