The Scope of Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: Appraisal of its Compatibility with Regional and International Counterterrorism Instruments

AuthorWD Kassa
PositionLL.B, LL. M., PhD candidate at Flinders University Law School. Email: Wondwossen.kassa@flinders.edu.au.
Pages371-405
371
The Scope of Definition of a Terrorist
Act under Ethiopian Law:
Appraisal of its Compatibility with Regional
and International Counterterrorism Instruments
Wondwossen Demissie Kassa
Abstract
While regional and international human rights institutions claim that the
definition of a terrorist act under the Anti-terrorism Proclamation No.
652/2009 is overly broad as a result of which citizens not involved in a
genuinely terrorist act are prosecuted and jailed, the Ethiopian government
defends the law pointing that it is borrowed from jurisdictions with
advanced legal system and rule of law. This article is concerned with this
debate and suggests how to deal with it. The article employs definitions
under relevant regional and international counterterrorism legal instruments
as standard to examine the scope of the domestic definition. With regard to
some of its elements, the proclamation’s definition is broader than the
standard definitions; in other aspects it is narrower. The regional and
international instruments simply indicate what states should proscribe as a
terrorist act without further prohibiting them from including other conduct
with in domestic definitions. As such, being broader per se does not render
the definition incompatible with regional and international definitions. On
areas where the definition is narrower, its strict application would mean
non-prosecution or, in the event of prosecution, acquittal of persons who
would have been treated as terrorist under regional and international law.
This has a direct bearing on Ethiopia’s counterterrorism obligation.
Key words
Definition of a Terrorist act, Ethiopian anti-terrorism proclamation, OAU
Convention on the Prevention and Combating of Terrorism, Security
Council Resolution 1373, International Convention for the Suppression of
Financing of Terrorism.
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/mlr.v8i2.4
LL.B, LL. M., PhD candidate at Flinders University Law School. Email:
. I am grateful to the two anonymous
reviewers for their scholarly insights and constructive comments.
372 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
Introduction
International and regional legal instruments urge states to prevent the
commission of a terrorist act through, inter alia, criminalization. Although
some are sceptical about the need and motive for promulgation of the
Ethiopian anti-terrorism Proclamation No. 652/2009 (hereafter the
Proclamation),1 from a legal point of view, by criminalizing a terrorist act,
Ethiopia discharges its responsibility under international law.
Article 3 of the Proclamation provides for a definition of a terrorist act.
The definition establishes the threshold of a “terrorist act” from a legal
perspective. This vital first step has been controversial ever since the law
was presented in its draft form.2 While regional and international human
rights institutions express concern on the broadness of definition of a
terrorist act, officials of the Ethiopian government and some others defend it
as being not broader than definitions in other jurisdictions.
This article deals with scope of definition of a terrorist act under the
proclamation in the following order. The first section briefly outlines the
controversy surrounding the scope of the definition and how the purported
lack of universally applicable definition of a terrorist act could be a major
obstacle to undertake a meaningful assessment on the scope of definition of
a terrorist act in a domestic legislation. Furthermore, it examines the
plausibility of the government’s argument to justify the reach of the
definition. Section 2 proposes two definitions of a terrorist act (one
international and the other regional) that can be used as standard to evaluate
the scope of the definition under the proclamation followed by analysis of
their elements in Section 3. The fourth section discusses the definition of a
terrorist act under the Proclamation. The discussion, not being intended to
provide an in-depth analysis and interpretation of the definition3, is confined
1 See: Ethiopian Political Parties Position on the Anti-Terrorism Law, parts 1-3.
Retrieved from:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nr76bQEtnlA ;
http://www.ethiopian.tv/ethiopian-political-parties-position-on-the-anti-terrorism-
law-part-3/>.
2 Human Rights watch (2009), An Analysis of Ethiopia’s Draft Anti-Terrorism Law
Updated, Retrieved from
fault/files/related_material/Ethiopia%20CT%20Law
%20Analysis%20June%202009_2.pdf >.
3 For a brief analysis on how some parts of the definition could be applied broadly
see: Hiruy Wube (2012), “Some Points on the Ethiopian Anti-Terrorism Law
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 373
to the extent needed to evaluate the scope of the definition. Section 5 is the
actual appraisal of the definition. It examines the definition vis-à-vis the
proposed standard definitions, and reveals a mixture of narrowness and
broadness therein. The section further examines the effect, on its validity, of
the definition’s deviation from the standards. The article winds up with a
conclusion.
1. Controversy on the scope of the definition and the
problematic nature of judging it
1.1 The controversy
Regional and international human rights institutions have expressed concern
on the broadness of definition of a terrorist act. In its analysis of the
proclamation, Human Rights Watch identifies what it considers as
problematic areas of the legislation,4 of which one is its ‘extremely broad’
definition of a terrorist act. In its Comment on Ethiopia’s Anti-Terrorism
Proclamation, Article 19 identifies over-broadness of the definitional
provision as particularly worrying.5 David Shinn and Thomas Ofcansky
label the definition as broad.6 Similarly, Hiruy points out some of the
elements of the definition that would give it a wider reach.7 Many who do
not agree with the conviction of journalists and opposition political party
leaders under the proclamation attribute the conviction to the over-broadness
of the definition.8
from Human Rights Perspective”, Journal of Ethiopian Law, Vol, 25 No.2, pp.
43-46.
4 Human Rights watch (2009), supra note 2, pp. 1, 4.
5 Article 19 (2010), Comment on Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, 2009, of Ethiopia,
pp. 3,4. Retrieved from:
fs/analysis/ethiopia-comment-on-anti-
terrorism-proclamation-2009.pdf>.
6 David H. Shinn, and Thomas P. Ofcansky (2013), Historical Dictionary of
Ethiopia, (Lanham Maryland: Scarecrow press), p. 388.
7 Hiruy Wube (2012), supra note 3, pp. 43-46.
8 In 2012 UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, denouncing
conviction and sentencing of journalists and opposition figures, said she is
seriously alarmed about the current climate of intimidation against human rights
defenders and journalists in Ethiopia, resulting from the use of “overly broad”
laws on terrorism and civil society registration. United Nations Human Rights
(2012), Climate of intimidation against rights defenders and journalists in
Ethiopia. Retrieved from:
374 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
In response to such criticism, government officials9 claim the language of
the definition was simply pulled from antiterrorism legislation of democratic
jurisdictions, such as the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada, thereby
asserting that it is not broader than the definitions in the anti-terrorism
legislation of these countries. Others10 follow a similar approach and
evaluate the scope of the definition under the anti-terrorism proclamation in
http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=12365
&LangID=E >; Patrick Griffith (2013), “Ethiopia’s Anti-Terrorism Proclamation
and the right to freedom of expression”, freedom now, August 30. Retrieved from:
ias-anti-terrorism-proclamation-and-
the-right-to-freedom-of-expression/>; Human Rights Council Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention (2012), Opinions Adopted by the Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention at its Sixty Fifth Session, 14-23 Nov, No. 62/2012 (The
Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia), Retrieved from:
now.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Eskinder-Nega-WGAD-Opinion.pdf>;
Human Rights Watch (2011), Ethiopia: Journalists Convicted Under Unfair Law,
Deeply Flawed anti-terrorism Act should be revoked, retrieved from:
hiopia-journalists-convicted-under-
unfair-law> ; Amnesty International (2012), Ethiopia: Conviction of government
opponents a 'dark day' for freedom of expression, retrieved from:
dark-day-freedom-expression-2012-06-27>.
9 During a discussion of the law in its draft form it was indicated that the definition
part is directly copied from the anti-terrorism law of the United Kingdom.Federal
Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, 3rd House of Peoples Representatives
(2008/2009), 4th year Adopted Proclamations, Public Discussions and
Recommendations, Volume 7, p.116-117.The late Prime Minster Meles Zenawi
indicated that the proclamation is copied word by word from the UK. Yemane
Negash,  ጧ Eሚ ሚም  ም IA  ጤጴም
Aም”, Reporter, Amharic version, December 10, 2014. Retrieved from:
ianreporter.com/index.php/politics/item/8182>. Also see: a
program on Terrorism in Ethiopia hosted by Ethiopian Television and Radio
Agency in 2013, part two, Available at:
>; Griffith (2013),
supra note 8.
10 SasahulehYalew, A Comparative Review of Ethiopian and Western Anti-
Terrorism Legislations. Retrieved from:
>. A senior
lawyer and a Federal High Court judge make this claim. Terrorism in Ethiopia,
supra note 9.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 375
light of definitions provided in the democratic jurisdictions to conclude that
it is not broader, if not narrower.
1.2 Plausibility of referencing to other jurisdictions
Different standards are applied to examine the scope of definitions of a
terrorist act in domestic anti-terrorism laws11 as a result of the commonly
held view that international law does not provide a binding definition of
terrorist act that states should comply with. Officials of the Ethiopian
Government and others justify the reach of the definition in the proclamation
claiming that it is copied from definitions in antiterrorism laws of other
jurisdictions. How relevant and persuasive is this approach?
