US, rights body raise concern over Amhara’s state of emergency extension

The Ethiopian parliament ratified the extension of the state of emergency in the troubled northern Amhara region on Friday.
Washington has expressed concern over Ethiopia’s recent extension of the state of emergency in Amhara.
In a post on X, the American Bureau of African Affairs emphasised the importance of respecting human rights and protecting civilians.
More To Read
- TPLF accuses Ethiopia, electoral agency of undermining Pretoria deal, warns peace at risk
- Ethiopia repatriates 121 citizens from Myanmar scam compounds, over 700 still trapped
- Ethiopia expects preliminary deal on IMF review within days, finance minister says
- Ethiopia, Morocco defense cooperation eyes cybersecurity, AI, and defense industries
- Ethio Telecom sells just 10.7pc of shares in IPO limited to Ethiopian citizens
- WFP: Funding shortfall forces halt to malnutrition treatment programmes in Ethiopia
“Dialogue is urgently needed to stop the violence,” read part of the post.
Daniel Bekele, the Chief of the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission, expressed serious concerns via the X platform regarding the extension and its potential implications on human rights, highlighting issues such as conflict casualties, humanitarian crisis, and prolonged pre-trial detention.
“Dialogue is key,” he said.
The Ethiopian parliament ratified the extension of the state of emergency in the troubled northern Amhara region on Friday.
The official Facebook page of the Ethiopian parliament reported that a resolution to extend the state of emergency in the Amhara region was approved by a majority vote.
The report did not disclose the duration of the extended state of emergency.
However, Ethiopian state media outlets reported that it has been extended for an additional four months.
In August 2023, the Ethiopian parliament ratified a six-month state of emergency rule in the Amhara region amid prolonged conflict between the military and local militiamen.
This decision followed several days of fighting in towns across Amhara, the country's second most populous region, between federal forces and local militia known as Fano.
The state of emergency granted the federal government authority to implement curfews, limit individual’s movements, and prohibit public gatherings.
Parliament said the extension was granted following a request by the justice minister and deliberations among lawmakers.
The state-appointed Ethiopian Human Rights Commission has previously documented a range of alleged abuses in the Amhara conflict, most of which it has attributed to government forces.
In October last year, it was reported that government forces had conducted drone strikes and house-to-house searches, resulting in the deaths of numerous civilians.
Top Stories Today
- Victims of human-wildlife conflict urged to claim compensation
- Eastleigh hawkers count losses as rains disrupt business for third day
- Lobby groups urge activation of victim protection fund to protect children
- Rights group disputes Ruto’s claims on abducted protesters
- Sugar board warns of lease revocations for non-compliant investors
- City Hall seizes Nairobi CBD buildings in crackdown on land rate arrears
- MoH: UHC staff to be transferred to counties by July 1
- Deputy Governors seek constitutional changes to have clear mandates
- Funding shortfall leaves Somali women, children facing death
- City Hall to freeze accounts, auction properties over Sh50bn arrears
- Sh40.7bn budget shortfall threatens military recruitment, operations
- Kenya’s security at risk as regional instability grows, warns NIS boss
- Supreme Court Judge Ouko warns of eroding public trust due to case delays
- Palestine lifts ban on Al Jazeera's operations in Palestinian territories
- Kenya aims to quadruple tea exports to China by 2030
- KNEC announces July, August deadlines for 2025 CBC assessments
- Kagame urges Africa to ditch aid dependence after US cuts
- Tanzania arrests Chadema official travelling to Brussels conference
- Garissa residents want colonial-era boundary fuelling disputes scrapped
- Lake Basin Board official Ebel Ochieng detained for 23 days in probe into MP Were's murder