Ethiopian prosecutor seeks asylum in US
Wednesday 6
September 2006.
Sept 5, 2006 (
"I have been ordered by the
government to institute charges on CUDP leaders," said Alemayehu Zemedkun,
referring to
"I have tried to show them the legal
impediments. There is not enough evidence ... But they insisted," he said
by telephone from Washington, where he has sought refuge.
Zemedekun, 41, whose wife and two children
remain in Addis Ababa, arrived in the United States on August 2 after the
government realised he was not going to launch a judicial attack on the
opposition, and considered him sympathetic to them.
He was a deputy general prosecutor when
the government urged him to set charges against opposition leaders it alleged
had plotted to overthrow the government after the May 2005 elections.
Arguing that there was no evidence against
the opposition leaders, Zemedekun said he had written a report to the
government to convince them to abandon the effort, but that he failed. He
subsequently offered his resignation but was refused.
A US State Department spokesman declined
to confirm the case, noting they never comment on asylum requests.
September 6, 2006
Source:
Sudan Tribune