The Borneo Post

Ethnic clashes kill 44 in restive western Ethiopia

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ADDIS ABABA: Weekend fighting between rival ethnic groups in western Ethiopia killed at least 44 people, state affi liated media reported Tuesday.

The clashes occurred on the border between the central Oromia and western Benishangu­l- Gumuz regions.

Violence began when officials from Benishangu­l- Gumuz were killed by unidentifi­ed gunmen, said the Walta Media and Communicat­ion Corporate, citing the region’s communicat­ions chief Zelalem Jaleta.

The clashes between youths from rival ethnic groups armed with rocks and knives forced tens of thousands of people to flee their homes with security forces deployed to pacify the area.

Benishangu­l- Gumuz is one of Ethiopia’s nine regional states, stretching to the border with Sudan.

The UN humanitari­an office OCHA said some 70,000 people had been displaced in the wave of violence. In its latest update, OCHA said the fighting began last Wednesday with the death of the four high-ranking officials.

While Ethiopia’s new Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has received praise from around the globe for his reformist agenda, a wave of communal violence — mostly over land issues — has marred the fi rst few months of his rule.

At least 58 people were killed in September when fighting broke out in the capital, with those fleeing saying they were targeted by Oromo mobs because they are members of minority ethnic groups. — AFP

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