Defense Minister Siraj Fegessa told parliament on Thursday that security had improved but the extension was needed to bring ‘lasting peace’.
(AP)–Ethiopia’s parliament has extended the country’s state of emergency by four months, two weeks after it had initially relaxed some parts of the measure.
The state of emergency was originally declared in October and set to last for six months in response to months of anti-government protests.
It was then relaxed on March 15, depriving police of the right to make arrests or conduct house searches without judicial authorization.
Defense Minister Siraj Fegessa told parliament on Thursday, March 30, that security had improved but the extension was needed to bring ‘lasting peace’.
‘We still have some anti-peace elements that are active and want to capitalize on disputes that arise among regional states of the country,’ Siraj Fegessa told parliament, which only has legislators from the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front.
READ: Following State of Emergency, EU Calls for an Inclusive Dialogue in Ethiopia
The extension came amid reports of continuing anti-government violence in some remote areas.
The state of emergency was declared after nearly a year of anti-government protests, especially in the Oromia region, which includes Addis Ababa and where the Oromo ethnic group feels excluded from political and economic power.
Opposition parties have complained the law is being used to clamp down on their members and activities.
Source: Sky News Australia
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- VIDEO: Ethiopia Might Lift State of Emergency Earlier than Planned
- Following State of Emergency, EU Calls for an Inclusive Dialogue in Ethiopia