13,000 people granted amnesty in Ethiopia since Abiy Ahmed came into power...

13,000 people granted amnesty in Ethiopia since Abiy Ahmed came into power | Sarah Mukabana

Ethiopia's Oromo people gather to celebrate the return of the formerly banned anti-government group the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) at Mesquel Square in Addis Ababa, on September 15, 2018. - Tens of thousands of people gathered in Addis Ababa to welcome the OLF, the latest once-banned rebel group to return following a string of Ethiopian political reforms. Last month, the OLF reached a deal on returning home following an accord with representatives of the government.  (Photo by MIchael TEWELDE / AFP) (Photo credit should read MICHAEL TEWELDE/AFP/Getty Images)

Ethiopia on Tuesday said it had granted more than 13,000 people amnesty as part of a broad reform agenda pushed by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

In July, Ethiopia’s parliament passed a law allowing people convicted or facing charges of “treason, crime against the constitutional order and armed struggle” to apply for pardons.

“More than 13,200 individuals took advantage of the law in the past six months,” state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting Corporate said, citing Ethiopia’s attorney general.

Abiy took office in April following more than two years of anti-government unrest that had prompted the government to twice declare a nationwide state of emergency and led to hundreds of deaths and tens of thousands of arrests.

He has since won over many Ethiopians by releasing jailed dissidents and welcoming home banned groups, all while promising to make elections expected in 2020 free and fair.

But violence has also surged since his inauguration, with ethnic clashes breaking out throughout the countryside and in the capital Addis Ababa.

The fighting drove at least 1.4 million people from their homes last year, among the highest tallies in the world.

Earlier this week, the United Nations humanitarian coordinator in Ethiopia said more aid was needed for 250 000 people displaced in the Benishangul-Gumuz and Oromia regions in western Ethiopia, where ethnic violence surged late last year.

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