The Phnom Penh Post

Ethiopian forces burned Tigrayan man alive: rights body

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THE Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) said on March 13 that government forces were responsibl­e for burning a Tigrayan man to death, a barbaric act circulated in a widelyshar­ed video that sparked outrage on social media.

Ethiopia’s government on March 12 vowed to investigat­e and take action against anyone involved in “the extremely savage act” depicted in the video, which shows an unarmed man being set on fire as a group of people, including some wearing army uniforms, taunt him.

On March 13, the EHRC said the victim was a Tigrayan man who was “burnt alive . . . with the participat­ion of government security forces and other people”.

The atrocity occurred on March 3 in the northweste­rn region of Benishangu­l Gumuz, which borders Sudan and South Sudan. It followed an attack a day earlier that left at least 20 people dead, the state-affiliated independen­t rights body said.

Security officials later captured and shot dead eight Tigrayans suspected of involvemen­t in that assault, it added.

“The bodies of the deceased were taken by security forces to a nearby forest and burned,” the EHRC said in a statement, citing eyewitness testimony.

“In between this, an ethnic Tigrayan who was suspected of having contact with the deceased, was arrested ... and thrown [on the pyre] with the deceased, with him dying of fire burns,” the EHRC quoted eyewitness­es as saying.

“Those who were in the area were Ethiopian army soldiers, Amhara region special police forces and Southern region police forces,” the rights body said, calling for a criminal investigat­ion.

The video could not be independen­tly verified by AFP and it was not immediatel­y clear if the atrocity was connected to the ongoing 16-month war in northern Ethiopia.

The conflict between government forces and Tigrayan rebels in Africa’s second most populous country has killed thousands of people. There are widespread reports of atrocities, including mass killings and sexual violence.

The Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), which has allied with the Tigrayan rebels, accused Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and his Prosperity Party of encouragin­g the “Stone Age savagery” on display in the video.

“The atrocious act we are subjected to stems directly from the wicked rhetoric” deployed by Abiy’s party and its allies, the OLA said in a statement released on March 12.

According to the UN, the fighting has displaced more than two million people, driven hundreds of thousands to the brink of starvation and left more than nine million in need of assistance.

Earlier this month, the UN Human Rights Council announced that Fatou Bensouda, a former chief prosecutor at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), would head a UN investigat­ion into a wide range of alleged violations committed by all sides in the war.

 ?? AFP ?? Soldiers of the Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF) ride on a bus in Gashena. The military has been accused of burning a Tigrayan to death.
AFP Soldiers of the Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF) ride on a bus in Gashena. The military has been accused of burning a Tigrayan to death.

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