Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ethiopia to citizens: Join to stop Tigray forces ‘once and for all’

- Cara Anna

NAIROBI, Kenya – Ethiopia’s government on Tuesday summoned all capable citizens to war, urging them to join the country’s military to stop resurgent forces from the embattled Tigray region “once and for all.”

The call to arms is an ominous sign that all of Ethiopia’s 110 million people are being drawn into a conflict that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, once declared would be over within weeks. The deadly fighting has now spread beyond Tigray into neighborin­g regions, and fracturing in Africa’s second most populous country could destabiliz­e the entire Horn of Africa region.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt effectively ends the unilateral cease-fire the government declared in June as its military retreated from Tigray. It is also almost certain to magnify the toll of a nine-month war that has led to the massacre of thousands, gang rapes and the displaceme­nt of entire communitie­s, mostly Tigrayan. Hundreds of thousands of people in Tigray now face famine conditions in the world’s worst hunger crisis in a decade.

The prime minister’s summons chilled Tigrayans, even those outside Tigray, with the statement calling on all Ethiopians to be “the eyes and ears of the country in order to track down and expose spies and agents” of the Tigray forces. Witnesses and lawyers have said thousands of Tigrayans have already been detained during the conflict for their identity alone.

“The kind of war he’s calling for is on another level, it’s for a total annihilati­on of Tigray,” said Teklehayma­not G. Weldemiche­l, whose family is trapped in the Tigray region. “‘Once and for all’ means to finish everyone out.”

The expansion of fighting has alarmed some people of other ethnicitie­s, such as the Amhara, who fear that the Tigray forces, now on the offensive, will take revenge.

“We know the (Tigray People’s Liberation Front) is well armed and the losers would again be the Amhara people,” Demissie Alemayehu, a U.S.based professor who was born in the Amhara region, said shortly after the prime minister’s call to war. Without addressing Ethiopia’s root problems, including a constituti­on based on ethnic differences, he said, it will be “very difficult to talk about peace.”

The deputy head of the Amhara regional government, Fenta Mandefro, asserted that hundreds of Amhara residents have already been killed. “More people will be endangered if we continue adhering to a cease-fire ignored by the TPLF,” he said.

The call to join the military is so far not compulsory, but with access to parts of Ethiopia increasing­ly blocked, it’s difficult to know what kind of pressure is being applied.

Ethiopia’s sharply worded statement came after weeks of mobilizati­on by the federal government, including military recruiting and blood donation drives, as Tigray forces pushed into the neighborin­g Amhara and Afar regions. On Tuesday, the spokesman for the Tigray forces, Getachew Reda, told The Associated Press that the prime minister “wants to send militia to the war front as cannon fodder” and called it unfortunat­e that “ill-trained, illequippe­d people” are now being pressed into the fight.

The war began as a political dispute. Tigray leaders dominated Ethiopia’s repressive government for nearly three decades, embitterin­g many across the country by helping to put in place a system of ethnic federalism that led to ethnic tensions. When Abiy came to office in 2018, the Tigray leaders were sidelined.

Fighting began in November and took a turn in June when the Tigray forces, strengthen­ed by new recruits among Tigrayans horrified by the war’s atrocities, retook much of the region.

The Tigray forces now say they want to secure their long-blockaded region of 6 million people, end the fighting and see the prime minister leave office. Despite the resentment of many in Ethiopia, they are hoping for public support as they vow to press to the capital, Addis Ababa, if needed.

 ?? FILE AP ?? The Ethiopian government on Tuesday urged its citizens to join the military and stop resurgent forces from the embattled Tigray region “once and for all.”
FILE AP The Ethiopian government on Tuesday urged its citizens to join the military and stop resurgent forces from the embattled Tigray region “once and for all.”

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