May 2, 2018
Reuters

NAIROBI (Reuters) – Ethiopia’s prime minister Abiy Ahmed should fulfill his pledge to expand political freedoms by lifting a state of emergency, said a journalist released in February after six years in jail.
Eskinder Nega was arrested in 2011 and convicted under anti-terrorism laws for articles criticizing what he called politically motivated prosecutions at a time of a broader campaign for democratic freedoms in the country of 100 million.
He was pardoned one day before Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn resigned on Feb. 15, saying he wanted to clear the way for reform. The government imposed the emergency the next day, saying it wanted to stem anti-government protests. [L8N1Q54CN]
The choice of Abiy, 41, as premier by the coalition that has ruled Ethiopia since 1991 has raised expectations of greater freedom but Eskinder said he will be judged by his actions.
“He’s saying the right things. He has to walk the talk and he hasn’t. He should have lifted the state of emergency by now,” Nega told Reuters TV in Kenya where he traveled after his release from a prison outside the capital Addis Ababa.