To start with, a quick comparison between the definition in the
proclamation and in the foreign laws from which the definition is said to
have been copied shows that the claim is misleading. Griffith, comparing the
definition in the proclamation with that of the definition in the UK anti-
terrorism law, notes “while Ethiopia’s Anti-Terror Proclamation borrows
some key phrases, it is significantly more expansive – and vague – than the
statutes it purports to mirror”.12 Griffith indicates “compared with UK’s
equivalent piece of legislation, the Ethiopian Anti-Terror Proclamation
simply lifts an introductory paragraph while omitting the following seven
sections that define and limit the law’s scope”.13 Furthermore, while the
motive requirement in the definition of the UK anti-terrorism legislation has
been amended,14 it forms part of the definition under the Ethiopian Anti-
terrorism Proclamation.
The Australian anti-terrorism law, one of the legislation said to have been
used as a basis for the Ethiopian Anti-terrorism Proclamation, incorporates a
sub-article which provides for an exception to “advocacy, protest, dissent or
industrial action” not to be considered as terrorist acts if not intended to
11 Reuven Young (2006), “Defining Terrorism: The Evolution of Terrorism as a
Legal Concept in International Law and Its Influence on Definitions in Domestic
Legislation”, Boston College International and Comparative Law Review, Vol.
29, issue 1; Keiran Hardy and George Williams (2011), ‘What is “terrorism”?
Assessing Domestic Legal Definitions’ UCLA Journal of International Law &
Foreign Affairs, Vol. 16.
12 Griffith (2013), supra note 8.
13 Ibid.
14 Counter-terrorism Act 2008 (UK), s 75(1); Roger Douglas (2010), Must terrorists
act for a cause? The motivational requirement in definitions of terrorism in the
United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand and Australia, Commonwealth Law
Bulletin, 36:2, 295-312, p. 299 DOI: 10.1080/03050718.2010.481400
376 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
“cause serious harm that is physical harm to a person; or cause a person’s
death; or endanger the life of a person, other than the person taking in the
action; or create a serious risk to the health or safety of the public or a
section of the public”.15 This political protest exception, which is
commended as a safeguard for legitimate forms of political activities,16 is
not part of the Ethiopian anti-terrorism proclamation.
Be the factual accuracy of the claim as it may, there are several reasons
that would make the aptness of defending the scope of the definition by
invoking its sources doubtful. First, the relevance of this approach to
Ethiopia where reference to legislation or cases decided in other jurisdictions
is not a recognized way of resolving a legal issue17, is minimal, if any, other
than for legal scholarship purposes.
Second, the definitions embodied in the anti-terrorism legislation of
jurisdictions that are invoked to have been used as basis for the definition in
the proclamation have been condemned by international human rights
bodies. For example, in 2005, the Human Rights Committee found that the
definition of terrorism in the Canadian Anti-Terrorism Act 2001 was overly
broad.18 The Committee found that the similar language in the Australian
Anti-Terrorism Act (No. 2) 2005 violated international human rights norms
and recommended its amendment.19
Thus, the definition in the proclamation being a reproduction of the
definitions in the cited jurisdictions does not save the definition from being
criticised as a broad one. Rather, by the government’s own admission, the
definition would be vulnerable to the same criticism as its sources have been
subjected to, one of which is broadness. What is worse, the definition in the
proclamation, as opposed to its claimed sources, is devoid of safeguards
against misuse of the definition to suppress legitimate political activities.
15 Criminal Code Act 1995 (Cth), s 100.1 (Austl); Jude McCulloch (2002-2003),
“Counterterrorism Human Security and Globalization from Welfare to warfare
State?”Current issues in criminal justice, vol. 14, p. 285.
16 Sec. Legislation Review Comm. (Austl.), Report of the Security Legislation
Review Committee 57 (June 2006) in Hardy and Williams (2011), supra note 11,
p. 135.
17 Article 78 (3) of the FDRE Constitution provides: “Judges shall exercise their
functions in full independence and shall be directed solely by the law.”
18 Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee, Canada, UN Doc.
CCPR/C/CAN/CO/5, 2 November 2005).
19 Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee, Australia,
CCPR/C/AUS/CO/5/CRP/1, 2 April 2009.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 377
Third, the jurisdictions from which the definition is said to have been
taken have strong democratic culture where the prosecution and the courts
have the highest degree of independence and loyalty to rule of law. For
example, in relation to the UK anti-terror legislation, Lord Carlile
acknowledges that owing to the broadness of the definition of terrorism,
non-terrorist conducts including protestors who support women’s rights and
environmental causes could fall within the terrorism Act 2000 definition.20
However, for him such a theoretical possibility is not a problem in a country
with strong traditions of democratic accountability as, he believes, that
“sensible use of the discretion to prosecute … would protect individuals
from unjustified state interference”.21
Likewise, the Australian High Court acknowledges that the complexity
and nature of the definition of terrorism in the relevant section of the
Criminal Code Act 1995 (Cth) makes it capable of catching range of non-
terrorist conducts. However, the court held, this quality was not
incompatible with the exercise of federal judicial power.22A similar position
is taken by Justice Rutherford of Canada. While he acknowledges the
theoretical possibility that the Anti-Terrorism act 2001 of Canada could be
applied to a non-terrorist conduct, he reasons that any conduct that was
clearly non-terrorist would be excluded from the definition through judicial
interpretation.23 This assumption is hardly possible in emerging democracies,
like Ethiopia, where such level of reliance on the prosecution and the
judiciary is hardly imaginable.24
20 Lord Carlile (2007), Definition of Terrorism A Report by Lord Carlile of Berriew
Q.C.; Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation, Cm 7052, para. 34 in
Hardy and Williams, supra note 11, p. 118.
21 “Lord Carlile of Berriew Q.C., Report on the Operation in 2005 of the Terrorism
Act 2000, 2006, para 30”.; Lord Carlile of Berriew Q.C., Independent Reviewer
of Terrorism Legislation, The Definition of Terrorism, 2007, Cm. 7052, para 34.;
Lord Carlile of Berriew Q.C., Report on the Operation in 2004 of the Terrorism
Act 2000, para 27 (U.K.) in Hardy and Williams, supra note 11, p. 118.
22 Thomas v Mowbray (2007), 233 CLR 307 (Austl.) in Hardy and Williams, supra
note 11, p 133.
23 R v Khawaja, [2006] O.J. No. 4245 (Can.) in Hardy and Williams, supra note 11,
p. 124
24 This was the point that Enginer Yilekal, president of the Blue Party, raised during
the televised debate on the Ethiopian Anti-terrorism proclamation. Discounting
the importance of adapting laws of democracies in and by itself he jokingly asked
the government officials to bring the institutions of the democratic countries as
well. om/watch?v=Nr76bQEtnlA>.
378 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
1.3 The difficulty of judging the controversy
Apparently, there is no easy way of judging the dispute pertaining to the
broadness of the definition of a terrorist act. That is because of the claimed
lack of a definition of terrorism in general and in Security Council
Resolution 1373 (hereafter the resolution) in particular. While the resolution
is applauded for mobilizing states to take counterterrorism legislative
measures (something which could not have been achieved through the treaty
process),25 it has been subject to several criticisms.26 The one major criticism
is that it fails to define the term ‘terrorist act’. Although the resolution
mentions ‘terrorism’ or ‘terrorist act’ numerous times, it does not explicitly
provide for their meaning.
Roach describes this gap as a ‘critical lacunae’ in resolution 1373.27
Samuel characterizes absence of universal definition of terrorism28 in
general as the major gap in the rule of law framework of international
counterterrorism.29 Thus, many have asserted that the Security Council has
25 Nicholas Rostow (2001-2002), ‘Before and After: The Changed UN Response to
Terrorism since September 11thCornell International Law Journal, Vol 35, 475,
481-84.
26 Resolution 1373 is criticised for circumventing the requirement of consent of
States as a conventional law making process by instructing them to adopt and
implement anti-terrorism measures. Nigel D. White (2012), ‘The United Nations
and Counter-Terrorism: Multilateral and Executive Law-Making’ in Ana Maria
Salinas De Frias, Katja LH Samuel, and Nigel D White (eds.), Counter terrorism
International Law and Practice (Oxford University Press) 54, 72; Rostow (2001-
2002), supra note 25, 482; Ben Saul (2005), ‘Definition of ‘‘Terrorism’’ in the
UN Security Council: 1985–2004,’ Chinese Journal of International Law, 141,
161, 165.
27 Kent Roach (2008), ‘Defining Terrorism: the need for a restrained Definition’ in
Laviolette N, Forcese C (eds.), the Human Rights of Anti-terrorism (Irwin Law,
2008) p. 99.
28 Two courts, one national another international, have adopted a different view of
the definition controversy. The UN Special Tribunal for Lebanon and an Italian
court recognize a customary law definition for the crime of terrorism. Ben Saul
(2012), ‘Civilizing the Exception: Universally Defining Terrorism’ in Aniceto
Masferrer (ed.), Post 9/11 and the State of Permanent Legal Emergency: Security
and Human Rights in Countering Terrorism (2012) 79, 80, 85.
29 Katja LH Samuel (2012), ‘The Rule of Law Framework and its Lacunae:
Normative, Interpretative, and/or Policy Created?’ in Ana Maria Salinas De
Frias, Katja LH Samuel, and Nigel D White (eds.), Counter terrorism
International Law and Practice (Oxford University Press,) 14, 16-19.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 379
left the definition of terrorism to individual governments.30 Similarly, others
observe that the imposition of an obligation on a state to criminalize a
‘terrorist’ act without providing a definition or guideline means authorizing
a state to “define terrorism according to its own history, objectives and
concerns”31 which permits a range of overbroad definitions. Guillaume
upholds a similar view and argues that requiring states to take measures
against terrorism, without defining it, enables states to make “unilateral
interpretations geared towards their own interests.”32
Both sides of the argument on the broadness of the definition of a
terrorist act in the Proclamation involve judging its reach according to a
standard. If there is no universally accepted definition of a terrorist act, so
much so that ‘one person’s terrorist is another’s freedom fighter’,33 and if
justifying the scope of the definition by referencing to definitions in other
jurisdictions is not acceptable, what is the right way to evaluate the scope of
the definition of a terrorist act under the proclamation? The next section is
devoted to investigating what we think is the appropriate standard.
