By Abebe Gellaw
The United States has expelled the Ethiopian Embassy gunman who opened fire at peaceful protesters last Monday, Ethiopian embassy sources confirmed to the Ethiopian Satellite Television (ESAT).
The United States has expelled the Ethiopian Embassy gunman who opened fire at peaceful protesters last Monday, Ethiopian embassy sources confirmed to the Ethiopian Satellite Television (ESAT).
Solomon
Tadesse Gebreselassie, aka Wedi Woyni, who was the security chief at
the embassy, was given 48 hours to leave the United States.
Gebreselassie had diplomatic immunity.
It
has now been confirmed that Mr. Gebreselassie has arrived in Addis
Ababa, the Ethiopian capital. Airlines insiders told ESAT that the
gunman took Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET501, on Wednesday, October 1, at
11:15 AM (EST) from Washington Dulles International Airport. The Boeing
777-200LR carrying Mr. Gebresellasie landed in Addis Ababa after a
12-hour direct flight on Thursday October 2, at 06:45 am local time.
Gebresellassie
was captured in a dramatic video brandishing a gun and shooting at
unarmed protesters. The U.S. Secret Service (USSS) had announced Monday
that it had detained a suspect in connection with the shooting incident.
Nicole
Mainor, a USSS spokesperson, declined to give updates to this reporter
on the ongoing investigation and referred the matter to the State
Department. The department indicated that there will be major updates in
connection with the incident in the next few days.
State
Department spokesperson, Jen Psaki, had said in a brief statement that
the Department of State took the incident involving the use of firearm
very seriously.
Ethiopian
Embassy officials allegedly expressed displeasure with the ongoing
investigation and body searches that law enforcement agents had
conducted on Gebreselassie and a few other embassy staffers.
Embassy gunman triggers diplomatic row
(Oct
1, 2014) – It emerged that the case of the Ethiopian Embassy gunman,
Solomon “Wedi Weyni”, has caused a diplomatic row between the TPLF
regime and the United States.
The
U.S. Secret Service had announced on Monday that the embassy gunman was
in custody. According to Ethiopian Embassy sources, embassy officials
immediately complained that the gunman’s diplomatic immunity, as per the
Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, was violated. The gunman was
freed later in the day after facing grilling by U.S. Secret Service.
Established in 1865, the federal agency is mandated to protect the U.S.
President, Vice President and visiting foreign leaders and dignitaries.
The elite force also conducts criminal investigations.
In
the aftermath of the shooting incident, Brian Leary, spokesman of U.S.
Secret Service, issued the following statement to members of the media:
“At
approximately 1215 pm today, U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division
received information of possible shots fired in the vicinity of the
Ethiopian Embassy, 3506 International Drive NW, Washington, D.C.Secret
Service Uniformed Division Officers immediately responded and detained
an individual believed to be the shooter. There have been no reported
injuries as a result of this incident.MPD, State Department, and USSS
Uniformed Division are on scene.”
Nicole
Mainor of the U.S. Secret Service told this reporter that further
information on this matter should be obtained from the State Department.
She referred any questions related to the case to the State Department
and declined to give further details.
In
a brief statement, State Department spokesperson, Jen Psaki, said that
the Department of State took the incident involving the use of firearm
very seriously. “The Department is in contact with the Embassy of
Ethiopia and the U.S. Secret Service,” she noted.
The investigation into the criminal incident is ongoing. The State Department is in talks with the
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