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HR2003
revisited - American law professor fired from Ethiopian university
By staff reporter
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia – An American
law professor, teaching at the Ethiopian Ministry of Education’s
Mekelle University in the Tigray region of Ethiopia, had her contract
terminated last week by university officials.
The administration claims “incompetence” was the reason
for her termination. But Professor Abigail Salisbury claims that
her public voicing of alternative views on the U.S. House of Representative’s
Ethiopia Democracy and Accountability Act of 2007 (HR2003) got her
fired.
After failing to convince the university’s academic commission
that her contract should not be terminated, Professor Salisbury
is planning to depart Ethiopia. The firing quickly followed an article
she published in “The Jurist,” the online University
of Pittsburgh law review journal, in which she described candidly
her participation in a Mekelle University Law Faculty forum on HR
2003.
Taking one stance, Professor Salisbury writes, “Listening
to the Ethiopians talk about the bill’s various points during
the discussion forum, I… wonder[ed] if America hadn’t
done something foolish…by asserting its right to determine
the domestic affairs of a foreign nation.” She also points
out that the factual findings section of HR2003 must be updated
to reflect current human rights progress in Ethiopia.
But based on the passionate testimonies of her own international
human rights law students at Mekelle, conveyed to her within mid-term
essays she assigned, Salisbury reached an alternative conclusion
– that HR2003 should be seen as an attempt by American foreign
policy makers not to threaten Ethiopian sovereignty, but to improve
the lives of poor Ethiopians who are truly suffering under a government
with a firm grip on freedom of speech.
“I had been very careful in wording my assignment. I asked
the students to select a human rights issue in Ethiopia…and
find another country dealing with that same situation. They were
required to then compare the actions of the two nations,”
Salisbury writes. According to her, a number of students wrote that
they would never give their real opinions to an Ethiopian professor,
for fear of “being turned in to the government and punished.”
According to Professor Salisbury, the terms of her contract make
it clear that in the case of premature termination, she should receive
three months’ pay. Claiming they have an alternative interpretation,
University officials have decided not to honor this clause. But
Salisbury is more disappointed by the failure of the university’s
professors and officials to honor freedom of speech. “The
dean [of Mekelle Law School] told me never to be afraid to write
anything,” the young American law professor recalled for SSI.
HR2003 was passed in October 2007 by the US House of Representatives
and is now being debated by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
It proposes to withdraw “nonessential” assistance from
Ethiopia until the federal government meets human rights obligations
outlined in the Act.
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