San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

ETHIOPIA’S TIGRAY REGION BOMBS AIRPORTS AS CONFLICT SPREADS

- BY CARA ANNA Anna writes for The Associated Press.

Ethiopia’s defiant Tigray regional government said Saturday it fired rockets at two airports in the neighborin­g Amhara region as a deadly conflict threatens to spread into other parts of Africa’s second-most populous country.

The Tigray regional government said in a statement on Tigray TV that such strikes would continue “unless the attacks against us stop.” Ethiopia’s federal government said the airports in Gondar and Bahir Dar were damaged in the strikes late Friday, asserting that Tigray regional forces were “repairing and utilizing the last of the weaponry within its arsenals.”

Fighting that erupted in the northern Tigray region on Nov. 4 has reportedly killed hundreds on both the federal government and regional government sides, sent well over 17,000 refugees fleeing into neighborin­g Sudan and raised internatio­nal alarm about a possible civil war at the heart of the Horn of Africa.

Each side regards the other as illegal, the result of a monthslong falling out amid dramatic shifts in power after Nobel Peace Prizewinni­ng Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed took office two years ago.

The Tigray regional government, which once dominated the country’s ruling coalition, broke away last year, and the federal government says members of the region’s ruling “clique” now must be arrested and their wellstocke­d arsenal destroyed.

Fears of ethnic targeting are rising. The Tigray People’s Liberation Front, which governs the region, denied allegation­s that scores or even hundreds of civilians were “hacked to death” Monday in the town of Mai-kadra. The massacre was confirmed by Amnesty Internatio­nal, which cited a man helping to clear away bodies as saying many of the dead were ethnic Amharas.

The statement by Tigray regional president Debretsion Gebremicha­el asserted that the allegation­s against the TPLF forces, repeated by Abiy, are “being proliferat­ed with the intent to incite hatred toward (ethnic) Tigrayans in Ethiopia.”

“A justified risk/threat of fear of ethnic profiling and discrimina­tion has arisen,” the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission said in a statement Saturday. It has visited 43 people in police custody in the capital, Addis Ababa, and said “some of the detained have reported that they have been arrested only because of their ethnicity.”

The internatio­nal community is warning against deadly ethnic tensions. The U.N. office on genocide prevention has condemned reports of “targeted attacks against civilians based on their ethnicity or religion” in Ethiopia, warning that the rhetoric sets a “dangerous trajectory that heightens the risk of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.”

Communicat­ions and transport links with the northern Tigray region remain severed, making it difficult to verify claims on both sides of the fighting.

Desperate families cannot reach relatives, and the United Nations and other humanitari­an organizati­ons warn of disaster as food, fuel and other supplies run short for millions of people.

 ?? MARWAN ALI AP ?? Refugees from the Tigray region of Ethiopia wait to register at the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees center at Hamdayet, Sudan, on Saturday. Ethiopia’s Tigray regional government has fired rockets at two airports in the neighborin­g Amhara region.
MARWAN ALI AP Refugees from the Tigray region of Ethiopia wait to register at the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees center at Hamdayet, Sudan, on Saturday. Ethiopia’s Tigray regional government has fired rockets at two airports in the neighborin­g Amhara region.

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