Monday, 30 November 2020 21:07

Harnnet Magazine Tigrinia Issue # 76

Written by

Child-survivors, family members, relatives, Kerenites and compatriots of Eritrea’s worst single-day massacre at Ona, in the outskirts of Keren, came together this 28 November  via a Zoom conference to commemorate the 50th anniversary of that extremely sad occurrence. On the other hand, their neighbors in Ethiopia were this weekend mourning and still counting their dead of their own Ona: Mai-Kadra, 440 kms away down in north western Tigray.

From Eritrean Ona Massacre to Ethiopian Mai Kadra 2 1

In both Ona and Mai-Kadra, estimates of the victims are put at around 800 each. Also in both places, the victims were innocent citizens who had very little to do with the big politics of their leaders - their blindfolded elite - who failed and continue to fail to resolve differences through civilized means. We cannot deny that the peoples of the entire region share a history of endless wars and their legacy of a mindset that wrongly values a meaningless bravado ‘earned’ through violence. Unfortunately, those bad legacies are not behind us. We may be condemned to live counting more and more of Onas and Mai-Kadras for decades to come unless we decide to change our ways.

For now, let us have a quick look at Eritrea’s Ona Massacre and related mass murders that Ethiopia and its army mercilessly inflicted upon so many innocent lives for so many years in Eritrea: 1961-1991.

Eritrean Massacres Were/Are Little known to Ethiopians

Today, many Eritreans join their Ethiopian neighbors in mourning the dead of Mai-Kadra and the thousands of young Ethiopians on both sides of the war in Tigray province. On the other hand, very few Ethiopians knew what went on in Eritrea during its 30-year war for self-determination and national independence. Among the few Ethiopians who knew were people like the former Ethiopian president, Negasso Gidada, who was told the massacre in Ona and Besik-Dira by his then classmate Michael Ghaber, who lost his aunt with eight family members at Ona.

The late Negasso Gidada wrote in his memoirs that it was from the story of Ona and Besik-Dira that he heard for first time about the war in Eritrea. My press colleagues at Addis Ababa’s Berhanen Selam and our daily contacts in those years would also have said the same about having heard from me on the wanton killings that raged in Eritrea in those years. Their list would include fairly well known names like Baalu Ghirma, the author of ‘Oromai; Abbe Gubegna, the author of ‘Aliweledim;’ Menghistu Ghedamu, Yacob Woldemariam, Yohannes Disasa and a few more. In other words, it was very few Ethiopians of our generation who knew about the numerous Mai-Kadras inflicted upon innocent Eritreans by the Ethiopian army. Sadly, those remain unrecognized by many Ethiopians. This is mainly because of the failure of the failed party misruling Eritrean for the past 29 years.

The Ona and Basik-Dira Massacres

These two sad incidents are usually mentions together because they occurred within 24 hours shared between 30 November and 1 December of 1970. Although killings and burning of innocent villagers was the norm in those days in Eritrea, the immediate cause for the Ona and Besik-Dira massacres is attributed to an ELF ambush and killing on 21 November of General Teshome Ergetu, the commander of Ethiopia’s second division in Asmara. He was in a convoy towards Keren to re-launch a wave of scorched-earth operations in the lowlands following intensification of guerrilla activities that year, including the de-railing of a train near Keren.  

Besik-Dira: 119 dead

Within a few days of the General’s death, killing and burning contingents of the Ethiopian army were deployed in the region north of Keren. Villages were burned and scattered human corpses were to be found in every dale and hill of the region.

On 30 November, 1970, it was the turn of Besik-Dira, 8 kms north of Keren. Christians in the village were asked to stand on one side and Moslems on the other. But the villagers refused to do so saying that they were one people inseparable on religious grounds and that they were willing to die or live together. All of them, estimated at 200, were then forced to enter into the small village Mosque, one body over the other.  Machine guns planted at the two windows opened fire, and continued doing so until complete silence reigned. Later on, those who died instantly were counted at 119 children, men and women. The rest, who miraculously survived death lying beneath dead body, were left with their painful wounds and life-time and disabilities.

Ona: Over 800 Dead

That Black Monday of 30 November in Besik-Dira was immediately followed by Black Tuesday, 1 December 1970, when it was decided to be the turn of Ona, a village only 4-5 kms north of Keren. It was in fact not one village by then but  a huge concentration camp for peasant farmers who were earlier forced to come to Ona after their villages were burned down in the previous months. Gunning down of innocent citizens near Ona was started in the eve although the major assault with heavy weapons and machine guns started in the early morning of 1st of December 190. By late afternoon, the once big ‘village’ of Ona was not there together with about two-thirds of its inhabitants.

The corpses buried in mass graves on the second day, 2 December, numbered 713. Of  about 300 souls, who did not die immediately, were left with severe wounds  and many died in succeeding days and weeks. 

Some of the infants who were found on the breasts of their dead mothers 50 years ago were among the Zoom conference attendants of 28 November 2020.

