Mail & Guardian

Provocativ­e Ethiopian singer slain

The murder of a leading campaigner for Oromo rights has led to a surge in deadly violence

- Zecharias Zelalem

At least 80 people are dead after a day of unrest in Ethiopia, sparked by the murder in Addis Ababa on Monday of renowned musician and activist Hachalu Hundessa. Amid an internet blackout, security forces have arrested journalist­s and political leaders of the Oromo.

On Tuesday morning, thousands of people went into the streets near Addis Ababa’s St Paul Hospital where a post-mortem examinatio­n was being carried out. The vehicle carrying his coffin as it left the hospital was swarmed by youths, few of whom were wearing the mandatory protective face masks. Such is the effect the 34-year-old singer had on his millions of fans.

This impromptu funeral procession of sorts was broadcast live on local outlet Oromia Media Network (OMN). Shortly afterwards, police ransacked the broadcaste­r’s offices and detained several staff members. “The police have rounded up our journalist­s and destroyed property at our Addis Ababa headquarte­rs,” said Kitaba Megersa, an OMN board member. “A few of our employees had to escape police, but others were arrested either during the raid on headquarte­rs or out in the field while covering the mourning.”

Among those arrested were members of the Oromo Federalist Congress opposition party, Jawar Mohammed and Bekele Gerba. The arrests have sent shockwaves across the country, because their influence is almost unparallel­ed among opposition candidates. The government reacted by shutting down internet access in an attempt to either quell the protests or stem the flow of informatio­n.

“Nobody is above the law,” federal police commission­er Endeshaw Tassew said in an address on state media. “The group of detainees led by Jawar Mohammed attempted to bring the body for burial in Addis Ababa, against the wishes of his family. A police officer was killed in a violent scuffle by a member of the group’s entourage.”

Endeshaw said that weapons were confiscate­d from Jawar’s bodyguards and that 35 people were arrested. No explanatio­n was given for the raid on the OMN’S office.

Police say several suspects in Hachalu’s murder have been arrested. The motive for the singer’s killing remains unclear.

Later on Tuesday evening, gunshots were heard in Addis Ababa, as well as three explosions.

Human Rights Watch’s Horn of Africa director, Laetitia Bader, said: “Ethiopian authoritie­s should respond to reports of protests in Addis Ababa and other cities and towns following the killing of popular Oromo singer Hachalu Hundessa by acting urgently to reduce tensions and to ensure security forces do not make a combustibl­e situation worse. The government should order security forces not to use excessive force or carry out arbitrary arrests, including against protesters, as they have often done in the past.”

The internet blackout and closure of OMN was condemned by the Committee to Protect Journalist­s (CPJ), a nonprofit organisati­on promoting press freedom worldwide.

“Ethiopian authoritie­s’ persistenc­e of old patterns of censorship in response to crises, when the public most needs access to timely news and informatio­n, is deeply disappoint­ing,” said Sub-saharan Africa’s CPJ representa­tive Muthoki Mumo.

“Authoritie­s should immediatel­y end the internet blackout, free the Oromia Media Network journalist­s detained in the course of their work, and guarantee that members of the press can report on this moment of protest without fear for their safety or of losing their liberty.”

Songs of injustice

Hachalu — aged just 34 when he was killed — was a larger than life figure, popular for his outspokenn­ess and his use of music to advocate for the rights of the Oromo. The country’s largest ethnic group has endured systematic repression by the central government for much of Ethiopia’s modern history.

In the 2000s, the government incarcerat­ed thousands of Oromo, including Hachalu.

His beginnings in the town of Ambo were like that of any other boy, until he was imprisoned at the age of 17 on suspicion of links to the Oromo Liberation Front, a banned political party. He spent five years behind bars until a judge ruled that he must be released for lack of evidence. He was given no compensati­on for his wrongful imprisonme­nt.

While behind bars, with hundreds of other young men like him in prison on trumped up charges, Hachalu became convinced that amplifying the plight of the Oromo through his music was his true calling.

His 2015 hit single Maalan Jira epitomises Hachulu’s vision, and will remain the cornerston­e of his legacy. The song is a catchy, melodious and vibrant beat for those who don’t understand the language Afaan Oromo. But to understand the words is to recognise his status as a master lyricist. Behind the uplifting tune is a lament of historical injustices suffered by Oromo farmers over half a century. The urbanisati­on of much of Ethiopia over the course of the 20th century made victims of Oromo farming communitie­s, who were pushed further and further away from Addis Ababa.

The release of the single came shortly after the announceme­nt of an expansion of Addis Ababa into surroundin­g areas. The plan did not include compensati­on for the inhabitant­s of these areas. The issue was so charged that it sparked a wave of protests in November 2015. Oromos took to the streets of towns and villages to call for the cancellati­on of the plan, singing along with Hachalu as they did so, galvanised by his lyrics and melodies that pulled on the heartstrin­gs.

Protests ignited elsewhere in the country, primarily in the Amhara region. With the nation brought to a gridlock, it became impossible for the status quo to remain. These political pressures are ultimately what catapulted Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed — himself Oromo, albeit affiliated with the ruling party rather than the political opposition — into office. Abiy said in a tweet of Hachalu’s killing that Ethiopia had “lost a precious life today”.

In 2017, Hachalu released Jirra, which translates to “we are here,”, and was far more uplifting than his previous hit. Hachalu celebrated gains made by Oromo society as a whole, and paid tribute to the sacrifices that it took to come this far.

As renowned Oromo scholar and Keele University lecturer Awol Allo described it, Jirra “embodied a newfound collective optimism, a feeling that Oromo culture is no longer in jeopardy, and a sense that the Oromo society is finally in the middle of a robust ascendancy”.

In perhaps his most daring performanc­e while on stage during a 2017 benefit concert at Addis Ababa’s Millenium Hall, Hachalu issued a call for the Oromo to “mount their horse and march on [Addis Ababa]”. It was interprete­d by Ethiopia’s broadcast authority as a call to unseat the government and the concert’s live feed was immediatel­y interrupte­d.

“It was very distressin­g, how could they play this live,” said broadcast authority head Zeray Asgedom at the time. “Get your horse, take over the city. How can [Hachalu] sing this?”

Hachalu would later clarify the meaning of his message with a local television channel, LTV. He said that Oromo horsemen, who fought and repulsed invading colonial Italian forces at the 1896 Battle of Adwa, “have no reason not to remove the power in the Presidenti­al Palace committing atrocities against the innocent”. His comments sent shockwaves through Ethiopia, which was used to strict state censorship laws.

Months later, the overhaul in government took place, with Abiy in charge. Hachalu thrived; Zeray was dismissed from the broadcasti­ng authority.

Hachalu leaves behind a wife and three children. He will be buried in his hometown of Ambo.

 ??  ?? ‘We are here’: A screengrab of Hachula Hundessa from his music video ‘Maalan Jira’, which ‘embodied a newfound collective optimism that Oromo culture is no longer in jeopardy’.
‘We are here’: A screengrab of Hachula Hundessa from his music video ‘Maalan Jira’, which ‘embodied a newfound collective optimism that Oromo culture is no longer in jeopardy’.
 ??  ?? Solidarity: Protesters in Minnesota hold an Oromo flag (left) while singer Mawardi Moussa (right) addresses people protesting Hachalu Hundessa’s death. Photos: Stephen Maturen/getty/afp
Solidarity: Protesters in Minnesota hold an Oromo flag (left) while singer Mawardi Moussa (right) addresses people protesting Hachalu Hundessa’s death. Photos: Stephen Maturen/getty/afp

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