Ethiopia’s Tigray Conflict: Alleged Atrocities, Law of War Violations and Regional Implications

On Nov. 4, 2020, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) attacked Ethiopia’s Northern Command headquarters. In response, the Ethiopian National Defense Force (EDNF) initiated a large-scale military operation throughout the northwestern province of Tigray. Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed characterized the campaign as a “law enforcement operation,” but such euphemisms obfuscate a frightening reality. The Tigray conflict constitutes an international civil war that has spawned a humanitarian crisis and risks destabilizing the broader region. More than 60,000 Ethiopians have fled to Sudan. At least 2 million people have been displaced internally. And 1.3 million people are in desperate need of aid. More troubling still, unsettling accounts of human rights violations and mass atrocities emerged soon after hostilities began. As human rights organizations assess the credibility of these claims and reconstruct events, a horrific picture has developed.
Although the worst allegations involve Eritrean forces, no party appears innocent. The EDNF, the Eritrean military, and Tigray and Amhara militias may all have violated international human rights law and the law of armed conflict. In Mai-Kadra, retreating Tigray militia allegedly murdered hundreds of ethnic Amharas. The Fano—an ethnic Amhara militia—may have carried out reprisal attacks on Tigray refugees. EDNF and Eritrean forces have shelled residential areas and killed scores of civilians, and survivors have shared grisly accounts of massacres and extrajudicial killings at the hands of Eritrean forces. To make matters worse, Doctors Without Borders recently documented widespread, intentional attacks on Tigray’s fragile health care infrastructure.
Such
conduct not only violates the law of armed conflict but also impedes
postconflict reconciliation, undermines regional stability and complicates U.S.
national security objectives in the Horn of Africa. It is imperative that U.N.
officials and independent observers gain full access to the region to
investigate these allegations and mitigate the chance of further atrocities.
This cannot occur without a full cessation of hostilities, and the U.S. must
continue to pressure all parties to achieve that goal.
Conflict
Overview
Tensions
between the Ethiopian government and Tigray have simmered since popular
protests brought Abiy to power in 2018. The TPLF—the party that governs the
northwestern province of Tigray—governed Ethiopia for three decades after
leading the insurgency against Mengistu Haile Mariam and the Marxist Derg.
Mistrust between Abiy and the TPLF runs deep. According to the TPLF, Abiy, a
member of Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group, formed the new, countrywide
Prosperity Party in violation of Ethiopia’s federal constitution. Moreover, the
TPLF claims that Abiy excluded Tigrayans from leadership roles and targeted
TPLF leaders with unfounded corruption charges. Therefore, the party refused to
join his ruling coalition in 2019. For his part, Abiy claimed that the TPLF
bore responsibility for a grenade attack at one of his rallies and labeled them
terrorists. Tensions reached a breaking point in spring 2020. Abiy postponed
national elections due to the coronavirus pandemic, but the government’s
constitutional mandate expired in early October. The TPLF disregarded the order
to delay elections, and its leader, Debretsion Gebremichael, declared that “we
will never back down for anyone who is intended to suppress our hard-won right
to self-determination and self-rule.”
In
September 2020, the TPLF organized a regional election in defiance of the
federal government’s order. Abiy immediately dismissed the results of the
unauthorized ballot and suspended the disbursement of federal funds to Tigray.
Matters came to a head on Oct. 29, when TPLF leaders refused to accept the
government’s regional appointees and pledged to block all EDNF movements in
Tigray. On Nov. 4, Tigrayan forces attacked the EDNF Northern Command
headquarters, claiming “pre-emptive self-defense.” Further conflict seemed
certain.
