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In Ethiopia, a secret committee orders killings and arrests to crush rebels

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(Reuters) A secretive committee of senior officials in Ethiopia’s largest and most populous region, Oromiya, has ordered extra-judicial killings and illegal detentions to crush an insurgency there, a Reuters investigat­ion has found.

Reuters interviewe­d more than 30 federal and local officials, judges, lawyers and victims of abuses by authoritie­s. The agency also reviewed documents drafted by local political and judicial authoritie­s. These interviews and documents for the first time shed light on the workings of the Koree Nageenyaa – Security Committee in the Oromo language - which began operating in the months after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed came to power in 2018. The committee’s existence has not been previously reported.

Five current and former government officials told Reuters that the committee is at the heart of Abiy’s efforts to end a years-old insurgency by the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), which wants self-determinat­ion for the Oromo people and greater language and cultural rights. Oromos have long complained of political and social marginalis­ation. When new protests broke out in 2019, the government cracked down hard. The Koree Nageenyaa took the lead, the five officials said.

The violence in Oromiya has displaced hundreds of thousands of people. Ethiopia’s government and human rights officials accuse the OLA of killing scores of civilians since 2019, a charge the group denies.

One of the five sources was willing to be identified: Milkessa Gemechu, a former member of the governing Prosperity Party’s central committee. The others, including two people who have attended meetings of the Koree Nageenyaa, spoke on condition of anonymity.

The people familiar with Koree Nageenyaa’s activities attributed dozens of killings to the committee’s orders and hundreds of arrests. Among the killings, they said, was a massacre of 14 shepherds in Oromiya in 2021 that the government has previously blamed on OLA fighters.

Reuters presented its findings to the head of the state-appointed Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC), Daniel Bekele. In an interview, Bekele confirmed the existence of the Koree Nageenyaa. He said its aim was to address growing security challenges in Oromiya, but it “overreache­d its purpose by interferin­g in the justice system with widespread human rights violations.”

“We documented multiple cases of extra-judicial killings, arbitrary detentions, torture and extortion,” Bekele said, without elaboratin­g on specific incidents.

Ethiopia’s federal government, Prime Minister Abiy’s office and the Oromiya regional government did not respond to detailed questions for this article. Abiy has previously defended his government’s human rights record. On Feb. 6, he told parliament during routine questions: “Since we think along democratic lines, it is hard for us to even arrest anyone, let alone execute them.”

The unrest in Oromiya, home to Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa, is a reminder of continuing instabilit­y in the Horn of Africa nation, a patchwork of many ethnic groups. Ethiopia is scarred by

conflict. A two-year civil war in the northernmo­st region, Tigray, killed hundreds of thousands of people until a peace deal was struck in November 2022. Fighting erupted last July in another northern region, Amhara, between the Ethiopian army and local militiamen. There the federal government has imposed a state of emergency.

Violence in Oromiya has continued even after the federal government and OLA rebels held peace talks for the first time in early 2023. Ethiopia’s government has designated the OLA a terrorist organisati­on – a label that the United States and

United Nations have not applied to the group.

According to the current and former Ethiopian officials, the Koree Nageenyaa meets in the Oromiya regional offices of Abiy’s Prosperity Party and is headed by Abiy’s former chief of staff, Shimelis Abdisa, the president of Oromiya region. Shimelis and other committee members are ethnic Oromo. Fekadu Tessema, leader of the Prosperity Party in Oromiya, sits on the committee, as does Ararsa Merdasa, head of security for Oromiya, and half a dozen other local political and security officials, the sources said. None of these

people responded to questions from Reuters.

Reuters found no evidence that Abiy attended the meetings or that he issued orders to the committee. People familiar with the matter said the committee was formed at Abiy’s instigatio­n. Abiy was briefed on at least one occasion in early 2022 about the committee’s activities, said a person who was present. Reuters couldn’t independen­tly verify this.

The security committee is little known beyond a tight official circle. Reuters

couldn’t independen­tly verify this.

The security committee is little known beyond a tight official circle. Reuters found one reference to it in the public record: a paragraph in a 2021 report by the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission about abuses of the justice system. The EHRC report said the committee – known as Yedehinine­ti Komītē in Ethiopia’s official language, Amharic – investigat­ed and jailed people with suspected ties to armed groups instead of allowing the justice system to take its course.

Jaal Marroo, the military leader of the OLA, told Reuters in an interview that he is aware of the Koree Nageenyaa’s existence and that high-ranking officials in Oromiya are its members. He accused the committee of ordering extrajudic­ial killings, arbitrary detentions, harassment and intimidati­on, without citing specific examples.

The enemy within

Ethiopia has a long history of using a clandestin­e security apparatus to quell dissent, Ezekiel Gebissa, professor of history and African studies at Kettering University in the United States, told Reuters.

During Haile Selassie’s four-decade rule last century, the emperor created a network of spies known colloquial­ly as the “joro tabi,” or listeners, to hunt his opponents. The communist Derg military junta that toppled Selassie in 1974 set up a vast new security system to eliminate threats to the regime.

At the turn of the century, Ethiopia got a new constituti­on and parliament. But this government, too, led by Meles Zenawi, grew increasing­ly repressive and fashioned a top-down structure of surveillan­ce that extended to every level of society. The system was commonly known as “Amist Le And” – one-to-five – because spies were typically assigned five people to monitor.

Abiy became prime minister in 2018. According to the current and former government officials, the Koree Nageenyaa security committee was formed soon afterwards in response to youth protests in Oromiya over inequality and economic mismanagem­ent.

Milkessa Gemechu, the former member of the Prosperity Party’s central committee, said he first heard of the Koree Nageenyaa at a meeting of Oromo political leaders in March 2019. There Shimelis, newly appointed as president of Oromiya, announced that the Koree Nageenyaa “would direct operations against enemy elements and enemy cells,” said Milkessa. Shimelis and Abiy’s office didn’t respond to questions about the Koree Nageenyaa. Reuters couldn’t independen­tly verify Milkessa’s account of the meeting.

Milkessa now lives in the United States. He says he left Ethiopia after receiving threats from security officials for criticisin­g Abiy and the Prosperity Party, including over their handling of unrest in Oromiya.

From late 2019, the Koree Nageenyaa met in the Prosperity Party’s Oromiya regional headquarte­rs in downtown Addis Ababa as often as three times a week, said the two officials who participat­ed in some of the meetings. The building was emptied of other staff, attendees handed in their phones, and documents were collected at the end of each session, these people said.

Abiy’s father is Oromo and he owes his premiershi­p in part to youth-led protests in Oromiya that forced his predecesso­r, Hailemaria­m Desalegn, to resign. Neverthele­ss, unrest in the region quickly loomed as a major challenge for the new prime minister.

Ever since Emperor Menelik II’s campaign of conquest at the close of the 19th Century imposed Amhara culture and language on assimilate­d groups, Oromos have complained of political and social marginalis­ation. Oromos hoped their lot would improve with Abiy, but many became disenchant­ed when change didn’t materialis­e. New protests broke out in October 2019 and the Koree Nageenyaa cracked down.

When a prominent Oromo singer, Haacaaluu Hundeessaa, was killed in June 2020 in an attack the government blamed on Oromo rebels, clashes between protesters and police led to at least 200 civilian deaths and 5,000 arrests, human rights groups have said. Oromiya president Shimelis and regional Prosperity Party head

Fekadu presided over a series of Skype calls with each of the 19 big cities and 21 zones of the region at this time, according to the two people who participat­ed in some meetings of the Koree Nageenyaa. Shimelis and Fekadu ordered some protesters arrested and others killed, the two people said. According to one of these people, Shimelis told one zonal administra­tor to have his forces shoot protestors if the demonstrat­ions got out of hand.

The sources did not specify numbers of people to be arrested or killed.

A tribal massacre

A former adviser to Shimelis told Reuters that in “important cases, like prominent executions,” orders

come from Shimelis or Ararsa, Oromiya’s police commission­er until his promotion last year to head of security. One such case, the source said, was a massacre in early December 2021 of 14 tribesmen.

The killings were reported at the time in Ethiopia, but the blame for the crime has been a matter of dispute. Reuters reviewed previously unreported official accounts of the incident and spoke to a local official who said he witnessed key moments leading up to the slaughter.

On Nov. 30, 2021, suspected OLA fighters killed 11 police officers and wounded 17 in an ambush in Fentale, a rural district of Oromiya that lies in the Great Rift Valley.

