Ethiopian army official confirms Eritrean troops in Tigray
A senior Ethiopian military official has confirmed
the presence of security forces from neighboring Eritrea in the deadly conflict
in his country’s northern Tigray region, contradicting the Ethiopian
government’s denials.
The United States last month said it believed
Eritrean troops were active in Ethiopia, a “grave development,” as people
fleeing the Tigray region alleged that Eritrean forces were involved in the
fighting, targeting and abducting Eritrean refugees from camps near the
Eritrean border as well as scores of Tigray residents. The fugitive Tigray
leader also has alleged Eritrea’s involvement.
Ethiopia’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed, who was awarded the prize for making peace with Eritrea in 2018,
had “guaranteed” that Eritrean forces had not entered Tigray, United Nations
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said last month.
Eritrea, described by rights groups as one of the
world’s most repressive countries, is a bitter enemy of the fugitive Tigray
government, which once dominated Ethiopia’s government but was sidelined after
Abiy took power and now sees his rule as illegitimate. Ethiopia’s government
calls the Tigray leaders criminals.
The comments by Maj. Gen. Belay Seyoum, leader of
the Northern Command of Ethiopia’s defense forces, were published Wednesday by
the local Addis Standard magazine along with a video of him speaking to
residents of the Tigray capital, Mekele, late last month.
“An alien army we didn’t want came in,” Belay said
in the translated remarks. “We know the problems that are being raised, it’s
painful, but who let them in?” They were not welcome, he added: “My conscience
does not allow me to say, ‘Eritrean army, come and help us!’ We can solve our
own problems on our own.”
A senior Ethiopian official, Redwan Hussein, did not
immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday as the country celebrated
the Orthodox Christmas holiday. Eritrea’s information minister has not
responded to requests for comment on the issue.
The involvement of Eritrean forces in a region where
nearly 100,000 Eritrean refugees shelter in camps has been a major source of
alarm for humanitarian workers and others. Two of the refugee camps remain
virtually unreachable after the conflict swept through. At least five
humanitarian workers were killed.
Thousands of the Eritrean refugees fled to the
capital, Addis Ababa, and Mekele, but Ethiopia’s government sparked further
alarm last month when it said it was putting the “misinformed” refugees on
buses and returning them to the camps. The U.N. refugee agency said it wasn’t
informed in advance and said any forced return would be “absolutely
unacceptable.”
The U.N. refugee chief, Filippo Grandi, last month
said that “over the last month we have received an overwhelming number of
disturbing reports of Eritrean refugees in Tigray being killed, abducted and
forcibly returned to Eritrea. If confirmed, these actions would constitute a
major violation of international law.”
No one knows how many thousands of people have been
killed in the Tigray conflict that erupted on Nov. 4, and the U.N. and other
humanitarian organizations still seek full and unimpeded access to a region
that for weeks was starved of food, medicines and other supplies after
transport links were cut.
Verifying conditions inside Tigray remains
challenging as communications return and as Ethiopian authorities detain some
journalists or deny their travel to the region.



