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ADDIS ABABA, Aug 21, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Ethiopian authorities must
"unconditionally release" two arrested journalists, media watchdogs said
Thursday, criticising the country's increasingly "hostile environment" for
reporters.
The sprawling African nation is regularly criticised by rights groups for the
repression of dissenting voices, and has seen a surge in detentions of
journalists in recent months.
Abdulsemed Mohamed, who hosts a business program on the privately-owned Ahadu
Radio, disappeared on August 11 in the capital, Addis Ababa.
Three days later he was seen "accompanying police officers who raided his
office," the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said, citing a relative.
Yonas Amare, a senior editor with The Reporter newspaper, was "abducted by a
group of masked individuals" on August 13 from his home in the city, his
employer said.
"Eyewitnesses told us he was taken away by government security forces," a
journalist with the outlet told AFP, requesting anonymity, adding that the
government had not responded to their requests for news of their colleague.
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) told AFP it was deeply concerned by
journalists' arrests, as well "the silence of the authorities, who have not
yet officially provided information on the reasons and conditions of their
arrest".
RSF sub-Saharan Africa director Sadibou Marong urged authorities to provide
information on the two, and to "release them immediately".
"Attacks on press freedom and the practice of journalism have increased in
recent months," he said.
Police have not yet responded to AFP's requests for comment.
The east African giant of around 130 million people ranks 145th out of 180
countries in RSF's 2025 press freedom index, which cites "widespread self-
censorship".
Three reporters from an English-language daily were detained in April, and
seven others from a broadcaster were arrested the previous month.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who came to power in 2018, was initially
hailed for his openness.
But rights groups have increasingly criticised a crackdown on freedom of
speech in the country.