Ethiopian Teachers' Association

The Ethiopian Teachers' Association (ETA) is a trade union in Ethiopia. It is affiliated with Education International.

ETA
Full nameEthioian Teachers' Association
Native nameየኢትዮጵያ መምህራን ማህበር
Founded1949
Members450,000
Head unionYohannes Benti Chekorso (President)
AffiliationEI
Key peopleYohnnes Benti, Shimelis Abebe, Tilahun Tarekegn, Destaye Tadesse, Tarekegn Haile are members of ETA executive committee
Office locationAddis Ababa, Ethiopia
CountryEthiopia
Websitewww.ethiopianteachersassociation.org

Background

The ETA formed in February 1949 by 32 teachers from Minilik Senior Secondary School, located in Addis Abba, the capital of Ethiopia.[1] The ETA was initially named Teacher’s Union but in 1965 the association quickly began to be known nationwide and as a result became known as Ethiopian Teachers’ Association (ETA). The ETA has support from UNESCO, UNICEF, Education International, International Organization for Development of Freedom of Education (Switzerland), World Teachers’ Organization (Belgium), ILO, United Nation Human Rights Commission, African Education Association for Development, and Teachers’ Associations of Sweden, Switzerland, Germany and the UK.[2] “The Ethiopian Teachers’ Association unifies all teachers and education personnel in Ethiopia." [1]

History

The ICFTU reports ongoing difficulties and harassment of trade union members by government security forces, and specifically notes the ETA. Dr. Taye Woldesemayat, president of the ETA, was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment in 1996, but was released from prison in May 2002 after 6 years.[3] In 2005, security forces occupied the ETA headquarters in Addis Ababa for two weeks, taking vital documents and equipment, and detained six members. Since then, ETA members have been under persistent attack, with more than 20 teachers dismissed for allegedly supporting opposition political parties.[4]

Another act of government harassment started in 1993, when the Ethiopian government created a splinter group with close ties to itself, known as the "New ETA", and began to redirect the ETA’s union dues to it. The original group fought this act in court, twice succeeding in getting the High Court to overturn the government's act in 2006, although these judgments were never enforced.[4] However in a ruling announced 21 June 2007, the Federal High Court ruled against the original ETA, and ordered the ETA to hand over property, other assets, and its name; the Federal Supreme Court of Ethiopia denied an appeal 7 February 2008, effectively ending the legal struggle.[5]

However, harassment of current and former members by the government reportedly continues. Tilahun Ayalew, chairman of the Dangila chapter of the ETA and coordinator of the program "Education for All", was detained by police from December 2007 to March 2008. He reported that he was imprisoned and tortured at Bahir Dar for three to four days before being transferred to a police station in Addis Ababa, where police again tortured him. The Federal First Instance Court then released him on a habeas corpus petition, citing the lack of formal charges. However, shortly after seeing his family upon release, Tilahun disappeared and his whereabouts remained unknown at the end of 2008. Another victim was Anteneh Getnet, chairman of the original ETA in Addis Ababa and an ETA coordinator, who was arrested in 2006 on charges of being a member of the Ethiopian Patriotic Front an outlawed, allegedly armed group operating in the Amhara Region. The Federal High Court denied his release, but the Federal Supreme Court released him on bail. After a few additional trial appearances, he disappeared in March, and his whereabouts remained unknown at year's end. Anteneh was first detained in 2006 for over two months on charges of instigating violence in the 2005 elections, and alleged that he was tortured during that incarceration.[6]

See also

References

  1. "Joomla Solutions Template." Ethiopian Teachers Association. Accessed November 20, 2014. http://www.ethiopianteachers.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=49&Itemid=54.
  2. Hassen, Mohammed. "Conquest, Tyranny, and Ethnocide against the Oromo: A Historical Assessment of Human Rights Conditions in Ethiopia, Ca. 1880s–2002." Northeast African Studies 9, no. 3 (2002): 15-49. Accessed November 20, 2014. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41931279.
  3. ICFTU - Ethiopia: Annual Survey of Violations of Trade Union Rights (2004)
  4. "Annual Survey of violations of trade union rights: Ethiopia" Archived 2007-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, International Trade Union Confederation website (accessed 14 May 2008)
  5. "2008-02-07: Ethiopia: EI deplores judicial dissolution of the ETA" Education International website (accessed 14 May 2008)
  6. "2008 Human Rights Reports- Ethiopia" Archived 2011-07-10 at the Wayback Machine (Ethiopian Guardian; PDF file) (accessed 9 March 2009)

Further reading

  • ICTUR; et al., eds. (2005). Trade Unions of the World (6th ed.). London, UK: John Harper Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9543811-5-8.
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