Regina rally calls for accountability in Ethiopia after killing of singer, activist leads to civil unrest - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Regina rally calls for accountability in Ethiopia after killing of singer, activist leads to civil unrest

Around 100 people marched from Regina's city hall to the Saskatchewan Legislative Building on Friday, calling for an independent and impartial review into the killing of a politically outspoken artist in the east Africa country.

Death of anti-government musician Hachalu Hundessa, killed June 29, was 'a political assassination': marcher

About 100 people marched to the Saskatchewan Legislature in Regina on Friday, calling for an independent and impartial review of the assassination of a prominent artist and activist. (Germain Wilson/CBC)

Around 100 people marched from Regina's city squareto the Saskatchewan Legislative Building on Friday, calling for an independent and impartial review into the killing of a politically outspoken musician and anti-government activist in Ethiopia.

Samuel Faye spoke to CBC about the march, spurred by the June 29shooting ofHachalu Hundessa, described byFayeas an independent voice fromthe Oromo, Ethiopia's largest ethnic group.

"It is a political assassination but we don't know who is the killer," Faye said on Friday. "The government has killed hundreds and jailed thousands. That is by their own admission. Therefore, we need justice for that too."

Faye said the Oromo are the largest ethnic group in the east African nation, but said they are also marginalized. The country's prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, became the first Oromoperson to hold that office in 2018.

There have been more than 230 deaths in the country, most of them civilians, after civil unrest spurred byHundessa's killing. Nearly 5,000 arrests have been made.

There is currently no access to the internet in the country, after it was shut down by the government.

Politicaltensions were high in Ethiopiaprior to the singer's killing, after the government scrapped elections planned for August due to COVID-19 and extended its term.

Faye referred to Abiy, winner of a 2018 Nobel Peace Prize, as a dictator.

"Justice forHachalu," the Regina crowd, which included demonstrators from outside of Regina, chantedin unison. "Free our people!"

Samuel Faye accuses Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed of running a dictatorship in the country after the government unilaterally extended its term and scrapped a planned August election due to COVID-19. (Germain Wilson/CBC)

The Associated Press reported on Friday that Ethiopia's attorney general,Adanech Abebe, announced through state media that two people had confessed to Hundessa's killing, allegedly ordered by a group called theOromo Liberation Army, and were in custody.

The military has been deployed by the country's government to quell the rising violence. Thousands of people have been arrested, including journalists from the Oromia Media Network, Faye noted.

Faye said the outlet had been exiled previously, but itre-emerged when Abiymadereforms,including welcoming home once-banned exile groups.

"People are on the street when COVID-19 is lurking in the communities and we are really worried," he said. "People are suffering economically. Now, safety and the right to live is questioned too."

Thousands of people, including journalists at the Oromia Media Network, have been arrested in Ethiopia after civil unrest erupted when a prominent Oromo musician and activist was killed on June 29. (Germain Wilson/CBC)

A statement from the Committee to Protect Journalists, a non-profit advocate for press freedom, said the Oromia Media Network had interviewed the singer about a week before he was killed.

"Authorities should immediately end the internet blackout, free the Oromia Media Network journalists detainedin 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," the statement said.

With files from Germain Wilson and The Associated Press