More than 166 people were killed during anti-government protests in Ethiopia last week, the government said on Sunday, as the capital and other hotspots remained closely guarded by security forces and a blanket internet shutdown entered its sixth day.
Large protests broke out in Addis Ababa and spread to the surrounding Oromia region on Monday night after popular Oromo musician Hachalu Hundessa was shot dead by unknown gunmen in a killing prime minister Abiy Ahmed said was "an evil act".
Hachalu sang in the Oromo language of Ethiopia’s biggest ethnic group. His killing tapped into grievances fuelled by decades of government repression and what the Oromo describe as their historic exclusion from political power.
The government initially said 80 people had been killed during the protests, which lasted for two days. The unrest is the deadliest since Mr Abiy, who is Oromo, took power in 2018 with the promise of wide ranging reforms.
The military, called in to quell the protests Wednesday, were out in the streets of Oromia towns, two residents from the town of Adama and another from the town of Shashemene told Reuters. Authorities shut down the internet after the protests began, and they are yet to switch it on again, residents said.
"The [Oromia] region is now relatively calm and there is no violence or protests at the moment. Businesses have also reopened," Jibril Mohammed, head of the Oromia Security and Peace Bureau, told Reuters by phone.
Amnesty International has called on the government to bring the killers to justice. – Reuters