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Aid group says two employees killed in Ethiopia’s Amhara region

TWO Catholic Relief Services (CRS) workers were shot and killed in Ethiopia’s Amhara region, the charity said, amid violent anti-government protests triggered by a federal government decision to disband regional special forces units.

CRS director of communications Kim Pozniak said on Monday that the incident occurred in the town of Kobo, where residents reported heavy artillery fire on Sunday but did not say whether the shootings were linked to the unrest.

“Details of the murder are still unknown,” CRS said in a statement.

The victims were Chuol Tongyik, one of CRS’s security managers, and Amare Kindeya, a driver. They were returning from Amhara to the capital Addis Ababa, the statement said.

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“The depth of our shock and sorrow is difficult to measure and we are saddened over this senseless violence,” Zemede Zewdie, CRS’s country representative in Ethiopia said in the statement.

Spokespeople for Ethiopia’s federal government and for the Amhara regional government did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Thousands have protested across Amhara since the federal government issued its order on Thursday and residents reported gunfire in at least two towns on Sunday.

Residents in the town of Dessie reported large protests there on Monday, with young people blocking the roads and burning tyres.

Amhara politicians and activists have condemned the government order that requires special forces from each of Ethiopia’s 11 regions – which enjoy a degree of autonomy – to integrate into the police or the federal army.

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They say disbanding Amhara’s special forces would leave the region vulnerable to attacks by neighbouring regions, including Tigray, whose leaders agreed on a truce with the federal government in November to end a two-year war that killed tens of thousands.

Amhara forces fought alongside the federal army in that conflict.

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed says the integration of the regional special forces is needed to ensure national unity in a country with a long history of inter-ethnic conflict.

Amhara’s regional government said on Monday it had banned protests in Gondar, which has seen some of the largest demonstrations, imposed restrictions on the circulation of three-wheeled vehicles there and ordered bars to close by 9 pm.


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By The African Mirror

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