Ethiopian forces killed scores in June-July unrest

Ethiopian security forces killed more than 75 people
and injured nearly 200 during deadly ethnic unrest in June and July following
the killing of a popular singer, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission said
Friday.
The commission’s report said 123 people in all were
killed and at least 500 injured amid one of the country’s worst outbreaks of
ethnic violence in years, a “widespread and systematic attack” against
civilians that points to crimes against humanity. Some victims were beheaded,
tortured or dragged in the streets by attackers.
Ethnic violence is a major challenge for Nobel Peace
Prize-winning Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who has urged national unity among
more than 80 ethnic groups in Africa’s second most populous country.
The unrest in June and July followed the killing of
singer Hachalu Hundessa, who had been a prominent voice in the anti-government
protests that led to Abiy taking office in 2018 and announcing sweeping
political reforms. Those reforms, however, opened the way for long-held ethnic
and other grievances to flare.
The commission found that amid the street protests
following Hachalu’s death, “civilians were attacked inside their homes by
individual and grouped perpetrators and were beaten and killed in streets in a
gruesome and cruel manner with sticks, knives, axes, sharp iron bars, stones
and electric cables.”
More than 6,000 people were displaced and at least
900 properties looted, burned or vandalized, the report said. The attacks often
targeted ethnic Amhara or Orthodox Christians.
“While it is understandable that security forces had
the challenging task of restoring order in the face of such widespread
violence, the proportionality of the force employed in some contexts is highly
questionable,” the report said.
As an example, in several communities, “the
commission found that there were people killed with bullet wounds to the head,
shots to the chest area or the back. People not participating in the protests —
passersby, bystanders observing from their doorsteps, young people, elderly
people trying to mediate, people with mental illnesses, and even police officers
— also lost their lives.”
In other cases, the commission found that “local
authorities and security did not respond to victims’ repeated calls for help,
being told instead ‘that higher ups gave no order to intervene’ ... Survivors
and witnesses also recount how sometimes police stood watching as the attacks
took place.”
Some watchdogs have warned of a return to repressive
measures in Ethiopia as authorities grapple with hate speech and ethnic
violence.
The unrest was not related to the conflict in
Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region that began in early November, but it was
another sign of the tensions straining the country of some 110 million people
at the heart of the Horn of Africa.
A spokeswoman for Abiy’s office did not immediately
comment on the report, and the commission did not say what the government’s
response had been. Interviews with government officials and security figures
were part of the commission’s investigation, which also involved visiting some
40 communities.
The commission said it found no indication of
“ongoing efforts to investigate the use of force by security officers during
the unrest and to hold to account those who caused unnecessary human
suffering.”
The report noted that “crimes against humanity of
this nature combined with the current national context are signs that the risk
of atrocity crimes, including genocide, is increasing,” and it called for
investigations, justice and “a lasting and institutional solution for the
increasing trend of discrimination and attacks against minorities.”