Ethiopian forces will take Tigrayan capital in coming days, military says
 
 
Ethiopian forces will
take control of the Tigray region’s capital Mekelle in coming days, the
military said late on Friday, a day after the Prime Minister announced the
“final phase” of an offensive in the region.
Federal forces seized
control of Wikro, a town 50 km (30 miles) north of Mekelle and “will control Mekelle
in a few days,” Lieutenant-General Hassan Ibrahim said in a statement.
Government troops had also taken control of several other towns, he said.
Reuters was not
immediately able to reach the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) for
comment, or to verify the statement.
Claims by all sides in
the three-week-old conflict between government and TPLF forces have been
impossible to verify because phone and internet connections to the region are
down and access to the area is tightly controlled.
Eritrea’s capital,
Asmara, came under fire from Ethiopia’s breakaway Tigray region Friday, raising
fears that Ethiopia’s internal conflict could spread as leader Abiy Ahmed
resisted calls for dialogue.
For more than three
weeks now, Ethiopia and Tigray have engaged in fierce fighting that the
International Crisis Group said Friday had left thousands dead “including many
civilians as well as security forces.”
On Friday night, at
least one rocket fired from the northern Tigray region targeted neighboring
Eritrea, four regional diplomats told AFP.
Abiy, the winner of
last year’s Nobel Peace Prize, announced Thursday a “third and final phase” in
his campaign against leaders of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).
Global concern remains
centered on the half a million residents of Mekele, Tigray’s regional capital,
which the army says it has encircled ahead of the threatened attack.
World leaders and
human rights groups have warned such a strike could violate rules of war and
were calling for urgent mediation.
Pope Francis was among
those worried about the intensifying fighting, growing loss of life and
displacement, Vatican media head Matteo Bruni said Friday.
Abiy announced
military operations in Tigray on November 4 after months of friction between
his government and the TPLF, which dominated Ethiopian politics for nearly
three decades before Abiy took office in 2018.
The prime minister has
refused to negotiate with the TPLF and dismissed calls for dialogue as
“interference” in Ethiopia’s internal affairs.
On Friday he met with
three African ex-leaders — Joaquim Chissano of Mozambique, Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf of Liberia and Kgalema Motlanthe of South Africa — dispatched this week
by the African Union as mediators.
In a statement issued
after their meeting in Addis Ababa, Abiy said he appreciated “this gesture
and... the steadfast commitment this demonstrates to the principle of African
solutions to African problems.”
Even so, the
government has a “constitutionally mandated responsibility to enforce rule of
law in the region and across the country,” his office said in a statement.
“Failure to do so
would further a culture of impunity with devastating cost to the survival of
the country,” it said.
UN chief Antonio
Guterres welcomed the talks with the AU envoys and urged all parties to
“peacefully resolve the conflict.”
The UN
Secretary-General also stressed the need “to ensure the protection of
civilians, human rights and access for humanitarian assistance to the affected
areas.”
The Tigrayan
government, meanwhile, said Friday the federal army was bombarding towns and
villages and inflicting heavy damage, although it did not specifically mention
Mekele.
“Our struggle will
continue from every direction until the self-determination of the People of
Tigray is guaranteed and the invading force is driven out,” Tigrayan
authorities said in a statement read on regional television.
A communications
blackout in Tigray has made it difficult to verify claims from both sides on
the fighting.
Hostilities have
erupted in a year when the 55-member AU — which is headquartered in Addis Ababa
— resolved to play a more prominent role in resolving conflicts across the
continent under the slogan “Silencing the Guns.”
At least one rocket
fired from Tigray targeted neighboring Eritrea Friday night, four regional
diplomats told AFP, the second such attack since Ethiopia’s internal conflict
broke out earlier this month.
There was no immediate
confirmation of how many rockets were fired, where they landed, and any
casualties or damage caused.
The TPLF has accused
Ethiopia of enlisting Eritrean military support in the fighting, a charge
Ethiopia denies.
The group claimed
responsibility for similar strikes on Eritrea two weeks ago, but there was no
immediate comment from its leaders Friday.
Abiy, who ordered the
“final” offensive on TPLF forces in Mekele after the lapsing of a deadline for
their surrender earlier this week, said “great care” would be taken to protect
civilians and spare the city from severe damage.
The prospect of a
full-scale attack accelerated diplomatic efforts this week to resolve the
conflict, with the UN Security Council holding its first meeting on Tigray and
US and European officials urging restraint.
French Foreign
Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, who met his Ethiopian counterpart Demeke Mekonnen
in Paris on Thursday, called for urgent measures to protect civilians as the
humanitarian fallout from the crisis worsened across the region.
The UNHCR said Friday
that nearly 100,000 Eritrean refugees in Tigray could run out of food as early
as Monday if supplies could not reach them.
In eastern Sudan,
meanwhile, where more than 40,000 refugees have escaped the fighting in Tigray,
local authorities are struggling to meet the sudden surge in demand for food,
shelter and other life-saving essentials.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


