Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Ethiopia’s forces shoot at, detain UN staffers in Tigray

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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Ethiopia’s security forces shot at and detained United Nations staffers as they tried to reach part of the embattled Tigray region, a senior official said yesterday, and he blamed the US staffers for trying to reach areas where “they were not supposed to go”.

The shooting occurred amid soaring frustratio­n among humanitari­an officials as desperatel­y needed aid is still not freely reaching the Tigray region more than a week after the UN and Ethiopia’s Government signed a deal for access.

The senior Government official, Redwan Hussein, told reporters that the UN employees “broke” two checkpoint­s and were trying to go through a third when they were fired upon. He said the staffers have since been released.

“They were told in some areas they were not supposed to move, but they indulged themselves in a kind of adventurou­s expedition,” he said.

United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric called the report “alarming” and said UN officials “are engaging at the highest level with the federal government to express our concerns and avoid any such incidents in the future”.

He said the four UN staffers on Sunday had been trying to assess roads, a key step before larger aid convoys can go in. Another UN spokesman, Farhan Haq, said the staffers were stopped at a military checkpoint near Sheraro. The town is near the Eritrean border.

Ethiopia’s Government is making it clear it intends to manage the flow of humanitari­an aid but the UN has openly sought unfettered and neutral access according to internatio­nal principles.

“The situation on the ground is complicate­d” at the local level, Dujarric said, and discussion­s continue with the Government “to try to get where we want to be”.

Crucially, the deal allows aid only in areas under Ethiopian Government control. The Government said yesterday that 44 truckloads of food aid had been delivered to Shire, the main town near the refugee camps.

Ethiopia’s Government late last month declared victory in the conflict in the Tigray region against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). The Government asserts that the fighting has stopped except for some “sporadic shootings”, but the TPLF has said fighting continues. The TPLF leaders are on the run.

Food, medicines and other aid for some six million people — some one million of them now displaced — are in the balance. Of special concern are camps that are home to nearly 100,000 refugees from Eritrea amid reports that they have been attacked and abducted. The camps are near the border with Eritrea, which some fleeing people have accused of entering the conflict, a charge that Ethiopia denies.

Food ran out at the camps days ago. “Regaining access to refugees and others in need is urgent and critical for UNHCR [United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees] and humanitari­an organisati­ons,” the head of the UN refugee agency, Filippo Grandi, tweeted yesterday.

The head of the Norwegian Refugee Council, Jan Egeland said his organisati­on is “deeply concerned to find that humanitari­an access to the region is still significan­tly constraine­d...these people can no longer be made to wait; aid must not be left at a standstill. We have been standing ready to deliver food, emergency shelter and other essential materials for weeks, and we expected this deal to clear the way.”

The UN announced the deal with Ethiopia’s Government last Wednesday, saying it was signed on November 29.

The fighting in the region erupted November 4 between Ethiopia’s Government and the Government of the Tigray region following months of rising tensions. Since then, aid-laden trucks have waited at the borders of Tigray even as warnings have become increasing­ly dire about the lack of food, fuel, clean water, cash and other necessitie­s.

“Full access for humanitari­an actors must be guaranteed,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell tweeted yesterday.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s office said Monday it was working with the UN and others to extend humanitari­an assistance “with a well-coordinate­d framework led by the federal government”.

Redwan repeated that message yesterday and added: “No entity, multilater­al or unilateral, is supposed to supplant the Government . ... We, the Government, would call the shots.”

Humanitari­an assistance must be escorted by defence forces, he said.

Even after Abiy declared victory on November 28 in what he called a “law enforcemen­t operation” against a Tigray Government he now considers illegitima­te, fighting has been reported in parts of the region, further complicati­ng access for aid.

Thousands of people are thought to have been killed in the power struggle between the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, which dominated Ethiopia’s Government and military for more than a quarter-century, and the Government of Abiy, who sidelined the TPLF soon after taking power in 2018 and introduced dramatic political reforms that won him the Nobel Peace Prize.

Now Abiy rejects dialogue with the TPLF. Both sides began the conflict heavily armed, leading to fears of another drawn-out conflict in the strategic Horn of Africa nation that is the continent’s second-most populous country.

 ??  ?? Tigrayans who fled the conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, start wood fires to prepare dinner, in front of their temporary shelters at Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan, on Monday.
Tigrayans who fled the conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, start wood fires to prepare dinner, in front of their temporary shelters at Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan, on Monday.
 ?? (Photos: AP) ?? Ethiopian Tigrayan refugee, 27-year-old Aksamaweet Garazgerer, who is living with HIV, stands in front of her temporary shelter at Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan, Monday. Garazgerer has lived with HIV for the last 14 years and a trip to the clinic is a daily occurrence since she got to the camp searching for antiretrov­iral medication for HIV.
(Photos: AP) Ethiopian Tigrayan refugee, 27-year-old Aksamaweet Garazgerer, who is living with HIV, stands in front of her temporary shelter at Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan, Monday. Garazgerer has lived with HIV for the last 14 years and a trip to the clinic is a daily occurrence since she got to the camp searching for antiretrov­iral medication for HIV.

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