Declaring
a state of emergency, Abiy issued arrest warrants for 167 TPLF leaders, cut
Tigray’s telecommunications and mobilized the EDNF for a “law enforcement
operation.” The central government appears to have coordinated the operation
with regional security forces from Amhara and the Eritrean military, and the
U.S. government assesses that Eritrean forces launched artillery strikes to
support EDNF operations. After quickly seizing key towns in Tigray, the EDNF
encircled the regional capital of Mekelle on Nov. 22, and the government issued
an ultimatum for TPLF leadership to surrender within 72 hours. When the
deadline passed, the EDNF assault on Mekelle began. Meanwhile, Eritrean forces
crossed into Ethiopian territory and assaulted TPLF strongholds along the
border, while provincial security forces and ethnic militias from Amhara
province supported EDNF operations in western Tigray. Prior to Abiy’s
parliamentary address on March 23, few government officials would even
acknowledge the presence of Eritrean forces, but it is widely reported that
they remain deployed throughout northern Tigray. Similarly, Amhara officials
have established a provisional government and effectively annexed a
long-disputed portion of western Tigray.
Abiy
claimed victory on Nov. 28 and told Parliament that no civilian lives were
lost. But facts on the ground belie these claims. Indeed, following the
government’s victory pronouncement, Tigray forces fired missiles at targets in
the neighboring state of Amhara and across the border into Eritrea. In late
December, the government shelled additional targets outside Mekelle, and TPLF
forces continue to engage government troops and their partners throughout
Tigray. The conflict appears far from over.
The
conflict is evolving steadily into a low-level insurgency. With TPLF leadership
ensconced in the mountains and strong popular support, the conflict could
endure for some time. In October, the International Crisis Group assessed that
the TPLF could field 250,000 well-trained militia. Moreover, as Emmanuelle
Igunza, a BBC reporter for East Africa, reminded listeners on the Lawfare
Podcast, the TPLF fought a successful insurgency against the Derg from Tigray’s
highlands, and their forefathers waged a guerrilla war against Italy’s colonial
forces in the same hills. In January, Debretsion seemed to channel this
history, vowing “extended resistance” and calling on all Tigrayans to support
the cause. Control Risk Group believes the government’s actions have engendered
“a fertile recruitment ground for secessionist or otherwise anti-government
ethnic militias.” The TPLF will not admit defeat, the government refuses to
negotiate and alleged atrocities harden hearts on all sides. Peace does not
appear imminent.
Humanitarian
Crises and Regional Instability
The
conflict has engendered an acute humanitarian crisis, and indiscriminate
violence aggravates these challenges. The region’s crops already suffered from
record-setting locust swarms in 2020, and fighting now impedes the delivery of
food aid. If the conflict continues into June, it could disrupt the growing
season and precipitate a full-blown famine. Similarly, estimates of internally
displaced persons present staggering numbers. In January, a government official
stated that Tigray has 2.2 million internally displaced persons, and 45,000
people from western Tigray relocated to the town of Shire alone. Fortunately,
international agencies have gained access to some parts of Tigray in recent
weeks, and aid has begun to flow to these areas. Nevertheless, the U.N. Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) recently assessed that
nearly a million people remain in areas deemed inaccessible due to the “highly
volatile and insecure” operational environment. The International Red Cross has
warned about a lack of water, medical supplies, and other essentials, and
UNOCHA has called the situation “dire.” Nor are the conflict’s effects confined
to Tigray. Since November, more than 60,000 refugees have fled to overcrowded
Sudanese camps. This influx taxes limited humanitarian resources, as the two
largest camps are designed to support no more than 20,000 people.
Food
security and refugee flows are not the only ways the Tigray conflict affects
the broader region. For more than a decade, Ethiopia has served as a close U.S.
military ally, and analysts consider it “the strategic linchpin of the volatile
Horn of Africa.” But if the Tigray conflict transforms into a long-running
insurgency, Ethiopia could become a source of instability for neighboring
states. For instance, Ethiopia contributes 5,000 peacekeepers to South Sudan,
provides 4,000 troops to the African Union’s mission in Somalia (AMISOM) and
deploys another 15,000 troops to Somalia bilaterally. Vanda Felbab-Brown,
co-director of Brookings’s Africa Security Initiative, believes that the
presence of Ethiopian troops stiffens the resolve of Somali forces, noting that
al-Shabab attacks increase whenever Ethiopian personnel withdraw from an area.
