BFF-18 Ethiopia says some 1,000 Oromo rebels give up arms

302

ZCZC

BFF-18

ETHIOPIA-POLITICS-MINORITIES-OROMO

Ethiopia says some 1,000 Oromo rebels give up arms

ADDIS ABABA, Feb 15, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Ethiopia has said some 1,000 fighters
with the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) rebel group have given up arms and
entered rehabilitation camps, according to state media.

Popular among the largest ethnic group, the Oromo, the OLF fell out with
the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) in 1992
and soon began launching armed attacks.

Last year, reformist Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed removed the OLF from a list
of terror organisations, and its exiled leadership made a triumphant return
home.

“Parts of Oromia regional state, which had been suffering from unrest, are
returning to normalcy, with OLF fighters giving up their arms and re-
integrating back to their local communities,” Admasu Damtwe, head of
communications for Oromia, told state media on Thursday evening.

“The insecurity in parts of Oromia where OLF fighters used to operate had
led to the suspension of basic government services including education, but
now with OLF fighters abandoning armed struggle, the government can focus now
on development works,” he added.

His claim has not been confirmed by the OLF.

The deal between the government and OLF has run into trouble recently, with
Addis Ababa deploying soldiers against armed members of the group it claimed
were robbing banks and attacking residents in the remote west of the country.

The OLF denied this, and has accused the government of failing to meet its
promise of integrating its combatants into the armed forces.

The Oromos are the largest of Ethiopia’s some 80 ethnic groups, with 35
percent of the nation’s nearly 80 million inhabitants.

After the fall of Ethiopia’s Marxist regime of Mengistu Haile Mariam in
1991, the OLF was part of the country’s transitional government.

But after numerous disputes with the leadership it quit and demanded the
creation of the independent state of Oromia.

BSS/AFP/GMR/1535 hrs