Dan Yirga, executive director of EHRCO in 2020, summarised EHRCO's main actions as having consisted of investigating human rights violations; providing human rights awareness training to police, judges, lawyers and community representatives, carrying out human rights advocacy and providing free
legal aid. EHRCO planned a one-day human rights workshop for media organisations and political parties for 20 October 2020. EHRCO protested against the forcible
1998–1998 deportation of 52,000 "Eritrean" Ethiopians to
Eritrea. Mesfin Woldemariam stated the deportations were "causing a build up of hatred" that if continued, would "lead to indiscriminate violence that [would] go on for generations". In 2020, EHRCO planned to provide voters' education and election monitoring, claiming extensive experience from the
2005 Ethiopian general election. On 25 December 2020, EHRCO published its preliminary report on the Mai Kadra massacre of the Tigray War, finding that 1100 civilians had been killed, attributing the killings to youth from the
Samri and other
kebeles, supported by Tigray Special Forces and militia. Survivors stated to EHRCO that ethnic Tigrayans had protected and aided potential victims in escaping; these Tigrayans had left due to fear and weren't contactable by EHRCO. ==Repression==