Ethiopia stories to watch today:
- Protests return to restive Oromia state: roadblocks, deaths and injuries reported
- Ethiopia’s premier addresses the House of People’s Representatives
- Ethiopian Broadcasting Authority undermines Minister of Communications
Federal security forces on Thursday fired live ammunition at protesters who had blocked roads, killing 10 and wounding 20 others in Ethiopia’s restive town of Ambo in central Oromia, according to a spokesperson for the town. The killing signals a dangerous escalation as regional authorities call for meaningful implementation of the country’s federalist constitution.
- Addis Standard: A large contingent of the regular federal army are also deployed in the city.
- Local merchant to AS: We’ve never seen this level of military forces deployed in the city even during the peak times of last year’s Oromo protests.
- Residents in the area also told Reuters that demonstrators blocked the town’s main road to protest sugar shortages, sparking clashes with police.
Languages to watch for: Oromia officials are denouncing the protests as “lawlessness” and “unnecessary” while blaming enemies of the regional state for organizing the demonstrations. Others, mostly pro-government bloggers and media outlets are characterizing the situation as a “security breakdown.” Analysts fear the latter language follows earlier calls by the same groups for the reimposition of the state of emergency.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn took questions from members of Parliament on Oromo-Somali border conflict and recent high level resignations by Speaker of the House and a key policy aide.
- Hailemariam: Resignations “common in a democratic party and government and should be habituated.”
- What he didn’t say: This is the first time in the ruling thiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition’s more than quarter a century rule when a senior government official – a founder of the party – stepdown protesting government’s handling of a proxy border war and lack of implementation of the federal order.
- Hailemariam: Abadula’s resignation request is still under consideration. Abadula did not attend the parliament session today.
- Hailemariam bolsters Oromia’s claim that the border conflict with Somali regional state is not ethnic as has been hyped by western media.
- Per Addis Standard, the Prime Minister attributed the prevalence of “black market in foreign currency”, “rampant contraband” and “the rush to monopolize Khat trading” in eastern Ethiopia as playing a major role in giving the conflict an “ethnic and national dimension.”
- The PM noted that in the last few months, the Oromia state police and federal customs officials have apprehended “about two million dollars” on its way out of the country via the Somali regional state border in eastern Ethiopia.
- Hailemariam also lamented about lack of professionalism and weak capacity of local media, calling on pro-government stations to exercise caution.
At least 10 dead, 20 wounded in Ethiopia as #OromoProtests expand
Mohammed Ademo ✔@OPrideSecurity forces killed 10 and wounded 20 others in #Ethiopia’s restive town of Ambo in central Oromia. The killing signals a dangerous escalation as regional authorities call for meaningful implementation of the country’s federalist constitution.
| | Ethiopian security forces kill at least 10 people as Oromo protests return ... Ethiopian security forces on Thursday fired live ammunition at protesters who blocked roads, killing 10 and woun... | | | |