Jump to navigation

Eritrea

Abiy makes grudging admission on atrocities in Tigray

As horrendous reports emerge abuses of civilians in the embattled region, Addis Ababa admits involvement of Eritrean troops

International pressure seems to have prompted Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to declare on 26 March that Eritrean troops will withdraw from the Tigray region after reports of their involvement in serial atrocities against civilians.

Abiy has given no timeline for Eritrea's withdrawal yet nor did he comment on reports that Ethiopian troops were involved in some of the incidents.

The admission that Eritrean soldiers had crossed into Tigray follows months of official denials. The agreement for their withdrawal has not been confirmed by President Issayas Afewerki's government.

Abiy's announcement is the first shift in policy by Abiy in the face of mounting international condemnation (AC Vol 61 No 24, War resets the region).

There is still no sign of an end to fighting between Ethiopian troops and Tigrayan People's Liberation Front which has morphed from an official 'policing action' by federal forces into a rumbling guerrilla war. Human rights monitors, including Ethiopia's own commission, have reported abuses and massacres by all sides in recent weeks.

The humanitarian crisis caused by refugees fleeing the region is also becoming increasingly desperate, senior UN officials told Africa Confidential this week.

Abiy's announcement about Eritrea's withdrawal followed a meeting with United States Senator Chris Coons, a close ally of President Joe Biden.



Related Articles

War resets the region

The Federal government’s war with Tigray upsets geopolitics throughout the Horn, and puts Eritrea centre-stage

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's refusal to consider a ceasefire or even mediation continues to attract widespread condemnation. His unflinching stance was underlined when he met an Afr...


Compassion fatigue

In 1984 BBC journalist Michael Buerk made a powerful television film of Ethiopia's 'biblical famine'. In an anniversary film this month, Buerk concluded things had not improved &sh...


Pride and prejudice

Both sides seem to be keen to fight to the death in one of the least explicable wars

On 6 February, Ethiopia launched the first of several attacks to test how deeply Eritrean forces were dug in along the disputed border areas which they had taken over in May-June. ...


Fighting escalates as federal ties fray

As Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed calls for a national war, Tigrayan forces mobilise on three fronts

As fighting was spreading eastwards to Afar Region, on 18 July Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed declared a total war on the Tigray People's Liberation Front, bringing in soldiers from mos...


Tentative

Secret talks in London on 10 March between American lawyers may help unblock the border dispute between Eritrea and Ethiopia, that killed 50-100,000 people in 1998-2000. Both gover...