30 Ben Saul (2006), Defining Terrorism in International Law (Oxford University
Press ) 316-17, 320; Rostow, supra note 25, 484; Roach (2008), supra note 27,
98-99; Young (2006), supra note 11, pp. 23, 44.
31 Kent Roach, Michael Hor, Victor V. Ramraj and George Williams (2012),
“Introduction” in Kent Roach, Michael Hor, Victor V. Ramraj and George
Williams (eds.), Global Anti-Terrorism Law and Policy (Cambridge University
Press , 2nd ed.) 1, 4.
32 Gilbert Guillaume (2004), “Terrorism and International Law”, International and
Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol. 53, pp. 537, 540.
33 George P. Fletcher (2006), “The Indefinable Concept of Terrorism”, Journal of
International Criminal Justice, vol. 4, p. 906. Ved Nanda rightly attributes this
cliché to the international community’s inability to provide a common definition.
Ved Nanda (2001), ‘The Role of International Law in Combating Terrorism’
Michigan State University-Detroit College of Laws Journal of International Law,
Vol. ,10, pp. 603, 604.
380 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
2. Search for a standard definition
True, by not expressly defining a terrorist act, the resolution, enforcement of
which is one of the justifications for the proclamation,34 makes its subject
matter unclear. However, it was not meant to give states a blank cheque to
fight terrorism according to their own definitions.35 By requiring or calling
upon states to take the several measures against a terrorist act, it would be
logical to assume that the Security Council would not be using the term
‘terrorist act’ to mean everything or nothing.36 It must have been referring to
something.37A close reading of the resolution, as argued below, suggests
what that something is.
Logical consistency requires that terrorist acts, the financing of which
states are obliged to criminalize under paragraph 1 of resolution 1373,
should not be different from (broader or narrower in scope than) terrorist
34 Wondwossen D Kassa (2013), ‘Examining some of the Raisons deter for the
Ethiopian anti-terrorism law’, Mizan law Review, Vol 7, No.1, pp. 49-66.
35 Andrea Bianchi (2006), ‘Security Council’s Anti-terror Resolutions and their
Implementation by Member States’ Journal of International Criminal Justice,
vol 4, 1044-73,1050.
36 Indeed as argued by Professor Oscar Schachter even lack of a comprehensive
definition “does not mean that international terrorism is not identifiable. It has a
core meaning that all definitions recognize.” Oscar Schachter (1989), ‘The
Extraterritorial Use of Force Against Terrorist Bases’, Hous. J. Int’l L. Vol 11,
309, 309.
37 Other sources confirm this. The Counter Terrorism Committee indicates that its
members have a fair idea of the meaning of terrorism under the resolution. CTC
Chair (Ambassador Jeremy Greenstock), Presentation to Symposium: Combating
International Terrorism: The Contribution of the United Nations, Vienna, 3–4
June 2002 quoted in Saul (2005), supra note 26, 157. Jeremy Greenstock, former
British Ambassador to the United Nations and chair of the Committee, stated:
"increasingly, questions are being raised about the problem of the definition of a
terrorist. Let us be wise and focused about this: terrorism is terrorism. . . . What
looks, smells and kills like terrorism is terrorism." John Collins, Terrorism, in
Collateral Language: A User’s Guide to America’s New war 167-68 (John
Collins & Ross Glover eds., 2002) quoted in Alex Schmidt (2004), ‘Terrorism-
the Definitional Problem’, Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law,
vol 36, 375. Though some states have expressed their concern about lack of
explicit definition in the resolution, others believe that definition is unnecessary
as it was defined in a previous General Assembly Resolution. Saul (2005), supra
note 26, p. 159. Moreover, Resolution 1373 was passed on the assumption that
the meaning of terrorism is known from previous counterterrorism legal
instruments. Rostow (2001-2002), supra note 25, 487.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 381
acts that the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing
of Terrorism (hereafter Suppression of Financing Convention or the
Convention) refers to.38 Paragraph 3(d) of the resolution calls upon39 states
to become parties to the Convention.40 The Security Council would not have
made this call, had it used the phrase ‘terrorist acts’ (the financing of which
it requires states to criminalize, under paragraph 1 of the resolution),
differently from its meaning under the Suppression of Financing Convention
that it refers to under its paragraph 3(d). If the meaning of terrorist acts, as
used under paragraph 1 of the resolution, is different from its meaning under
the Convention, states will not be able to comply with both paragraphs 1 and
3(d) of the resolution simultaneously.41 Where a state, responding to the
Security Council’s call under paragraph 3(d) of the resolution, ratifies the
38 Szasz asserts that “the provisions of operative paragraph 1 of Resolution 1373, ---
are clearly based on the International Convention for the Suppression of the
Financing of Terrorism.” Paul Szasz (2002), ‘The Security Council Starts
Legislating’ American Journal of International Law, Vol. 96, 901, 903. The
Counter Terrorism Committee opined that “resolution 1373 should be interpreted
in compliance with existing international agreements.” UN Information Service
(2003), ‘Human Rights Committee Briefed on Work of Counter-terrorism
Committee’ (press release HR/CT/630 27 March 2003)
cs/2003/hrct630.doc.htm>.Wainwright,
former expert adviser to the Counter Terrorism Committee, indicates that because
resolution 1373 calls upon states to give effect to the relevant counter-terrorism
international instruments “the CTC has seen fit to import into its interpretation of
the resolution concepts included in those instruments, in particular, the fairly
detailed description of terrorism included in the Financing Convention.” Jeremy
Wainwright ‘Some aspects of compliance with UN Security Council Resolution
1373’ (2005)
phole_papers/Wainwright_Mar2005.pdf>
at 15 June 2014.
39 As noted by Szasz, it is for political reasons that the Council makes participation
in the convention optional. Szasz (2002), supra note 38, 903.
40 The obligations that the resolution imposes on the states under its paragraph 1 are
so similar with those imposed under the Suppression of Financing Convention
that Bantekas describes Paragraph 3(d) of the resolution which, he thinks, makes
a needless call for states to ratify the Convention as ‘ironic’. Ilias Bantekas
(2003), “The International Law of Terrorist Financing” The American Journal of
International Law, Vol. 97, No. 2, pp. 315-333, P. 326
41 However, it is self-evident that the Security Council would like the States both to
implement paragraph 1 and to ratify the Convention in compliance with
paragraph 3(d) of the resolution. Thus, the resolution has to be interpreted in such
a manner that compliance with both paragraphs at the same time is possible.
382 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
Suppression of Financing Convention, the state undertakes to criminalize
financing of terrorist acts as defined under the Convention.42 If the meaning
of terrorist acts referred to under paragraph 1 of the resolution is different
from that provided under the convention, then it will neither practically nor
theoretically be possible for the state to comply with both paragraphs of the
resolution concurrently. This anomalous consequence would not be the
Security Council’s intention. The only way to circumvent this anomaly is to
interpret ‘terrorist acts’ as used under paragraph 1 of the resolution and in
the Suppression of Financing Convention to refer to the same conduct.
It is reasonable to assume that the Security Council, in mentioning the
phrase ‘terrorist acts’ in the different paragraphs of the resolution,43 refers to
the same conduct. That is, for example, ‘terrorist acts’, the financing of
which states are instructed to criminalize under paragraph 1 of the resolution
would not be different from ‘terrorist acts’ the commission of which states
are required, under paragraph 2(b) of the resolution, to prevent.
Because the meaning of terrorist acts, as used in other paragraphs of the
resolution, would not be different from the meaning given to terrorist acts
under the resolution’s first paragraph (which, as argued above, refers to the
meaning of a terrorist act under Article 2 (1) of the Suppression of Financing
Convention), it stands to reason that this definition is applicable to terrorist
acts that resolution 1373 refers to in all of its different paragraphs.44
This argument is supported by the Council’s subsequent practice.
Although states routinely claim terrorist attacks being made in their
territories (based on their own definition of terrorism), the Security Council
has never taken every allegation seriously.45 The Council has consistently
42 Szasz, supra note 38, p. 903.
43 The resolution has made about forty mentions of terrorism, terrorists or terrorist
acts.
44 It is not uncommon to infer the intention of the Security Council from what it has
expressly stated. For example, Szasz argues that in resolution 1373 the Security
Council implicitly approves previous General Assembly recommendations.
Szasz, supra note 38, p. 903. Similarly, Saul notes that Resolution 1373
implicitly authorized self defence against terrorism. Saul (2005), supra note 26,
p.160.
45 For the sporadic involvement of the Security Council in domestic terrorism
Cases, which arguably do not fall under the Convention’s definition, see:
Wondwossen Kassa (2013), supra note 34, pp. 60-63.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 383
confined its involvement to attacks46 which are grave enough to be captured
by the definition provided under the Suppression of Financing Convention.