Eritrean Victims of Ethiopian Massacres.

 Eritreans today easily list over 20 major massacres inflicted by the Ethiopian army, although the worst one-day such incident was that of Ona. Countless persons continued to die in prisons and smaller groups through the years. Unfortunately, the exact count of Eritrea’s innocent victims had not been known, as we also don’t know the victims of the past 29 years under the homegrown dictator. They  all remained rough estimates.  

Ethiopia’s earliest admission of killings in Eritrea was made in June 1978 by Colonel Menghistu Haile Mariam, then head of Ethiopia’s military junta, when he said that up to 50,000 civilians had been victimized in the war till that year. Major Dawit Woldegiorghis, who as a governor in Eritrea, admitted in his book, Red Tears, that up to 280,000 civilian Eritreans were killed between 1975 and 1983.

Journalist-author Michela Wrong, in her book on Eritrea entitled I Didn’t Do it for You, put the figure of 200,000 civilians killed. On its part, a known British magazine, The Economist of 20 October 1990, estimated civilian victims of the 30-year war and related consequences at about 500,000.

Yet, all those war crimes and genocidal acts of the Ethiopian army in Eritrea remain widely unknown, unrecognized, let alone to be compensated or apologized for. This is one of the inexcusable failures of independent Eritrea. But let us hope the day will come when justice will be served and all actors of war crimes and genocides are put to accountability.

May the victims of today’s Mai-Kadra in Ethiopia, the victims of Ona and Beskik-Dira of 50 years ago this month, and all other victims of mass killings of in our region rest in peace.

NOVEMBER 28, 2020  ETHIOPIANEWS

It was early evening when Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed put out a Tweet proclaiming that the military operation had been “completed” – all that remained was a policing operation to capture the leaders of the TPLF.

But what happened next suggests that the Tigrayans retain a serious military capability.

The Eritrean capital, Asmara was hit by missles after the fall of Mekelle.

The US Embassy in Asmara put out this message on their website.

“Security Alert – U.S. Embassy Asmara, Eritrea

Message:  At about 10:13pm on November 28 there were six explosions in Asmara.
The Embassy again advises all U.S. Citizens in Eritrea to continue to exercise caution, remain in their homes (when not at work), conduct only essential travel, and to remain situationally aware of the ongoing conflict in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia.  US Citizens not in country should avoid travel to Eritrea.”
This would suggest that the Tigrayans managed to move missile launchers away from Mekelle, and that they are still able to strike targets deep inside Eritrea. If this is confirmed then this war would appear to be far from over, and nowhere near the police operation suggested by Prime Minister Abiy.
There are unconfirmed reports of heavy fighting between Tigrayan and Eritrean forces inside Eritrea this evening. Troop movements are also reported inside Eritrea.
While Tigray has faced offensives from Ethiopian Federal Forces, supported by Amhara militia, from the South and East, they have also faced attacks from Eritrean divisions from the North.
The Ethiopian military are reported to have been reinforced by Ethiopian troops flown into the Eritrean capital, Asmara, as well as Ethiopian troops who fled into Eritrea when the Tigrayans seized the Northern Command on 4 October.

NOVEMBER 29, 2020  ETHIOPIANEWS

Source: Human Rights Concern-Eritrea

Ethiopia- Thousands of Eritrean Refugees Abducted from Tigray Camps by Eritrean Armed Forces

Reports are emerging that 6,000 Eritrean Refugees, who were living in two of the four refugee camps and in the town of Shire in the Tigray Regional State of Ethiopia, have been abducted by Eritrean armed forces working in Tigray with the permission of the Ethiopian army. It is understood that the refugees were removed at gunpoint from the Shimelba and Hitsats camps and Shire town and are being forcibly returned to Eritrea.

Following a period of electoral and constitutional disputes, Prime Minister of Ethiopia, Abiy Ahmed, ordered Federal forces on 4th November to move into Tigray and impose a state of emergency by force. Heavy fighting has occurred ever since, with Eritrean armed forces apparently active alongside Ethiopian armed forces. It would appear that the Ethiopian government has allowed Eritrean military personnel total freedom to deal with Eritrean citizens in Tigray as they see fit.

There are up to 100,000 Eritrean refugees in Tigray, almost half of them, living largely in four United Nations-sponsored camps, Hitsats, Mai-Aini, Adi-Harush and Shemelba. However, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) is currently unable to provide them with protection, food or health care.

Human Rights Concern-Eritrea (HRCE) commented in a Press Release earlier this month that there was a very real danger that Eritrean refugees might be driven out of the camps, kidnapped or forcibly returned to Eritrea, where arrest, imprisonment, torture and possible execution would almost certainly be their fate.

These camps are under the official protection of the UNHCR. The Ethiopian Government is directly responsible to UNHCR for the safety of refugees in the camps. Under international law the Ethiopian Government must ensure the safety of all refugees in its care, and is responsible for preventing any criminal acts against them. Under the UN Convention on the Status of Refugees, No State shall expel or return (” refoule “) a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened.”

