Ethiopian officials have blocked United Nations access to areas that experienced deadly protests during one of the country's most violent periods in recent memory, the UN human rights chief said today.
Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein spoke during a three-day visit to the East African nation at the government's invitation.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn has rejected United Nations and other outside requests to investigate the months of anti-government protests demanding more political freedoms.
The government has said at least 669 people were killed and largely blames the political opposition for the unrest.
Opposition figures and human rights groups say security forces killed protesters, while the government has called security forces' response "proportionate." More than 26,000 people were detained amid the protests, and Ethiopia in October declared a state of emergency that recently was extended.
Zeid expressed alarm at the "extremely large number" of arrests and said some charges against those detained "may be misplaced."
He asked that UN staffers be allowed to visit the areas of unrest. "We may then perhaps provide a list to the government and ask for specific releases" of people detained, Zeid said. "This requires more attention." The human rights chief also expressed concern about anti-terrorism laws in Ethiopia, saying that "an excessively broad definition of terrorism may be misused against journalists, bloggers and members of opposition parties." Earlier today, Zeid addressed the crisis in neighboring South Sudan, saying up to 50,000 civilians in the country's Upper Nile region are at imminent risk of human rights violations as government troops close in.
Many civilians in Aburoc town, some of whom recently fled a military attack on nearby Kodok town, are ethnic Shilluk and have faced a sharp rise in government attacks as South Sudan's civil war continues.
Zeid said military commanders on both sides show little regard for protecting civilians.
Separately, the UN humanitarian affairs agency said roughly 100,000 civilians have been displaced after a South Sudan government offensive in the Jonglei region.
Army spokesman Santo Domic Chol did not comment on fighting in either location but said government attacks on civilians "didn't make sense" because civilians are not armed.
(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)