The definition of a terrorist act provided under Security Council
resolution 1566 of 2004 is another evidence to demonstrate the Security
Council’s understanding of the term. Under Paragraph 3 of the resolution,
the Security Council,
… Recalls that criminal acts, … committed with the intent to cause
death or serious bodily injury, or taking of hostages, with the purpose to
provoke a state of terror in the general public or in a group of persons
or particular persons, intimidate a population or compel a government
or an international organization to do or to abstain from doing any act,
which constitute offences within the scope of and as defined in the
international conventions and protocols relating to terrorism, are under
no circumstances justifiable by considerations of a political,
philosophical, ideological, racial, ethnic, religious or other similar
nature, … ;
As rightly noted by Hardy and Williams, this definition is “practically
indistinguishable”47 from the definition under the Suppression of Financing
Convention. This ‘striking’ similarity gives credence to the argument that
the Council understands the term terrorist act, while passing resolution 1373,
to refer to a terrorist act as defined under the Suppression of Financing
Convention.48 The Security Council espouses the Convention’s definition in
both resolutions, explicitly in resolution 1566 and tacitly in resolution 1373.
While the definition provided under the Convention is one that is
imposed from the Security Council through the resolution, there is another
definition that Ethiopia has voluntarily accepted—the definition under the
OAU Convention on the Prevention and Combating of Terrorism (hereafter
46 The Council adopted resolutions denouncing bomb attacks (Bali and Kenya in
2002, Bogota and Istanbul in 2003, Madrid in 2004 and London in 2005) and
hostage takings (Moscow, 2002).
47 Hardy and Williams (2011), supra note 11, pp. 77, 93. See Thomas Weigend
(2006), “The Universal Terrorist: The International Community Grappling with a
Definition”, Journal of International Criminal Justice, Vol. 4, p. 920
48 Curtis Ward, Legal Expert for the Security Council’s Counter-Terrorism
Committee (CTC), invoked a legal instrument(The Ministerial Declaration
annexed to Security Council resolution 1456 (2003)) which was passed after
resolution 1373 to support his view that the Security Council intended, under
resolution 1373, to require states to ensure that their counterterrorism activity is
compatible with human rights. UN Information Service, (2003), supra note 38.
384 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
OAU Convention).49 Among others, the proclamation is meant to enforce
agreements that have been entered into at the United Nations and African
level.50 A recommendation that the Legal and Administration, and Defence
and Security Affairs Standing Committees submitted to the House of
Peoples’ Representatives indicate that the proclamation is drafted based on
international and regional counterterrorism treaties that Ethiopia is a party
to.51 Thus, the definition under this convention is pertinent to examine the
scope of the definition under the Proclamation.
3. What constitutes a ‘terrorist act’ under the standard
Definitions?
3.1. Suppression of Financing Convention
Paragraph 2(1) of the Suppression of Financing Convention defines a
terrorist act as follows.
(a) An act which constitutes an offence within the scope of and as
defined in one of the treaties listed in the annex; or
(b) Any other act intended to cause death or serious bodily injury to a
civilian, or to any other person not taking an active part in the
hostilities in a situation of armed conflict, when the purpose of such
act, by its nature or context, is to intimidate a population, or to
compel a government or an international organization to do or to
abstain from doing any act.
Under paragraph 2(1)(a), a conduct would be regarded as a terrorist act if it
falls within one of the nine treaties52 listed in the annex to the convention.53
49 It was adopted in 1999. Ethiopia ratifies the convention in 2003. Apart from
calling, in its paragraph 3(d), for states to become parties to the international
treaties relating to countering terrorism Security Council resolution no 1373, in
its Paragraph 3 (c), further calls upon states “to cooperate, particularly through
bilateral and multilateral arrangements and agreements, to prevent and suppress
terrorist attacks and take action against perpetrators of such acts.” The OAU
Convention has to be seen in this context.
50 Preamble, Anti-terrorism Proclamation no 652/2009; Wondwossen Kassa (2013),
supra note 34.
51 Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, supra note 9, p. 133
52 They are:
1. Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft, done at
The Hague on 16 December 1970.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 385
Two exceptional instances (where an act that falls within one of these
treaties may not be considered as terrorist act for a state party to the
Suppression of Financing Convention) are provided under paragraph 2(2) of
the Convention. According to sub paragraph 2(2)(a), a state, at the time of
becoming a party to the Suppression of Financing Terrorism, has the right to
express its reservation that any treaty, which it is not party to, not be deemed
to be included in the annex referred to under Paragraph 2(1)(a). If it does not
express its reservation, the treaty to which it is not a party will be applicable
to that state, by virtue of Paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Convention, for the
purpose of criminalizing financing of the act prohibited under the treaty.
Similarly, by virtue of sub paragraph 2(2)(b) where a state which had been a
party to any of the treaties referred under Article 2(1)(a) of the Convention
ceases to be so, it can terminate the applicability of the Suppression of
2. Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Civil
Aviation, done at Montreal on 23 September 1971.
3. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes against
Internationally Protected Persons, including Diplomatic Agents, adopted by
the General Assembly of the United Nations on 14 December 1973.
4. International Convention against the Taking of Hostages, adopted by the
General Assembly of the United Nations on 17 December 1979.
5. Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material, adopted at
Vienna on 3 March 1980.
6. Protocol for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts of Violence at Airports
Serving International Civil Aviation, supplementary to the Convention for
the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Civil Aviation, done
at Montreal on 24 February 1988.
7. Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of
Maritime Navigation, done at Rome on 10 March 1988.
8. Protocol for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Fixed
Platforms located on the Continental Shelf, done at Rome on 10 March
1988.
9. International Convention for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings,
adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 15 December
1997.
53 At the time when the Suppression of Financing Convention was adopted there
were ten counterterrorism instruments: eight conventions and two protocols. The
annex (Paragraph 2(1) (a)) to the convention refers to seven of the conventions
and to both protocols. The only convention not included in the list is the 1963
Convention on Offences and Certain Other Acts Committed On board Aircraft
(Aircraft Convention) which prohibits conduct that do or may affect in-flight
safety.
386 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
Financing Convention to the act covered by the treaty which it ceases to be a
party to by making a declaration to that effect.
By making such declaration, a state not a party to one of the treaties listed
in the Annex to the Financing Convention makes the treaty to be presumed
not to be in the list for the purpose of Paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Convention.
It is noteworthy that the exclusion of a certain act from sub paragraph
2(1)(a) provides eligibility to be included in the definition provided under
sub paragraph ‘b’. Though not being included in the treaties listed under
article 2(1)(a) is necessary, other elements need to be fulfilled for an act to
be regarded as a terrorist act under the definition that sub paragraph 2(1)(b)
provides. These elements are discussed below.
Different authors analyse definitions of a terrorist act by taking different
elements.54 Here two elements of the definition are considered. The first
element is what Weigend calls the ‘base offence,’55 which refers to the
ordinary crime that forms the basis of a terrorist act. The second is what
Cassese refers to as ‘purpose of the act,’56 which denotes the mental
element that distinguishes a terrorist act from ordinary crimes.
Base offence
The base offence is the underlying crime of a terrorist act which refers to an
act “intended to cause death or serious bodily injury”.57 It has nothing to do
with property offences or victimless offences.58 As noted by Fletcher,
“terrorism is premised on the violent attack on life and security of human
beings.”59 Thus, the first element relates to conduct that is in and by itself
already criminalized60 under national criminal law. The act would have
been an ordinary crime (as opposed to a terrorist crime) of intentional
54 For example, Fletcher identifies eight variables of terrorism. Fletcher (2006),
supra note 33, pp. 901-911; Cassese approaches the notion of terrorism in terms
of its objective and subjective elements in Antonio Cassese (2006), Journal of
International Criminal Justice, Vol. 4, 935-958.
55 Weigend (2006), supra note 47, p. 929.
56 Cassese (2006), supra note 54, p. 938.
57 There is no restriction on the means of committing the act (it can be a machine
gun, knife …) in so far as it is intended and perhaps reasonably capable of
resulting in death or bodily injury. Anthony Aust (2001), "Counter-Terrorism—
A New Approach: The International Convention for the Suppression of the
Financing of Terrorism" Max Planck Institute UNYB, Vol. 5: 11, p. 298.
58 Fletcher (2006), supra note 33, pp. 894-911.
59 Ibid, 894, 901.
60 Cassese (2006), supra note 54, p. 938.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 387
homicide or grave bodily injury or an attempt to commit these offences had
it not been for the specific purpose accompanying the act.
Young refers to this element of the definition as the ‘proscribed harm.’61
While Wigenede describes it as the only objective element62 of definition of
a terrorist act, another scholar describes this element as the actus reus of an
international crime of terrorism.63 However, in addition to a doing of a
certain act, this element has a mens rea dimension/component—the intent to
commit homicide/murder and grave bodily injury. The act should be
committed intentionally with a view to cause death or serious bodily injury.
Purpose of the act
Fulfilment of the above element makes a certain conduct to be a candidate to
be treated as a terrorist act.64 The eligible conduct that fits this category
would be a terrorist crime where the actor possesses the ‘right’ state of mind
(intention)65 which constitutes the second element under paragraph 2(1)(b)
of the Convention. This element relates to the purpose of doing the act. A
base offence would be a terrorist act “when the purpose of such act … is to
intimidate a population, or to compel a government or an international
organization to do or to abstain from doing any act.” The actor must have at
least one of the three purposes while doing an act intending to cause death or
serious bodily injury on a civilian.
