First witness account emerges of Ethiopians fleeing conflict
 
 
The sound of heavy weapons erupted across the
Ethiopian border town, and immediately Filimon, a police officer, started to
run.
Now, shaken and scared, he pauses when asked about
his wife and two small children, ages 5 and 2. “I don’t know where my family is
now,” he said, unsure if they were left behind in the fighting or are somewhere
in the growing crowd of thousands of new refugees just over the border in
Sudan.
In an interview with The Associated Press by phone
on Thursday, the 30-year-old gave one of the first witness accounts from what
experts warn is a brewing civil war with devastating humanitarian consequences.
The conflict could draw in neighboring countries, too.
Filimon, who gave only his first name, said those
attacking the Tigray regional town of Humera last week were coming from the
direction of nearby Eritrea, though it was impossible to know whether the
attackers were Eritrean forces.
Tigray regional leaders have accused Eritrea of
joining the week-long conflict in the region at the request of Ethiopia’s
federal government, which regards the Tigray government as illegal. Ethiopia
has denied the involvement of Eritrean forces.
Filimon’s worries are far more immediate, though.
After a day-long journey on foot with some 30 others fleeing, he has spent two
days in Sudan, exposed to the sun and wind in a border town that is quickly
becoming overwhelmed. Close to 10,000 refugees have fled into Sudan, where
local authorities are preparing for up to 200,000.
Tensions over the deadly conflict in Ethiopia are
spreading well beyond its cut-off northern Tigray region, as the federal
government on Thursday said some 150 suspected “operatives” accused of seeking
to “strike fear and terror” throughout the country had been detained.
The statement said the suspects “happen to be
ethnically diverse,” but concerns remain high among ethnic Tigrayans amid
reports of being singled out by authorities.
Ethiopia’s parliament voted to remove immunity from
prosecution for 39 top Tigray region officials, including its president,
accusing them of revolting and “attacking the federal army.”
Meanwhile, rallies occurred in multiple cities in
support of the federal government’s military offensive against the Tigray
regional government, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. At a blood drive in
the capital, Addis Ababa, donor Admasu Alamerew said that “I also want to pass
my message to those people who are causing conflict and urge them to fear God
and make peace.”
Ethiopia’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed has rejected international pleas for negotiation and de-escalation,
saying that cannot come until the TPLF ruling “clique” is removed and arrested
and its heavily stocked arsenal is destroyed.
In a new statement, Abiy asserted that the western
part of the Tigray region had been liberated, and accused the TPLF rulers of
seeking to “destroy Ethiopia.” He accused the TPLF forces of abuses. Defense
Minister Kenea Yadeta said a transitional administration will be set up in
“rescued” areas, the Ethiopian News Agency reported.
What appeared to be a sudden slide toward civil war
has been months in the making. Abiy after taking office in 2018 announced
sweeping political reforms that won him the Nobel but marginalized the TPLF,
which had dominated Ethiopia’s ruling coalition. The TPLF later left the
coalition and in September held a local election in defiance of the federal
government.
Each side now regards the other as illegal, and each
blames the other for starting the fighting.
Communications and transport links remain severed in
the Tigray region, making it difficult to verify claims, while the United
Nations and others warn of a looming humanitarian disaster as food and fuel run
short for millions of people.
There is no sign of a lull in the fighting that has
included multiple airstrikes by federal forces and hundreds of people reported
dead on each side. It is not clear how many of the dead are civilians.
The effects of the conflict risk drawing in
Ethiopia’s neighbors, notably Sudan, whose leaders are under pressure from the
international community, Ethiopia’s federal government and now the government
of Eritrea, which the TPLF accuses of joining the fighting at Ethiopia’s
request.
Experts fear that the Horn of Africa, one of the
world’s most strategic regions, could be destabilized despite Abiy’s past
peacemaking efforts.
The top U.S. diplomat to Africa, Tibor Nagy, spoke
with Ethiopia’s foreign minister on Wednesday “to urge again immediate action
to restore peace and de-escalate tensions,” a State Department spokesperson
said in an email. “The protection and safeguarding of American citizens and all
civilians is our top priority.”
More than 1,000 citizens of various countries are
stuck in the Tigray region, the U.N. humanitarian chief in Ethiopia, Sajjad
Mohammad Sajid, has told the AP.
Inside the Tigray region, long lines have appeared
outside bread shops, and supply-laden trucks are stranded at its borders. Fuel
is already being rationed.
“Every global agency, the U.N., is asking for a
cease-fire but we haven’t seen any agreement, any willingness to dialogue,”
U.N. refugee agency spokesman Kisut Gebreegziabher told the AP late Wednesday.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


