Hundreds of Tigrayans detained in Ethiopian capital in recent weeks,
witnesses say
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[July 15, 2021]
By Dawit Endeshaw and Maggie Fick
ADDIS ABABA/NAIROBI (Reuters) - Ethiopian
police have detained hundreds of ethnic Tigrayans in Addis Ababa since
federal government forces lost control of the Tigray region's capital on
June 28, according to some of those who say they were released.
The detentions in the Ethiopian capital are the third wave of what
dozens of Tigrayans, rights groups and lawyers have described as a
nationwide crackdown on ethnic Tigrayans since November, when fighting
erupted between the military and the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF)
in Tigray, the country's northernmost region.
City authorities in Addis Ababa say they have recently closed a number
of Tigrayan-owned businesses over alleged links to the TPLF, which was
designated by the government as a terrorist organization in May but had
dominated Ethiopian politics for three decades until 2018.
But Addis Ababa police spokesperson Fasika Fanta said he had no
information on the arrests or business closures.
Federal police spokesperson Jeylan Abdi said: "People might be suspected
of a crime and be arrested, but no one was targeted because of
ethnicity."
Ethiopia's attorney general has previously said there is nogovernment
policy to "purge" Tigrayan officials. He has said he cannot rule out
that some innocent individuals might be swept up in arrests but that the
TPLF has a big network in Addis Ababa and Ethiopia must err on the side
of caution.
Officials in the prime minister's office, the attorney general's office
and a government task force on Tigray did not respond to requests for
comment on the released detainees' reports of a wave of arrests, or on
individual cases.
Tesfalem Berhe, a Tigrayan lawyer from a Tigrayan opposition party, told
Reuters he knew of at least 104 Tigrayans arrested in the past two weeks
in Addis Ababa and five in the eastern city of Dire Dawa.
The names were provided by colleagues, friends or family members, and
most of those detained are hotel owners, merchants, aid workers, daily
workers, shopkeepers or waiters, he said.
He had not spoken to the detainees directly, and said he was not
representing them although he was passing the information to
organisations such as the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission.
"They are not appearing before the court within (the legally mandated
period of) 48 hours and we do not know their whereabouts – their family
or lawyers cannot visit them," he said.
The arrests intensified, he said, after the military withdrew from
Tigray's capital, Mekelle, and declared a unilateral ceasefire after
nearly eight months of fighting.
A spokesperson for the rights commission confirmed it had received
reports of detentions and was monitoring them.
ARRESTS
Nigusu Mahari, a Tigrayan street trader, told Reuters that city police
and men in civilian clothes had arrested him and 76 other Tigrayans on
July 5.
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Residents walk past Adi Harush Refugee camp in Mai Tsberi town in
Tigray Region, Ethiopia, June 26, 2021. REUTERS/Tiksa Negeri
"They beat us all with sticks," Nigusu said.
Police asked if he had been sent by the TPLF, he said.
The group was taken to a military camp on the outskirts of Addis
Ababa, he said, and the number of Tigrayans detained there later
passed 100. He said he was held there for two days and given six
pieces of bread a day.
Reuters could not independently verify Nigusu's account.
Police and military officials did not respond to questions about
Nigusu's case and other individual accounts.
Last week, Reuters visited 10 Tigrayan-owned coffee shops, bars and
restaurants in Addis Ababa that had notices posted on their doors
saying they had been closed by city authorities.
A notice posted at a coffee shop in the Haya Hulet area said it had
been closed for "disturbing the area."
Another's doors were papered shut by a notice stamped by the Peace
and Security Office of Addis Ababa's Bole district. No reason was
given.
Lidia Girma, deputy head of Addis Ababa City Peace and Security
department, told Reuters the government had acted against businesses
connected to the TPLF.
"It wasn't random and has nothing to do with ethnicity. It was based
on investigations," she said.
RESTAURANT WORKERS HELD
A Tigrayan resident of Addis Ababa told Reuters his family
restaurant had been shut down last week, and his younger brother and
their 80-year-old father arrested along with 25 employees.
They were released after two days, he said, requesting anonymity for
safety reasons.
A Tigrayan woman said police came to her house in Addis Ababa before
dawn on July 1, searched it, and took her to a camp in the city's
Kality district that is usually used for vagrants where she said
hundreds of Tigrayans were being held.
She said they were fed only one serving of bread per day but she was
not beaten or questioned.
She said she was not told why she was detained, paid 3,000 birr to a
policeman and was released five days later.
($1 = 43.8932 birr)
(Reporting by Dawit Endeshaw;Additional reporting by Katharine
Houreld in Nairobi; Writing by Maggie Fick; editing by Katharine
Houreld and Timothy Heritage)
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