Funeral service for vocalist Dawit Nega in Addis Ababa

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Eyewitnesses of the butcher in Axum unveiled to Amnesty International that Ethiopian and Eritrean contenders together took care of the city anyway the Eritreans did the killings and a short time later guided house to house assaults for men and high schooler young fellows.

 

Bodies were left tossed in the streets after the events of Nov. 28 and 29, witnesses said.

 

"The next day, they didn't allow us to pick the dead. The Eritrean officials said you can't cover the dead before our dead contenders are covered," one woman uncovered to Amnesty International. With centers ravaged or prosperity workers having gotten away, a couple of eyewitnesses said different people passed on from their wounds because of nonattendance of care.

 

"Get-together the bodies and doing the entombment administrations required days. Most of the dead appear to have been covered on 30 November, but witnesses said that people found various additional bodies in the days that followed," the new report says.

 

Subsequent to getting approval from Ethiopian contenders to cover the dead, witnesses said they feared the killings would proceed with any second, even as they loaded bodies onto horse-drawn trucks and took them to heavenly spots for burial, occasionally in mass graves.

 

The AP chatted with a clergyman at one church, the Church of St. Mary of Zion, who said he helped count the bodies, collected losses' personality cards and assisted with burial. He believes some place in the scope of 800 people were executed that week's end around the city.

 

Subsequent to being left uncovered for a day or more, the bodies had begun to rot, further harming families and the people who collected to help.

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