Arab News

Ethiopia army threatens ‘no mercy’ in assault on regional capital

Spokesman warns civilians to flee while they still can, saying ‘the next decisive battle is to surround Mekele with tanks’

- AFP Addis Ababa

Ethiopia’s military on Sunday threatened an all-out assault on Mekele, capital of the dissident Tigray region and seat of the local government it is seeking to dislodge, warning civilians to flee while they still can.

“The next decisive battle is to surround Mekele with tanks,” Dejene Tsegaye, a military spokesman, told state broadcaste­rs on Sunday, threatenin­g a siege of the city. He added a warning for Mekele’s half a million residents: “Save yourself. A directive has been communicat­ed for you to dissociate yourself from this junta, after that there will be no mercy.”

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed — last year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner — launched a military campaign against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front ( TPLF) on Nov. 4, accusing its forces of attacking two federal military camps in the region and the party of defying his government and seeking to destabiliz­e it.

A communicat­ions blackout in the region has made claims from both sides in the conflict difficult to verify, but hundreds of people are reported to have been killed while tens of thousands have fled the fighting into neighborin­g Sudan.

Abiy’s government has claimed

the capture of a string of towns in recent days, including the ancient city of Aksum and the town of Edega Hamus, 100 kilometers (60 miles) north of Mekele.

“Defense forces have controlled Edaga Hamus city, which is on the road from Adigrat to Mekele,” the Ethiopia State of Emergency Fact Check, a government agency, said

Sunday. “The defense force are currently marching on the campaign’s last goal, Mekele city.”

The TPLF claimed Saturday that civilians had been killed during a “heavy bombardmen­t” of Adigrat town by the Ethiopian Defense Forces (EDF). The government insists it does not target civilians. The TPLF led the overthrow of Mengistu Hailemaria­m, head of Ethiopia’s military Derg regime, in 1991 and dominated the country’s politics until Abiy became prime minister in 2018.

The party continues to rule Tigray, one of 10 regional states under Ethiopia’s system of ethnic federalism whereby regions are delineated by ethnicity and language.

TPLF leaders have complained of being sidelined by Abiy and blamed for the country’s woes. The bitter feud with the central government led the TPLF to hold their own elections this year in defiance of a national postponeme­nt due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Abiy has spurned all calls for peace, including from the African Union — which plans to send three former national presidents as special envoys in the coming days — the US and the UN which has warned of a looming humanitari­an disaster.

His government regards the TPLF as a criminal administra­tion and appears intent on winning the military battle rather than negotiatin­g.

Military

action

has

already spread beyond Tigray’s borders with the TPLF firing rockets at Asmara, the capital of neighborin­g Eritrea to the north, which it accuses of supporting the Ethiopian government, and the city of Bahir Dar to the southwest.

The campaign has seen warplanes bombing Tigray and heavy fighting, while Amnesty Internatio­nal has documented a gruesome massacre in which “scores, and likely hundreds, of people were stabbed or hacked to death” in the southweste­rn town of Mai-Kadra. The UN has called for the opening of humanitari­an corridors to allow aid agencies access, and has said it is preparing for as many as 200,000 refugees to flee unrest in the coming months.

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