An Oromo Leadership Convention held
over the weekend in Atlanta called on all Ethiopians to “stand together
and act in concert to remove the TPLF regime that has become the source
of all discontent, division and disorder in the country.”
In a resolution passed at the end of
the convention, which coincided with the first year anniversary of the
uprising in the Oromo region, the participants also called upon the
international community to support the resolution by the UN Human Rights
Commission that calls for an independent investigation into “the
massacre committed by the regime against the oromo and other peoples of
Ethiopia at the Ireecha festival on October 2, 2016”
The convention also condemned in the
strongest terms the state of emergency declared by the regime, which it
said uses the martial law to “legalize its illegitimate actions.”
The convention also decided to
establish an a human rights organization to assist the people victimized
by what it called the inhuman acts of the TPLF regime. The convention vows to further
intensify the support given to the “Oromo revolution to fight against
the TPLF regime that has lost all legitimacy.”
The resolution said the participants
of the convention discussed four documents in plenary and breakout
sessions but it did not give details contained in those documents.
Eight Oromo political organizations,
political leaders, civil society representatives, activists and
scholars, among others, participated at the three day conference which
was closed to media.
At least 1500 people were killed in
the last one year of protests by security forces while 60,000 were
detained without due process of law, according to local political
organizations. Upto 600 people lost their lives at the Ireecha religious
festival in October when regime forces fired shots and used teargas at
the millions of party goers resulting in deadly stampede. Ethiopian
regime officials insist only 55 people lost their lives at the festival.
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