The Star Early Edition

PM downplays war fears

Trucks carrying Ethiopian militia rush to front line in support of Abiy’s campaign

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AN ESCALATING conflict in Ethiopia’s restive Tigray region has killed hundreds of people, sources on the government’s side said, even as the prime minister sought yesterday to reassure the world his nation was not sliding into civil war.

The flare-up in the area bordering Eritrea and Sudan threatens to destabilis­e the country where ethnic conflict has already killed hundreds since Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed took over in 2018.

Reporters in Tigray and neighbouri­ng Amhara saw trucks packed with armed militia and bakkies with machine-guns mounted on the back rushing to the front line in support of the federal government. Some militia waved the Ethiopian flag.

Abiy, the continent’s youngest leader at 44, won a Nobel Peace Prize last year for democratic reforms and for making peace with Eritrea. But last week the prime minister, who is from Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group, the Oromo, launched a campaign against forces loyal to Tigrayan leaders whom he accused of attacking a military base in the town of Dansha.

“Concerns that Ethiopia will descend into chaos are unfounded and a result of not understand­ing our context deeply,” he tweeted yesterday.

Abiy has said jets have been bombing arms depots and other targets. Aid workers and security sources have reported heavy fighting on the ground.

A military official in Amhara, on the side of the federal troops, said clashes with Tigrayan forces in Kirakir, near the Tigray-Amhara border, had killed nearly 500 Tigrayan forces.

Three security sources in Amhara working with the federal troops said the Ethiopian army had also lost hundreds in the original battle in Dansha.

The prime minister’s office and Ethiopia’s national army did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which governs the region, is battle-hardened from the 1998-2000 war with Eritrea and the guerrilla war to topple Mengistu Haile Mariam in 1991. TPLF forces and militia allies number up to 250 000 men, experts say.

Tigrayans account for just 5% of Ethiopians but before Abiy’s rule, dominated politics since rebels from their ethnic group toppled Marxist military rule in 1991.

They say Abiy’s government has unfairly targeted them as part of a crackdown on past rights abuses and corruption.

“These fascists have demonstrat­ed they will show no mercy in destroying Tigrayans by launching more than 10 air strike attempts in Tigrayan cities,” the TPLF said via Facebook.

There was no immediate response from the government.

The army said it was intensifyi­ng attacks and that Tigrayan special forces and militia were surrenderi­ng. It denied a TPLF claim of downing a jet.

Abiy, a former soldier who fought alongside Tigrayans against Eritrea, has defied calls from the UN and others to negotiate.

Outside the Dansha military base, SUVs and bakkies were filled with soldiers, and a black metal sign read: “Let’s build one democratic country together.” Military helicopter­s flew northward.

On a road into Dansha from the neighbouri­ng Amhara region – which is backing the federal government – huts in a string of villages appeared abandoned. In some parts, men in plain clothes with AK-47s stood guard.

A diplomat working on the Ethiopia crisis said Abiy had increasing­ly fallen back on support from Amhara – fuelling the risk of more ethnic violence – after parts of the military’s northern command went over to Tigrayan control.

There are also fears of reprisals against Tigrayans elsewhere, with 162 people including a journalist arrested in Addis Ababa on Sunday on suspicion of supporting the Tigrayan forces.

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