FILE - United Nations spokesman Stephane
Dujarric fields questions at U.N. headquarters, June 20, 2017.
U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters on Thursday that six U.N. staff members had been released but five others, along with one of their dependents, remain in detention in Addis Ababa.
At least 16 U.N. staff
and dependents were detained earlier this month amid reports of widespreadarrests of ethnic Tigrayans in Addis Ababa and other cities.
"Further ethnic
profiling can only deteriorate this serious dynamic and can lead to a situation
for which we have alarming precedents," said Alice Wairimu Nderitu, the
U.N. special adviser of the secretary-general on the prevention of genocide.
In a press release on
Wednesday, Nderitu reiterated her concern over the "deteriorating
situation" in Ethiopia and strongly condemned "the intensification of
profiling and arbitrary arrests of ethnic Tigrayans, including United Nations
staff."
"The region has
experienced the evil of inter-ethnic violence spiraling down to the commission
of genocide," she said. "All possible action must be taken as a
matter of utmost urgency to prevent further escalation."
Police have denied making ethnically motivated arrests, contending they are only detaining backers of the Tigrayan forces (TDF) fighting the Ethiopian government.
Nderitu voiced her
concerns the day before the U.S. special envoy for the Horn of Africa, Jeffrey
Feltman, and the African Union's high representative for the Horn of Africa,
Olusegun Obasanjo, returned to Ethiopia with hopes of reviving peace talks and
negotiating a cease-fire in the yearlong conflict.
Nderitu warned during
an online event earlier this month of the risk of the war spilling across
borders and "becoming something completely unmanageable." She also
warned that ethnic-based militias are "so dangerous in this context."
The war began a year
ago when Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed deployed troops to the northern
regional state of Tigray in response to the Tigray People's Liberation Front's
seizure of military bases. The ensuing conflict has killed thousands of people,
displaced several million from their homes and left 400,000 residents of Tigrayfacing famine, according to a July estimate by the U.N.
A joint investigation
by the U.N. and the government-created Ethiopian Human Rights Commission
published a report in early November concluding that all sides in the conflict
have committed human rights violations, including torturing civilians,
committing gang rapes and arresting people based on ethnicity.
U.N. High Commissioner
for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet has said some of those abuses may amount to
war crimes and crimes against humanity.
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