The Mercury News Weekend

PM: Troops are ordered to move on Tigray capital

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NAIROBI, KENYA >> Ethiopia’s prime minister said Thursday 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 halfmillio­n 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

he 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 erupted 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.

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