The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Country ‘at a crossroads’ amid spiraling ethnic conflict

- By Rodney Muhumuza

Aba Yosief Desta preferred not to discuss the ethnicitie­s of victims in the widening conflicts threatenin­g Ethiopia’s unity.

A wooden cross in hand, the Orthodox monk in yellow robes insisted that victims of massacres “have the same face.”

Speaking to The Associated Press from the city of Gondar, where he manages a diocesan office, he reflected on the first known massacre of the conflict in the neighborin­g Tigray region. Ethiopia’s government says ethnic Amhara were killed, but ethnic Tigrayan refugees have told the AP they were also targeted.

“It’s better to say Ethiopians were killed,” the bearded monk said. “If one Amhara is killed and one Tigrayan is killed, it means Ethiopians are killed.” He hopes young people will shun ethnic-driven politics, which he calls “the source of all problems” in this country with more than 90 ethnic groups.

Africa’s second-most populous country, with 110 million people, faces a crisis of ethnic nationalis­m that some fear could tear it apart as the federal government asserts its authority in regions such as Tigray, where a military operation launched in November to capture the fugitive regional leaders has escalated into a war in which widespread atrocities are reported and thousands have been killed.

As that war reaches the six-month mark on Tuesday, there is no sign of how it might be resolved for the Tigray region’s estimated 6 million people. The United Nations human rights office has said all sides are accused of committing abuses against civilians, although far more of the killings, rapes, and mass expulsions are attributed to Ethiopian forces, allied Amhara regional forces, or, especially, troops from neighborin­g Eritrea.

Over the weekend, Ethiopia’s Council of Ministers almost certainly ended hopes of negotiatio­ns for peace when it designated as a terrorist organizati­on the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, or TPLF, the regional party which dominated a coalition of groups that ruled Ethiopia from 1991 until Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed took office in 2018.

The TPLF, like some others in Ethiopia, is an ethnicbase­d party that has long represente­d the people of Tigray in accordance with the 1995 constituti­on, which enshrines ethnic federalism. Under that constituti­on, regional leaders have been accused of asserting the rights of majority ethnic groups at the expense of minorities.

Tigrayans and the United States government allege ethnic cleansing in western Tigray, where Amhara authoritie­s assert they are reclaiming land that Tigray leaders seized in the 1990s. The term “ethnic cleansing” refers to forcing a population from a region through expulsions and other violence, often including killings and rapes.

Members of other ethnic groups elsewhere say they have been targeted, too. Scores of people have been killed in clashes this year between the Amhara and the Oromo, Ethiopia’s two largest ethnic groups. In the country’s west, the Gumuz have been accused of massacring people from both the Amhara and Oromo groups.

With the rising violence, some in Ethiopia wonder how the government will pull off national elections on June 5. The decision to delay voting from last year because of the COVID-19 pandemic helped to spark the Tigray conflict when the region’s leaders objected, asserted that Abiy’s mandate had ended and held a regional vote of their own.

The European Union this week canceled its election observatio­n mission, saying requiremen­ts for its independen­ce and the import of communicat­ions equipment — also sought by humanitari­an groups for work in Tigray — were not met. Ethiopia in a statement Tuesday replied that external observers “are neither essential nor necessary to certify the credibilit­y of an election.”

Abiy, who has vowed a free and fair vote, will keep his post as prime minister if his Prosperity Party wins a majority of seats in the national assembly.

But there will be no voting in Tigray, where witnesses say fighting persists and local authoritie­s can reject decisions made by the federal government. An AP team that was granted permission to visit Mai Kadra was turned back in nearby Humera by soldiers who said they recognized the authority of Amhara leaders.

The winding road to western Tigray displays the ruins of war: the charred remains of armored personnel carriers, the mangled bed of a truck, the pockmarked walls of an industrial park. There is no phone or internet service. Humera looked deserted. A soldier with a gun slung over his shoulder crossed one street while a lone woman brewed coffee on her veranda.

Amhara authoritie­s’ annexation of a vast part of western Tigray has forced hundreds of thousands of Tigrayans to seek refuge elsewhere, including in nearby Sudan.

Some Ethiopians said they believe the country must overcome its ethnic politics by forging a new federation in which ethnicity is not the most important factor.

But there is no agreement on how this can be achieved as Abiy, who came to power as a reformist leader and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for making peace with Eritrea, moves to centralize power in ways that marginaliz­ed Tigray’s now fugitive leaders.

 ?? BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ethiopian Orthodox Church priest Aba Yosief Desta, who hopes young people will shun ethnic-driven politics which he calls “the source of all problems,” speaks to The Associated Press May 2 at his office in Gondar, in the Amhara region of Ethiopia.
BEN CURTIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ethiopian Orthodox Church priest Aba Yosief Desta, who hopes young people will shun ethnic-driven politics which he calls “the source of all problems,” speaks to The Associated Press May 2 at his office in Gondar, in the Amhara region of Ethiopia.

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