Ethiopian PM says troops ordered to move on Tigray capital
 
 
Ethiopia’s
prime minister said Thursday the army has been ordered to move on the embattled
Tigray regional capital after his 72-hour ultimatum ended for Tigray leaders to
surrender, and he warned its half-million residents to stay indoors and disarm.
The
military offensive “has reached its final stage” after three weeks of fighting,
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s office said. That means tanks and other weaponry
can close in on Mekele, whose residents had been warned of “no mercy” if they
didn’t move away from Tigray leaders in time.
That
caused international alarm as rights groups said such wording could violate
international law and put civilians in further danger.
Abiy’s
statement asserted that thousands of Tigray militia and special forces
surrendered during the 72-hour period that ended Wednesday evening.
“We will
take utmost care to protect civilians,” the statement said.
The United
Nations has reported people fleeing the city, but communications and transport
links remain severed to Tigray, and it’s not clear how many people in Mekele
received the warnings in time. Tigray regional leaders couldn’t immediately be
reached.
The
international community is pleading for immediate de-escalation, dialogue and
humanitarian access as Ethiopian forces have fought their way through Tigray to
Mekele. But Abiy, last year’s Nobel Peace Prize winner, however, has rejected
international “interference.” His government has said three high-level African
Union envoys for the conflict can meet with Abiy, but not with the Tigray
leaders.
It remains
difficult to verify claims in the fighting that erupted Nov. 4 between
Ethiopian forces and the heavily armed forces of the Tigray People’s Liberation
Front, which once dominated Ethiopia’s government but has been sidelined under
Abiy’s rule. The two governments now regard each other as illegal.
The U.N.
now says shortages have become “very critical” in the Tigray region as its
population of 6 million remains sealed off.
Fuel and
cash are running out, more than 1 million people are now estimated to be
displaced and food for nearly 100,000 refugees from Eritrea will be gone in a
week, according to its update released overnight. And more than 600,000 people
who rely on monthly food rations haven’t received them this month.
Travel
blockages are so dire that even within Mekele the U.N. World Food Program
cannot obtain access to transport food from its warehouses there.
A
statement this week from a civil society representative in the region, seen by
The Associated Press, described heavy bombardment of communities elsewhere that
has kept many residents from fleeing.
Other
people are frantically moving within the Tigray region from one district to
another and “living within church compounds, streets, schools, health centers,”
the statement warned, and it pleaded for a safe corridor to ship in aid as food
runs out.
Human
Rights Watch is warning that “actions that deliberately impede relief supplies”
violate international humanitarian law, and that the complete shutdown of
communications “could amount to a form of collective punishment by imposing
penalties on people without a clear lawful basis.”
Another
crisis is unfolding as more than 40,000 Ethiopian refugees have fled into a
remote area of Sudan, where humanitarian groups and local communities struggle
to feed, treat and shelter them. Nearly half the refugees are children under
18. Many fled with nothing.
“When it
is cold, it hurts so much,” said one wounded refugee, Alam Kafa. “At night, I
have to wrap tightly with a blanket so I can sleep. But I don’t sleep at
night.”
“Just to
imagine for everything, literally for everything, starting from your food,
ending with your water drinking, ending just to go for the toilet facilities
and washing your hands, for everything you depend on somebody else,” said
Javanshir Hajiyev with aid group Mercy Corps. This is really a very dire
situation. I can’t stress how difficult it is.”
 
          
     
                                
 
 


