Anti-Oromo sentiment

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Anti-Oromo sentiment or Oromophobia, is opposition, hatred, discrimination or prejudice against the Oromo ethnic group. Anti-Oromo sentiment has root its accusations during the rule of Ethiopian Empire, particularly in the reign of Emperor Menelik II in 1880s. Oromo nationalists argued that the Oromo have been subjugated and oppressed by dominant Amhara feudal rulers and its oppression persisted throughout 20th century. Under Haile Selassie, Oromos were the target of persecution in wake of waves of resistance. Many Oromo revolutionaries like Mamo Mazamir, Haile Mariam Gamada and General Tadesse Birru faced persecution by Selassie government and/or execution under the Derg regime.

Oromo protesters in March 2007

Oromo also faced persecutions and human rights violations under TPLF-led EPRDF period since 1991. Today, Oromo nationalists used the term to dismantle anti-Ethiopian and anti-Amhara sentiments which are used to justify ethnic violence. Such scenario can be understood during Abiy Ahmed leadership, where the term "Oromummaa" dominated through autocratic based political system.[1][2]

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