Elite soldiers protest over pay at Ethiopia PM's office by Staff Writers Addis Ababa (AFP) Oct 11, 2018 Dozens of Ethiopian soldiers marched on the prime minister's office to demand better pay, triggering an internet blackout in Addis Ababa that was lifted Thursday. In an unusual break with discipline, a group of "disgruntled" elite soldiers, who had been sent to quell bloody ethnic clashes on the capital's outskirts, marched on Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's office Wednesday to protest low salaries, state-run Ethiopia News Agency (ENA) reported. "Members of the army claimed that officers at various levels could not address their grievances about the low allowances and benefits they receive," ENA said, adding they had gone "to appeal to Abiy Ahmed" directly. The internet was shut down across Addis Ababa for hours after the troops, who appeared unarmed, arrived at Abiy's compound close to parliament in the city centre. Abiy's chief of staff Fitsum Arega said the prime minister "listened to the grievances carefully, reprimanded them for the wrong procedure they followed to express those grievances, but concluded the meeting with a promise to meet properly in the near future." Photos circulating on social media showed Abiy doing pushups with the smiling troops. Picked as prime minister by the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), Abiy has pursued aggressive reforms since taking office. The promised changes have been broadly welcomed in the authoritarian state but have failed to defuse escalating ethnic violence in different parts of the country. Abiy has replaced the heads of the military and intelligence service, and begun a rapprochement with foe Eritrea that has ended decades of conflict between the neighbours. However, he has also repeatedly deployed the military to stop ethnic clashes. The elite, red beret-wearing troops were deployed in southern Ethiopia in August following clashes between the largest ethnicity, the Oromos, and the Gedeo ethnic minority, which have displaced nearly one million people. ENA says the soldiers involved in Wednesday's incident had been deployed to Burayu, a suburb of Addis Ababa where at least 58 people were killed last month in fighting between the Oromo and other ethnic groups.
Hunting a shadowy armed militia in DR Congo's 'triangle of death' Beni, Dr Congo (AFP) Oct 10, 2018 "I am always anticipating an attack," says South African soldier Maijeke of how it feels to be in DR Congo's "triangle of death", where he is part of a UN peacekeeping force helping the Congolese army hunt down a militia group that is slaughtering civilians. There has been a recent spike in violence in this volatile eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo blamed on the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a shadowy armed group rooted in Ugandan Islamism. Just last week, six civilians were ... read more
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