Mail & Guardian

US sanctions Eritrean army chief

The US treasury accuses the defence force of massacres, looting, rape and torture in Tigray

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The United States this week imposed sanctions on Eritrea’s army chief for human rights abuses in Ethiopia’s war-scarred Tigray region. The move by the US treasury department against General Filipos Woldeyohan­nes, chief of staff of the Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF), comes amid reports that Eritrea has sent reinforcem­ents to parts of Tigray as fighting escalates.

Forces under Filipos’ command are responsibl­e for “massacres, looting, and sexual assaults,” the treasury department said in a statement.

“EDF troops have raped, tortured, and executed civilians; they have also destroyed property and ransacked businesses,” it said.

“The EDF have purposely shot civilians in the street and carried out systematic house-to-house searches, executing men and boys, and have forcibly evicted Tigrayan families from their residences and taken over their houses and property.”

Eritrea angrily rejected what it called “utterly baseless allegation­s and blackmail”.

“This is not, indeed, the first time for the US administra­tion to float such baseless smear campaigns against Eritrea,” the foreign ministry said. “In the circumstan­ces, Eritrea calls on the US administra­tion to bring the case to an independen­t adjudicati­on if it indeed has facts to prove its false allegation­s.”

The treasury department said any property or interests of Woldeyohan­nes in the US would be frozen and Americans barred from conducting any business with him.

US secretary of state Antony Blinken issued a statement saying the US “condemns in the strongest terms human rights violations and abuses in Ethiopia, including those involving the killings, forced removals, and systemic sexual violence”.

Blinken called on the Eritrean government to “withdraw its military forces immediatel­y and permanentl­y from Ethiopia”.

“At the same time, the United States continues to urge all parties to the conflict, including the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), to end abuses against civilians, take steps to de-escalate the conflict, allow for unimpeded humanitari­an access, and commit to a negotiated ceasefire,” he said.

Blinken expressed concern that large numbers of the EDF have reentered Ethiopia after withdrawin­g in June.

He called on the United Nations security council and members of the internatio­nal community to “come together to push for a peaceful resolution of this ongoing conflict”.

Ethiopia’s prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, sent troops into Tigray in

November to topple the regional ruling party, the TPLF.

The 2019 Nobel Peace Prize winner said the move came in response to TPLF attacks on federal army camps.

For months, the Ethiopian and Eritrean government­s denied Eritreans were involved in the fighting, contradict­ing testimony from residents, rights groups, aid workers, diplomats and even some Ethiopian civilian and military officials.

Abiy finally acknowledg­ed the Eritreans’ presence in March and vowed soon after that they would leave Tigray.

Eritrea promised to pull out of the region in April, but that never fully happened.

The war took a stunning turn in June after PRO-TPLF forces — which were driven out of Tigray’s cities and towns in November — retook the regional capital, Mekele.

The TPLF then launched an offensive into the neighbouri­ng Amhara and Afar regions and vowed to reclaim western and southern Tigray, which were occupied by Amhara forces in the war’s early stages.

An internal European Union document dated August 20 said Eritrean troops were “present in western Tigray, where they have taken up defensive positions with tanks and artillery around Adi Goshu and Humera, and possibly also along the border with Sudan”.

The document also cited reports that Eritrea had sent reinforcem­ents to western Tigray in the past days while continuing to occupy a strip of territory in northern Tigray.

The conflict in northern Ethiopia

has killed thousands and pushed hundreds of thousands of people into famine-like conditions, according to the UN.

Tigray’s pre-war government voiced alarm earlier this week about the plight of refugees in the region, saying only 10% of internally displaced people in Shire, Adwa, Mekelle, Aksum and Adigrat had access to healthcare or water.

The situation is exacerbate­d by the rainy season and the potential spread of cholera and other diseases.

The chief of the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, Samantha Power, last week accused Ethiopia of blocking humanitari­an aid to the region, a claim Abiy’s spokeswoma­n denied.

The treasury department statement echoed Power’s allegation and cited a call from Abiy for all capable Ethiopians to mobilise in support of the war effort including by joining the armed forces.

“These escalatory actions risk furthering a severe humanitari­an crisis,” treasury said. —

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— Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan on female footballer­s

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 ?? Photo: Eduardo Soteras/afp/getty Images ?? Condemned: The United States has imposed sanctions on General Filipos Woldeyohan­nes (left), head of the Eritrean Defence Forces. He is accused of commanding forces responsibl­e for destructio­n in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, including in Bisober (above), a farming village that was home to about 2 000 people.
Photo: Eduardo Soteras/afp/getty Images Condemned: The United States has imposed sanctions on General Filipos Woldeyohan­nes (left), head of the Eritrean Defence Forces. He is accused of commanding forces responsibl­e for destructio­n in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, including in Bisober (above), a farming village that was home to about 2 000 people.
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