The Tigray conflict could unravel AMISOM’s limited security gains. Ethiopia
redeployed some of its forces from Somalia to Tigray, and the military confined
more than 200 ethnic-Tigrayan troops deployed to Somalia due to security
concerns. Felbab-Brown argues that such “purges weaken the morale, cohesion,
and capacity of anti-Shabab forces,” and she fears that a weakened Ethiopian
presence in Somalia will destabilize the country. A similar dynamic has
occurred on the Sudanese-Ethiopian border, where Ethiopia redeployed forces
from the contested al-Fashqa Triangle to Mekelle, and the Sudanese army
destroyed EDNF outposts and displaced Amhara farmers in late December.
Skirmishes have continued throughout the winter.
Alleged
atrocities exacerbate these humanitarian crises and regional tensions. Parties
may grow increasingly unwilling to negotiate, refugees may not feel safe to
return home and the EDNF’s effectiveness as a multiethnic fighting force could
deteriorate. Moreover, unlawful, indiscriminate violence threatens critical
food stores and could precipitate a famine. It is therefore imperative that the
international community broker a cessation of hostilities and fully investigate
alleged atrocities.
Human
Rights Violations, Mass Atrocities and Possible War Crimes
At
the start of the conflict, Addis Ababa blocked all internet and
telecommunications services in Tigray. Nevertheless, credible reports of
indiscriminate shelling, extrajudicial killing, pillaging and sexual assaults
slowly reached the outside world. Refugees shared harrowing stories of abuses
committed by the EDNF and Amhara militias, while Abiy claimed that TPLF forces
intentionally destroyed nonmilitary infrastructure and used civilian sites as
“hideouts.” Four months after the conflict began, human rights organizations,
international observers and investigative journalists have leveraged satellite
imagery, eyewitness reports and documentary evidence to flesh out these claims.
Ethiopian
National Defense Force
Despite
Abiy’s “law enforcement” rhetoric, the operations in Tigray easily meet the
legal threshold for armed conflict and trigger treaty obligations for Addis
Ababa. Common Article 3 of the Geneva Convention establishes baseline
protections for civilians in a noninternational armed conflict, and Additional
Protocol I provides guidance for the selection of military targets and the
safety of civilian populations. Proportionality, distinction, humanitarian
restraint and military necessity are the analytic lodestars. Abiy has claimed
that the EDNF took “all necessary precautionary measures … to ensure that
civilians [were] not harmed … and to protect historical monuments, places of
worship, public facilities, [and] infrastructure.” If true, these precautions
would accord with the law of armed conflict; however, on-the-ground reports
tell a different story.
In
February, Human Rights Watch issued a detailed report documenting
indiscriminate EDNF (and Eritrean) shelling of urban areas. Drawing on
discussions with doctors, forensic experts and 37 eyewitnesses, the report
describes artillery attacks on densely populated areas and corroborates the
allegations with photographs, videos and satellite imagery. The report
concludes that artillery fire struck homes, hospitals, schools, hotels and
markets in Mekelle, Humera and Shire, killing 83 civilians and wounding 300.
While Human Rights Watch notes that legitimate military targets, such as TPLF
offices or training camps, were located near some impact sites, the overall
damage suggests a dangerous lack of targeting discrimination. Moreover, the BBC
reported that TPLF forces withdrew from Mekelle before the EDNF offensive
began. If true, such shelling may also fail to meet the requisite threshold for
military necessity.
Amnesty
International has documented the results of indiscriminate shelling in Axum as
well. After an initial wave of aircraft attacks, the EDNF and Eritrean forces
initiated a joint artillery strike on Axum on Nov. 19. Witnesses described
continuous shelling throughout the evening that struck residential buildings
and decimated entire families.
