Protests have continued for a third day in parts of Ethiopia's Oromia region with young men on the streets of Burayu, near the capital Addis Ababa, as well as in the west of the country.

Some are calling for an end to ethnic clashes which, since October, have left close to 50 people dead - including police officers.

But there is also anger that local officials linked to human rights abuses of the former government are still in their posts.

When the reformist Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed came to power in April, two years of huge countrywide protests ended.

But correspondents say many Ethiopians are impatient for further reforms, that more protests are planned and pressure is increasing on the government.