A top opposition figure in Ethiopia has died after he was shot dead and his body was found on the side of a road in his hometown in Meki, in the troubled Oromia region.
Africa Today News, New York reports that the 41-year-old Bate Urgessa was an outspoken critic of the government and had been jailed on several occasions before now.
Family members told the local news site, Addis Standard, people who “looked like government security forces” took him from his hotel room on Tuesday night.
The regional administration of Oromia refuted the involvement of security forces.
Ethiopia has witnessed a rise in the assassinations of cultural and political leaders in recent years.
Mr Bate was a senior official of the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) – one of the biggest political parties in Ethiopia.
The OLF condemned the “brutal murder” of Mr Bate and said he was a “eloquent, brave and selfless Oromo soul”.
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“The unwarranted and extrajudicial killing of conscious and active Oromo political and cultural figures has been a systematic and irresponsible act of silencing the Oromo throughout years and decades,” the statement said.
His death has sparked outraged across social media, while human rights groups are demanding justice.
Chief commissioner of the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) Daniel Bekele posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, that the federal authorities need “to hold perpetrators to account”.
Phone lines are cut off in the town but it is unclear if the killing of Mr Bate will trigger protests.
Mr Bate has been jailed several times in recent years, but has remained an advocate of non-violent dissent.
In February security forces accused him of “working to incite unrest.” He was arrested while being interviewed by French journalist Antoine Galindo and later released on bail.
Galindo was released after a week in jail and returned to Paris.