The Guardian (USA)

Three aid workers found dead in Tigray, says Médecins Sans Frontières

- Kaamil Ahmed

Three aid workers who had been working in Ethiopia’s Tigray region have bee found dead, their organisati­on, Médecins Sans Frontières, announced on Friday.

MSF said it had lost contact with the workers while they were traveling on Thursday afternoon. Their bodies were found near their empty car this morning.

The workers were Maria Hernandez, an emergency coordinato­r from Spain, and Yohannes Halefom Reda, an assistant coordinato­r, and Tedros Gebremaria­m Gebremicha­el, an MSF driver, both Ethiopian.

“No words can truly convey all our sadness, shock and outrage against this horrific attack,” the MSF said. “Nor can words soothe the loss and suffering of their families and loved ones, to whom we relay our deepest sympathy and condolence­s.

“We condemn this attack on our colleagues in the strongest possible terms and will be relentless in understand­ing what happened. Maria, Yohaness and

Tedros were in Tigray providing assistance to people and it is unthinkabl­e that they paid for this work with their lives,” MSF said in a statement.

MSF has been active in Ethiopia’s

Tigray region, the focus of a government offensive against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front since last year. In March the organisati­on said that in the aftermath of an ambush on the army, its workers had witnessed soldiers carrying out extrajudic­ial killings, while their own driver was beaten with the butt of a gun and also threatened with death.

Reports of rights abuses have been widespread in Tigray and the warring parties have been accused by rights groups of occupying schools and attacking hospitals.

Earlier this month the Ethiopian aid worker Negasi Kidane was killed by a stray bullet, according to his employer, the Italian charity Internatio­nal Committee for the Developmen­t of Peoples. In May, another Ethiopian working with USAID was also killed.

“Every day humanitari­an workers risk their own lives to help those in dire need because of man-made conflicts and natural disasters,” USAID’s chief, Samantha Power, said in a statement. “We hope that his courage and sacrifice, and that of other humanitari­an workers intimidate­d, threatened, harmed, or killed in the Tigray region will not be in vain, as we work with the people of Ethiopia toward a peaceful resolution and a brighter future.”

At least 11 aid workers have been killed in Tigray since November 2020.

 ??  ?? A convoy of MSF trucks carrying medical supplies in Tigray, northern Ethiopia, in May. Photograph: Ben Curtis/AP
A convoy of MSF trucks carrying medical supplies in Tigray, northern Ethiopia, in May. Photograph: Ben Curtis/AP

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