The Columbus Dispatch

Hunger grows in war-torn Tigray

Growing conflict in Ethiopia causes thousands to flee

- Cara Anna

Neven

AIROBI, Kenya – People are going hungry in Ethiopia’s rebellious northern Tigray region as roads are blocked, airports are closed and the federal government marches on its capital in a final push to win a two-week war. But residents are afraid to leave for fear of being killed, an internal assessment says. h Trucks laden with food, fuel and medical supplies have been stuck outside the region’s borders since the Nov. 4 announceme­nt by Ethiopia’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning Prime Minister Abiy

Ahmed that a military offensive had begun in response to an attack by Tigray regional forces on a military base. h “At this stage there is simply very little left, if you have money,” according to the internal assessment by one humanitari­an group, seen by The Associated Press. Based on a colleague who managed to get out, it said people “will stay where they are, there is no place in

Tigray where the situation is any different and they cannot cross over into the other regions of Ethiopia because of fear of what would be done to them.”

Banks in Tigray were closed for days, cutting off humanitari­an cash transfers to some 1 million people, or one-sixth of the Tigray population. And even before the fighting, a locust outbreak was destroying crops.

Close to 30,000 Ethiopians have fled into neighborin­g Sudan, burdening villages that have been praised for their generosity, though they have little to give.

But many inside Tigray can’t or won’t leave, frightened by the threat of ethnic violence. Abiy’s office on Wednesday tried to ease those fears, saying its “law enforcemen­t operation” against a Tigray regional leadership it regards as illegal is “primarily” targeting members of that ruling circle.

“The people of Tigray will be the first to benefit,” the statement said, as senior government officials vow the fighting will end within days. Abiy’s government accuses the Tigray government of damaging bridges and digging up roads leading to its capital, Mekele, to slow the march of federal forces.

Hundreds of wounded people have been treated so far, the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said after visiting a handful of health centers in the Tigray and Amhara regions. More than 400 have been treated in one hospital in the Amhara city of Gondar, including “large numbers of critically injured.”

“At the beginning, most of the wounded were fighters. As days went ahead, we started seeing more wounded civilians exiting” the Tigray region, the ICRC’S Daniel O’malley said in an interview, adding that combatants still make up the majority. As federal forces move eastward along the front line, more wounded are coming from there.

“For the whole country, this is something terrible,” he said.

Electricit­y is out in the Tigray capital, and there is limited water. Hospital beds, supplies for diabetic care and dialysis, even blankets, are urgently needed, the ICRC said.

“It is unclear why all basic services to Tigray need to be cut in order to arrest, if arrest is warranted, the leadership” of the region, the head of the Tigray Friendship Liaison Office, Wendimu Asamanew, said in a statement.

Ethiopia’s federal government promised a rapid end to the fighting from nearly the start. Now humanitari­an groups, experts and even the United States government are showing signs of desperatio­n.

“We do not know if there will be additional U.n.-coordinate­d relocation efforts out of Tigray,” the U.S. Embassy said in a brief statement Tuesday after the U.N. said some 200 foreigners had been evacuated. “U.S. citizens who cannot depart Tigray safely are advised to shelter in place.”

Well over 1,000 citizens of the U.S. and other countries had been said to be trapped, along with the bulk of the region’s residents. The Tigray regional government says more than 100,000 civilians have been displaced and seeks urgent humanitari­an assistance.

Even famine is a possibilit­y in Tigray, researcher­s warned in The Conversati­on, a website for researcher­s. Some 80% of people are subsistenc­e farmers, and the fighting affects the upcoming harvest, they wrote.

The locust outbreak, the region’s worst in decades, has “destroyed vast areas of cropped land and numerous swarms remain active.”

The locust outbreak is so serious that even neighborin­g Eritrea, which has been almost silent on the conflict despite the Tigray forces firing rockets at its capital, speaks relatively openly about the insect invasion.

Researcher Jan Nyssen worries the locusts will pose the worse threat in the end. As of Nov. 3, the day before fighting erupted, swarms had reached as far as Mekele and were expected to move north, further into the region.

He also recalled the hunger that swept through Tigray in the 1980s as its leaders fought the federal government. Back then, Ethiopia’s regime tried to hide the suffering, he said. “Nowadays, you can’t hide it that long.”

 ?? MARWAN ALI/AP ?? The U.N. refugee agency says fighting inside Ethiopia has resulted in close to 30,000 people from the Tigray region moving into Sudan.
MARWAN ALI/AP The U.N. refugee agency says fighting inside Ethiopia has resulted in close to 30,000 people from the Tigray region moving into Sudan.

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