Six
months after her partner Andargachew Tsege was abducted at an airport
in Yemen in June 2014, Yemi Hailemariam says she remembers her phone
ringing.
It
was around 8 a.m. on a Sunday morning in December 2014, six month she
had last heard from her partner. “He’s on the phone and I’m like, ‘Where
are you?’ He says, ‘I’m still there,’” Hailemariam, 48, tells Newsweek . “You can imagine how stressful it was.”
The
“there” that Tsege was referring to was a secret location in Ethiopia,
the country where he was born, where security forces had taken him after
Yemeni officials detained him at the international airport in the
Yemeni capital of Sanaa on June 23, 2014. A British citizen and an
active voice in Ethiopia’s political opposition in exile,
Tsege, now 62, remains in a notorious Ethiopian prison, facing a death
sentence. An Ethiopian court tried and convicted Tsege, along with
several other political accomplices, of plotting a coup against the
country’s government in 2009, and sentenced him to death.
That
Sunday morning, Hailemariam was given no explanation as to why Tsege
was finally allowed to call her after so many months. After passing the
phone to her three children, who had tearful conversations with Tsege,
Hailemariam—aware that her partner was probably under observation as he
spoke—cautiously told him that the family had not given up on getting
him back. “I said, ‘We are working so very hard to get you home.’” But
her longtime partner simply replied by telling her not to let their
children get their hopes up, in case the worst happened.
But
after almost three years away, Hailemariam is hopeful that her partner
may return home soon. Earlier in February, three top British legal
officials penned a letter to British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson,
urging him to push for Tsege’s release from detention, which they say
is “in violation of international law.” This development, along with
what Hailemariam believes is the Ethiopian government’s fatigue at
holding him—the country is dealing with other problems, including a wave
of anti-government protests since November 2015, while Tsege’s ongoing
detention is likely straining ties with the U.K., a major donor to
Ethiopia—has renewed the family’s hope of getting Tsege back. “[But] I
don’t know if I’m being too much of an optimist,” she says.
Born
in Addis Ababa in 1955, Tsege left Ethiopia in the late 1970s: The
country’s military government, known as the Derg, had initiated a mass
crackdown on political opposition, killing hundreds of thousands of
opponents—including Tsege’s younger brother—in a brutal repression known
as the Red Terror.
He sought asylum in the U.K., but returned briefly to Ethiopia
following the 1991 revolution, in which the Ethiopian People’s
Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) overthrew the Derg. Tsege hoped
the new government would establish a democratic state in Ethiopia, but
he was quickly disillusioned at the ethnocentric policies of the EPRDF,
an ostensibly multi-ethnic coalition but which was dominated by, and
consequently favored, the Tigrayan ethnic minority. He returned to
London within two years, where he became an outspoken critic of the
Ethiopian government: Tsege spoke before the U.S. Congress in 2006 and
the European Union’s Committee in the same year on Human Rights on
Ethiopia’s poor human rights record, according to Reprieve,
a U.K. charity campaigning for his release. In the early 2000s, Tsege
also met Hailemariam, who had grown up in Ethiopia and the United
States; the couple have been together for around 15 years and have
10-year-old twins, Yilak and Menabe. Hailemariam also says that Tsege
has been like a father to her elder daughter, Helawit, 17. Read more here
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