The Jerusalem Post

Ethiopia faces ‘ hell’ in battle for Tigray, rebels say

- • By GIULIA PARAVICINI

ADDIS ABABA ( Reuters) – The rulers of Ethiopia’s rebellious Tigray region refused on Wednesday to surrender to federal troops, and instead claimed they were winning a war that has exacerbate­d ethnic fractures in the vast nation and further destabiliz­ed the Horn of Africa.

“Tigray is now a hell to its enemies,” they said in a statement on the two- week offensive against them.

“The people of Tigray will never kneel.”

Ignoring internatio­nal appeals for talks, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government is also claiming major victories and says its forces are marching on Tigray’s capital Mekelle and will triumph shortly.

The war has killed hundreds and possibly thousands on both sides, sent 30,000 refugees fleeing into Sudan, and called into question the reputation of Africa’s youngest leader who won a Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for a peace pact with Eritrea.

Abiy, 44, ordered air strikes and sent soldiers into Tigray on November 4 after accusing the well- armed local ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, of revolt and an attack on a government base.

The TPLF says their former military comrade and onetime political partner has been persecutin­g their ethnic group and removing Tigrayan officials from senior security and government positions since he took office in 2018.

In a lengthy statement, the Tigrayan leaders accused federal forces of targeting civilians, churches and homes, while blocking internet, electricit­y and banking services. Hundreds of thousands of people

have been uprooted from homes, it said.

Neverthele­ss, Tigrayan forces had captured tanks and artillery and would soon drive their enemies out despite being massively

outnumbere­d, it added.

The government denies it is targeting civilians.

The northern state is largely cut off to the world as media are barred, most communicat­ions are down and foreign aid workers are pulling out, meaning Reuters could not independen­tly verify assertions made by either side.

“The wider world will soon testify the amazing victories achieved by the people and government of Tigray,” the Tigrayan statement added. “Attempting to rule the people of Tigray by force is like walking on a burning flame... Tigray will be the graveyard of dictators and aggressors and not their playground.”

Tigrayans who have fled to Sudan have told Reuters that militias from Amhara, the neighborin­g state, attacked them because of their ethnicity and that government airstrikes were killing civilians. There have also been reports of Tigrayans losing jobs and facing discrimina­tion around Ethiopia.

Tigrayan leaders have used the word “genocide.”

But Abiy’s government has repeatedly denied an ethnic undertone, saying it is simply restoring law and order, pursuing criminals and guaranteei­ng national unity.

“The federal government... denounces, in the strongest of terms, mischaract­erization that this operation has an ethnic or other bias,” its task force on the crisis said on Wednesday.

Abiy is of mixed heritage, with parents from the Oromo and Amharic ethnic groups – the country’s largest and second largest groups respective­ly.

Tigrayans represent about 5% of Africa’s second most populous country. They dominated national leadership between 1991 and 2018, before Abiy took the premiershi­p and began opening up both the economy and a repressive political system.

The government says rebel forces have destroyed bridges and a road connecting the regional capital Mekelle.

Debretsion Gebremicha­el, elected Tigrayan president in polls that Ethiopia does not recognize, told Reuters in a text message his forces had fallen back but denied they destroyed bridges.

“We have shifted our defense line and as a result they got into some towns of South Tigray,” he added.

Ethiopia’s army is one of the strongest in Africa, but many senior officers were Tigrayan and plenty of its heavy weaponry were based in Tigray, which was on the front line of the two- decade standoff with Eritrea after a 1998- 2000 war.

But the Tigrayans are also a battle- hardened force with experience of fighting against Eritrea and spearheadi­ng the ouster of a Marxist dictatorsh­ip in 1991.

 ?? ( World Food Program/ Handout via Reuters) ?? ETHIOPIANS WAIT to be processed for emergency food and logistics support, after fleeing fighting in the Tigray region on Tuesday.
( World Food Program/ Handout via Reuters) ETHIOPIANS WAIT to be processed for emergency food and logistics support, after fleeing fighting in the Tigray region on Tuesday.

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