Ethiopia rejects independent probes into Tigray conflict
 
 
Ethiopia’s government is rejecting calls for
independent investigations into the deadly conflict in its Tigray region,
saying it “doesn’t need a baby-sitter.”
The declaration comes amid international calls for
more transparency into the month-long fighting between Ethiopian forces and
those of the fugitive Tigray regional government that is thought to have killed
thousands, including civilians. At least one large-scale massacre has been
documented, and others are feared.
Senior government official Redwan Hussein told
reporters on Tuesday evening that Ethiopia will invite others for assistance
only if it feels that “it failed to investigate.” To assume the government
can’t carry out such probes “is belittling the government,” he said.
Frustration is growing as the northern Tigray region
remains largely cut off from the outside world, with food and medicines
desperately needed by the population of 6 million — some 1 million of them now
thought to be displaced.
The lack of transparency, as most communications and
transport links remain severed, has complicated efforts to verify the warring
side’s claims.
It also hurts efforts to understand the extent of
atrocities that have been committed since Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Nov. 4
announced that fighting had begun with the TPLF, which dominated Ethiopia’s
government and military for nearly three decades before he came to power and
sidelined it.
Each government now regards the other as illegal, as
the TPLF objects to the postponement of national elections until next year
because of the COVID-19 pandemic and sees Abiy’s mandate as expired.
Ethiopia’s government has pushed back against what
it calls outside “interference,” from efforts at dialogue to delivering aid,
drawing on its history as the rare African country never colonized, a source of
deep national pride.
The government has made it clear it wants to manage
aid delivery, and on Tuesday it said its forces had shot at and detained U.N.
staffers who allegedly broke through checkpoints while trying to reach areas
where “they were not supposed to go.”
Sporadic shooting remains in Tigray and humanitarian
assistance must be escorted by defense forces, Redwan said.
The United Nations, alarmed, said it is “engaging at
the highest level with the federal government to express our concerns” more
than a week after it and the government signed a deal to allow humanitarian
access.
The deal, crucially, allows aid only in areas under
federal government control. While Ethiopia’s government says the fighting has
stopped, the leaders of the fugitive Tigray People’s Liberation Front have
asserted that the conflict continues.
With growing allegations of massacres and attacks on
refugee camps inside Tigray, the U.N. human rights office has not responded to
a question about whether it has begun investigating possible war crimes.
Meanwhile, the need for aid is being called
critical. The Tigray capital, Mekele, a city of a half-million people, is
“basically today without medical care,” the director-general of the
International Committee for the Red Cross, Robert Mardini, told reporters on
Tuesday.
The city’s Ayder Referral Hospital has run out of
supplies, including fuel to power generators, he said.
“Doctors and nurses have been forced to make
horrible life and death decisions,” Mardini said. “They suspended intensive
care services and are really struggling to take care like delivering babies or
providing dialysis treatment.”
A joint ICRC-Ethiopian Red Cross convoy with
supplies for hundreds of wounded people is ready to go to Mekele, pending
approval, he said. It would be the first international convoy to reach the city
since the fighting began.
While the risk of insecurity remains in the Tigray
capital, there is no active fighting, Mardini said.
Overall, he said, “People in Tigray have been cut
off from services for nearly a month. They have had no phone, no Internet, no
electricity and no fuel. Cash is running out. This of course adds to the
tension.”
 
          
     
                                
 
 