Elizabeth Chyrum, Director of HRCE, has issued the following statement: –

  • “The criminal kidnapping of defenceless Eritrean refugees must be stopped. Eritrean troops must not be allowed anywhere near these Eritrean refugees, for whose protection Ethiopia is primarily responsible.The decision of the Ethiopian government not to protect refugees in its territoryis an utter dereliction of duty. Allowing refugees to be abducted by troops whom they fled in the first place is tantamount to a crime against humanity.
  • If refugees from Eritrea are forcibly returned to the country from which they have fled, arrest, imprisonment and torture are almost certain to be their fate. This must be prevented.
  • The very lives and survival of Eritreans in the refugee camps are now hugely endangered. It is vital that the Ethiopian government takes action, protects the camps, and prevents the Eritrean army or any security agents from having any access to the camps and those dwelling in them.
  • It appears that these refugees were abandoned by the humanitarian organizations including the UNHCR that were responsible for their care. Why has no one raised their voice against the inhuman treatment of the defenceless refugees? This would appear to be a dereliction of responsibility by those in charge of the camps.
  • The UNHCR must be given full access to the camps and provided with safe corridors to supply all necessary food and medical services to these refugees.

 

  • HRCE is appealing most urgently to all member states of the UN to intervene and put pressure on the governments of Ethiopia and Eritrea to give immediate priority to the protection of Eritrean refugees.” 

Human Rights Concern – Eritrea (HRCE)

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

+44 7958 005 637

www.hrc-eritrea.org

NOVEMBER 29, 2020  ETHIOPIANEWS

Source: BBC

Viewpoint: How Ethiopia is undermining the African Union

By Alex de Waal

IMAGE COPYRIGHTOFFICE OF THE PRIME MINISTER
image captionPrime Minister Abiy Ahmed (L) held talks with ex-Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and two other former presidents

Ethiopia took the lead in creating Africa’s continental organisation, the African Union (AU), but Ethiopia analyst Alex de Waal argues that its actions are now jeopardising the body’s founding principles.

Shortly before three former African heads of state arrived in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, to seek a peaceful resolution to the conflict in the northern Tigray region, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed ordered what he called the “final phase of our rule of law operations”.

This was a remarkable rebuff.

Former Presidents Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia, Joachim Chissano of Mozambique and Kgalema Motlanthe of South Africa met Mr Abiy on Friday, but were told that the Ethiopian government would continue its military operations.

Mr Abiy also said that they could not meet any representatives of the group Ethiopia is fighting in Tigray, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which the prime minister has dismissed as a “criminal clique”.

IMAGE COPYRIGHTEPA
image captionMembers of the Ethiopian Tigrayan community in South Africa have been protesting over the conflict

Citing the Charter of the United Nations in a statement earlier in the week, the prime minister insisted that the federal government was engaged in a domestic law-enforcement operation and the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign nation applied.

But Nigerian legal expert Chidi Odinkalu argues that Ethiopia is using the charter to escalate a war, the opposite of its pacific intent, saying that the “audacity of this position is disconcerting”.

He points out that the conflict is already internationalised, because Eritrea is entangled and refugees are crossing into Sudan.

Also, the United Nations has adopted principles to prevent states abusing the doctrine of non-interference to give themselves impunity to commit atrocities.

Since 1981, conflict resolution has been a duty and a right. Since 2005, states have had the responsibility to protect civilians in conflict.

Fears of war crimes

In rebuffing the African mediators, Mr Abiy is not just turning down a peace initiative. He is challenging the foundational principles of the African Union itself.

Article 4(g) of the AU’s Constitutive Act – to which Ethiopia acceded in 2002 – does specify “non-interference by any member state in the internal affairs of another”.

But this is immediately followed by Article 4(h), which gives the AU the right “to intervene in a member state… in respect of grave circumstances, namely: war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity”.

This so-called “duty of non-indifference” was adopted in the wake of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.

It was first formulated by an International Panel of Eminent Personalities, strongly supported by Ethiopia, which was brought together to recommend how Africa should prevent such atrocities in the future. “Non-indifference” is Africa’s version of the UN’s “responsibility to protect”.

MAGE COPYRIGHTGETTY IMAGES
image captionEthiopia accuses the TPLF of killing 600 civilians in Mai Kadra, which it has denied

The Ethiopian government has itself accused the TPLF of carrying out atrocities, and observers fear that when the news blackout is lifted, evidence of war crimes by both sides will come to light.

There are unconfirmed reports that Eritrean troops have crossed the border and rounded up Eritrean refugees in United Nations camps in Tigray, which would be a violation of the United Nations convention on refugees.

Ethiopia’s diplomatic triumph

The Organisation of African Unity (OAU) was founded in 1963, with its headquarters in Addis Ababa, with the aim of consolidating the newly won independence of African states.

IMAGE COPYRIGHTAFP
image captionEthiopia’s Emperor Haile Selassie (L) was a prime mover in the OAU’s establishment

Locating the OAU in Ethiopia was a diplomatic triumph for Emperor Haile Selassie, who had long championed international law.

Famously, his 1936 speech at the League of Nations predicted that if Italy’s invasion of Ethiopia were to go unpunished, the world would be bathed in blood.

The OAU was a common front for Africa’s liberation from colonial and racist rule.

But it also served as a club of autocrats, who held to their common interest of staying in power no matter what. Tanzania’s founding President, Julius Nyerere, lamented that it had become “a trade union of heads of state”.

By the 1990s it was clear that the OAU needed to be refashioned to be able to respond to Africa’s wars, coups and atrocities, and in 2002 the AU was created with a far more ambitious agenda of promoting peace and democracy.

Since then it has developed a set of mechanisms that include suspending countries where there is an unconstitutional change in government, and offering help to mediate conflicts, along with an obligation for conflict-afflicted countries to welcome good-faith peacemaking efforts.

How the African Union has helped

Mr Abiy himself intervened in the Sudanese crisis last year when he sought a peaceful resolution to the confrontation between the pro-democracy movement and the military, which had unseated President Omar al-Bashir.

The formula for Sudan’s transition to democracy was drawn up on the AU’s template.

But the AU is not a strong institution. It has a low budget and cannot impose its will.

More powerful states and organisations can overrule it – as Nato did when the AU sought a negotiated settlement to the Libya conflict in 2011, but the United States, European and Arab countries pursued regime change.

The AU’s real value lies in its soft power: it articulates the norms of peace and cooperation and persuades African leaders to go along, knowing that they rise together and sink together.

Over time, it has proven its value: Africa has become more democratic and peaceable.

A generation ago, African diplomatic efforts to avoid conflicts or resolve them were rare. Today, they are standard practice.

NOVEMBER 29, 2020  ETHIOPIANEWS

Tigrayan television has shown images of a plane shot down and shown the pilot

Tigray forces claim to have shot down Ethiopian plane, taken town

Source: Reuters

By 

There was no immediate comment from the government or the military on the claims made by Debretsion Gebremichael, leader of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in text messages to Reuters.

Claims from all sides are difficult to verify since phone and internet links to Tigray have been down and access tightly controlled since the fighting began on Nov. 4.

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government has been trying to quell a rebellion by the TPLF, a powerful ethnically-based party that dominated the central government from 1991 until Abiy came to power in 2018.

Thousands of people are believed to have been killed and nearly 44,000 have fled to Sudan since the fighting began. The conflict has been another test for Abiy, who took office two years ago and is trying to hold together a patchwork of ethnic groups that make up Ethiopia’s 115 million people.

RELATED COVERAGE

Abiy said on Saturday evening federal troops had taken control of the Tigrayan capital Mekelle within hours of launching an offensive there, laying to rest fears of protracted fighting in the city of 500,000 people.

The prime minister, who refers to the three-week-old conflict as an internal law and order matter and has rebuffed international offers of mediation, said federal police would now try to arrest TPLF “criminals” and bring them to court.

It was not clear if any TPLF leaders had surrendered or been apprehended since Saturday. Their whereabouts are also unknown.

TPLF leader Debretsion said on Saturday evening in a series of text messages to Reuters that his forces were withdrawing from around the city but would fight on, raising the spectre of a drawn-out guerrilla war.

In text messages on Sunday, he said that his forces had shot down an Ethiopian military plane and captured the pilot, and had also retaken the town of Axum.

Also on Sunday, Ethiopian state TV (ETV) said on Sunday that 70 graves, some individual and some containing multiple bodies were found in the town of Humera in Tigray. The news reader did not say who might have killed the people buried in the graves.

Regional diplomats and experts have warned that a rapid military victory might not signal the end of the conflict.

The TPLF has a history of guerrilla resistance. Tigray’s mountainous terrain and borders with Sudan and Eritrea helped the TPLF during its long struggle against Marxist dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam, whom it eventually toppled in 1991.


Source: Reuters

Tigrayan forces say they have retaken Ethiopian town of Axum from military

ADDIS ABABA — The leader of rebellious forces from Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region said on Sunday in a text message to Reuters that his fighters had retaken the town of Axum from the federal military.

Debretsion Gebremichael, leader of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), made the claim a day after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced the military had taken the Tigray regional capital Mekelle and completed its operation.

Claims from all sides have been difficult to verify as phone and internet links to Tigray have been down and access has been tightly controlled since fighting erupted on Nov. 4. (Reporting by Addis Ababa newsroom Editing by Frances Kerry)

ብዕለት 27.11.2020 ጨንፈር ፍራንክፉርትን ከባቢኡን ምስዚ ህልዊ ኩነታት ናይ ኮቪድ-19 ብዝጥዕም ብናይ አለክትሮኒክ መራኸቢ ብምጥቃም ወርሓዊ  ኣኼባኡ ኣካይዱ። ኣኼባ ብናይ ኣቦመንበር ጨንፈር እንቋዕ ብደሓን መጻእኩምን ካብዚ ንዓለምና ኣሸጊሩ ዘሎ ለበዳ ሕማም ደሓን ክህልዉ ብምምናይን ተኸፊቱ። ቀጺሉ እዚ ዝስዕብ ኣጀንዳታት ተነቢቡ፡-

1- ውሽጣዊ ኩነታት ጨንፈርን ሰደህኤን፤

2- ኣተሃላልዋ ተቓወምቲ ሓይልታትን ደለይቲ ፍትሕን፤

3- ህልዊ ኩነታት ውግእ ትግራይን ጽልዋኡን ዝብሉ ኔሮም

ኣብቲ ዝቐረበ ኣጀንዳታት ሓደ ብሓደ ብምዝታይ ድማ መግለጺታትን ምርድዳኣትን ተኻይዱ። ኣብቲ ቀዳማይ ኣጀንዳ፡ ጨንፈርና ሓያልን ድኹምን ጐድንታትና ብምግምጋምን፡ እቲ ብጽፉፍን ኣድማዕን ክንሰርሓሉ ዘሎንና ጉዳያት ድማ ተቢዕና ክንደፍኣሉ ምዃንናን ኣስሚርናሉ።

ካልኣይ: ኣብዚ ንዓለምና ብምልኡ ቀዳማይ ኣሻቓሊ ጉዳይ ኮይኑ ዘሎ ውግእ ዞናና ብዝርዝር ድሕሪ ምዝታይ፡ እቲ ቀንዲ ሃንዳስን ብቀጥታ ተዋስኣይን ናይ ኤርትራ ውልቀ መላኺ ኢሳያስ ኣፎርቂ ምዃኑ ኣኼባ መዚኑ። ዲክታቶር ኢሳያስ ብዘይውግእ ክነብር ስለ ዘይክእል፡ ነዚ ውሽጣዊ ግርጭት ናይ ኢትዮጵያ ከም ጽቡቕ ኣጋጣሚ ብምውሳድ፡ ንኣቢዪ ኣሕመድ ቀ.ሚ.ኢትዮጵያ ከም መሳርሒ ብምጥቃም፡ ንነዊሕ ዓመታት ኣብ ልዕሊ ትግራይ ሕነ ንምፍዳይ ሕኒን ክብለሉ ዝጸንሐ፡ ንምሉእ ዞናና ዘብርስ ኣዕናዊ ውግእ ከም ዝኽፈት ጌሩ። እቲ ውግእ ሕጂ ኣብ ብረታዊ ደረጃ ተሰጋጊሩ እምበር፡ ቀ.ሚ.ኢትዮጵያ ኣብ ስልጣን ካብ ዝመጽእ ኣትሒዙ፡ ቁጠባውን ማሕበራውን ፖለቲካውን ናይ ዘርኢ ምጥፋእ ዝዕላምኡ ውግእ ክካየድ ከም ዝጸንሐ ኩላትና ክንዕዘቦ ከም ዝጸናሕና ኣኼባ ርእዩ።

ሳልሳይ፡ እቲ ውግእ ንምሉእ ዞናናን ዓለምናን ዝጸሉን፡ ብፍላይ ድማ ንህዝብታት ኢትዮጵያን ኤርትራን ዘብርስ ምዃኑ ኣኼበኛ መዚኑ። እቲ ቀንዲ ንዓለም ኣደናጊሩ ዘሎ ድማ፡ መለኽቲ መራሕቲ ኣብ ትግራይ ኢንተርነትን ኤለትሪክን ብምዕጻው ኩሉ ግፍዕታት ብምሽፋን፡ ዓለም ብሓደ ወገን ዝወሃብ ሓበሬታ ጥራሕ ስለ እትሰንቕ ዘላ‘ዩ። እቲ ኢሰብኣዊ ዝኾነ ግፍዕታት ኣብ ልዕሊ ህዝቢ ትግራይን ህዝቢ ኤርትራን ድማ፡ ሓላፍነቱ ነዞም ክልተ መራሕቲ ኤርትራን ኢትዮጵያን ምሉእ ብምሉእ ዘሰክም ምኻኑ ኣኼበኛ ርእዩ።

ካብዚ ብምብጋስ:

1 - ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ብመላኺ ኢሳያስ ተጐቲቱ፡ መንእሰያቱ ተገፊፎም ኣብ ዘይምልከቶም ውግእ እናተጠብሱ ይሃልቁ ስለ ዘለዉን፤

