UNITED NATIONS (IDN) – When the 15-member UN Security Council (UNSC) met at an emergency session on February 7, a non-working Sunday afternoon, to discuss the most recent defiance by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), the outcome was predictable.

After “urgent consultations”, the UNSC “strongly condemned” DPRK for launching a rocket which could lead to the future development of intercontinental ballistic missile technologies.

But the Council stopped short of penalizing a country that continues to defy the world body despite several previous resolutions – and a rash of U.S. economic sanctions.

- Photo: 2020

Murder of Popular Protest Singer Swells Opposition Against Ethiopian Leader

By Lisa Vives, Global Information Network

NEW YORK (IDN) – Ethiopian protest singer and revered musician Hachalu Hundessa sang about love and unity, recalled his friend Amensisa Ifa, raising issues that many would not dare to bring up.

He addressed issues of marginalization – capturing the struggles and frustrations of his Oromo people who faced efforts by successive Ethiopian regimes to destroy the Oromoo language, exploit its precious resources, and expropriate Oromo lands into an expanded Addis Ababa.

Oromo protests against a years-long state of emergency helped elect Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in 2018. Hundessa’s songs became an anthem for the protestors, which helped galvanize the movement.

On June 29, unidentified gunmen shot the 34-year-old Hundessa dead in Addis. His uncle was also reportedly killed. In widespread protests across Ethiopia this week, more than 80 people have died.

Now, his death has become a rallying cry for the opposition to speak out against Prime Minister Ahmed.

On a TRTWorld interview, Fauma Bedhaso, an Oromo rights activist, based in Minneapolis, said Hachalu spoke truth to power. “His music captured our collective trauma. He gave voice to a generation.”

“Most people were very happy with (Prime Minister) Abiy Ahmed in the beginning. He opened up the political space, former members of the opposition were able to go home, he freed journalists, he freed political prisoners. But somewhere after the euphoria, (Ahmed’s government) began focusing on trivial things as opposed to starting a national reconciliation which a lot of people were hoping for.”

Ahmed called Hundessa’s killing “an evil act… committed and inspired by domestic and foreign enemies in order to destabilize our peace and to stop us from achieving things that we started.”

Police now claim to have detained suspects in connection with the singer’s killing, but shortly after the murder, the government cut internet services across the country, making it impossible to access independent information on those killed and injured in the protests.

Authorities have also detained media baron and political activist Jawar Mohammed and Bekele Gerba of the Oromo Federalist Congress party. Jawar says he intends to run in next year’s elections to unseat Mr Abiy, his one-time ally.  Another prominent political opposition leader, Eskinder Nega, has also been detained.

Rather than restoring calm, the authorities’ internet shutdown, apparent excessive use of force, and arrest of political opposition figures could make a volatile situation even worse, said Human Rights Watch adding, “The government should take prompt steps to reverse these actions or risk sliding deeper into crisis.” [IDN-InDepthNews – 07 July 2020]

Photo: The shooting dead of popular Ethiopian political singer Hachalu Hundessa has sparked unrest in the country. Hundessa is considered a voice for Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group, the Oromo, during years of anti-government protest. He is a Nobel Peace laureate. Source: DW Africa.

IDN is flagship agency of the Non-profit International Press Syndicate Group, practising Global Journalism.

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