close
Monday, March 14, 2022

Ethiopia: Sixty-four people killed in ambush, reprisals

The violence in the Benishangul-Gumuz, home to several ethnic groups, was separate from the war in Tigray.

• March 14, 2022
Ethiopian Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed
Ethiopian Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed

Ethiopian Human Rights Commission on Monday confirmed the death of 64 people in western Ethiopia after an armed group attacked a civilian convoy and its military escort in a region plagued by ethnic violence.

The commission said previously an unreported attack occurred on March 2 in Metekel, in the Benishangul-Gumuz region.

It said 20 soldiers and three civilians were killed in the ambush, while 30 attackers died during the day-long gun battle that followed.

The commission said that 11 more people were killed, including one who was burnt alive – as security forces rounded up suspects and carried out summary killings.

The commission investigated the incident after a video posted on social media on Friday showed armed men, some in military uniforms, using a stick to poke a man back onto a burning pile of bodies after he tried to escape.

According to the commission, the government soldiers stopped a bus, pulled out eight ethnic Tigrayan civilians who had just been released from prison and accused them of orchestrating the attack.

The commission said security officers detained and beat the men, then shot them along with two men from the local Gumuz ethnic group and burnt their bodies.

Security officers said they found cash and a satellite phone with the Tigrayan suspects.

Also, the security officers discovered another Tigrayan man hiding in a car, tied him up and threw him onto the pyre, the commission said, noting the presence of Ethiopian soldiers and uniformed forces from the Amhara region and Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples’ Region.

The rights body did not say which security force killed the civilians.

Spokespersons for the two regions were not available for comment. A military spokesman and government spokesman did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The violence in the Benishangul-Gumuz, home to several ethnic groups, was separate from the war in Tigray, a northern region that has been fighting central government rule for more than 16 months.

(Reuters/NAN)

More from Peoples Gazette

Economy

Buhari regime will continue to borrow without subsidy removal: Femi Adesina

“You know how much could have been saved if the subsidy was removed and how it could have been diverted to other areas and spheres of national life.

Putin and Zolotov

World

Russia’s war with Ukraine slower than planned, admits top Putin ally

National Guard chief Viktor Zolotov is blaming the slower pace on Ukrainian forces hiding behind civilians.

Politics

Wike is PDP bully; can’t intimidate us in Edo: Obaseki

“It clearly amounts to delusion of grandeur, for any one man to nurse the idea that he owns…the PDP.”

Governor Nyesom Wike and David Umahi

States

Wike bragging about controlling Nigeria’s judiciary ‘brutish’ for democracy: Umahi

The former allies have been locked in fierce political confrontation in recent weeks.

Education

ASUU extends strike by eight weeks, says Buhari regime mindless

“…The government’s response…a continuation of the unconscionable, mindless, and nonchalant attitude of the Nigerian ruling elite…”

Russian troops

World

Russia tells UN peacekeepers to stay away from Ukraine

A new round of talks between Russia and Ukraine will be held via video link on Monday.

Abba Kyari's wife slumps

Abuja

Wife of alleged drug dealer Abba Kyari slumps in court

Though she appeared lifeless on the floor, she was quickly carried up and rushed inside one of the offices.