Any act that is intended to cause or has actually caused death or serious
bodily injury not accompanied at least by one of these purposes would not
constitute a terrorist act. Thus, the purpose for which the doer of the act
committed it gives a terrorist nature to what is otherwise an ordinary crime.
Cassese refers to this component as the hallmark of a terrorist act.66
While the definition is framed in such a manner that it provides three
alternative purposes for a terrorist to engage in a terrorist act, the primary
goal of a terrorist act is always that of compelling a public or private
institution to take a certain course of action. Logically, intimidating a
population, though listed as one possible purpose of a terrorist act, can only
be used as a means, as opposed to a purpose, for compelling a government
or another institution to do or to refrain from doing something. As observed
61 Young (2006), supra note 11, pp. 53-55
62 Weigend (2006), supra note 47, p. 929.
63 Antonio Cassese, International Criminal Law, 129.
64 Weigend (2006), supra note 47, p. 929.
65 Ibid.
66 Cassese (2006), supra note 54, 939.
388 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
by Fletcher, imposition of fear on the population is a means to reach some
political objective.67 In a similar fashion Cassese, referring to scaring the
population, notes that “it is never an end in itself”.68
Incorporating intimidating a population as one possible end of a terrorist
act makes it easy for law enforcement agencies to get a conviction where the
doer’s demands in connection with certain acts are unclear.69 In such cases,
it is enough for the prosecution to show that the actor’s immediate purpose
is to spread fear among the public. The purpose of the act being inferred
from the ‘nature’ or ‘context’ of the act,70 as opposed to knowledge or intent
on the part of the actor that his action will intimidate the population, gives
credence to this interpretation.
3.2. OAU Convention
Article 1(3)(a) of the OAU Convention defines a terrorist act as:
any act which is a violation of the criminal laws of a State Party and
which may endanger the life, physical integrity or freedom of, or cause
serious injury or death to, any person, any number or group of persons or
causes or may cause damage to public or private property, natural
resources, environmental or cultural heritage and is calculated or intended
to:
(i) intimidate, put in fear, force, coerce or induce any government, body,
institution, the general public or any segment thereof, to do or abstain
from doing any act, or to adopt or abandon a particular standpoint, or
to act according to certain principles; or
67 Fletcher (2006), supra note33, p. 902.
68 Cassese (2006), supra note 54, p. 939
69 Fletcher (2006), supra note 33, p. 902.
70 On this Weigend writes that inference from nature or context “means that all that
has to be proved is that the actor had mens rea with respect to the base crime
(murder, assault or destruction of property) and that that crime was committed in
a ‘context’ that the court deems indicative of terrorism. That is unsatisfactory
because the largely increased penalties provided for terrorists can be justified
only when the actor is proven to have intended or known that his acts will
intimidate the population or interfere with important government functions.
Moreover, since the actus reus of terrorist attacks does not differ from ‘ordinary’
offences, being labeled a terrorist hinges on the presence of a specific subjective
element. Leaving determination of that defining element to inference means that
the court can without conclusive proof put the terrorist label on one defendant
and withhold it from another. Weigend (2006) supra note 47, p. 923
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 389
(ii) disrupt any public service, the delivery of any essential service to the
public or to create a public emergency; or
(iii) create general insurrection in a State.
Base Offence
The definition captures “any act … which may endanger the life, physical
integrity or freedom of, or cause serious injury or death … or causes or may
cause damage to public or private property, natural resources, environmental
or cultural heritage … .” Not every act falls within the domain of the base
offence of a terrorist act. There are specific protected interests acting against
which would make the act potentially a terrorist act. Either the act should
endanger or be a transgression against life, physical integrity or liberty of a
human person or it should be a wrongdoing against public or private
property, natural resources, environmental or cultural heritage.71
The definition provision does not require that there be actual or risk of
harm/damage or that there be actual endangering of life, physical integrity,
or freedom. It simply requires that an act may result in any of the proscribed
consequences. The term ‘may’ is ambiguous. It includes any probability
(greater than zero less than 100 percent) that an act would result in the
consequences/states of fact. There is no requirement that the actor intends to
bring about these consequences or states of fact. Thus, in so far as other
elements of the definition are satisfied, almost any act arguably “may” result
in the proscribed consequences or states of fact, which deprives any value of
incorporating this element.
The definition speaks about the status of the base offence under the
criminal law of a state party to the convention. By providing that terrorist act
means “any act which is a violation of the criminal laws of a State Party and
…”, the definition provision indicates that it does not capture every
perpetration of violence against the above mentioned protected interests. It
requires that the act, even where it is not accompanied by the purpose
elements of the definition of a terrorist act, be criminalized under criminal
law of member states as non-terrorist ordinary offence. In other words, it is
71 Even these acts would not be considered as a terrorist act if the situation in which
the acts are committed falls under article 3 of the Convention. According to this
provision, “the struggle waged by peoples in accordance with the principles of
international law for their liberation or self-determination, including armed
struggle against colonialism, occupation, aggression and domination by foreign
forces shall not be considered as terrorist acts.”
390 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
not any act that causes death, bodily injury, damage to property and other
consequences or states of fact that falls within the domain of acts which are
potentially terrorist acts. An act which may cause any of the proscribed
harms or states of fact would be eligible to the category of terrorist acts to
the extent it is criminalized in a domestic criminal law.72
Purpose of the Act
The definition provides for a list of three possible purposes that the actor
might intend his act to serve. Each consists of a broad coverage of purposes.
The first purpose is to “intimidate, put in fear, force, coerce or induce any
government, body, institution, the general public or any segment thereof, to
do or abstain from doing any act, or to adopt or abandon a particular
standpoint, or to act according to certain principles.” This purpose has four
component elements. First, it relates to exerting certain pressure and/to
terrorize--intimidating, putting in fear, forcing, coercing or inducing.
Second, this pressure is exerted on “any government, body, institution, the
general public or any segment thereof.” Third, the actor may demand any of
those against whom he exercises pressure. This is as opposed to the
definition under the Suppression of Financing Convention where though the
pressure might be directed at the public or its part and the government, it is
only the government that the actor demands to do or not to do something.73
Fourth, the demand might have a variety of forms. It may relate to
demanding any of the aforementioned “to do or abstain from doing any act,
or to adopt or abandon a particular standpoint, or to act according to
certain principles.” Unless the latter two are argued to be subsumed in “to
do or to refrain from doing,” the phrase incorporated in the Suppression of
Financing Convention, in which case the definition would be criticised for
being redundant, the African definition is broader than the UN definition.
The second purpose of committing any of the base offences relates to
disrupting any public service, the delivery of any essential service to the
public or to creating a public emergency. The third possible purpose of
doing any of the acts to be a terrorist act is the creation of general
72 Because national criminal laws relating to protection of life, security and freedom
of a person and to property are not likely to be identical including this
requirement opens a room for variety of definitions of terrorist act across the
continent. This definition recognizes a possibility where a terrorist act for one
state is not so for another state.
73 Christian Walter (2003), Defining Terrorism in National and International law,
p.13. Retrieved from:
>
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 391
insurrection in a State. These two purposes envisioned by the definition
provision are not included in the definition under the Suppression of
Financing Convention. Because the three possible purposes of committing
an act are provided alternatively, it seems that an act can be a terrorist act
without being intended to compel government or public or part of it to do an
act or refrain from doing an act. To that extent, the definition lacks what is
considered as the core feature/characteristic of a terrorist act.
4. Definition of a terrorist act under the Proclamation
Article 3 of Proclamation No. 652/2009 titled ‘terrorist acts’74 provides:
Whosoever or a group intending to advance a political, religious or
ideological cause by coercing the government, intimidating the public or
section of the public, or destabilizing or destroying the fundamental
political, constitutional or, economic or social institutions of the country:
1) causes a person’s death or serious bodily injury;
2) creates serious risk to the safety or health of the public or section of
the public;
3) commits kidnapping or hostage taking;
4) causes serious damage to property;
5) causes damage to natural resource, environment, historical or
cultural heritages;
6) endangers, seizes or puts under control, causes serious interference
or disruption of any public service; or
7) threatens to commit any of the acts stipulated under sub-articles (1)
to (6) of this Article;
is punishable with rigorous imprisonment from 15 years to life or with
death.
Base offence
The definition provides for list of seven ‘base offences’ the commission of
which would constitute a terrorist act when accompanied by subjective
elements incorporated in the introductory part of the provision. While some
of the base offences require that a certain result (harm) be achieved, others
do not. For the latter, creating danger or risk of harm suffices.
74 Though Article 3 of the Anti-terrorism proclamation is titled ‘terrorist acts’, it
simply prescribes the punishment attached to the acts which are listed thereunder.
However, we assume that the provision is intended to define a terrorist act as an
act which satisfies the conditions provided thereunder.
392 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
To the first belong causing a person’s death or bodily injury, serious
damage to property, damage75 to natural resources, environment, historical
or cultural heritages, causing serious interference or disruption of any public
services and kidnapping or taking of hostages. Two of the offences on the
list belong to the second category: creating serious risk to safety or health of
the public or section of the public and endangering, seizing or putting under
control of any public services. The seventh on the list criminalizes, as a
terrorist act, a mere threat to commit any of the other six.
