The Scotsman

Schoolyard massacre leaves at least 54 dead as ethnic violence roils Ethiopia

- By ELIAS MESERET newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Survivor sofa massacre by rebel sin western Ethiopia have counted 54 bodies in a school yard after the latest attack to target ethnic minorities, Amnesty Internatio­nal has said.

Human rights groups are asking why federal soldiers left the area hours before attackers moved in and targeted ethnic Amharas.

Prime minister Abiy Ahmed denounced the killing of people based on identity, adding that security forces had been deployed to the area and “started taking measures”.

Ethnic violence is posing the greatest challenge yet to the prime minister, who was last year's Nobel Peace Prize winner for his sweeping political reforms.

“Ethiopia' s enemies are vowing either to rule the country or ruin it, and they are doing everything they can to achieve this ,” he said in a Facebook post. One of their tactics is to arm civilians and carr y out barbaric attacks based on identity. [For me] this is heartbreak­ing.”

Ethiopia' s government blamed a rebel group, the Oromo Liberation Army, for the attacks in the far western part of Oromia, in an area bordering South Sudan and a few hundred miles from the capital, Addis Ababa.

The head of the Oro mi a region police commission, Ararsa Merdasa, told the state broadcaste­r the death toll was 32 and“some 200 families have fled the area”.

Survivors of the attack in the Guliso District told Amnesty Internatio­nal that federal troops had withdrawn unexpected­ly and the rebels arrived hours later, identifyin­g themselves as the OLA.

“Militants gathered people who did not manage to flee, mainly women, children and the elderly, and killed them,” the Amnesty statement said.

Survivors hid in a forest nearby. One told the human rights group he found the bodies of his brother, sister-in-law and three children.

“The fact that this horrendo us incident occurred shortly after government troops abruptly with drew from the area in unexplaine­d circumstan­ces raises questions that must be answered,” said Amnesty Inter nation al' s regional director De prose Muchena.

The Ethiopian Human Rights Commission noted the government's death toll of 32 but said preliminar­y evidence “indicates the number is very likely to exceed that tally”.

Attackers numbered up to 60, the commission said. Ethnic Amharas “were dragged from their homes and taken to a school, where they were killed”.

The commission urged the federal government to “shed light on the reasons behind the military's withdrawal from an area long known to be vulnerable to attacks” and to make sure civilians are protected.

Am har as are the second most populous ethnic group in Ethiopia after Oromos. The Oromia region's communicat­ions office called the latest assault a “brutal terror attack”. Getachew Balcha, the region's spokesman, said it was aimed at creating havoc and putting psychologi­cal pressure on citizens.

“The armed group gathered 200 people and then star ted shooting at them,” the Amhara region's affiliated broadcaste­r quoted one survivor as saying.

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