Then police commission­er Ararsa and the region’s deputy president, Awalu Abdi, arrived at the district administra­tion’s compound the following day, the local official said. Like Ararsa, Awalu is a member of the Koree Nageenyaa, according to five sources. Also present was the then zonal administra­tor, Ababu Wako.

The local official recounted that Ababu received a phone call from a military commander whose troops had detained 16 suspected rebels in a forest area near the shallow waters of Lake Basaka. The commander was seeking guidance about what to do with the suspects. The local official said he was present when Ababu took the phone call and heard the discussion­s that followed.

Ababu consulted his more senior visitors. Ararsa and Awalu said the men should be killed, the local official said, and Ababu passed on the command: “Don’t spare anyone. Shoot them all.”

Two other sources independen­tly corroborat­ed this account. Both said they were briefed on the events by people who were present.

Awalu, Ararsa and Ababu did not respond to requests for comment about the killings.

Arrests and detentions

The Koree Nageenya not only eliminates suspected enemies. It also acts preemptive­ly to keep protesters off the streets.

In 2019, the committee started to order that people it deemed a threat to security be arrested or have their prison terms prolonged, according to half a dozen judges and prosecutor­s who worked on such cases.

One of the sources, an intelligen­ce official, shared an internal document listing more than 1,006 names of men and women arrested on the committee’s orders between 2019 and March 2022. The document lists full names, gender and location of arrest.

“The Koree Nageenya sits down and decides that a person needs to be detained,” said a former judge on the Oromiya supreme court. “Then they go and arrest them without warrant or investigat­ion or due process.”

Prisoners under the authority of the committee are referred to by the police and other security agents as “Hala Yero,” meaning those jailed because of the “current security situation,” according to a dozen prisoners, five judicial sources and the two EHRC sources. All spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the matter.

Their cases are handled by the police, who have repeatedly defied court orders that they be released, according to the sources. And the detainees are jailed in separate facilities – mostly military barracks and training camps – without access to family members or the courts, they said.

A 2021 report by the EHCR, based on interviews with 281 detainees across 21 police stations in Oromiya, names the Koree Nageenyaa as interferin­g in the legal process involving people suspected of having links to armed groups.

“Their cases were not handled by courts of law, but rather by what is called the security council,” the report said. “This security council was establishe­d under the regional administra­tion bodies and has a mandate to investigat­e and decide on their cases.”

Judges and lawyers who resist interferen­ce from government officials have faced intimidati­on, assault, kidnapping and one attempted murder of a court president, according to an earlier May 2019 report by the Oromiya supreme court, seen by Reuters, that was shared with Oromiya’s regional president, his deputy and the police commission­er.

A supreme court judge told Reuters that two to four judges approached him each week to complain about interferen­ce in the justice system.

“I used to believe in the reform agenda of Abiy, I really wanted to be part of the transition,” the judge said. “At first I justified the behaviour of the security forces and thought it was linked to a particular moment, but at some point I realised the problem was systemic. Everyone who disagreed with the Koree Nageenyaa would be removed.”

Two gym instructor­s told Reuters they were detained in 2021 on suspicion of working with the OLA and subjected to a torture method known as “number eight” – a reference to how prisoners are suspended from the ceiling, with their arms bound together at the wrist and their legs bound together at the ankle. Both men deny any involvemen­t with the OLA.

“I was put upside down and then electrocut­ed on the sole of my foot,” one said, showing scars from the electrodes on his feet and fingers. “Five days a week for 45 days.”

“When they torture you using this method, blood spills out of your body,” said the other. Ethiopian authoritie­s did not respond to requests for comment about the accounts of torture.

The two men told Reuters they were released after several months in prison. Others have spent years behind bars with no prospect of freedom, their lawyers and families say.

 ?? ?? Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is pictured campaignin­g in Jimma, Oromiya, ahead of parliament­ary and regional elections in 2021. REUTERS
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is pictured campaignin­g in Jimma, Oromiya, ahead of parliament­ary and regional elections in 2021. REUTERS
 ?? REUTERS ?? An Oromo thanksgivi­ng festival in Addis Ababa in October 2023. The Oromos have complained of marginalis­ation since the late 19th century.
REUTERS An Oromo thanksgivi­ng festival in Addis Ababa in October 2023. The Oromos have complained of marginalis­ation since the late 19th century.

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