Purpose of the act
The purpose for which the doer did commit an act makes what is otherwise
an ordinary crime a terrorist crime.76 As noted by Thomas Weigend, “the
offender’s ‘specific’ intent accompanying his overt act is what sets a
terroristic murder, bombing or assault apart from an ‘ordinary’ crime of the
same kind.”77
The definition requires that the base offence be committed with intent to
serve one of the several purposes for it to be a terrorist act. Three possible
purposes are envisaged. These are coercing government in Ethiopia (at state
or federal level) or foreign government or international organization;
intimidating the public or section of the public; or destabilizing or
destroying the fundamental political, constitutional, economic or social
institutions of Ethiopia. With regard to the level of pressure on the
government, it is required that the actor intends to ‘influence’ the
government. It is noteworthy that the Amharic version provides for
‘coercion’ which is a higher and narrower form of pressure. A draft of the
law, dated January 2009, used the words “coercing or intimidating” in place
of “influence.”78
As Human Rights Watch observes, “it is not clear if the change
represents a government attempt to make the definition of terrorism broader
…, or whether this is primarily a translation issue”.79 Be the reason for
change of words as it may, for interpretation purpose the Amharic version of
75 The Amharic version requires that the damage be serious as in the case of damage
to property.
76 Young argues “intimidation or coercion should be regarded as a necessary
element of terrorism as a legal concept at international law.” Young (2006),
supra note 11, p. 57.
77 Weigend (2006), supra note 47, p. 923.
78 Human Rights Watch (2009), supra note 2, p. 3.
79 Ibid.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 393
legislation prevails over the English.80 Thus, courts would apply the
Amharic version that retains the word which was used at the draft stage of
the legislation thereby avoiding the possible expansive consequence of the
term introduced in the final English version of the definition provision.
The proclamation’s definition incorporates the phrase “… coercing the
government, intimidating the public or section of the public, or…”, and
because of the wording of the definition, it is not clear if these are provided
as purposes of a terrorist act. Adding to the confusion, possible motives of
the actor (advancing a political, religious or ideological cause) are
incorporated as elements of the definition of a terrorist act. In principle,
motive is irrelevant in establishing criminal responsibility.81
Owing to phrasing, the introductory part of the definition which states
“whosoever …intending to advance a political, religious or ideological cause
by coercing the government, intimidating the public or section of the public,
or…” suggests that what are normally considered as purposes of a terrorist
act are stated as means of achieving the motives.
5. Appraisal of the definition vis-à-vis the standard
definitions
This Section examines the proclamation’s definition of a terrorist act in light
of the definitions provided under the international and regional legal
instruments. It has been argued earlier that the resolution points to a
definition of terrorist act that states ought to follow while passing their own
counterterrorism legislation. As noted above, by ratifying the OAU
Convention, Ethiopia has voluntarily accepted the definition provided
thereunder as a guiding definition.
80 Federal Negarit Gazeta Establishment, 1995, Art. 2(4), Proc. No. 3, Neg. Gaz.
Year 1, No.3
81 Fletcher, G.P. (2000), Rethinking Criminal Law, (Oxford: Oxford University
press), p. 452; Kent Roach (2001), ‘The New Terrorism Offences and the
Criminal Law’ in: Ronald J Daniels, Patrick Macklem and Kent Roach (eds), The
Security of Freedom: Essays on Canada’s Antiterrorism Bill (University of
Toronto Press, Toronto) p. 156; Kent Roach (2007), ‘The Case for Defining
Terrorism With Restraint and Without Reference to Political or Religious
Motive’ in: Andrew Lynch et al (eds) (2007), Law and Liberty in the War on
Terror (Federation Press, Sydney), p. 43.
394 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
Because the proclamation has been enacted with a view, inter alia, to
enforce these regional and international legal instruments,82 examining the
proclamation’s definition of a terrorist act vis-a-vis the definitions in these
instruments would mean judging it by its own standard.
5.1. Elements where the Proclamation’s definition reveals
broadness
Base offence
This part of the definition of a terrorist act under the Proclamation deviates
from the international definition in two major points. First, it encompasses
conduct not incorporated in the latter. Among the list of seven acts under
Article 3 of the Proclamation only the first, namely, an act that “causes a
person’s death or serious bodily injury” is captured by the meaning of a
terrorist act under Paragraph 2(1)(b) of the Suppression of Financing
Convention. Others are not envisaged by the definition of a terrorist act
under the international instrument.83 UN Special Rapporteur on Human
Rights and Counterterrorism holds the view that the concept of terrorism
82 Preamble part of the Proclamation; Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
(2008/2009), supra note 9, p. 133.
83 This assertion on the proclamation’s deviation from the definition under the
Suppression of Financing Convention is subject to a proviso. The fact that an act
is not covered by the general definition of a terrorist act under Article 2(1) (b) of
the Suppression of Financing Convention does not necessarily exclude it from
being a terrorist act under the Convention. By virtue of its Article 2(1) (a), the
Convention treats acts proscribed by the treaties listed on its Annex as a terrorist
act without requiring that the act relates to causing damage to one’s life or body.
Thus, to the extent the other acts listed in the definition of the anti-terrorism
proclamation fall within the scope of the specific anti-terrorism treaties,83 the acts
would still be within the scope of the Convention’s definition. For example,
under Diplomatic Agents Convention (1973) kidnapping of an internationally
protected person, in and by itself, constitutes a terrorist act. That means, while
incorporating kidnapping as a base offence of terrorist act under the anti-
terrorism proclamation appears to go beyond the scope of definition of a terrorist
act under the Suppression of Financing Convention, to the extent it is applied for
an internationally protected person (as defined in the Diplomatic Agents
Convention) it is compatible with the Convention’s definition. Similarly, if a
hostage taking is accompanied by “threat to kill, to injure or to continue to detain
another person,” it would fall under the Hostages Convention (1979) making its
inclusion in the definition of a terrorist act under the Anti-terrorism proclamation
harmonious with the definition under Suppression of Financing Convention.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 395
should be limited to acts committed with the intention of causing death or
serious bodily injury, Kidnapping and the taking of hostages, and not
property crimes’84
Commenting on this divergence of the Proclamation’s definition,
Amnesty International indicates:
This definition of terrorism includes acts that do not involve violence or
injury to people, such as property crimes and disruption of public
services. The United Nations special rapporteur on counterterrorism
and human rights has stated that the concept of terrorism should be
limited to acts committed with the intention of causing death or serious
bodily injury, or the taking of hostages, and should not include property
crimes.85
Secondly, under the Convention’s definition an act, to be a terrorist act, must
have been intended to cause death or bodily injury. The definition under the
Anti-terrorism proclamation does not require that the act be intended by the
actor to cause the harm or risk listed thereunder. Nor does the definition call
for the harm or risk results from negligence. In so far as one’s act results in
death, bodily injury or any of the consequences listed in the definition,
irrespective of mens rea of the actor relating to the consequence, it will
constitute a base offence of a terrorist act under the antiterrorism
proclamation. It follows that if other elements of the definition are fulfilled,
an act which causes death, bodily injury, or any other harm or danger of
harm listed thereunder would be treated as a terrorist act even if the actor did
not intend the act to bring about such result.
While the proclamation’s definition and the OAU definition share most
of the base offences86 of a terrorist act, a close look at the definitions reveals
the following differences. Under both definitions, any act that causes death
or bodily injury would constitute a terrorist act if accompanied by other
elements. However, while the Ethiopian definition requires actual death or
bodily injury, the OAU definition makes an act “which may endanger” one’s
“life, physical integrity” as well a potentially terrorist act. Similarly unlike
the Ethiopian definition which requires actual kidnapping or taking of
84 Human rights Watch, Ethiopia: Amend draft law proposed counterterrorism
legislation violates human rights. Retrieved from:
0/ethiopia-amend-draft-terror-law>.
85 Human Rights Watch (2009), supra note 2.
86 Causing serious injury or death; causing damage to property; and causing damage
to natural resources, environmental and cultural heritages constitute base
offences under both definitions.
396 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
hostages, an act that “may endanger freedom” suffices to constitute a base
offence of a terrorist act under the OAU Convention. While both the OAU
Convention and the anti-terrorism proclamation declare damage to property
as one of the base offences, only the latter requires that the damage be
‘serious’. There are acts which are declared as potentially terrorist under the
definition of the Proclamation but not under the OAU definition. These are
an act that causes damage on historical heritage, and an act that “creates
serious risk to the safety or health of the public or section of the public.”
The failure of Article 3 of the Proclamation to require criminal fault
relating to the act that causes any of the harms or risks listed thereunder is a
major gap making it broader than Article 1(3) of the OAU convention in
relation to the base offences that the two definitions share. The latter, inter
alia, requires that the act be criminalized under criminal law of state parties,
which ensures the fulfilment of the mens rea element. The definition under
Article 3 of the Proclamation does not require that the conduct be
independently criminalized under the Criminal Code or in any other criminal
law of Ethiopia. Nor does it require that there be criminal fault in causing
the harm or risk of harm.
Thus, if the other elements of a terrorist act provided in the introductory
part87 of Article 3 are fulfilled, the person who ‘causes’ any of the listed
harms thereunder, be it accidentally or negligently, will be treated as a
terrorist person. That is, in so far as one’s intention “to advance a political,
religious or ideological cause” through “coercing the government,
intimidating the public or section of the public, or destabilizing or destroying
the fundamental political, constitutional or, economic or social institutions
of the country” is known and can be proved, then he will automatically be
considered as a terrorist person if his act causes any of the harms or risks of
harm listed thereunder, with no need to prove that the act was intended or
committed negligently. The OAU Convention does not allow that.
