US Delegation, Top Ethiopian Officials Discuss Tigray Conflict

A U.S. delegation has met with top officials in Addis Ababa to convey President Joe Biden’s “grave concerns” about the ongoing conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.
The delegation led by U.S. Senator
Chris Coons arrived in Ethiopia Saturday to meet with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed
and express the president’s “grave concerns about the humanitarian crisis and
human rights abuses in the Tigray region and the risk of broader instability in
the Horn of Africa,” according to U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan.
Present during the closed-door meeting
were Ethiopian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Demeke Mekonnen and
the spokesperson for Ethiopia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Dina
Mufti.
There was no immediate comment on
the talks from Senator Coons, a Democrat from Biden’s home state of Delaware,
and no word on when the delegation will meet with Prime Minister Abiy.
Since the start of the conflict
between the federal government and the Tigray regional forces in November,
hundreds of thousands have been displaced within Ethiopia or sought refuge in
neighboring Sudan.
A recent U.S. government report
concluded the Ethiopian government is conducting “a systematic campaign of
ethnic cleansing” in Tigray. It said
Ethiopian forces and allied militia fighters from the neighboring Amhara
region, who participated in the Tigray conflict in support of Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed, are “deliberately and efficiently rendering Western Tigray
ethnically homogeneous through the organized use of force and intimidation.”
The U.S has called for an
independent investigation into alleged war crimes.
Ethiopian officials put a positive
spin on the talks with the Coons delegation.
Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Dina
Mufi called the discussion with Coons “constructive.”
“The Ethiopian government is in the process of
explaining its position so the friendly United States government would better
understand it and study the issue,” he said, speaking to reporters on
Ethiopia’s state-owned media, Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation.
Dina added, “there is willingness
on Ethiopia’s side to work together and make adjustments.”
At the same time, he said, “in the
process of the law enforcement operation in Tigray, it is not an appropriate
direction for them [the U.S.] to take when considering a local militia [Amhara
militia] as a foreign force,” Dina said. “Domestic matters are Ethiopian
matters and sovereignty matters,” he added.
Deputy Prime Minister Demeke
briefed the delegation “to shed light on the confusions that the U.S. Government
previously had about the military operation in the region,” the government
media reported. The Fana Broadcasting
Corporate report stopped short of explaining what the confusion is.
Ambassador Dina told local
reporters that other topics were discussed beyond the conflict in the Tigray
region during the meeting with the delegation.
Ethiopian authorities spoke about
tensions with Sudan, which are running high to disputes over the border and
Ethiopia’s hydropower project, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, he said.