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Tension Mounts In Part of Ethiopia: Army Chief, Others Killed In Failed Coup

Tension is currently mounting in Ethiopia’s northern Amhara region as four people, including the Chief of Army Staff have been killed in what is believed to be an attempted coup that has failed.
The office of the Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed confirmed today, June 23 that the  incident began yesterday,  Saturday evening in Bahir Dar, the capital of Amhara, where the region’s President Ambachew Mekonnen and Amhara Regional Government Office Advisor Ezez Wassie were killed from gunshots.
Regional Attorney General, Migbaru Kebede sustained heavy injuries and is undergoing medical treatment, the Prime Minister’s office said.
Meanwhile in the country’s capital, Addis Ababa, the Army Chief of Staff General, Seare Mekonnen and retired Major General Gezai Abera were killed at Seare’s home by his bodyguard.
“The attack was committed by General Seare’s bodyguard who has also been arrested,” the statement added.
Ahmed blamed the attempted coup on a Brigadier General named Asaminew Tsige and others. Tsige has been serving as the regional government’s Peace and Security Bureau head after being given amnesty and released from prison last year.
The situation in the Amhara — located in northwestern part of Ethiopia and is one of nine regional states in the country — is now under full control of the Federal Government, the statement added.
The Prime Minister “conveys his deepest sympathies and condolences to the family and friends of the deceased,” it said.
On Saturday, the US Embassy in Addis Ababa issued a security alert saying it was aware of shots being fired in the capital, as well as violence in and around Bahir Dar.
Rise in tensions
Abiy came to power in 2018, following the resignation of Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, after years of anti-government protests over economic and political exclusion, and led by the Oromo, Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group.
He has led a remarkable political transformation in the country. Abiy’s government freed thousands of political prisoners, unblocked hundreds of censored websites, ended the 20-year state of war with longtime enemy Eritrea, lifted a state of emergency, and plans to open key economic sectors to private investors, including the state-owned Ethiopian Airlines.
Ethiopia’s parliament even appointed the country’s first female president, Sahle-Work Zewde, and the nation’s first Supreme Court chief, Meaza Ashenafi, was sworn into office.
But his rule has also been marked by a rise in tensions between the diverse country’s ethnic groups. According to Agence France-Presse news agency, more than a million people have been displaced by ethnic clashes.
Source: CNN.

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