New Era

Grim picture emerges from glimpses of Tigray war

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ADDIS ABABA - Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed declared victory in his military operation in the northern region of Tigray, but there are clear signs that fighting persists despite a claimed return to normalcy.

Abiy launched the offensive last November against Tigray’s ruling party, which he accused of attacking federal army camps and seeking to destabilis­e the country.

Within weeks troops entered the regional capital of Mekele and Abiy announced military operations were “completed.”

But the government continues to give accounts of TPLF leaders slain in gun battles while the United Nations reports “insecurity” hampering aid access.

And in recent weeks satellite images, public statements from military and civilian officials in Tigray and scattered accounts from residents have added to evidence of a conflict unfolding largely in the shadows.

A communicat­ions blackout in much of Tigray means confirmabl­e details remain scant.

When federal forces arrived in Mekele in late November, they encountere­d little resistance as the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) leadership appeared to have already fled.

And a triumphant Abiy claimed no civilians had been killed during the capture of Tigrayan cities.

Doctors at one Mekele hospital told a different story, though, saying at least 20 civilians died in shelling.

They provided AFP with photos of survivors with gruesome injuries, including

lost limbs and exposed internal organs.

The Internatio­nal Crisis Group (ICG) think tank says thousands have died so far, and tens of thousands of refugees have streamed across the border into neighbouri­ng Sudan.

Federal officials have described subsequent fighting as minor operations centred on Tigrayan leaders like former regional president Debretsion Gebremicha­el, who has been out of contact for more than a month.

But a UN humanitari­an assessment dated 6 January said Tigray remained “volatile”, with “localised fighting”.

The UN is especially worried about what happened at two camps housing over 30,000 Eritrean refugees that are inaccessib­le.

Top officials have repeatedly sounded the alarm about reported killings, abductions and forced repatriati­ons from the camps back to neighbouri­ng Eritrea.

The alleged presence of soldiers from the isolated and iron-fisted Eritrean regime in Tigray has been a hotly contested aspect of the conflict.

Five humanitari­an workers have been confirmed killed at one of the camps, known as Hitsats.

“Reports of additional military incursions over the last 10 days are consistent with open source satellite imagery showing new fires burning and other fresh signs of destructio­n at the two camps,” UN refugees chief Filippo Grandi said in a statement Thursday.

“These are concrete indication­s of major violations of internatio­nal law.”

Ethiopia has strenuousl­y denied Eritrean soldiers played an active role in the fighting, contradict­ing witness accounts.

But in December, the US State Department said it was “aware of credible reports of Eritrean military involvemen­t in Tigray” and called for Eritrean troops to be withdrawn.

Eritrea fought a brutal border war with Ethiopia in 1998-2000, back when the TPLF dominated Ethiopia’s governing coalition.

Abiy won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 in large part for initiating a rapprochem­ent with Eritrea, whose President Isaias Afwerki and the TPLF remain bitter enemies.

In late December a top-ranking member of Ethiopia’s army told a meeting of Mekele residents that Eritrean troops had entered Tigray, but insisted they were “unwanted”.

Awet Woldemicha­el, a Horn of Africa security expert at Queen’s University in Canada, said this explanatio­n was dubious.

“Eritrean involvemen­t in the war in Tigray is not considered a violation of Ethiopia, and the internatio­nal community is not worked up about it, precisely because the Ethiopian government invited it,” he said.

Perhaps the most immediate concern for Tigray’s estimated population of six million is humanitari­an access.

So far “the number of people reached is extremely low compared with the number of people we estimate to be in need of lifesaving assistance, around 2.3 million people,” said Saviano Abreu, spokesman for the UN’s humanitari­an coordinati­on office.

The government’s Tigray Emergency Coordinati­on Centre puts the number of people needing food assistance at 4.5 million and says 2.2 million have been displaced.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Displaced… Ethiopian refugees who fled the Tigray conflict gather in front of a tent during the Coptic Christmas celebratio­ns at a village next to Um Raquba refugee camp in Gedaref, eastern Sudan.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Displaced… Ethiopian refugees who fled the Tigray conflict gather in front of a tent during the Coptic Christmas celebratio­ns at a village next to Um Raquba refugee camp in Gedaref, eastern Sudan.

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