‘We’ll be left without families’: Fear in Ethiopia’s Tigray

As soldiers from Eritrea looted the border town of Rama in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, one home became a dispensary for frightened residents seeking medicine in the midst of war. In return, they shared details of killings in nearby communities. An American nurse visiting her family listened in shock.
Now, after escaping to her home in
Colorado, she struggled to estimate the number of dead. “I don’t know, 1,000?”
she told The Associated Press. “It was a lot, just in the rural areas.” She has
been unable to reach her parents since leaving.
If the fighting doesn’t end soon,
she said, “we’ll be left without families.”
Rare witness accounts are
illuminating the toll of the shadowy conflict in Tigray, which is largely cut
off from the world as fighting enters a fourth month in a region of 6 million
people. Ethiopian forces and allied fighters pursue the fugitive former leaders
of Tigray who long dominated Ethiopia’s government. Each side sees the other as
illegitimate after last year’s national elections were delayed and Tigray
defiantly held its own.
Soldiers from neighboring Eritrea,
a secretive nation and enemy of the former Tigray leaders, are deeply involved,
though Ethiopia and Eritrea deny their presence. The European Union this week
joined the United States in urging Eritrea to withdraw its forces, asserting
they are “reportedly committing atrocities and exacerbating ethnic violence.”
With journalists barred,
communications patchy and the international community unable to investigate
atrocities firsthand, it is challenging to verify witness accounts. But their
details are consistent with others who describe a region where the health
system is largely destroyed, vast rural areas remain out of reach and Red Cross
officials warn that thousands of people could starve to death.
Once Tigray reopens to scrutiny,
people will be shocked, said Hailu Kebede, foreign affairs head for the Salsay
Woyane Tigray opposition party that, along with two others, estimates more than
52,000 civilians have died. He told the AP they have attempted to collect data
from witnesses in every administrative area of the region.
“We have thousands of names,” said Hailu, who
spent weeks hiding on the outskirts of the Tigray capital, Mekele, listening to
bombardment and gunfire. He said one relative was killed.
“This is the least-documented war,” Hailu said.
“The world will apologize to the people of Tigray, but it will be too late.”
Even as the delivery of aid slowly
begins to improve, it is questioned.
One woman from Tigray, a student
in Europe, asserted that Ethiopian authorities have begun arriving in her
family’s border-area village with badly needed food but are withholding it from
families suspected of links to Tigray fighters. She is not the first to make
that claim.
“If you don’t bring your father, your brothers,
you don’t get the aid, you’ll starve,” she recounted after speaking with her
sister about events in the Irob administrative area. Like others, she spoke on
condition of anonymity out of fear for her family.
A spokeswoman for Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed, Billene Seyoum, and the official overseeing Tigray’s state of emergency,
Redwan Hussein, didn’t respond to questions. The prime minister, who once said
no civilian had been killed in the conflict, now says the suffering and deaths
in Tigray “have caused much distress for me personally.”
The student in Europe also learned
that her uncle and two nephews were killed by Eritrean soldiers during a recent
holiday gathering. The Irob Advocacy Association, relying on witnesses who have
reached cities with phone service, has listed 59 victims overall.
“I’m so ashamed of my government,” the student
said, and started to cry. Like many in the diaspora, she scours social media
for information. “I worry if somebody from my family dies, I will learn about
it from Facebook.”
People who have contacted the
outside world are frustrated by how little it knows about the conflict.
“The north is dying,” said a man from Irob who
reached Mekele last month. “I strongly believe there is a campaign to target
the people. Every public and private institution is looted.” The north is
occupied by Eritrean soldiers, he said. That’s confirmed even by Tigray’s new
interim government, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission said in a statement
Thursday.
The woman who left Rama for the
U.S. described an uneasy world where Ethiopian and Eritrean soldiers both
appeared to be in charge.
Eritrean soldiers came to her
family’s home multiple times to sack it, she said. At first, they sought
jewelry, cell phones and money. Later they took whatever they could find.
“If they found a spoon, they even took the
spoon,” she said.
Some soldiers acknowledged they
were from Eritrea, she said, and they assumed that everyone in Tigray received
military training as they did in what human rights groups call one of the
world’s most repressive states.
For two and a half months, she hid
indoors like many Tigray residents, scared of being raped, shot “for no reason”
or, like her brother, beaten. The soldiers said they had come for “Debretsion,”
the fugitive regional leader.
She could tell which towns in
Tigray were being looted from the names written on vehicles, even ambulances,
driven through Rama on their way into Eritrea, 7 kilometers (4.3 miles) away.
She finally left when her mother
declared, “You’re not going to die here.” She walked for 11 hours on rural
paths to the town of Adwa, then found transport to Mekele. Ethiopian soldiers
manned some checkpoints, she said, and Eritrean soldiers manned others.
“On the way, you could see a lot of buildings
were destroyed,” she said. “You couldn’t see anybody in cities, it was all
quiet.”
In Mekele, despite showing her U.S.
passport, she was asked for her local identity card. “I was like, I don’t live
here, I’m a U.S. citizen,” she said, her voice starting to shake. “I was so
scared.”
Like other ethnic Tigrayans trying
to fly out of Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, she was questioned and feared
she would be unable to board. She arrived in the U.S. last month.
Others from Tigray who have
reached Addis Ababa but hold no foreign passport are trying to hide their
ethnic background amid reports of arrests and harassment.
“I’m in the middle of Ethiopia and I can’t go
anywhere,” said Danait, who came from Mekele and gave only her first name out
of concern for relatives in Axum, Shire and other Tigray towns that she still
cannot reach by phone. “No, I don’t feel safe.”