At least 1,500 arrests in Ethiopian state of emergency, claims news agency

Ethiopian authorities have arrested more than 1,500 people since declaring a state of emergency less than two weeks ago, according to state-controlled news agency Fana

Ethiopians cross their wrists above their heads as a symbol for the Oromo anti-government protesting movement PHOTO: AFP
Ethiopians cross their wrists above their heads as a symbol for the Oromo anti-government protesting movement PHOTO: AFP

Ethiopian authorities have arrested more than 1,500 people since declaring a state of emergency less than two weeks ago, according to a statement published by state-controlled news agency Fana.

The command post, a body set up by authorities to oversee the state of emergency, said 1,120 people had been arrested in the towns of Shashemene and West Arsi for “violence and property damage.”

According to the Guardian, the towns are in the region of the Oromo ethnic group, who along with the Amhara have waged a nearly year-long protest against a government largely made up of minority Tigrayans.

Another 302 people were reportedly arrested in the western town of Guji and 110 in the area of Kelem Wolega. According to the statement on Fana’s website, authorities seized hundreds of weapons.

About 50 people were arrested for “trying to deny service” by closing their businesses or calling for strikes in the Amhara region, and three teachers were detained for “abandoning school.”

The six-month state of emergency comes with a raft of stringent rules. Foreign diplomats are banned from travelling more than 25 miles outside Addis Ababa, and it is illegal to watch television stations set up by the diaspora. Posting links from these organisations’ websites on social media has been declared a “criminal activity”, according to the Guardian.

The state of emergency was imposed after a surge in violence following a stampede at an Oromo religious festival that killed more than 50 people on 2 October, which was blamed on police firing tear gas at anti-government protesters.