ADDIS ABABA/AL FASHQA, Sudan (Reuters) – The United Nations voiced concern on Friday that the conflict between Ethiopian government forces and insurgent northern leaders could spiral out of control and said war crimes may already have been committed.
On the Sudanese border, refugees who had fled the combat zone in Tigray region told of buildings wrecked by government air raids, shootings in the street and killings by machete.
The 10-day-old war has already killed hundreds, pushed thousands of civilians into Sudan, and raised fears it may draw in Eritrea or pressure Ethiopia’s commitment to an African force opposing al Qaeda-linked militants in Somalia.
It may also blemish the reputation of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who won a Nobel Peace Prize for a 2018 peace pact with Eritrea and had won plaudits for opening Ethiopia’s economy and easing a repressive political system.
“There is a risk this situation will spiral totally out of control,” U.N. rights chief Michelle Bachelet said.
A massacre of civilians reported by Amnesty International would amount to war crimes if confirmed it was commiited by one of the belligerent forces, she said.
Federal troops say the TPLF rose against them last week but that they have since survived a siege and recaptured the west of the region. With communications cut and media barred, there has been no independent confirmation of the state of the fighting.
The TPLF says Abiy’s government has persecuted Tigrayans and purged them from positions since he took office in April 2018, replacing a TPLF-led coalition in which he had served as a minister and head of a cyber security unit.
It terms the offensive an “invasion”.
Federal troops have been carrying out air strikes and there has been fighting on the ground since Wednesday of last week.
CIVILIAN DEATHS
Refugees described bombing by government warplanes, shooting on the streets, killings with machetes and civilian deaths.
“The bombing has demolished buildings and killed people, and I escaped, part running on foot and part in a car,” said Hayali Kassi, 33, a driver from Tigray who reached the Sudanese border town of Al-Fashqa, now hosting more than 7,000 refugees.
Abiy, who comes from Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group the Oromo, said parliament named former Addis Ababa university academic and deputy minister for science and higher education Mulu Nega, 52, as the new leader of Tigray.
There was no immediate response to Mulu’s appointment from current Tigray leader Debretsion Gebremichael, who won a local election in September despite central government orders to cancel it.
AU chair Moussa Faki Mahamat ordered the removal of Gebreegziabher Mebratu Melese in a Nov. 11 memo seen by Reuters after Ethiopia’s defence ministry wrote with concerns.
Horn of Africa expert Rashid Abdi said Gebreegziabher was Tigrayan and his departure from the AU post was part of the Abiy government’s efforts to sideline prominent Tigrayans.
“It also plays into the notion that this is essentially an ethnic war masked as a centre-periphery power struggle,” he said.
However, Abiy this week exhorted Ethiopians to ensure Tigrayans are not targeted. “We all must be our brother’s keeper by protecting Tigrayans,” he said.
His opening of political space since taking office in 2018 unleashed ethnic frictions in Africa’s second most populous nation of 115 million people.
LIST OF STAFF
An internal U.N. security report said Ethiopian police visited an office of the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) in Amhara region to request a list of Tigrayan staff.
The local police chief told them of “the order of identifying ethnic Tigrayans from all government agencies and NGOs”, it said. Amhara borders Tigray and its rulers back Abiy.
But the Ethiopian government said it was targeting TPLF-linked suspects, rather than Tigrayans in general, and reports of the WFP office visit were a “complete misrepresentation”.
Rights group Amnesty International has said scores and possibly hundreds of civilians were stabbed and hacked to death in Tigray on Nov. 9, citing witnesses who blamed the TPLF.
Debretsion denied that to Reuters.
More than 14,500 Ethiopian refugees – half of them children – have gone to Sudan since fighting started and aid agencies say the situation in Tigray is becoming dire. There are also concerns about a mass displacement of thousands of Eritrean refugees at a camp in Ethiopia.
In Sudan, a Reuters witness said the thousands in al-Fashqa, which lies along the banks of the Tezeke river, are mostly women and children, forced to quarrel over scarce quantities of food and water provided by the Sudanese army.
Ethiopia’s national army is one of Africa’s largest. But its best fighters are from Tigray and much of its hardware is also there, under the Northern Command.
Redwan Hussein, spokesman of a new State of Emergency Task Force for Tigray, said the offensive would not lead Ethiopia to withdraw peacekeepers abroad.
“No, we are even sending troops to Darfur” in Sudan, he said.
Ethiopia’s foreign minister said operations were on track and the conflict would end in a “very short” time.
Reporting by Giulia Paravicini; Additional reporting by Nairobi newsroom, Khalid Abdelaziz and El Tayeb Siddig in Al-Fashqa, Sudan, Emma Farge in Geneva; Writing by Maggie Fick and Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Angus MacSwan