Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ethiopian troops ordered to march on Tigray hub

- CARA ANNA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Fay Abuelgasim of The Associated Press.

NAIROBI, Kenya — Ethiopia’s prime minister said Thursday that the army has been ordered to move on the embattled Tigray regional capital after his 72-hour ultimatum ended for Tigray leaders to surrender, and he warned the city’s half-million residents to stay indoors and disarm.

Instead, “an increasing number of people continues to leave Mekele” even after the deadline expired, U.N. humanitari­an spokesman Saviano Abreu said. They join tens of thousands of newly displaced people throughout the region that remains almost completely sealed off from the world, beyond the reach of desperatel­y needed food and other aid.

The military offensive “has reached its final stage” after three weeks of fighting, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s office said. That means tanks and other weaponry can close in on Mekele, whose residents were warned of “no mercy” if they didn’t move away from the defiant Tigray leaders in time.

That caused internatio­nal alarm as rights groups said such wording could violate internatio­nal law and put civilians in further danger. “We will take utmost care to protect civilians,” Abiy’s statement said. It also asserted that thousands of Tigray militia and special forces surrendere­d during the 72-hour period.

Tigray regional leaders couldn’t immediatel­y be reached. With communicat­ions and transport links severed, it remains difficult to verify claims in the fighting that broke out Nov. 4 between Ethiopian forces and the heavily armed forces of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, which once dominated Ethiopia’s government but has been sidelined under Abiy’s rule. The two government­s now regard each other as illegal.

The fighting threatens to destabiliz­e Ethiopia, which has been described as the linchpin of the strategic Horn of Africa, and even its neighbors.

“What is happening is beyond words, and it is heartbreak­ing to see a great country is collapsing,” said a message sent from a Mekele resident Wednesday and seen by The Associated Press. The message expressed hopelessne­ss at not being able to reach loved ones elsewhere in the region, adding, “Ohhhhhhhh GOD!”

But the situation in Mekele remained quiet, said spokeswoma­n Crystal Wells of the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross. “We were still able to go about our work gathering messages from people in Mekele who are looking to contact their families outside” Tigray, she said.

The internatio­nal community is pleading for immediate de-escalation, dialogue and humanitari­an access as Ethiopian forces have fought their way through Tigray to Mekele. Hundreds of people, perhaps thousands, have been killed. “Next to the casualties, the danger of a major humanitari­an crisis is imminent,” European Union commission­er for crisis management Janez Lenarcic tweeted.

Abiy, last year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner, has rejected internatio­nal “interferen­ce.” His government has said three high-level African Union envoys for the conflict can meet with him, but not with the Tigray leaders.

Abiy’s office for the first time did say a “humanitari­an access route” would open under the management of the country’s Ministry of Peace, but released no details. It also said distributi­on of supplies has begun in areas of Tigray now under government control.

That came hours after the U.N. said shortages have become “very critical” in the Tigray region of 6 million people.

The U.N. appreciate­s the Ethiopian government’s acknowledg­ement of the need for urgent humanitari­an assistance, Abreu said. “We look forward to working with all parties to the conflict to ensure that humanitari­ans have unconditio­nal, safe and immediate access to, and within, Tigray. … We want to do so in accordance with the globally agreed-upon principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiali­ty and operationa­l independen­ce.”

Fuel and cash are running out in Tigray, and food for nearly 100,000 refugees from Eritrea will be gone in a week, according to the U.N. update released overnight. And more than 600,000 people who rely on monthly food rations haven’t received them this month.

Travel blockages are so dire that even within Mekele the U.N. World Food Program cannot obtain access to transport food from its warehouses there.

Human Rights Watch is warning that “actions that deliberate­ly impede relief supplies” violate internatio­nal humanitari­an law, and that the complete shutdown of communicat­ions “could amount to a form of collective punishment by imposing penalties on people without a clear lawful xbasis.”

 ?? (AP/Nariman El-Mofty) ?? A Tigray girl who fled the conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region watches women cook in front of her shelter Wednesday at the Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan.More photos online at arkansason­line.com/1127ethopi­a
(AP/Nariman El-Mofty) A Tigray girl who fled the conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region watches women cook in front of her shelter Wednesday at the Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan.More photos online at arkansason­line.com/1127ethopi­a

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