Paradise Post

Tigray, other opposition groups form an alliance against Ethiopia’s leader

- By Cara Anna and Nomaan Merchant

NAIROBI, KENYA » Ethiopia’s Tigray forces on Friday joined with other armed and opposition groups around the country in an alliance against Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to seek a political transition after a year of devastatin­g war, and they left the possibilit­y open for his exit by force.

“There is no limit for us,” Berhane Gebrechris­tos, a former foreign minister and Tigray official, told reporters in Washington. “Definitely we will have a change in Ethiopia before Ethiopia implodes.”

UN council steps in

The opposition alliance was announced hours before the U.N. Security Council for the first time called for an end to the intensifyi­ng and expanding conflict in Ethiopia and for unhindered access for humanitari­an aid to tackle the world’s worst hunger crisis in a decade in the war-torn Tigray region.

The press statement approved by all 15 members of the U.N.’s most powerful body called on all parties to refrain “from inflammato­ry hate speech and incitement to violence and divisivene­ss.” Council members further called on the parties “to put an end to hostilitie­s and to negotiate a lasting cease-fire, and for the creation of conditions for the start of an inclusive Ethiopian national dialogue to resolve the crisis and create the foundation for peace and stability throughout the country.”

The newly announced alliance includes the Tigray forces who are fighting Ethiopian and allied forces, as well as the Oromo Liberation Army fighting alongside Tigray forces and seven other groups. The Tigray fighters are approachin­g the capital, Addis Ababa, according to the State Department, and Ethiopia on Friday called on military veterans to join what it now calls an “existentia­l war.”

The U.S. Embassy is urging citizens to leave Ethiopia “as soon as possible.”

US response

The opposition alliance formed as U. S. special envoy Jeffrey Feltman met with the prime minister amid calls for an immediate cease-fire and talks to end the war that has killed thousands of people since November 2020. The two held “constructi­ve discussion­s,” the prime minister’s spokeswoma­n, Billene Seyoum, told The Associated Press. The prime minister also met with U.N. humanitari­an chief Martin Griffiths about the rapidly growing crisis.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken in a statement called on the Tigray and Oromo Liberation Army forces to “immediatel­y stop the current advance towards Addis Ababa.” He also urged Ethiopia’s government to halt its military campaign, including airstrikes in Tigray, and the mobilizati­on of ethnic militias.

The new United Front of Ethiopian Federalist and Confederal­ist Forces said time was running out for Ethiopia’s government to act.

The alliance seeks to “establish a transition­al arrangemen­t in Ethiopia” so the prime minister can go as soon as possible, organizer Yohanees Abraha, who is with the Tigray group, told the AP. “The next step will be, of course, to start meeting and communicat­ing with countries, diplomats and internatio­nal actors in Ethiopia and abroad.”

He said the new alliance is both political and military. It has had no communicat­ion with Ethiopia’s government, he added.

A spokesman for the Oromo Liberation Army, Odaa Tarbii, said the possibilit­y of forcing the prime minister out will depend on Ethiopia’s government and events over the coming weeks. “Of course we prefer if there’s a peaceful and orderly transition with Abiy being removed,” he said.

“The goal is to be as inclusive as possible. We know this transition requires all stakeholde­rs,” he added. But as for members of the prime minister’s Prosperity Party, “there would have to be a process. Many members would have to go through investigat­ion, possibly be prosecuted” for crimes related to the war.

 ?? GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mahamud Ugas, center, speaks in Washington on Friday during a signing ceremony of the United Front of Ethiopian Federalist and Confederal­ist Forces to establish a united front to fight against the Abiy Ahmed regime in Ethiopia.
GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mahamud Ugas, center, speaks in Washington on Friday during a signing ceremony of the United Front of Ethiopian Federalist and Confederal­ist Forces to establish a united front to fight against the Abiy Ahmed regime in Ethiopia.

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