Eritrean
Forces
Addis
Ababa only recently acknowledged Eritrea’s involvement in Tigray, but the
international community has long recognized the deployment as fact. The U.S.
State Department has received credible reports of looting, sexual violence, and
assaults in Eritrean-controlled areas and called on Eritrea to redeploy its
forces immediately. In an interview for International Crisis Group, Alex de
Waal, one of the leading experts on the Horn of Africa, claims that Eritrean
troops have ransacked food stores, intentionally ruined food supplies and
killed livestock. If true, such actions would aggravate the region’s acute food
insecurity and clearly violate the law of armed conflict. These crimes,
however, pale in comparison to other allegations about Eritrean forces, to
include indiscriminate targeting, forced transfers of refugees and civilian
massacres.
Article
49 of Geneva Convention IV—to which Eritrea is a party—explicitly prohibits
“individual or mass forcible transfers” of civilians in occupied territory
unless required for their security or military necessity. Reports indicate that
Eritrea may have violated this precept. Before the conflict, the U.N. Refugee
Agency (UNRA) provided support for 96,000 Eritrean refugees in four camps
across northern Tigray. UNRA withdrew at the start of the conflict, and the
camps soon fell under Eritrean control. Witnesses have claimed that Eritrean
soldiers arrested dozens of refugees and forcibly removed them from the camps.
Imagery analysis lends some credence to these claims. DX Open Network, a
British open-source investigations group, analyzed satellite imagery of the
Hitsats and Shimelba refugee camps and concluded that both had been demolished.
Prior to the conflict, the two camps had hosted 25,000 Eritrean refugees. The
status of the refugees remains unknown.
Other
investigations have shed light on alleged massacres committed by Eritrean
troops. In a Feb. 26 report, Amnesty International provided extensive
documentation about a horrific incident in the town of Axum. The report drew on
interviews with 41 ethnic Tigrayans who survived the attack and fled to Sudan.
According to the report, during the afternoon of Nov. 28, 2020, Eritrean
soldiers randomly shot civilians in the streets of Axum, systematically
searched houses, and executed men and boys. Witnesses claim that the soldiers
operated vehicles with Eritrean license plates, wore Eritrean uniforms and
spoke an Eritrean dialect of Tigrinya. The following day, Eritrean troops
reportedly shot at any residents who tried to remove bodies from the streets.
Amnesty International has identified more than 240 victims by name and
estimates that several hundreds may have been killed. Analyzing satellite
imagery, the group may have located signs of mass burial sites in the town.
CNN
also investigated an alleged massacre at a remote monastery in the village of
Dengelat on Nov. 30. They interviewed 12 eyewitnesses, spoke to the relatives
of 20 survivors and collected photographic evidence. According to these
accounts, Eritrean troops attacked the church while hundreds celebrated an
Orthodox festival. As many as 50 people may have died as troops fired on the
church, dragged people from their homes and pursued fleeing residents on
mountain paths. Witnesses claim that the violence continued for three days and
that several children lost their lives.
Finally, analysis indicates that Eritrean forces conducted indiscriminate shelling of dense commercial and residential areas in Tigray, often in conjunction with EDNF operations. For instance, in the town of Humera, a day-long barrage struck a wide array of civilian structures and killed scores of residents. Human Rights Watch employed satellite imagery to identify potential firing positions outside of Humera. The locations, situated on a hill 2.2 miles from Humera, lie just inside Eritrean territory. Both sites bear the telltale blast marks of artillery fire, the positions lie within range of impact sites, and imagery reveals vehicle tracks leading to the locations during the assault. Furthermore, the trajectories corroborate eyewitness accounts from Humera. Eritrea may not bear sole responsibility for civilian casualties, but the evidence strongly suggests its direct involvement.
