Kelbessa Negewo

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Kelbessa Negewo (born 1950) was chairman of Higher Zone 9, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, while the Marxist Derg ruled the country. He is currently serving a life sentence in the country for his role in what witnesses describe as torture during the Red Terror; Kelbessa denies a role in the torture that occurred.

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[edit] Life in Ethiopia

Kelbessa was born in western Ethiopia in 1950, where his family raised goats. He says he was awarded a scholarship to study in the United States, but a government official in Emperor Haile Selassie's regime had his own nephew sent in Kelbessa's place. He was married and had three children, later divorcing.[1]

When the emperor was overthrown and the Derg seized power, Kelbessa became part of a neighborhood council which was tasked with seeing to revolutionary changes in the country. He eventually progressed to the status of chairman of Higher Zone 9, one of Addis Ababa's 25 zones, where he oversaw multiple councils and was involved in recruiting members of armed "revolutionary defense squads".[1] According to Andrew Rice, writing in the The New York Times Magazine, "A series of memos... reveal that he was tireless in begging his higher-ups for more guns, more ammunition and more press coverage."[1]

According to Hirut Abebe-Jiri, an activist involved in preserving and documenting atrocities while Mengistu Haile Mariam ruled the country, and other women, Kelbessa directly oversaw their torture, and demanded to know whether they were members of the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party, then fighting the government in the Ethiopian Civil War.[1]

[edit] Life in the United States

Kelbessa moved to the United States in 1987, arriving in New York on August 3. He moved to Atlanta, Georgia, progressing from dishwasher to bellhop at the Colony Square Hotel. He was recognized in an elevator at the hotel by an Ethiopian woman, who claims he oversaw her torture while in Ethiopia. She contacted two other women who also identified themselves as his victims, and together they filed a lawsuit under the Alien Tort Claims Act, alleging a violation of their human rights. A judge awarded them US$ 1.5 million in damages, but Kelbessa filed bankruptcy. Shortly after the trial, the Ethiopian special prosecutor tasked with investigating and prosecuting crimes committed under Mariam asked for Kelbessa's deportation to Ethiopia, which was not granted.[1]

He was fired from his job at the hotel, earned a degree in accounting from DeVry University, and remarried, having a son who died in infancy and later a daughter. He became a US citizen on July 28, 1995, after which two of the women who had sued him returned to Atlanta and were taped in a CNN interview. He was tried and convicted in absentia in Ethiopia on murder charges, and sentenced to life imprisonment.[1]

In 2004 the National Intelligence Reform Act was made into law in the US. It included Senator Patrick Leahy's Anti-Atrocity Alien Deportation Act, which made torture and extrajudicial killings in other countries reason for a person's deportation from the US to that country.[2] Kelbessa was brought to trial in the US again, and voluntarily gave up his American citizenship.[1] A judge ordered him deported, and he was sent back to Ethiopia to serve his life sentence.[3]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Rice, Andrew. "The Long Interrogation", The New York Times Magazine, The New York Times Company, 2006-06-04. Retrieved on 2007-09-29. 
  2. ^ Reaction Of Sen. Patrick Leahy To The Arrest Of Kelbessa Negewo. Leahy.Senate.Gov. United States Senate (2005-01-05). Retrieved on 2007-10-03.
  3. ^ "An archive of murders past", The Economist, The Economist Newspaper Limited, 2007-09-27. Retrieved on 2007-09-29.