Ethiopia's Tigray conflict: Six months on and no end in sight

It has been six months since Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops into Tigray for a military campaign he vowed would be swift and targeted.
But
violence rumbles on, and reports continue to emerge of massacres, rape and
widespread hunger.
- How did we get here? -
Abiy,
winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize, sent troops into Ethiopia's northernmost
region in November to detain and disarm leaders of the Tigray People's
Liberation Front (TPLF), the regional ruling party that had dominated national
politics for three decades.
He
said the move came in response to TPLF attacks on army camps.
It
also followed months of tensions, including Tigray's holding of unauthorised
elections.
The
TPLF initially denied firing the first shots and said Abiy was seeking an
excuse to invade the region.
- How bad is the fighting? -
After
a few weeks of air strikes and heavy fighting, federal forces took control of
the regional capital Mekele in late November.
Abiy
declared victory and his government downplayed the TPLF's ability to mount an
insurgency.
But the fighting has not ended.
Addressing
diplomats in Mekele in March, General Yohannes Gebremeskel Tesfamariam, head of
a command post in Tigray, described a "dirty war" with no fronts that
was causing suffering for "defenceless victims".
Abiy
said earlier this month that Ethiopia's military is fighting "on eight
fronts" in hotspots including Tigray, where pro-TPLF fighters have adopted
"guerrilla" tactics.
The
UN's latest humanitarian update for Tigray, published Tuesday, describes
"active hostilities reported in the central, eastern and northwestern
parts of the region."
"Fighting is still going on and it
appears that it is even intensifying in some parts, which makes me believe that
apparently there cannot be a military solution to this conflict," Janez
Lenarcic, the EU commissioner for crisis management, told AFP.
- Who is involved? -
Ethiopia's
military leaned on forces from the country's Amhara region, south of Tigray, to
secure western and southern Tigray after pro-TPLF troops fled.
The
government in Amhara has made no secret of its plans to annex those
territories, which it accuses the TPLF of illegally incorporating when it came
to power in the early 1990s.
US
Secretary of State Antony Blinken has told Congress that "ethnic
cleansing" is unfolding in western Tigray, with Amharas driving out
Tigrayans -- something Amhara and federal officials deny.
Abiy
has also received support from Eritrea's army, which is accused of some of the
conflict's worst atrocities, including mass rapes and massacres that have left
hundreds dead.
Both
countries denied Eritrea's role until late March when Abiy finally acknowledged
it before lawmakers.
He
then said the Eritreans would withdraw, but so far that has not happened
despite multiple appeals from abroad.
TPLF
leaders, meanwhile, remain on the run and say their forces are gathering
momentum and recruiting from disaffected Tigrayans.
Continued
access restrictions for the media make such claims difficult to independently
verify.
- How is the world responding? -
Last
week the UN Security Council unanimously approved its first statement on the
conflict, expressing "deep concern" over widespread rights violations
and calling for a scaled-up humanitarian response.
It
came after multiple meetings going back to November that had failed to yield
any kind of concrete outcome.
In
the US, Trump-era Secretary of State Mike Pompeo once praised Eritrea for its
"restraint" but his successor Blinken has repeatedly demanded that
the Eritreans leave.
The
Biden administration has also appointed a special envoy to the Horn of Africa,
veteran diplomat Jeffrey Feltman.
The
European Union announced in December it was postponing nearly 90 million euros
($109 million) in budget support payments to Ethiopia.
Lenarcic
told AFP that funding would not resume without unfettered humanitarian access
and an "independent, credible" investigation of rights abuses
committed during the conflict.
The
African Union, for its part, has been relatively quiet since calling for a
cessation of hostilities in November.
Abiy
has rejected appeals from high-level AU envoys for talks with Tigrayan leaders,
sticking to his line that the conflict is a limited "law and order"
operation.
- What is the humanitarian situation? -
Fighting
in Tigray disrupted the harvest in a region that was already food insecure.
The
Abiy-appointed interim government estimates that some 4.5 million people now
need food assistance.
"Further deterioration is expected as
the conflict continues and disrupts the next planting season," the UN said
Tuesday.
Briefing
the UN Security Council on April 16, Mark Lowcock, undersecretary-general for
humanitarian affairs, said he had received reports of 150 people "dying
from hunger" in one part of southern Tigray.
That
figure could not be verified, and Ethiopia responded by saying no one had died
from hunger during the war.
Government
documents reviewed by AFP this week said Eritrean troops were blocking and
looting food aid in Tigray.