(May 28, 2012, IBTimes)--The Ethiopian government's paramilitary force
summarily executed 10 men after a dispute with villagers spiralled out of
control, Human Rights Watch has claimed.
HRW says police killed a
villager who was trying to protect residents. His death sparked retaliations in
which seven police officers were killed. he security forces responded by launching an "operation" in
which they executed 10 men who were in their custody and killed another nine
villagers in gunfights.
Human Rights Watch spoke to 30
relatives and witnesses who fled the violence and crossed the border into
Somaliland. Witnesses said that on 17 March the
Liyu arrested 23 men and put them in a truck heading towards a neighbouring
village. After a few minutes, police stopped
the vehicle, ordered five randomly selected men to get out and shot them by the
roadside.
"Three police shot them,"
a detainee told Human Rights Watch. "They shot them in the forehead and
shoulder - three bullets per person. The remaining detainees were threatened
and driven on to the neighbouring village of Adaada where four men were
summarily executed. Villagers said the unit went on the
rampage, shooting in the air and dragging villagers out of their houses. They
also looted and ransacked homes and shops, witnesses said.
"The killing of several Liyu
police members doesn't justify the force's brutal retaliation against the local
population," said Leslie Lefkow, deputy Africa director at Human Rights
Watch. "The Liyu police abuses in Somali region show the urgent need for
the Ethiopian government to rein in this lawless force."
Ethiopian authorities created the
Liyu ("special" in Amharic) police in the Somali region in 2007
following an armed conflict escalated between the insurgent Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF) and the government. The special unit has become a
prominent counter-insurgency force but has been accused of a series of abuses
against civilians across the region.
Source: IBTimes.co.uk
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