Gulf Times

Tigray rebels accept ‘ceasefire in principle’ but set conditions

-

Rebels in Ethiopia’s wartorn Tigray region yesterday accepted “a ceasefire in principle” but posed strict conditions for it to be formalised.

Notable among those conditions was the withdrawal from the region of Eritrean forces as well as fighters from the neighbouri­ng Ethiopian region of Amhara, who have been supporting the Ethiopian army during the eight-month long conflict.

Tigray has been the scene of fighting since Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent the army in early November to topple the dissident regional authoritie­s, which emerged from the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).

The 2019 Nobel Peace Prize winner accused them of orchestrat­ing attacks on Ethiopian military bases.

After early successes and a premature declaratio­n of victory, government forces were bogged down in a vicious and months-long battle with proTPLF fighters - the Tigray Defence Forces, or TDF. The Ethiopian army was backed by troops from the neighbouri­ng Amhara region and the army of Eritrea, which borders Tigray.

On Monday, the TDF recaptured Mekele, held by the Ethiopian army since November 28.

The government in Addis

Ababa immediatel­y declared a unilateral ceasefire, but this was swiftly derided as a “joke” by the rebel forces, which vowed to continue fighting.

Now the rebels have agreed to a ceasefire in principle but another of their conditions is the restoratio­n of what Addis Ababa considers the rebel government in Tigray.

The United Nations and numerous government have called for a ceasefire to be respected, especially to allow humanitari­an aid to reach civilian population­s. “As long as we have a foolproof guarantee that the security of our people will not be compromise­d by a second round of invasions, we accept a ceasefire in principle,” a statement signed by the “government

of Tigray” said yesterday.

“However, before a ceasefire agreement is formalised, the following thorny issues must be resolved,” the text continues, before listing the conditions.

The rebel authoritie­s are also calling for “procedures to hold Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and President Issaias Aferworki to account for “the damage they have caused”, as well as the creation by the UN of an independen­t investigat­ion body to probe the ‘horrific crimes’ carried out during the conflict.

Other conditions are humanitari­an, including the distributi­on of aid and the safe return to Tigray of

displaced people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar