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Tag: Eritrea

  • Ethiopia’s Tigray region is caught between past conflict and fears of another

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    MEKELE, Ethiopia (AP) — Gebreegziabher Berehe has stopped waiting for tourists to arrive as many worry about a return to war.

    The tour guide in Ethiopia ’s northern region of Tigray says his bookings have dried up, ATMs in the city of Mekele are empty and he is considering leaving a country where he can no longer afford to live.

    “If war arises again, I think the situation will be even more severe than before,” the 37-year-old Berehe said. “My colleagues and I are now facing serious economic and moral crises, even before hearing the sound of any gun.”

    There is a tense calm in Mekele, the regional capital, but tensions have been rising again between local authorities and Ethiopia’s government in Addis Ababa, the federal capital.

    The recent conflict

    Tigray has been bracing for the possibility of renewed conflict after the parties signed a peace deal in November 2022, ending fighting that killed thousands of people as Ethiopian government troops, backed by allied forces from neighboring Eritrea, fought Tigrayan forces.

    Now, Tigray’s rulers accuse Ethiopian federal authorities of breaching that agreement with drone strikes. At the same time, Ethiopia’s government accuses Eritrea of pivoting to mobilize and fund armed groups in Tigray, with which it shares a border.

    In the feared scenario, Eritrea would team up with the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, the group that governs Tigray, in armed hostilities against Ethiopian forces.

    The conflict that ended in 2022 was brutal, with widespread allegations of sexual violence and the withholding of food as a weapon of war.

    Many residents of Mekele are looking for opportunities to escape any new fighting while they can, recalling the communications blackout and travel restrictions that Ethiopia’s government imposed on the region during the conflict.

    Shifting alliances

    Some observers see a possible war trigger in Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s forceful stance on efforts to regain Red Sea access for landlocked Ethiopia through Eritrea, which was lost when Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia in 1993 after decades of guerrilla warfare.

    Abiy told lawmakers earlier this month that the Red Sea and Ethiopia “cannot remain separated forever.” Yemane Gebremeskel, the Eritrean government spokesperson, dismissed Abiy’s ambition as “delusional malaise” in comments to The Associated Press.

    Eritrea, fearing a military strike on its port of Assab, has responded by warming up to its former rivals, Tigray’s leaders, even as it denies any alliance. That has caused concern in Addis Ababa, where the Ethiopian government is calling up its reserve forces.

    Abiy has tried to build a global image of Ethiopia as a rising power since he took office in 2018. But he has been set back by several conflicts over the years.

    United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has called on all parties to exercise restraint, echoed by the European Union and the United Kingdom, which has warned its citizens against traveling to the region.

    Ethiopian Airlines, the national carrier, on Jan. 29 canceled flights to Tigray after clashes broke out between federal troops and Tigrayan forces in Tselemti district, which is part of an area disputed by Tigray and the neighboring Amhara region. The airline resumed flights on Feb. 3.

    The violence was followed by drone strikes that killed one person and injured another. Tigrayan authorities accused Ethiopian forces of carrying out the attack. Ethiopia’s military didn’t publicly respond to the allegation.

    ‘All we can do is pray’

    The events have affected travel to Tigray, whose ancient rock-hewn churches and dramatic highland landscapes make tourism a rare but vital source of hard currency and employment.

    While Mekele business owners like Berehe worry about lost income, Tigray farmers like Johannes Tesfay worry.

    Tesfay lives north of Mekele in Debretsion, where his family grows chili, potatoes and onions at the base of a mountain range that Eritrean troops used to cross into Ethiopia during the last conflict, trampling over farmland and destroying equipment.

    Supply chain disruptions tied to the renewed tensions have left him gravely concerned.

    “There’s no fuel for my irrigation pumps, there’s no fertilizer and there’s barely any transportation for buyers to bring the produce to market,” he said.

    Asked what he would do if fighting returned to the region, Tesfay looked to the mountains and said, “What can we do? All we can do is pray. We need help from the global community to make some kind of reconciliation between all the forces.”

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  • Clip shows Indian doctor, not Egyptian diplomat, visiting Ethiopia’s Tigray region

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    Ethiopia recently accused Eritrea of collaborating with rebels from the northern Tigray region amid increasing instability in the Horn of Africa and neighbouring countries. A clip widely circulating in Ethiopia claims to show a diplomat from Egypt visiting Tigray after entering the region from Eritrea, suggesting collaboration between Ethiopia’s diplomatic rivals. However, the claim is false: the video shows an Indian surgeon who visited Tigray to provide medical training and treatment.

    The post contains text in Amharic that claims an “Egyptian Ambassador entered Mekelle via Eritrea”.

    The purported ambassador is not identified, nor is the country where he is supposedly posted.

    Mekelle is the capital of the Tigray region. Tigray shares borders with Eritrea, a country that gained its independence from Ethiopia in 1993.

    Screenshot of the false post, taken on October 22, 2025

    The clip was posted on Facebook on October 16, 2025, and has been shared more than 600 times.

    The 8-second video shows leaders of the Tigray region, including its President Tadesse Werede and others, standing in a group and speaking with an individual who appears to be a foreigner.

    An arrow in the video points to the individual, designating him as the “Egyptian ambassador”.

    In the background, a man is seen wearing a vest with the words “Dejen Hospital Security” on the back.

    Similar posts were also shared here and here on Facebook.

    Mounting tensions 

    Tensions between Ethiopia and Egypt remain high following the inauguration of Ethiopia’s Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) on September 9, 2025, which drew protests from its downstream neighbour (archived here).

    AFP also reported that the Ethiopian government recently accused the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) of collaborating with Eritrea to actively prepare for war against Ethiopia (archived here).

    Ethiopia’s federal army and the TPLF fought a bloody two-year war that claimed up to 600,000 lives before it ended with a peace deal in November 2022 (archived here).

    Eritrea dismissed the latest accusation and condemned Ethiopia for “provocative sabre-rattling” (archived here).

    The clip was shared as alleged evidence of secret cooperation between Tigrayan leaders, Eritrean officials, and an Egyptian diplomat illegally visiting Mekelle without approval from Ethiopia’s federal government.

    However, the claim is false.

    Indian doctor 

    AFP Fact Check used InVID-WeVerify to conduct reverse image searches on keyframes from the video.

    The search provided numerous results, including a post in Tigirinya and English on X indicating that the individual seen in the clip is an Indian doctor named Arvind Verma Jangid (archived here).

    A keyword search for Arvind Verma Jangid shows he is listed on several medical websites, such as here and here (archived here and here).

    These describe him as an orthopaedic surgeon in the city of Indore in west-central India.

    Jangid shared multiple photos from his trip to Mekelle on Facebook here and here (archived here and here).

    He wrote: “I am delighted to share that I have successfully completed 109 complex Ilizarov surgeries — all on patients who had previously undergone multiple unsuccessful operations — here in Ethiopia, Africa.”

    Ilizarov surgery is an orthopaedic procedure that uses an external fixator device to lengthen, reshape, or reconstruct bones.

    Although the clip shared in the false post was filmed from a side angle, the individual’s appearance and clothing clearly match photos from Jangid’s own posts.

    <span>Screenshots of the false post (left) and a photo shared on Jangid’s Facebook page, taken on October 23, 2025 </span>

    Screenshots of the false post (left) and a photo shared on Jangid’s Facebook page, taken on October 23, 2025

    Ayder Hospital at Mekelle University also shared a similar report on its official Facebook page, stating that the university hosted basic Ilizarov and limb reconstruction training to strengthen orthopaedic expertise in Ethiopia (archived here).

    The report further stated that the programme featured Jangid, “a renowned limb lengthening and reconstruction surgeon” from India, who conducted training and provided specialised surgical care at Dejen Hospital in Mekelle.

    Again, the photos included in Ayder Hospital’s report correspond to the same individual seen in the clip.

    <span>Screenshots of the false post (left) and a photo shared on Ayder Hospital’s Facebook page, taken on October 23, 2025 </span>

    Screenshots of the false post (left) and a photo shared on Ayder Hospital’s Facebook page, taken on October 23, 2025

    In the hospital’s photos, Jangid is dressed differently, but his features more clearly match the person shown in the clip.

    AFP Fact Check contacted Jangid, who confirmed that the person in the clip was him.

    “Yes, it is me,” Jangid told AFP Fact Check, adding, “We were discussing the treatment of injured patients with Tigray leaders”.

    He further confirmed the location where the clip was recorded. “The video was captured at Dejen Hospital, Mekelle, during the launching ceremony for the limb reconstruction campaign.”

    He said that he provided surgical care for patients and trained local doctors.

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  • Israel’s Netanyahu calls for deportation of Eritrean refugee ‘rioters’

    Israel’s Netanyahu calls for deportation of Eritrean refugee ‘rioters’

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    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he wants Eritrean refugees and migrants involved in a violent clash in Tel Aviv to be deported immediately and has ordered a plan to remove all of the country’s African migrants.

    The remarks came a day after bloody protests by rival groups of Eritreans in south Tel Aviv left dozens of people injured.

    “We want harsh measures against the rioters, including the immediate deportation of those who took part,” Netanyahu said in a special ministerial meeting called to deal with the aftermath of the violence on Sunday.

    He requested that the ministers present him with plans “for the removal of all the other illegal infiltrators,” and noted in his remarks that the Supreme Court struck down some measures meant to coerce the refugees to leave.

    Under international law, Israel cannot forcibly send migrants back to a country where their life or liberty may be at risk.

    Ahead of an official visit to Cyprus, Netanyahu said the ministerial team was seeking to deport 1,000 supporters of the Eritrean government who were involved in Saturday’s violence.

    “They have no claim to refugee status. They support this regime,” Netanyahu said. “If they support the regime so much, they would do well to return to their country of origin.”

    About 25,000 African migrants live in Israel, mainly from Sudan and Eritrea, who say they fled conflict or repression. Israel recognizes very few as asylum seekers, seeing them overwhelmingly as economic migrants, and says it has no legal obligation to keep them.

    On Sunday, Israel’s far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, visited the site of the unrest, voicing his support for the police and calling for those who broke the law to be placed in detention until they are deported. “They don’t need to be here. It’s not their place,” he said.

    Some people heckled Ben-Gvir as he walked with a police escort, telling him to “go home.”

    Al Jazeera’s Paul Brennan, reporting from West Jerusalem, said politicians on both sides of the parliament have had their say in the matter.

    “The far-right coalition of Netanyahu’s government demand that instigators and ringleaders should be deported,” he said, adding that the coalition blames the high court for blocking attempts to deport people in the past.

    “Opposition members of the Knesset say successive governments have failed to grasp this issue and deal with the situation,” Brennan said.

    “There’s politics involved in this,” Brennan noted, adding that Netanyahu “clearly wants to be seen to be doing something”.

    Earlier on Saturday, Eritreans – supporters and opponents of Eritrea’s government – faced off with construction lumber, pieces of metal and rocks, smashing shop windows and police cars.

    Israeli police in riot gear shot tear gas, stun grenades and live rounds while officers on horseback tried to control the protesters.

    Protesters attend violent demonstrations by Eritrean asylum seekers, including both supporters and opponents of the Eritrean government, in Tel Aviv on September 2, 2023 [Moti Milrod/Reuters]

    Under international law, Israel cannot forcibly send migrants back to a country where their life or liberty may be at risk.

    Netanyahu said Sunday that he didn’t think deporting supporters of the Eritrean government would be a problem.

    Al Jazeera’s Brennan said opposition parliamentarians have questioned Netanyahu’s response to the violence, asking him where the refugees would be deported to.

    Israel recognises very few as asylum seekers, seeing them overwhelmingly as economic migrants, and says it has no legal obligation to keep them.

    The country has tried a variety of tactics to force them out, including sending some to a remote prison, holding part of their wages until they agree to leave the country or offering cash payments to those who agree to move to another country, somewhere in Africa. Critics accuse the government of trying to coerce the migrants into leaving.

     

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  • Dozens injured after Eritrean government supporters, opponents clash at protest in Israel

    Dozens injured after Eritrean government supporters, opponents clash at protest in Israel

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    Hundreds of Eritrean government supporters and opponents clashed with each other and with Israeli police Saturday, leaving dozens injured in one of the most violent street confrontations among African asylum seekers and migrants in Tel Aviv in recent memory.

    Among those hurt were 30 police officers and three protesters hit by police fire.

    Eritreans from both sides faced off with construction lumber, pieces of metal, rocks and at least one axe, tearing through a neighborhood of south Tel Aviv where many asylum seekers live. Protesters smashed shop windows and police cars, and blood spatter was seen on sidewalks. One government supporter was lying in a puddle of blood in a children’s playground.

    Israeli police in riot gear shot tear gas, stun grenades and live rounds while officers on horseback tried to control the protesters, who broke through barricades and hurled chunks rocks at the police. Police said officers resorted to live fire when they felt their lives were in danger.

    The clashes came as Eritrean government supporters marked the 30th anniversary of the current ruler’s rise to power. The event was held near the Eritrean embassy in south Tel Aviv. Eritrea has one of the world’s worst human rights records. Asylum seekers in Israel and elsewhere say they fear death if they were to return.

    Israel Eritrea
    Eritrean protesters clash with Israeli riot police in Tel Aviv, Israel, Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023.

    Ohad Zwigenberg / AP


    Police said Eritrean government supporters and opponents had received permission for separate events Saturday, and had promised to stay away from each other.

    At some point, the promises were broken, said Chaim Bublil, a Tel Aviv police commander.

    “A decision was made by the government opponents to break through the barriers, to clash with the police, to throw stones, to hit police officers,” Bublil told reporters at the scene.

    He said the police had arrested 39 people and confiscated tasers, knives and clubs.

    The Magen David Adom rescue service said at least 114 people were hurt, including eight who were in serious condition. The others had moderate or mild injuries. Of those hurt, 30 were police officers, said Bublil.

    A spokesperson for Tel Aviv’s Ichilov Hospital said it was treating 11 patients for gunshot wounds. Police said three protesters were wounded by police fire.

    By late Saturday afternoon, the clashes had stopped. Police were still rounding up protesters, putting them on buses.

    Israel Eritrea
    A supporter of the Eritrean government lies injured and covered in blood after he was hurt by an Anti-Eritrean government activist, during a protest against an event organized by the Eritrea Embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel, Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023.

    Ohad Zwigenberg / AP


    Many of the anti-government protesters wore sky blue shirts designed after Eritrea’s 1952 flag, a symbol of opposition to the government of the east African country, while government supporters wore purple shirts with a map of Eritrea.

    Eritreans make up the majority of the more than 30,000 African asylum seekers in Israel. They say they fled danger and persecution from a country known as the “North Korea of Africa” with forced lifetime military conscription in slavery-like conditions. Eritrea’s government has denounced anti-government protesters as ” asylum scum ” who have marched against similar events in Europe and North America.

    President Isaias Afwerki, 77, has led Eritrea since 1993, taking power after the country won independence from Ethiopia after a long guerrilla war. There have been no elections and there’s no free media. Exit visas are required for Eritreans to leave the country. Many young people are forced into military service with no end date, human rights groups and United Nations experts say.

    Israel Eritrea
    Eritrean protesters clash with Israeli riot police in Tel Aviv, Israel, Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023. 

    Ohad Zwigenberg / AP


    In Israel, they face an uncertain future as the state has attempted to deport them. But despite the struggle to stay, in often squalid conditions, many say they enjoy some freedoms they never would have at home — like the right to protest.

    Eritrean asylum seekers are often “hunted and harassed” by the Eritrean government and its supporters inside Israel, said Sigal Rozen, from the Tel Aviv-based human rights organization Hotline for Refugees and Migrants.

    Events like the one held in Tel Aviv on Saturday are controversial because they raise money for the heavily sanctioned government and are used to pressure Eritreans far from home, said Elizabeth Chyrum, director of the London-based Human Rights Concern — Eritrea.

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  • UN, others cite new displacement from Ethiopia’s Tigray

    UN, others cite new displacement from Ethiopia’s Tigray

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    ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Forces from Ethiopia’s Amhara region have displaced tens of thousands of ethnic Tigrayans from disputed territory in the north of the country in recent weeks despite a peace deal agreed late last year, according to aid workers and internal agency documents seen by the AP.

    The Mai Tsebri area in northwestern Tigray is close to the regional border with Amhara. It changed hands several times during the war, which erupted in 2020 and ended with a ceasefire in November. The Amhara people claim the area as their own.

    Since early March, some 47,000 people uprooted from Mai Tsebri have gone to Endabaguna, a town roughly 55 kilometers (34 miles) further north, according to United Nations figures seen by the AP on Thursday.

    Another report, prepared by a humanitarian agency, says residents fled Mai Tsebri because of “harassment, ethnic profiling and direct threats” from irregular Amhara forces that also carried out “evictions.”

    That report adds that there have been no aid deliveries to Endabaguna since the displaced people started arriving. As a result, it says, they are “on the brink of starvation.”

    The displaced people at Endabaguna are sheltering in a reception center originally built by the U.N. and Ethiopia’s government for refugees from Eritrea, which borders Tigray. The site was badly damaged during the war.

    An aid worker who recently visited the center said conditions there were “very bad” and the number of people was “increasing day by day.”

    “The roofing and pipelines are damaged, there is no toilet and latrine, the doors and windows of the rooms are looted (or) damaged, and there is no proper water supply,” said the aid worker, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

    It was not immediately possible to get a comment from Amhara authorities.

    A second aid worker, who also requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to a reporter, said many of the people recently uprooted from Mai Tsebri were displaced for a second time, having already been forced from their homes in the western part of Tigray.

    Amhara forces annexed western Tigray in the early stages of the war. They stand accused of “ethnic cleansing” by the U.S. State Department after they forcibly deported hundreds of thousands of Tigrayans from the area.

    Under the recent ceasefire, aid deliveries to Tigray resumed after two years of restrictions. However, aid workers say Amhara forces have continued to block food distribution around Mai Tsebri, and residents have reported killings.

    One Mai Tsebri resident, Teferi Muley, said he fled the area in November after he was threatened by Amhara troops, who accused him of helping the Tigray rebels. He said he returned in March to the nearby village of Haida, where he witnessed the shooting of several artisanal gold miners by Amhara troops.

    Last week Ethiopia’s government said it planned to fold the security forces of the 11 federal regions into the national army or police. This prompted a wave of protest across Amhara, as well as gun battles between the federal military and regional Amhara units who refused to disarm.

    Humanitarian officials believe the upheaval will likely lead to an increase in displacements from Mai Tsebri, which already stand at an average of 150 households every day, according to an assessment by another aid agency.

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  • Ethiopia civil war raging again in Tigray region, satellite images appear to confirm

    Ethiopia civil war raging again in Tigray region, satellite images appear to confirm

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    ethiopia-tigray-war-maxar.jpg
    An image provided by Maxar Technologies shows what the company says are Ethiopian and Eritrean troops and tanks in formation near the town of Shiraro, in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, September 26, 2022.

    Satellite image ©2022 Maxar Technologies


    Johannesburg, South Africa — New satellite images have shed some light on the world’s most hidden conflict. The images released by Maxar Technologies appear to confirm that fighting in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region has resumed after a five-month humanitarian ceasefire.

    Satellite images dated September 26 show what Maxar Technologies says are Ethiopian federal forces massed in the northwest town of Shiraro, along with troops from neighboring Eritrea, a close ally of Ethiopia’s federal government. Shiraro sits only about 10 miles from the Eritrean border.

    The images come after recent reports of a military mobilization in Eritrea. On September 15, reports surfaced in the Eritrean capital Asmara that reservists up to the age of 55 had been called up for service. Local media said the reservists were told to bring their own supplies, including blankets, and given just hours to report to their local head offices. 

    The U.S. has imposed sanctions on the Eritrean Defense Forces and the ruling PFDJ party over the country’s involvement in the Ethiopian conflict.  It’s believed that Eritrean soldiers have fought alongside the Ethiopian army since civil war broke out in Tigray in 2020.


    War in Ethiopia fuels humanitarian crisis

    01:56

    Eritrea, a militarized state, is already isolated diplomatically. President Isaias Afwerki considers the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) — the rebel group battling Ethiopia’s government, but based just across his country’s own border — as his enemy, too.

    The town of Shiraro had been under control of the Tigrayan forces until earlier this month, but then word filtered out that Ethiopian troops had driven out the TPLF. The satellite images appear to confirm an offensive by Ethiopian forces, showing tanks and a line of what appears to be more than 100 soldiers in formation near a hospital on the eastern outskirts of the town.

    Other images show what Maxar Technologies identifies as mobilizing forces and artillery positions just south of Shiraro and long lines of buses and military vehicles on the roads. Maxar also released four images from September 19 of heavy weaponry in the town of Serha, near the Tigray boarder. Maxar told CBS News the images show “main battle tanks, self-propelled howitzers and a M-46 field gun battery.”

    eritrea-ethiopia-tigray-tank.jpg
    An image provided by Maxar Technologies shows what the company says is a main battle tank deployment in the town of Serha, Eritrea, near the Tigray region of Ethiopia, on September 19, 2022.

    Satellite image ©2022 Maxar Technologies


    It’s unclear what led the ceasefire to fall apart, but shots were reportedly fired on the southern border of Tigray in the early morning hours of August 24 after five months of at least relative calm. 

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has cut off the Tigray region since the fighting broke out in 2020. All basic services, including phone and internet, banking and even health services have been cut off for some time.

    Abiy has maintained tight control over the country’s media, and journalists are largely unable to visit Tigray. Many international journalists have been barred from entering Ethiopia or thrown out if they were already there. That’s made independently verified information on the conflict incredibly difficult to come by. 

    DRCONGO-US-DIPLOMACY
    U.S. Special Envoy to the Horn of Africa Mike Hammer is seen in an October 5, 2020 file photo speaking to journalists in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) when he served as the U.S. ambassador to the country.

    SEBASTIEN KITSA MUSAYI/AFP/Getty


    “We’ve been tracking Eritrean troops’ movement across the border,” U.S. Special Envoy to the Horn of Africa Mike Hammer told reporters during a briefing last week. “The presence of Eritrean troops in Ethiopia only serves to complicate matters and to inflame an already tragic situation.”

    Neither the Ethiopian nor Eritrean governments have commented on the situation.

    Hammer confirmed that he’d met representatives of the TPLF and the Ethiopian government in the Seychelles for talks, and he said there seemed to have been some agreement about restoring basic services to the region. The government cutting them off has had a devastating impact on the local population.  

    The TPLF has said no peace talks can take place until basic services are restored, and it calls the blockade of Tigray a war crime. 

    On August 2, Hammer, along with United Nations and European Union envoys, visited the Tigrayan regional capital of Mekelle and called for “unfettered humanitarian access” and a “swift restoration of electricity, telecom, banking and other basic services.”

    The United Nations’ World Food Program (WFP) has said that while the ceasefire gave the charity an opportunity to reach some people, it was far short of the 4.8 million Tigrayans estimated to be in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. 


    Conflict over Ethiopia’s Tigray region worsens while diplomats scramble to find a resolution

    05:49

    “We just don’t know,” is a refrain echoed by many aid organizations recently, as they have not had access to Tigray, past sporadic convoys or very limited access. 

    There are no confirmed figures on how many people the war has left to die of hunger and related illnesses since it started in November of 2020, but an investigation carried out by a team of researchers led by Jan Nyssen of Ghent University in Belgium found the toll was likely at least 500,000.

    The U.N. Human Rights Council’s International Commission of Human Rights Experts on Ethiopia concluded in a report published on September 19 that Ethiopia’s government had committed crimes against humanity in the Tigray region, and that Tigryan forces had committed serious human rights abuses, adding that some amounted to war crimes.

    “We have reasonable grounds to believe that the widespread denial and obstruction of access to basic services, food, health care, and humanitarian assistance amounts to the crime against humanity of persecution and inhumane acts,” said Karri Betty Murungi, one of the three U.N. investigators who compiled the report. “We also have reasonable grounds to believe that the federal government is committing the war crime of using starvation as a method of warfare.”

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