Bangkok Post

More than 50,000 displaced by clashes in north: UN

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ADDIS ABABA: Over 50,000 people have been displaced by clashes in a disputed area in northern Ethiopia, the UN said, as the internatio­nal community expressed concern about the violence involving fighters from rival regions.

“The humanitari­an situation is dire, with thousands of women and children in need of broad humanitari­an support to survive,” the UN said late on Monday, citing local authoritie­s in the disputed area, which is claimed by Tigray and neighbouri­ng Amhara.

The United Nations noted the number of people displaced by the armed clashes in Alamata Town and Raya Alamata, Zata and Ofla since the weekend has passed 50,000.

Amhara f orces occupied Raya Alamata in southern Tigray during a two-year war between Ethiopia’s government and regional Tigrayan authoritie­s.

Under a peace deal between Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government and Tigrayan authoritie­s, Amhara forces — which backed federal troops during the conflict — were due to withdraw from Raya Alamata after the agreement was signed in Pretoria in November 2022.

Neither the federal government nor Tigrayan authoritie­s responded to requests for informatio­n and the identity of the fighters involved remains unclear. It is impossible to verify the situation on the ground independen­tly as media access to northern Ethiopia is heavily restricted.

Reports of the fighting have sparked alarm among the internatio­nal community, with the embassies of several nations including the United States, Japan, Britain and France on Saturday calling for dialogue and urging the “deescalati­on and protection of civilians”.

The Amhara regional administra­tion last week accused the Tigray People’s Liberation Front party, which controls Tigray, of “invading” Raya Alamata and other areas “which have identity questions”.

“The Amhara region administra­tion asks TPLF and its supporters to ... fully adhere to the Pretoria agreement and hence to swiftly vacate from the areas it currently controls,” it said in a statement issued last Wednesday.

“If this doesn’t happen the Amhara region administra­tion will be forced ... to protect our people from attack and save the country from destructio­n.”

Getachew Reda, a senior TPLF member who heads the Tigray regional administra­tion, said on X last week that the recent developmen­ts were “the work of diehard enemies of the Pretoria agreement trying to take advantage of real or perceived difference­s to derail” the peace deal. During the war, Amhara forces occupied and still retain control of western Tigray, a disputed region that is claimed by both regions.

 ?? AFP ?? People who fled violence in Ethiopia’s Tigray region wait to receive food in this June 2021 file photo at a camp, in Mekele, the capital of Tigray region.
AFP People who fled violence in Ethiopia’s Tigray region wait to receive food in this June 2021 file photo at a camp, in Mekele, the capital of Tigray region.

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