Regional
Forces and Ethnic Militias
State
parties are not the only perpetrators of such violence. On Nov. 9, as many as
500 civilians—mostly ethnic Amhara seasonal workers—were killed in the western
Tigray town of Mai-Kadra. An Amnesty International report cites several
eyewitnesses who claim that TPLF personnel carried out the attacks. Residents
report that the assailants struck down unarmed civilians with machetes and
knives. When the EDNF and Amhara militias entered the town on Nov. 10, corpses
lay on streets throughout the town’s commercial center. Several photographs
support these claims, and an independent pathologist commissioned by Amnesty
International confirmed that sharp objects caused the wounds. The TPLF is
likely responsible, but they are not alone in perpetuating ethnic violence.
The
New York Times obtained a U.S. government report that outlines Amhara militias’
efforts to “deliberately and efficiently render[] Western Tigray ethnically
homogenous through the organized use of force and intimidation.” The report
goes on to describe “whole villages [that] were severely damaged or completely
erased.” Human Rights Watch debriefed refugees from western Tigray, and their
stories add detail to this narrative. They described the heavy shelling of
Humera, a town near the border with Eritrea and Sudan, and claimed that
Amhara’s regional security force and informal “Fano” militia entered the towns
after the initial EDNF assault. Witnesses report that after the initial
fighting, Amhara security forces and Fano militia detained residents, looted
hospitals and homes, and stole livestock and food stores. According to Human
Rights Watch, many refugees now fear returning home.
Attacks on Health Care Infrastructure
Countless
treaties and centuries of customary international law prohibit belligerents
from attacking medical personnel and hospitals. According to a new Doctors
Without Borders report, the parties have repeatedly violated this norm in
Tigray. Oliver Behn, the general director of Doctors Without Borders, stated
that Tigray’s health care infrastructure has experienced “a deliberate and
widespread attack.” The Doctors Without Borders investigators visited 106
medical facilities between mid-December 2020 and early March 2021 and found
that approximately 70 percent were looted and nearly a third were damaged. Only
13 percent were “functioning normally.” Having observed smashed windows,
discarded medicine and wrecked equipment, investigators concluded that most
facilities were “deliberately vandalized to make them non-functional.”
Furthermore, the investigators noted that both Eritrean and Ethiopian forces
are using health care facilities as bases, depriving the civilian population of
desperately needed resources and exposing the facilities to additional risk.
Such actions constitute grave violations of the law of the war, endanger the
civilian population and hinder an eventual return to normalcy.
The
Road Ahead
After
each alleged incident, a counternarrative quickly develops. On social media, a
cacophony of voices denounces the claims of their opponents, and the
three-month communications blackout has only compounded the confusion.
Admittedly, in a region beset with historic tensions and ethnic rivalry, some
witnesses may fabricate facts or distort accounts. But the consistency and
number of eyewitness reports is telling, and analysis of satellite imagery, photographs
and video has corroborated numerous details. Many specifics remain murky, but
there is little doubt that Tigray has suffered gross violations of the law of
war. Daniel Bekele, the commissioner of the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission,
recently agreed to conduct a joint investigation with the Office of the U.N.
High Commissioner for Human Rights. This is a positive step. But only a truly
independent investigation with unrestricted access will suffice.
During congressional testimony on March 10, Secretary of State Antony Blinken condemned “acts of ethnic cleansing” in western Tigray, called for the removal of Amhara militias and Eritrean forces, and emphasized the need for a full investigation into human rights abuses. On March 17, the House Foreign Affairs Committee issued a joint statement calling for such an investigation and encouraged the U.S. and its partners “to hold perpetrators of human rights abuses accountable.” The next day, President Biden dispatched Sen. Chris Coons for meetings with Abiy in Addis Ababa. Others have called for the U.S. to lean on its Gulf state allies so that they can leverage influence with Eritrea and encourage a full withdrawal. Ultimately, the ability of the international community to facilitate peace remains unclear. Only one fact is certain: Ethiopia is a strategic U.S. partner in an unstable region. But it cannot serve that role if the nation descends into civil war.