Ethiopia honour victims of Mengistu purge

Published Mar 7, 2010

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Addis Ababa - Ethiopia inaugurated a museum on Sunday in memory of the victims of former dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam's so-called Red Terror purge which killed tens of thousands in the 1970s.

Dozens of family members and government officials attended a sombre ceremony at the memorial in Addis Ababa to remember their loved ones, whose bodies were mostly dumped in mass graves.

The museum took three years to complete and honours the dead with photographs of the 1977-78 campaign of state terror carried out under the orders of Mengistu to wipe out his opponents.

"Our aim is to promote unity and tolerance. Ethiopia has had a troubled past, and we don't want that suffering to be experienced again," Ayne Tsige, chair of the organising committee, told AFP.

Mengistu, now in exile in Zimbabwe, was sentenced to death on genocide charges two years ago along with 17 of his henchmen following a decade-long trial in Addis Ababa.

The former army lieutenant colonel was a member of the Marxist junta known as the Derg which ruled Ethiopia from between 1974 and 1991 after the ouster of emperor Haile Selassie.

Experts say as many as 100,000 people were killed during the campaign as Mengistu sought to transform the country into a Soviet-style workers' state.

The regime, then battling a number of insurgencies throughout the country, used several tactics to scare opponents, one of which was leaving dead bodies on streets as a warning.

The corpses were later exhumed from mass graves. A number of their belongings are exhibited in the museum.

Eighty-five year-old Tedla Zeyohannes, whose son was killed by the regime called on African leaders to press Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe to hand over Mengistu.

"I'm very happy with the sentence, but Zimbabwe should hand over Mengistu. He is a convicted criminal who must face justice," he said. - Sapa-AFP

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