According to the Dutch explorer
Juan Maria Schuver, who visited the town in 1881, Asosa was "a prosperous village as several slave-merchants live here" who travelled to
Leqa Naqamte and to the
Kwama people to purchase slaves. He also mentions that "fine views are obtained at Inzing [the earlier name for Asosa] into the forestclad ravines that plunge down into the White Nile basin." A Belgian force from the Congo captured Asosa on 11 March 1941, destroying the
Italian 10th Brigade and capturing 1,500 men. During the
Ethiopian Civil War, the
Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) captured Asosa from the
Derg in early January 1990, and held the city for a brief time. During the occupation, the government airforce subjected Asosa to aerial attacks several times that month, killing 19 people and wounding 20. Before the Derg withdrew from Asosa, it destroyed the town's only electricity generator, stole 1.8 million
Birr from the bank, most of which were deposits from the local farmer cooperatives, and took any valuable items its troops could carry. During the 1990s, Asosa was characterised by entire government office complexes of partially completed buildings, which John Young notes was "testimony to corrupt relations between politicians and contractors." Young continues, "Indicative of the scale of the problem, during a peace and development conference held in Asosa in June 1996, the then deputy prime minister,
Tamrat Layne, dismissed the entire regional government and had many of its members imprisoned for corruption." The governor of the town of Asosa, Ahmed Khalifa, on 7 July 2007 fled to
Ad-Damazin, the capital of the
Blue Nile State, in Sudan. Khalifa was accused by the Ethiopian authorities of offering concessions to Sudan on border issues. Sudan turned down a request to return Khalifa to Ethiopia, resulting in increased tensions between the two countries. == Demographics ==