2- ሰራዊት ኢትዮጵያ ንሓይሊ ባሕርን ሓይሊ ኣየርን ኤርትራ ተኪኦም ንመዕርፎ ነፈርትን ወደባትን ኤርትራ  ምሉእ ብምሉእ ክጥቀሙሉን፡ ኤርትራ ናይ ሰራዊቶም  መበገሲትን መዋግኢ ሜዳን ከም ዝቐየሩዋን፤

3 - ኣብ ትግራይ ዝርከቡ ካብ 100 ሽሕ ንላዕሊ ዝኾኑ ሕጋዊ ናይ ዑቝባ መሰል ዝተዋህቦምን ዘይተዋህቦምን ኣብ ናይ ሞት ሓደጋ ወዲቖም ምህላዎምን፤

4 - ብዓቢኡ ድማ ውልቀመላኺ ኢሳያስ ንነዊሕ እዋን ከም ናይ ሕቡእ ኣጀንዳኡ ሒዝዎ ዝጸንሐ እሞ ሕጂ ዝተጋህደ ንልዑላውነት ኤርትራ ኣሕሊፉ ናይ ምሃብን፤ ኣኼበኛ ርእዩ።

በዚመሰረት፡

1 - ውግእ ደው ክብል፡

2ይ - ኣብ ትግራይ በዚ ውግእ ምኽንያት ትግራዎትን ኤርትራውያንን ሲቪላውያን ቅልጡፍ ረድኤት ናይ ኣህጉራዊ ትካላትን መንግስታትን ክረኽቡ፡

3 - ምልካዊ ኢሳያስ ኣብ ጉዳይ ኢትዮጵያ ኢዱ ክስሕብን ሰራዊቱ ካብ ትግራይ ክወጹን፡

4 - ሰራዊት ኢትዮጵያ ድማ ካብ መሬት ኤርትራ ክወጹን፡ ልዑላውነት ኤርትራ ክኽበርን ብምባል፤

ኩሎም ተቓወምቲ ፖለቲካዊ ሓይልታትን፡ ደለይቲ ፍትሒን፡ ምሁራትን፡ ሲቪክ ማሕበራትን ኤርትራውያን፥ ካብቲ ቅድሚ ሕጂ ክሰርሑዎ ዝጸንሑ ብሰላማዊ ሰልፍታትን ናብ ዝተፈላለዩ ትካላትን መንግስታትን መጸዋዕታታት ምቕራብን ብዝያዳ፡ ቅልጡፍን ዝተወሃሃደን ጥሙር ንጥፈታት ቃልሲ ከካይዱ ኣኼበኛ ተማሕጺኑ።

ኣብ መወዳእታ ኣኼበኛ ነቲ በማእከላይ ባይቶ ዝወጸ መግለጺ ናይዚ እዋናዊ ጉዳይ ምሉእ ደገፉ ብምግላጽ ኣኼባ ተደሚዲሙ፡

NOVEMBER 28, 2020  ETHIOPIANEWS

This news comes from two different sources.

It has been gathered from the camps holding some 100,000 Eritrean refugees in Tigray.


Mai Ayni: The camp (home to 21,682 residents according to UNHCR) is calm now, having been the scene of fighting earlier in the week. They were visited by a humanitarian agency (not identified) who attempted to re-assure the residents. The camps still have no certainty that they will be re-supplied at the end of this month.
There is no news at all from two of the other camps – Shimelba (8,702 residents) or Hitsats (25,248).
An Eritrean mother in the Eritrean town of Dekemhare (40 km South-East of the Eritrean capital, Asmara) saw her son on one of three busses that were being driven northwards. She recognised him and said that he had previously been in Shimelba camp, as a refugee.
There are unconfirmed reports of Eritrean refugees being forcibly enlisted from the camps, to participate in the attack on Mekelle. Many of the younger refugees would have had military training before they fled across the Eritrean border into Ethiopia.
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Isaias’s Occupying Forces Roundup (Giffa) Refugees in Tigray

At dawn, Thursday 27 November 2020, over 3,000 (exact number TBC) young refugees were rounded up in Hitsats  refugee camp in Tigray by Eritrean Forces. Their current whereabouts remains unknown.  Hitsats camp has been under the Eritrean occupying forces for about two weeks and the refugees have been increasingly worried about their fate.

The remaining women and children in Hitsats refugee camp are concerned and panicking, fearful that they could be used as human shield by Eritrean and Ethiopian forces who are pushing towards Mekelle – Tigray’s main city with approximately 500,000 inhabitants.

In addition, Eritrean forces have rounded up unknown number of refugees from Shimelba refugee camp in Tigray. These roundups of refugees are against international law because they breach the fundamental rights of refugees to safety and security.

A large number of refugees worried about what is happening in Hitsats and Shimelba are fleeing the camps, with some of them crossing into the Amhara region. This is a tragedy because the Amahara are the main forces pushing into Tigray in collaboration with Eritrean forces. These refugees may also end up in the hands of the Eritrea regime from whom they fled in the first place.

