Ethiopia Risks Lengthy Stalemate in War-Hit Tigray

The war in Ethiopia's northern Tigray region risks dragging on for months and even years, with both sides eyeing a military "knockout blow" that appears unrealistic, the International Crisis Group (ICG) said Friday.
Prime
Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops into Tigray in November to detain and disarm
leaders of the once-dominant regional ruling party, the Tigray People's
Liberation Front (TPLF).
He
said the move came in response to TPLF-orchestrated attacks on federal army
camps.
Abiy
declared victory within weeks, but combat has continued recently in central and
southern Tigray, conflict-prevention group ICG said in a briefing published
nearly five months after the first shots were fired.
The
number of fighters loyal to the TPLF is likely swelling because of rising fury
over atrocities, it said, AFP reported.
Even
though Ethiopia's military has backing from Eritrea and Ethiopia's Amhara
region, which borders Tigray to the south, most TPLF leaders remain on the run
and ICG noted that none were reported captured or killed in February or March.
Pro-TPLF
fighters have regrouped under the Tigray Defense Forces, an armed movement
"led by the removed Tigrayan leaders and commanded by former
high-ranking" military officers, ICG said.
The
resistance is "entrenched" and enjoys popular support from Tigrayans
angry over mass killings and rapes, including those committed by soldiers from
Eritrea, the TPLF's bitter enemy, ICG said.
Amid
mounting international pressure, Abiy said a week ago that Eritrean troops would
pull out of Tigray.
But
the region's interim leader Mulu Nega told AFP this week that withdrawal was
"a process" and would not happen immediately.
Mulu,
who was appointed by Abiy, has previously acknowledged that the Tigrayan
population has "mixed feelings" about his administration's presence
in the region.
He
and other officials, though, have said assumptions that the TPLF enjoys
widespread popular support are misguided and have downplayed its potential to
mount an effective insurgency.
ICG said in its briefing that peace talks seem unlikely in the immediate term, but called on the US, the EU and the African Union to push for a cessation of hostilities and expanded humanitarian access.