Purpose of the Act
For a certain act to be a terrorist act under the Suppression of Financing
Convention, its purpose should be “to intimidate a population, or to compel
a government or an international organization to do or to abstain from doing
any act.” Range of purposes of committing the base offence of a terrorist act
is provided in the Proclamation’s definition. These are “coercing the
government, intimidating the public or section of the public, or destabilizing
87 As discussed below the intention requirement provided in the introductory
statement applies to other elements of the definition.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 397
or destroying the fundamental political, constitutional or, economic or social
institutions of the country.” While broadly speaking the two definitions
refer to similar purposes, there are important differences. Coercing an
international organization to do or to refrain from doing a certain act, one of
the purposes under the Convention’s definition, is not included among the
purposes under the Proclamation’s definition. On the other hand
“destabilizing or destroying the fundamental political, constitutional or,
economic or social institutions of the country,” which constitutes one
possible purpose for a terrorist act under the proclamation, is not covered by
the Convention’s definition.
Under the Convention’s definition, the coercion against the government
is to force it to take some steps—to do or to refrain from doing a certain
act(s). Apart from requiring that there be coercion, the anti-terrorism
proclamation does not explicitly indicate that the actor demands the
government to do or to refrain from doing something. Any sort of coercion
(with no need to show that the coercer demands the government to do or to
refrain from doing a specified act) suffices to satisfy this element of the
definition. On the other hand, while the requirement that the actor be
motivated by religious, political or ideological causes is incorporated under
the Ethiopian definition, it is not relevant under the international definition.
The specific treaties listed in the Annex to the Suppression of Financing
Convention do not require that an act they respectively proscribe be intended
to influence the government or intimidate the public for it to be considered
as a terrorist act. Because the purpose element of the definition under Article
3 of the anti-terrorism proclamation is applicable to all eligible base offences
(including those covered by specific treaties), the Proclamation provides for
a narrower instance where these acts would be treated as terrorist acts. Thus,
an act which may not be treated as a terrorist act under the proclamation
because it is not accompanied by the purpose element of the definition might
be a terrorist act under the Suppression of Financing Convention upon
satisfying any one of the treaties listed in the Annex to the Convention.
While the definition under the Proclamation does not provide what is
being demanded and from whom, the purpose of committing a terrorist act
under the OAU Convention is to “intimidate, put in fear, force, coerce or
induce any government, body, institution, the general public or any segment
thereof.” And the demand is to be made against any of them “to do or
abstain from doing any act, or to adopt or abandon a particular standpoint, or
to act according to certain principles.”
Disrupting public service, the delivery of any essential service to the
public, which is treated as a base offence under the proclamation, is treated
398 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
as one possible purpose of committing the base offence under the OAU
convention definition. As a consequence, under the OAU Convention but
not under the Proclamation, causing property damage or any of the base
offences provided thereunder with a view to “disrupt any public service or
the delivery of any essential service to the public” would constitute a
terrorist act with no need to establish intimidation, putting in fear, forcing,
coercing or inducing any government, body, institution, the general public or
any segment thereof.
While the definition under the OAU Convention envisions different level
of pressure (forcing, coercion or inducement) as constituting the purpose of
committing the base offence, the Proclamation’s definition captures only the
extreme influence (coercion) on the government.
5.2. Elements where the Proclamation’s definition reveals
narrowness
Requirement of actor’s motive88
The proclamation’s definition, unlike the regional and international
definitions, requires that the base offence and purpose of the act be
accompanied by specific motive. It is where “whosoever or a group
intending to advance a political, religious or ideological cause …” commits
the proscribed act with the proscribed purpose that a terrorist act is said to be
committed under the Proclamation’s definition. A document that provides a
brief explanation about the draft anti-terrorism proclamation makes
reference to the motive of the doer of a terrorist act as one of the factors that
makes a terrorist act different from other ordinary crimes.89 However, under
international law, what makes one a terrorist is not the motive for doing the
88 For a discussion on the background of how the requirement of motive was made
element of definitions in some jurisdictions see: Douglas (2010), supra note 14,
Must terrorists act for a cause? The motivational requirement in definitions of
terrorism in the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand and Australia,
Commonwealth Law Bulletin, 36:2, 295-312, DOI: 10.1080/03050718.2010.481400
89 Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (2008/2009), supranote9, p.71. For
more arguments in support of the motive requirement see: Douglas (2010), supra
note 14, p. 307- 311; Ben Saul (2007), ‘The Curious Element of Motive in
Definitions of Terrorism: Essential Ingredient or Criminalising Thought’ in:
Andrew Lynch et al (eds) (2007) , Law and Liberty in the War on Terror
(Federation Press, Sydney ), 29–30; Saul (2006), supra note 30, pp. 38–41
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 399
act but the purpose of doing the act.90 John Dugard went as far as arguing
that “an ideal definition of terrorism “should expressly state that motive is
irrelevant in determining whether an act of terrorism has been
committed”.91 As argued by some, the inclusion of this element would
unduly narrow the definition and cause unnecessary hurdle for the
prosecution to get terrorists convicted.92
Objecting incorporation of this requirement under Australian law “the
Commonwealth DPP and the Attorney General’s Department argued before
the Security Legislation Review Committee that it was ‘not in the public
interest for a person to avoid criminal liability by showing that his or her
acts were motivated by something other than politics, religion or
ideology”.93
Failure to protect the public in a foreign country
Another area where the definition has a narrow scope of application relates
to the public that it protects. There is state obligation under international law
to cooperate with other governments in counterterrorism. This suggests that
a terrorist act, no matter where it is committed or/and against whom it is
committed, should be proscribed by every state. However, the definition
provision of the anti-terrorism proclamation restricts scope of application of
the law to the protection of the Ethiopian public. Because the term
‘government’ is defined as “the federal or a state government or a
government body or a foreign government or an international organization”,
it is not confined to protect the state and federal governments of Ethiopia.
90 Cassese, supra note 54, pp. 940ff. Duchemann attributes the absence of the
motive element in international conventions to the need to reach consensus on the
definitions. Adam Duchemann, Defining Terrorism in International Law so as to
Foster the Protection of Human Rights, retrieved from:
https://www.academia.edu/2912017/Defining_Terrorism_in_International_Law
_so_as_to_Foster_the_Protection_of_Human_Rights>.
91 John Dugard (1974), “International Terrorism: Problems of Definition”, RIIA,
Vol. 50, no 1, p. 80.
92 Commonwealth Secretariat, Draft Model Legislation on Measures to Combat
terrorism 42 (2002); Cassese, supra note 54, p. 941. For more on criticism of the
motive requirement see: Douglas (2010), Supra note 14, 301-307. DOI:
10.1080/03050718.2010.481400
93 Nicola McGarity (2010), “Testing” our counterterrorism laws: the prosecution of
individuals for terrorism offences in Australia 34 Crim LJ , 92-127, p.114, note
182.
400 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
The definition captures an act committed to coerce foreign governments.
However, it does not capture acts intended to intimidate a public or part of a
public of another state94 and acts intended to destabilize or destroy the
fundamental political, constitutional or economic or social institutions of
foreign country as terrorist. While the definitions under the Suppression of
Financing Convention and the OAU Convention capture intimidation or
putting in fear of any state’s population or a part thereof, the Proclamation’s
definition applies only to Ethiopian population or a segment thereof. This
approach would have an unacceptable consequence. For example,
committing an act resulting in any of the harms or risks listed under the
definition would not make one a terrorist if s/he intends to intimidate the
public in a foreign country contrary to the international and regional
definitions.
6. What do the discrepancies mean for the validity of the
definition under the Proclamation?
We note, in the previous section, that the definition of a terrorist act under
the proclamation deviates from the regional and international definitions.
While relating to some aspects the definition in the proclamation is wider in
scope, on other aspects it is narrower. This section deals with the effect of
these discrepancies on the validity of the proclamation’s definition, which
turns on what the resolution and the OAU Convention require of states in
relation to criminalization of a terrorist act.
To this end, we need to examine whether the instruments instruct states to
criminalize certain conduct, without meanwhile requiring them not to
criminalize other conduct, as a terrorist act, or whether they require states to
criminalize certain conduct, but not others, as a terrorist act. In the former
scenario, the states would comply with the instruments by criminalizing
every conduct that falls within the respective meaning of a terrorist act in the
two instruments. States are free to adopt a definition that captures conduct
beyond what the instruments treated as a terrorist act. It follows that a
domestic definition would be in conflict with international or regional
definition only where the domestic definition fails to capture, but not where
it goes beyond, a conduct criminalized by the latter.
94 Unlike Article 2(1) (b) of the Suppression of Financing Convention which is
phrased as “---is to intimidate a population” Article 3 of the proclamation is
formulated as “---intimidating the general public or section of the public …”
which refers only to the Ethiopian public or section of the Ethiopian public.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 401
If, on the other hand, the instruments require states to criminalize as
terrorist act only a conduct that their respective definition captures (no less
no more), states will be obliged to confine their definition of a terrorist act to
the definitions in the regional and international instruments. Under this
interpretation, for a state to comply with the instruments, its definition of a
terrorist act should match that provided under the respective definitions of
the two instruments.95 It follows that state definition would contravene with
the respective definitions of the two instruments not only where it fails to
include, but also where it goes beyond, a conduct that the latter captures.