The refugees at Hitsats who find themselves in this tragic conflict between the Tigrayan forces on the one hand and Eritrean/Ethiopian forces on the other hand, and are in serious danger of death or injury. So far, 5 refugees have killed. Over the last two weeks these refugees have not had food, health care and they have been denied their right to safety and security.

All humanitarian organisations have left Tigray, leaving over 100,000 Eritrean refugees to fend for themselves and they are at the mercy of Eritrean forces. They face thirst, hunger and lack of medical care as well as routine rounding up by Eritrean forces.

Some of the refugees who are unable to escape from the camps say the tragedy unfolding in the area could be on a scale the world has not seen before, and must be halted immediately.

The refugees plead to the Eritrean diaspora in Europe, North America and elsewhere to call on the UN and the International Community to help find a peaceful resolution to this unnecessary and catastrophic conflict.

Message received by ATV, 27 November 2020 (Translated from Tigrinya to English)

 
 
 

NOVEMBER 28, 2020  ETHIOPIANEWS

This report comes following the timely warning from senior American African experts as this crisis was erupting that the conflict might result in the collapse of Ethiopia itself. As they pointed out this could result in a “fragmentation of Ethiopia” which “would be the largest state collapse in modern history,” with consequences for the entire region.

How they have issued this warning.

Source: US Institute of Peace

Ethiopia’s Problems Will Not End with a Military Victory

Substantial efforts are needed to reduce political tensions ahead of elections in 2021.

Tuesday, November 24, 2020 / BY: Aly Verjee

PUBLICATION TYPE: Analysis and Commentary

As violence continues over control of the northern Ethiopian region of Tigray, Ethiopia’s future remains unsettled, even if the conflict ends soon. Achieving the federal government’s security objectives in Tigray is unlikely to resolve both new and entrenched political challenges, and already delayed national elections, now expected in 2021, may prove a severe test of Ethiopia’s political order, and consequently affect broader regional stability. Reconciling the electoral process with efforts for reconciliation and national dialogue is now even more imperative.
Ethiopian voters in Addis Ababa, the capital city, wait in line to vote during 2010 general elections. (Uduak Amimo)Ethiopian voters in Addis Ababa, the capital city, wait in line to vote during 2010 general elections. (Uduak Amimo)

The Conflict in Tigray

War sometimes starts like clockwork but predicting the date on which a conflict will end often leads to disappointment. Yet from the start of armed hostilities with the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed promised the conflict would be swift and decisive. On November 6, Abiy wrote that “operations by federal defense forces underway in Northern Ethiopia have clear, limited and achievable objectives.” On November 9, the prime minister  saPM Abiy tweet 9 Novid the military operation “will wrap up soon,” and the next day, that “our law enforcement operations in Tigray are proceeding as planned: operations will cease as soon as the criminal junta is disarmed, legitimate administration in the region restored, and fugitives apprehended and brought to justice—all of them rapidly coming within reach.” Claims that the conflict will be short-lived have also been echoed by senior American officials: U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia Michael Raynor told journalists on November 19 that “another aspect of this is the Ethiopian government continues to articulate a vision of the military conflict coming to an end fairly soon, a week or two from now.”

Despite limitations on independent reporting and the severing of most communications, the federal government has announced significant military advances, capturing a number of important towns and cities in Tigray, including Shire on November 17, Axum and Adwa on November 20, and Adigrat on November 21. The TPLF has made counterclaims: that it inflicted significant casualties on federal forces in Raya and to have repulsed federal forces in Mehoni and Zalambessa. For the federal government, taking control of the state capital of Tigray, and its largest city, Mekelle, is now the principal remaining tactical military objective.

However, even if Abiy’s military objectives are quickly achieved, experiences of warfare in northern Ethiopia dating back a century suggest that it is much easier to capture territory than it is to hold it. It is unclear what a successful strategy for the federal government will be if it is able to capture Tigray’s urban centers but cannot command the widespread acceptance of Tigray’s people. While the fighting of the last few weeks may have significantly degraded the TPLF’s military capacity, it is unlikely that the federal government can entirely subdue the TPLF as a political entity, which retains the support of a substantial number of Tigrayans. Further, the TPLF’s historic capacity to wage guerrilla warfare from the rural mountains of Tigray may not be definitively eroded by its losses in conventional warfare.

While some in the federal government have indicated that they would accept a refashioned TPLF led by moderates, external efforts to re-engineer the party may well be counterproductive and only risk further alienating some Tigrayan constituencies. Therefore, as focused on their immediate objectives and consequently as reluctant to seek dialogue and compromise as they may be, the parties in conflict may find that a negotiated settlement may ultimately be the only realistic choice, if not imminently, then in the months ahead. Moreover, the federal government must soon confront an even bigger problem in 2021: how to conduct peaceful and credible elections.

