81 Killed in Violence After Ethiopian Singer Tragedy
AFP
2020/7/2 16:18:40
File photo shows people taking part in a demonstration along the streets of Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia, Jan. 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Michael Tewelde)
Two days of protests have left at least 81 people dead in Ethiopia, a police chief said Wednesday, after the murder of a popular singer from the country's largest ethnic group stoked tensions that threaten to derail the country's democratic transition.
Hachalu Hundessa, whose political songs gave voice to the Oromo's long-standing sense of marginalization, was shot dead on Monday night.
Angry protests broke out in Addis Ababa and the region of Oromia which surrounds it, the heartland of the Oromo people who have long complained of oppression at the hands of smaller ethnic groups in the diverse country of 100 million people.
"So far 81 people have been killed, including three Oromia special police force members," Ararsa Merdasa, the Oromia police chief, said on Wednesday in a televised press briefing.
On Wednesday the worst violence took place in Hachalu's hometown of Ambo, west of Addis Ababa.
At the core of the anger was Oromo nationalists' desire to see Hachalu buried in Addis Ababa - historically at the heart of their territory, from where they feel they have been displaced.
Ambo spokesman Milkessa Beyene said that Hachalu's body had arrived in the town for burial on Thursday but "a group of youths who wanted the funeral to happen in Addis Ababa clashed with security forces, causing unrest."
He urged the public to be calm ahead of the funeral.
AFP
AFP
2020/7/2 16:18:40
File photo shows people taking part in a demonstration along the streets of Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia, Jan. 17, 2018. (Xinhua/Michael Tewelde)
Two days of protests have left at least 81 people dead in Ethiopia, a police chief said Wednesday, after the murder of a popular singer from the country's largest ethnic group stoked tensions that threaten to derail the country's democratic transition.
Hachalu Hundessa, whose political songs gave voice to the Oromo's long-standing sense of marginalization, was shot dead on Monday night.
Angry protests broke out in Addis Ababa and the region of Oromia which surrounds it, the heartland of the Oromo people who have long complained of oppression at the hands of smaller ethnic groups in the diverse country of 100 million people.
"So far 81 people have been killed, including three Oromia special police force members," Ararsa Merdasa, the Oromia police chief, said on Wednesday in a televised press briefing.
On Wednesday the worst violence took place in Hachalu's hometown of Ambo, west of Addis Ababa.
At the core of the anger was Oromo nationalists' desire to see Hachalu buried in Addis Ababa - historically at the heart of their territory, from where they feel they have been displaced.
Ambo spokesman Milkessa Beyene said that Hachalu's body had arrived in the town for burial on Thursday but "a group of youths who wanted the funeral to happen in Addis Ababa clashed with security forces, causing unrest."
He urged the public to be calm ahead of the funeral.
AFP
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