Ethiopia's army chief of staff Seare Mekonnen was shot dead by his bodyguard in Addis Aaba just hours after an attempted coup in Amhara state left the regional president and another top adviser dead, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's office confirmed on Sunday.
Earlier, PM Ahmed announced the government had put down a coup attempt in the autonomous Amhara state in the country's north.
In his TV address, the premier said that the botched coup was led by a very high-ranking regional military official and others within the country's military. Billene Seyoum, a spokeswoman for PM Ahmed, later said the coup attempt was orchestrated by General Asamnew Tsige, the region's head of security.
State media also reported that both the head of Amhara's regional government, Ambachew Mekonnen, and his advisor, were killed, during the coup attempt.
A press statement issued by the PM office said that "Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew broke off an official visit to Frankfurt on Saturday, because of the crisis at home, and returned to Addis Ababa."
"The coup attempt in Amhara regional state is against the constitution and is intended to scupper the hard won peace of the region," the government said in a statement. "This illegal attempt should be condemned by all Ethiopians and the federal government has full capacity to overpower this armed group."
DW correspondent Alemnew Mekonnen in Bahir Dar, where the attempted coup took place, reports of a high security presence in and around the city. Internet services continue to be disrupted.
Army chief dead
Describing the circumstances of General Mekonnen's death, PM's press secretary Seyoum said that he was shot dead by his bodyguard just hours after an attempted coup in Amhara left the regional president and another top adviser dead.
Seyoum told journalists a "hit squad" led by Amhara's security chief Tsige burst into a government meeting on Saturday afternoon, wounding regional president Ambachew Mekonnen and another top official, who both died of their wounds.
Later that evening in what appeared a "coordinated attack", army chief Seare Mekonnen, and a retired general who was visiting him, were killed by his bodyguard, said Billene.
Earlier, PM Ahmed said that General Mekonnen "was shot by people who are close to him," adding that the regional government officials were in a meeting when a coup attempt occurred.
The premier said Mekonnen had been shot while trying to fend off the attackers.
Early on Sunday, Brigadier General Tefera Mamo, the head of special forces in Amhara, said on TV: "Most of the people who attempted the coup have been arrested, although there are a few still at large."
At the time, no details were given about who was behind the coup attempt in the northern state, led by regional president Ambachew Mekonen.
"The failed coup in Amhara is the culmination of many months of ethnic and political strife," says Ludger Schadomsky, head of DW's Ethiopia language service. "Following hot on the heels of the recent postponement of a National Census, which called into question the government's ability to hold elections in May 2020, this latest crisis puts a serious damper on Prime Minister Ahmed's reform agenda."
Gunshots heard
Residents in the region's capital, Bahir Dar, reported hearing gunshots in the city on Saturday.
The US embassy issued alerts about gunfire in the country's capital, Addis Adaba, and violence around Bahir Dar.
Internet and media access has reportedly been limited across the country. Internet and cybersecurity monitor group NetBlocks reported nationwide internet access was at 2% of normal levels.
A former army intelligence officer,
Ahmed took office in April 2018 following three years of protests that forced Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn to resign.
He has since
implemented economic reforms, opened up political space and prosecuted officials accused of human rights abuses. He also established relations with neighboring Eritrea.
However, ethnic tensions that were kept in check by the iron-fist of past rulers has lead to deadly violence.