The Prospects and Difficulties of Elections

National elections are overdue and are now expected to be held next year. While in February 2020, the National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) announced that elections would be held in August 2020, by the end of March, the Board had decided to indefinitely delay the elections because of the COVID-19 pandemic. As NEBE explained, several important preparatory tasks were unable to be completed in March, meaning that the crucial voter registration exercise, which was expected to register tens of millions of prospective voters, was unable to commence in April.

Beyond the national polls, each regional state of Ethiopia is also due to hold elections for their state legislatures. It was the Tigray region’s decision to proceed with organizing its own elections in September, in defiance of the federal government and without the oversight and participation of the NEBE, that contributed to a deterioration of relations between Tigray and Addis Ababa, and which was a further step toward the violence now occurring.

Even without the impact of COVID-19 and the situation in Tigray, Ethiopia’s next national elections are fraught with difficulty. The polls are expected to be the first competitive elections since 2005 and raise fundamental questions about the future order of the Ethiopian state. Abiy’s new political vehicle, the Ethiopian Prosperity Party, is the national frontrunner, constructed from the former Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front ruling coalition, which was once led by the TPLF. Apart from the TPLF, a number of new opposition political parties are expected to contest the polls.

The challenges faced in administering elections are significant. The first problem is one of election administration, operations and reform: a rush to organize elections in early 2021, as some have suggested, may easily worsen the political situation across the country, as in such a limited time, elections are unlikely to be effectively administered. In May, the NEBE proposed two scenarios on which to base a prospective electoral calendar: the first required 224 days to prepare for and conduct elections, and the second required 276 days. However, at the end of October, NEBE proposed that the elections be held in late May or June 2021, contingent on beginning poll worker training in December and voter registration in January.

As early as December 2018, a USAID pre-elections assessment found that “there is a lack of consensus about specific solutions and timing of reforms in relation to the election cycle, and that information about and support for the reforms is inconsistent. The reform process has been largely elite-driven and concentrated in Addis Ababa, and there is a lack of clarity on a specific road map to achieving the goals set out by the prime minister.” While there has been some important progress since that assessment was made, conducting elections in Ethiopia will be the largest democratic exercise in the country’s history; the technical challenges should not be underestimated and cannot easily be expedited. More recently, NEBE has noted that the possibility of constitutional and electoral reform could also complicate the electoral calendar and has warned, “Preparations for electoral process based on [an] unstable timeline are not advisable. Only once these processes [of constitutional and electoral reform] are completed should an electoral timeline be consulted and announced, and preparations begin in earnest.”

The second, more profound problem in conducting elections concerns broader needs for security, trust, reconciliation, and the ability of Ethiopians to freely engage in open political discourse, debate, and campaigning. Even before the conflict with Tigray, there were more than 1.8 million internally displaced persons in Ethiopia. In May, Amnesty International reported that at least 10,000 people had been “arbitrarily arrested and detained last year as part of the government’s crackdown on armed attacks and violence in Oromia Region,” and in July, that another 5,000 had been arrested following protests the previous month. A number of prominent political figures and journalists were jailed before the Tigray conflict began, and more arrests of journalists have followed this month.

For their part, American officials have asserted that the conflict in Tigray has served to unite Ethiopians. Assistant Secretary of State for Africa Tibor Nagy told journalists on November 19 that “it seems like [the conflict in Tigray] has brought the Ethiopian nation together, at least for the time being, in support of the prime minister …” Ambassador Raynor added that “the rest of the country actually remains quite calm at present, no indications of anyone taking up comparable actions elsewhere, and in fact the opposite. Seemingly both regional governments, federal governments, and large swaths of the people galvanizing around the [federal] government.”

Unfortunately, violence has continued elsewhere in Ethiopia. In a recent tragic incident, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission reported that at least 34 people were killed in a November 14 attack on a bus in Benishangul. Further, as the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs pointed out on November 20, “Humanitarian partners in Ethiopia are further concerned about the increasing report of violence in Oromia and Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples (SNNP) regions. Violent incidents involving unidentified armed groups have been reported on an almost daily basis, mainly in the Western Oromia region, while several thousand people were reportedly displaced by inter-communal violence in Konso zone, SNNPR on 16 November.” Alas, any short-term increase in perceived or real Ethiopian national unity resulting from the current Tigray confrontation does little to address the problems of arbitrary detention or intercommunal violence elsewhere in the country.

For successful elections to be held, credibly and non-coercively addressing both insecurity and the underlying grievances behind the violence will be essential. An adequate response necessitates efforts at reconciliation, justice, and inclusive dialogue. While wider questions of reconciliation, reform, and elections cannot be the first point on the agenda in any eventual negotiations between the federal government and the TPLF, discussing them cannot be indefinitely avoided, either. More importantly, discussions on such issues must include many more political and civil actors beyond those now in conflict if at least a degree of national consensus is to be achieved. Squaring the electoral preparations and timetable with a plan for reconciliation and national dialogue may thus be imperative for a peaceful future in Ethiopia.