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The
Associated Press
ADDIS
ABABA, Ethiopia March 29 — Security forces battled student
protesters demanding aid for farmers, leaving two dead
and five injured in four Ethiopian cities, a regional
official said Friday.
Juneidi
Sado, the president of the autonomous Oromiya region,
said elementary and high school students "went on the
rampage" during protests this week.
He
said the students were protesting what they consider
the indifference of the regional and federal governments
to the plight of farmers in the region, who have been
hard hit by falling prices for coffee and other agricultural
products since October.
Juneidi
claimed the opposition Oromo Liberation Front, which
has declared war on the government, was behind the student
unrest.
The
protests began in Ambo, 80 miles west of Addis Ababa,
and spread to Nekemt, Ghimbi and Shambu along the main
highway through Oromiya, he said.
"The
students first tried to stage a demonstration in Ambo
without the necessary permits and then stoned police
and militia forces who had tried to stop the illegal
demonstration," Juneidi said.
One
student was injured in Ambo and five were arrested Monday,
he said. Similar demonstrations were held in Nekemt
and Ghimbi and about 100 students were arrested in Nekemt.
The last protest was on Wednesday in Ghimbi.
Two
students were killed and four others were injured in
Shambu, he said. The Oromo Liberation Front "has been
trying to infiltrate students, particularly high school
students, to advance its hidden agenda under various
pretexts," he said. It was impossible to reach the students
or front officials because of poor telecommunications
in Ethiopia.
Juneidi
said the government has reduced the tax on coffee from
the equivalent of 7 cents to 2 cents and was trying
to export more to the United States and other foreign
markets. The Oromiya administration has also earmarked
$4.5 million to buy agricultural products from the farmers
to stabilize the market, he said.
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