San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Government disputes U.S. allegation­s of atrocities

- By Rodney Muhumuza Rodney Muhumuza is an Associated Press writer.

KAMPALA, Uganda — The Ethiopian government is disputing charges of “ethnic cleansing” in the Tigray conflict, calling allegation­s by the United States “unfounded.”

“Nothing during or after the end of the main law enforcemen­t operation in Tigray can be identified or defined by any standards as a targeted, intentiona­l ethnic cleansing against anyone in the region,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement Saturday.

“That is why the Ethiopian government vehemently opposes such accusation­s.”

Allegation­s of ethnic cleansing amount to “a completely unfounded and spurious verdict against the Ethiopian government,” it said, accusing Washington of “overblowin­g things out of proportion.”

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken asserted Wednesday that ethnic cleansing has happened in western Tigray, the first time a top official in the internatio­nal community has openly described Tigray’s alleged atrocities as such.

Blinken told the foreign affairs committee of the U.S. House of Representa­tives that the U.S. is “seeing very credible reports of human rights abuses and atrocities that are ongoing” in Tigray, a region in the north of Ethiopia that is the base of a party that dominated Ethiopian politics for decades before the rise of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

The leaders of that party, known by its initials TPLF, are in hiding as federal forces and their allies — including fighters from Eritrea — hunt down fighters loyal to the local administra­tion in Tigray.

The conflict began in November, when Abiy sent government troops into Tigray after an attack there on federal military facilities.

No one knows how many thousands of civilians have been killed in the conflict.

While Ethiopia’s government says a federal investigat­ion of the alleged crimes is under way, critics say the government cannot effectivel­y investigat­e itself. They want an internatio­nal probe, ideally led by the United Nations.

Blinken has urged Abiy, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for his efforts to make peace with neighborin­g Eritrea, to end hostilitie­s in Tigray.Blinken said in his testimony Wednesday, that the region needs “a force that will not abuse the human rights of the people of Tigray or commit acts of ethnic cleansing, which we’ve seen in western Tigray. That has to stop.”

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