Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Limbs lost, anger rises amid Tigray war

Town pays price even as many back Ethiopia rebels

- By Rodney Muhumuza

HAWZEN, Ethiopia — Shops remained shuttered, some government workers hadn’t been paid and the town’s main hospital was utterly laid to waste. But the Tigrayan fighters still claimed victory, swaggering through the streets of Hawzen with their guns. It wouldn’t last long. Hawzen, a rural town in the ethnic Tigray region of northern Ethiopia, is a microcosm of the challenge facing Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed — and a warning that the war here is unlikely to end anytime soon. When Associated Press reporters arrived in May, Tigrayan fighters had recently retaken Hawzen from Ethiopian government troops, laying claim once again to land that has switched control multiple times since the war began in November.

To the Ethiopian government, the fighters are terrorists who have defied the authority of Abiy in the federal capital, Addis Ababa. But almost everyone the AP spoke with in Hawzen supported them and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, or TPLF, the party of the region’s ousted and now-fugitive leaders.

“The people elected us, so we are not terrorists,” said fighter Nurhussein Abdulmajid, standing confidentl­y in the middle of the road with a gun on his shoulder, as a crowd listened. “He (Abiy)’s the one who is the terrorist. A terrorist is someone who massacres people.”

The battle for Hawzen is part of a larger war in Tigray between the Ethiopian government and the Tigrayan rebels that has led to massacres, gang rapes and the flight of more than 2 million of the region’s 6 million people. While the government now holds many urban centers, fierce fighting continues in remote rural towns like Hawzen. The AP was able to get though an Ethiopian military roadblock and cross the front line to get a rare look at a town held by Tigrayan fighters.Recent atrocities appear to have increased support for the TPLF. One 19-year-old said she was raped by an Ethiopian soldier and is now six months pregnant.

As soon as possible, she said, she wants to join the rebels.

“I want to go,” she said, as she broke down in tears. “You will die if you stay home, and you will die if you go out there. I would rather die alongside the fighters.”

The AP does not name victims of sexual abuse.

The TPLF was on top of a coalition that ruled Ethiopia for nearly three decades. That changed in 2018, when Abiy rose to power as a reformist. Abiy alienated the TPLF with efforts to make peace with its archenemy, Eritrea, and rid the federal government of corruption.

Tigray’s leaders fought back. In 2020, after a national vote was suspended because of the pandemic, the TPLF went ahead with its own elections in the region.

Asserting that Tigrayan fighters had attacked a military base, Abiy sent federal troops into Tigray in November. Government forces are now allied with militias from the rival Amhara ethnic group as well as soldiers from neighborin­g Eritrea, who are blamed for many atrocities.

Abiy acknowledg­ed recently that the highly mobile Tigrayan guerrillas were stretching the Ethiopian military, springing ambushes from the rugged highlands where they hide. And in April the Internatio­nal Crisis Group predicted that entrenched resistance on both sides meant “the conflict could evolve into a protracted war.”

Abebe Gebrehiwot, an ethnic Tigrayan appointed by Abiy to serve as Tigray’s deputy CEO, told the AP that he and others in the interim administra­tion didn’t feel trusted by the people, making their work more difficult.

“We are not getting as much public support as we expect,” he said in his office in Mekele, the largely peaceful regional capital.

Representa­tives of the Ethiopian government didn’t respond to requests for comment. But Billene Seyoum, a spokeswoma­n for Abiy’s office, told reporters Thursday that “the suffering of Ethiopians who are victims of a situation that is not of their choosing is a source of pain.” Efforts to alleviate the suffering of Tigrayans “have been marred by various challenges given the complexity of any armed engagement,” she said.

Residents of Hawzen, a town of a few thousand people, said it had seen fighting four times since November. A Tigrayan sentry in military fatigues sat atop a hill leading into the town, on the lookout for trouble.

Yohanes Kidanemari­am, a fighter in civilian clothes who held a gun between his legs, claimed they would eventually outlast their opponents.

“We don’t have any doubt,” he said. “We have extreme public support and we have a straight and clear objective: freedom.”

Many here spoke disapprovi­ngly of Abiy, saying they no longer trust him to keep them safe. Gebremedhi­n Aregawi, a tour guide who helped manage civilian relations for the guerrillas, said the entry of federal troops into Mekele doesn’t mean Abiy won.

“If he won, how is fighting still going on up to now?” Gebremedhi­n asked.

Gebremicha­el Welay, a civics teacher at a primary school in Hawzen, said it was “difficult to live” amid the waves of fighting and bombardmen­t that have rocked his hometown. He flees to a nearby forest when Ethiopian and Eritrean troops are in charge.

“They do not discrimina­te,” said the rheumy-eyed 40-year-old as he sat on a stool by the roadside. “If they find you, they kill you.”

As the two sides fight, civilians, and especially children, are suffering heavily. More and more children are caught up in shelling in Hawzen and other nearby areas, with at least 32 admitted to the regional Ayder Hospital in Mekele for blast injuries from December to April. Thirteen left after having a limb amputated, according to official records.

Haftom Gebretsadi­k, a 17-year-old from Freweini near Hawzen, was wounded by an artillery round that struck his home in March. He looked at the stump on his right arm and shook his head.

“I am very worried,” he said. “How can I work?”

Some of the young victims of blast trauma may have kept their limbs if they had received first aid at the nearest health centers. But such facilities are systematic­ally looted, vandalized and turned upside down.

 ?? BEN CURTIS/AP ?? Haftom Gebretsadi­k, 17, from Freweini, Ethiopia, had his right hand amputated after an artillery round struck his home in March. He said he was worried and also questioned how he would be able to work with only one hand.
BEN CURTIS/AP Haftom Gebretsadi­k, 17, from Freweini, Ethiopia, had his right hand amputated after an artillery round struck his home in March. He said he was worried and also questioned how he would be able to work with only one hand.

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