New Straits Times

Ethiopia state of emergency to last six months

-

ADDIS ABABA: A state of emergency imposed in Ethiopia a day after the prime minister resigned will last for six months, the defence minister said on Saturday, as authoritie­s sought to tamp down unrest in Africa’s second most populous nation.

Outbreaks of violence had continued in parts of the country and the government was banning protests, along with the preparatio­n and disseminat­ion of publicatio­ns “that could incite and sow discord”, Defence Minister Siraj Fegessa said.

“The government has previously made several efforts to curtail violence, but lives have continued to be lost, many have been displaced and economic infrastruc­ture has been damaged.”

Prime Minister Hailemaria­m Desalegn announced his surprise resignatio­n in a televised speech on Thursday, the first time in modern Ethiopian history that a sitting prime minister had quit. He said he wanted to smooth the way for reforms.

A day later, the government imposed the state of emergency. Parliament, where the four-party ruling coalition controls all 547 seats, is expected to ratify it within two weeks.

Since January, Ethiopia has released more than 6,000 prisoners charged with a variety of offences, including taking part in mass protests and crimes against the state.

It has also closed down a jail where activists alleged torture took place.

Many of the prisoners took part in anti-government protests in 2015 and 2016 in the country’s two most populous provinces, whose ethnic Oromo and Amharic communitie­s complain they are under-represente­d in the country’s corridors of power.

The demonstrat­ions began against a government plan to expand the capital Addis Ababa but then morphed into greater demands for civil rights.

The government previously imposed a state of emergency in October 2016, which was lifted in August 2017.

During that time, curfews were in place, movement was restricted and about 29,000 people were detained.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia