Alem Bekagn

Alem Bekagn
Map
LocationAddis Ababa, Ethiopia
Coordinates9°00′00″N 38°44′40″E / 9.0000°N 38.7445°E / 9.0000; 38.7445
StatusDemolished
Security classMaximum
Openedc. 1923
Closed2004
Former nameKerchele Prison
Central Prison
Websitehttp://www.alembekagn.org
Notable prisoners
The Sixty

Alem Bekagn[a] (Amharic: ዓለም በቃኝ, "Farewell to the World"), or 'Kerchele Prison', was a central prison in Ethiopia until 2004. Located in Addis Ababa, the prison possibly existed as early as 1923, under the reign of Empress Zewditu, but became notorious after Second Italo-Ethiopian War as the site where Ethiopian intellectuals were detained and killed by Italian Fascists in the Yekatit 12 massacre. After the restoration of Emperor Haile Selassie, the prison remained in use to house Eritrean nationalists and those involved in the Woyane rebellion. Under the Communist Derg regime that followed, the prison was the site of another mass killing, the Massacre of the Sixty, and of the torture and execution of rival groups in the Red Terror. The prison remained a site of human rights abuses until the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front entered Addis Ababa on 28 May 1991, after which it became a normal prison.[citation needed] The prison was closed in 2004 and demolished in 2007 to allow the construction of the headquarters of the African Union.
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).