The Borneo Post

UN says 120 Ethiopia ex-peacekeepe­rs seek asylum in Sudan

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Around 120 former peacekeepe­rs from Ethiopia, where several regions including northern Tigray are hit by interethni­c conflict, have sought asylum in Sudan, the United Nations said Sunday.

The personnel were due to be repatriate­d on the back of the phased withdrawal of the UN peacekeepi­ng mission, UNAMID, from western Sudan’s Darfur region after its mandate ended on December 31.

“As of now, 120 former UNAMID peacekeepe­rs who were due to be repatriate­d have sought internatio­nal protection,” a UN peacekeepi­ng spokespers­on told AFP via email.

The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, also confirmed the former peacekeepe­rs have applied for asylum in Sudan.

They “will be taken to a location where they can be safely undertaken for their refugee status to be determined,” it said without elaboratin­g, due to ‘protection purposes’.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether all the former peacekeepe­rs seeking asylum originated from Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

The Tigray conflict broke out last November between Ethiopia’s federal forces and leaders of the region’s ruling party, leaving thousands killed.

The fighting sent some 60,000 refugees fleeing into neighbouri­ng Sudan, a nation struggling with economic woes and a rocky transition since the April 2019 ouster of strongman Omar al-Bashir.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize, is also grappling with ethnic violence in other regions including Amhara, Oromia and Benishangu­l-Gumuz.

UNAMID, deployed in Darfur since 2007, in January began a phased withdrawal of its about 8,000 armed and civilian personnel, to be completed within six months.

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