Scholars who criticise the Security Council for not including a definition
of a terrorist act under its resolution 137396 would support the second
interpretation. They are of the view that had there been a definition under
resolution no 1373, states would have been required to adopt that definition.
They attribute the proliferation of divergent definitions of a terrorist act
across the globe to the Security Council’s alleged failure to attribute
meaning to a terrorist act in its resolution 137397 and blame98 the Council for
this. Amnesty International shares this view.99
There is reaction of scholars to what is deemed as a definition of a
terrorist act under Security Council resolution 1566 (2004) as being a late
response100 to rectify the failure of resolution 1373 to define a terrorist act.
According to these scholars, the delay has resulted in broad and divergent
domestic definitions. The criticism is that the definition came after many of
the states had already adopted their own definition of a terrorist act since
2001, following the instruction under resolution 1373. This criticism is
based on the premise that had that definition been incorporated in resolution
1373, it would have been a mandatory definition to be adopted by states
95 Because the definitions provided under the OAU Convention and the Suppression
of Financing Convention are different in scope this interpretation would make it
practically impossible for a state party to the OAU convention to adopt a
definition of a terrorist act that would satisfy both definitions.
96 Roach (2008), supra note 27; Saul (2005), supra note 26.
97 Roach (2008), supra note 27, pp. 97, 98; Beth Elise Whitaker (2007), ‘Exporting
the Patriot Act? Democracy and the ‘war on terror’ in the Third world’ 28 (5)
Third World Quarterly, Vol 28, No. 5, p. 1017.
98 Roach (2008), supra note 27, pp. 98-99
99 Noting that ‘‘the terms ‘terrorists’ and ‘terrorist acts’ in resolution 1373 are open
to widely differing interpretations,’’ Amnesty International expresses its fear that
this may facilitate rights violations. Amnesty International (2011), Statement on
the Implementation of SC Res 1373, 1 October 2001.
100 Saul (2005), supra note 26, p.165; Roach (2008), supra note 27, p. 99.
402 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
thereby preventing the diversified and broad definitions of a terrorist act in
domestic legislation.
On the other hand, Reuen Young supports the first view. For Young,
while it is crucial for states to harmonize domestic anti-terrorism laws with
international law, the latter is “only one of the relevant considerations taken
into account in the anti-terrorism law-making process.” In view of the
international nature of counterterrorism it is logical that states draw on
“international law’s jurisprudence concerning the definition of terrorism,”
and states, according to Young, are “entitled to proscribe conduct beyond
that which they are required to proscribe pursuant to international
obligations”.101 In the following paragraph which summarizes the gist of his
argument, Young indicates the right of the states to define a terrorist act as
something that is derived from their sovereignty.102
The international definition should be regarded as a minimum; states’
definitions should be assessed against this standard. States are entitled to
proscribe further conduct … . To think otherwise would wrongly
construe international law, rather than the state, as the source of
sovereignty.
A close reading of relevant provisions of the resolution and the OAU
Convention confirms Young’s view. The instruments simply instruct states
to criminalize terrorist act and other related conduct and punish those who
are involved in such conduct. According to Paragraph 2(b) of the resolution,
“states shall take necessary steps to prevent the commission of a terrorist
act” of which one is criminalization and prosecution. This duty is explicitly
stated under Paragraph 2(c) of the resolution which requires states to “ensure
that, … terrorist acts are established as serious criminal offences in domestic
laws and regulations and that the punishment duly reflects the seriousness of
such terrorist acts.” In connection with prosecution, the same paragraph
instructs states to “ensure that any person who participates in the financing,
planning, preparation or perpetration of terrorist acts or in supporting
terrorist acts is brought to justice.” Similarly, Article 2(a) of the OAU
Convention provides for obligation of state parties to “… establish criminal
offences for terrorist acts as defined in this Convention and make such acts
punishable by appropriate penalties that take into account the grave nature of
such offences.”
101Young (2006), supra note 11, pp. 99-100.
102 Ibid, p. 100.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 403
Owing to the transnational nature of terrorism, both the OAU Convention
and the resolution, in their preambular103 and operative paragraphs,104 make
reference to cooperation among states in countering terrorism. Even though
these paragraphs suggest that states ought to adopt a definition that would
make cooperation possible,105 it does not necessarily mean that states need to
define a terrorist act in exactly the same way as provided in the definitions
of the regional and international instruments. It is only to the extent that a
state anti-terror law relates to terrorist act that falls within the definitions of
the regional and international instruments that another state is called upon to
cooperate for the enforcement of the law.
The provisions relating to cooperation should not be construed as calling
for one state to cooperate with another in the enforcement of the latter’s anti-
terrorism law in its full extent. Because provisions relating to cooperation in
counterterrorism are applicable in relation to terrorist acts as understood in
the respective definitions of the two instruments, defining a terrorist act in
such a manner that it encompasses a conduct that the respective definitions
103 The seventh and eighth paragraphs of the resolution respectively states:
“Calling on States to work together urgently to prevent and suppress terrorist
acts, including through increased cooperation and full implementation of
the relevant international conventions relating to terrorism,” and
“Recognizing the need for States to complement international cooperation by
taking additional measures to prevent and suppress, in their territories
through all lawful means, the financing and preparation of any acts of
terrorism.”
The sixth paragraph of the OAU Convention provides:
desirous of strengthening cooperation among Member States in order to
forestall and combat terrorism
104 Paragraph 2(f) of the resolution requires that states “[a]fford one another the
greatest measure of assistance in connection with criminal investigations or
criminal proceedings relating to the financing or support of terrorist acts,
including assistance in obtaining evidence in their possession necessary for the
proceedings”; Paragraph 3 (a-e) of the resolution call for states to engage in
different joint activities with a view to fight terrorism. Article 5 of the OAU
Convention provides for range of areas where state parties need to cooperate in
countering terrorism.
105 Paragraphs relating to cooperation among states in counterterrorism would be
effectively implemented if states define a terrorist act consistently. Thus, state
compliance with the definition provided under the respective definitions of the
OAU Convention and the resolution would facilitate consistency among
domestic definitions which in turn facilitates the cooperation in countering
terrorism.
404 MIZAN LAW REVIEW, Vol. 8, No.2 December 2014
of the two instruments captures plus some other conduct would not have
impact on the enforcement of these provisions. These provisions simply
reinforce the argument that state definitions should be broad enough to
encompass every act that falls within the scope of the definitions of the
OAU convention and the resolution. Thus, the provisions, the enforcement
of which envisages communality among domestic definitions of a terrorist
act, should not lead one to the conclusion that states are not allowed to
define a terrorist act differently from the definitions under the regional and
international instruments.
Both the regional and international legal instruments require states to
criminalize certain conduct as terrorist act with no explicit or tacit
prohibition of states from adopting broader definition of a terrorist act. Thus,
state definition’s being broader than the regional or international definition
does not make it incompatible with the latter. The definition of a terrorist act
under the Anti-terrorism proclamation, by incorporating acts which are not
within the scope of the base offence of the international and regional
meaning of a terrorist act, is broader than the latter. But that does not make it
in contravention of these instruments. However, a definition that is broad so
as to embrace conduct other than that envisioned under the Suppression of
Financing Convention and the OAU Convention may have a negative
consequence on human rights.106
A state definition will be incompatible with the international and regional
definition to the extent it fails to capture a conduct which falls within the
scope of the international and regional definitions respectively. The
definition of a terrorist act under the proclamation, by requiring motive as an
additional element and by excluding a crime committed against a public in a
foreign state, makes it narrower than the meaning attributed to a terrorist act
under resolution 1373 and the OAU convention.
Conclusion
While there has been live controversy surrounding the scope of definition of
a terrorist act under the Ethiopian anti-terrorism law, both sides of the debate
do not seem to ground their arguments on relevant standard. One cannot
claim that the definition of a terrorist act under the Anti-terrorism
106 Laetitia Bader, Human Rights Watch’s researcher on Ethiopia, criticises the
definition as being broad so as to include peaceful protests and lawful speech.
IRIN (2012), Briefing: Ethiopia's ONLF rebellion. Retrieved from:
t/96658/briefing-ethiopia-s-onlf-rebellion>.
The Scope and Definition of a Terrorist Act under Ethiopian Law: … 405
Proclamation is wide or narrow without a standard. This article proposes the
definitions provided under the OAU Convention on the Prevention and
Combating of Terrorism and the International Convention for the
Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism, which has been endorsed by the
Security Council resolution 1373, to be the appropriate standards in light of
which the scope of the Proclamation’s definition has to be evaluated.
Examination of the Proclamation’s definition in light of these standard
definitions reveals that while in respect to some elements the definition in
the proclamation is broader, in others it is narrower.
Although broadness does not, per se, make the definition in the
proclamation incompatible with the standard definitions, it might ultimately
render the definition to be constitutionally, and from human rights
perspective, suspicious. Because the regional and international instruments
instruct states to criminalize conduct that falls within the scope of their
respective definitions, narrowness of the Proclamation’s definition, on the
other hand, makes the definition incompatible with the international and
regional definitions. Its strict application would mean non-prosecution or, in
the event of prosecution, acquittal of persons who would be treated as
terrorist under regional and international law. The definition, by leaving
some terrorist acts unaddressed, makes Ethiopia fail to discharge its
counterterrorism responsibility. Moreover, this defeats one of the
proclamation’s declared purpose, i.e., enforcement of the regional and
international counterterrorism instruments.

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