Wednesday, January 10, 2018

#OromoRevolution






















Ethiopia's key security headache is 

Oromia,

 Amhara mistrust of federal

 forces

The lack of trust for federal security forces in Ethiopia’s biggest regional states has been 
identified 
as the main security headache the country faces.
The Addis Standard news portal reported on Monday that two anonymous sources close to a 
Security Council meeting held late last week, said that strong resistance from parts of the
 Oromia and Amhara regional states was making the work of federal forces difficult.
“Concerns were raised by members of the national defense forces and the federal police
 regarding
 strong resistance from several parts of the public, particularly in Oromia and Amhara regional 
states,” a source is quoted to have said.
The Security Council meeting was headed by Defense Minister Siraj Fegessa and was
 attended 
by Premier Hailemariam Desalegn and other top security and police chiefs from across the 
country.
Clashes between especially the army and residents of Oromia has claimed a number of lives. 
The most recent being when about 19 people were killed in the town of Chelenko late last year. 
In October 2017, 10 people were reportedly killed in Ambo with another four deaths in the town
 of Soda.
The security situation between the Oromia and Ethiopia-Somali states has also been heated
 in the last quarter of 2017. The clashes led to hundreds of deaths with massive displacement of 
persons
 on both sides. The government has announced a resettlement plan.
Another area of concern according to the submissions was the ethnic-based killings that 
forced the
 closure of some universities in the Oromia, Amhara and Tigray regional states. The situation is
 said to 
have calmed down and most universities reopened.
Addis Ababa early last week announced political reforms to what has long been tagged a
 repressive
 region. Leaders of the four parties that form the ruling EPRDF coalition announced that 
political
 prisoners
 were to be released and a notorious jail,
 the Maekelawi, closed down and turned into a modern museum.

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