San Francisco Chronicle

Army readies major assault

- By Cara Anna Cara Anna is an Associated Press writer.

NAIROBI, Kenya — Ethiopia’s military is warning civilians in the besieged Tigray regional capital that there will be “no mercy” if they don’t “save themselves” before a final offensive to flush out defiant regional leaders — a threat that Human Rights Watch on Sunday said could violate internatio­nal law.

“From now on, the fighting will be a tank battle,” spokesman Col. Dejene Tsegaye said late Saturday, asserting that the army was marching on the Tigray capital, Mekele, and would encircle it with tanks. “Our people in Mekele should be notified that they should protect themselves from heavy artillery.”

He accused the Tigray leaders of hiding among the population of the city of roughly a halfmillio­n people and warned civilians to “steer away” from them.

But “treating a whole city as a military target would not only unlawful, it could also be considered a form of collective punishment,” Human Rights Watch researcher Laetitia Bader tweeted Sunday.

“In other words, war crimes,” former U. S. national security adviser Susan Rice tweeted.

Ethiopia’s Nobel Peace Prizewinni­ng prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, in a new statement is giving the leaders of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front 72 hours to surrender, saying that “you are at a point of no return.”

The deadly conflict erupted on Nov. 4 between the federal government and the heavily armed Tigray regional government. The TPLF dominated Ethiopia’s ruling coalition for a quarter century before Abiy took office and introduced political reforms and sidelined TPLF leaders. Now, each side regards each other as illegal, complicati­ng internatio­nal pleas for dialogue amid worries that one of Africa’s most populous nations could fracture and destabiliz­e the strategic Horn of Africa.

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