Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Ethiopia’s premier seeks end to violence

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ADDIS ABABA — Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed travelled on Saturday to a region where clashes have displaced nearly a million people, his first trip since being sworn in as premier five days ago.

Violence along the border of the Horn of Africa country’s Somali and Oromiya provinces first erupted in September last year, with both regions blaming the other for the unrest.

Since September, officials in Oromiya have repeatedly blamed raids by a paramilita­ry force from the Somali region as causes of the violence. The Somali region denies those claims and says its residents have been unjustly targeted in attacks.

On Saturday, Abiy arrived in Jijiga — the capital of the Somali region — in a bid to tackle the problems.

“This has been a tragedy that should never have taken place,” the state-run Ethiopian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n quoted him as saying in a speech.

A report said he pledged “to find sustainabl­e solutions within a very short time” and provide support to those displaced. The area has been plagued by sporadic clashes for decades. A referendum held in 2004 to determine the status of disputed settlement­s failed to ease tensions.

The ruling EPRDF coalition picked Abiy last month to replace Hailemaria­m Desalegn, who quit to clear the way for reforms in Ethiopia, Africa’s second most populous nation which has been racked by violence for the last three years.

Hundreds have been killed by security forces in Oromiya, the violence triggered by land rights but largely fuelled by a sense of political and economic marginalis­ation among the young. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Winnie Madikizela-Mandela
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela

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