Ethiopian police announced the arrest on Tuesday December 12 of a former minister accused of “collaborating” with the rebel Oromo Liberation Army (OLA).
Taye Dendea, former Minister Delegate for Peace, had posted on his Facebook account on Monday December 11 a letter from Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, informing him of his ouster from the Government. On Tuesday, the federal police issued a statement announcing the minister’s arrest for “collaboration with forces opposed to peace and who want to destroy Ethiopia”.
In the past, the minister has been a staunch supporter of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, but he had recently been critical of the government, particularly its economic policy and the ongoing violence in the Oromia region, which surrounds the capital Addis Ababa and is home to around a third of the 120 million inhabitants of Africa’s 2nd most populous country.
In its statement published on Facebook, the police published photos of weapons, rebel flags, license plates and cell phones, all found at the minister’s home and all part of a “plan to destabilize the country”, according to the authorities. An OLA member “who used three different identities was also found hiding in (the minister’s) residence and was arrested”, the police added.
Classified as a “terrorist organization” by Addis Ababa, the OLA has been fighting the Ethiopian authorities since its split with the historic Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) in 2018, when the latter renounced armed struggle that year, when current Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed came to power.