Ethiopia Targets TPLF Leaders After Taking Region’s Capital

Ethiopia Targets TPLF Leaders After Taking Region's Capital
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed
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Ethiopian President Abiy Ahmed has on Monday revealed that Ethiopian federal forces are currently tracking Tigray region’s dissident leaders who had fled west of the regional capital after weeks of fighting and would ‘attack’ them soon.

This is made known in a wide-ranging four-hour address to MPs where Abiy Ahmed recounted personal tales of alleged TPLF aggression and claimed there had been no civilian casualties in the three weeks of conflict.

The international red Committee of the Red Cross has reported that hospitals in the regional capital, Mekele were flooded by trauma patients. AFP Has also shown a picture of Ethiopian refugee, who fled the fighting in Tigray Region, builds a shelter at a border reception centre (Village 8) in Gedaref State, eastern Sudan.

Mr Abiy ordered military operations this month against the leaders of Tigray’s ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), in response to what he said were TPLF-organised attacks on Ethiopian federal army camps.

Read Also: UN Urges Ethiopia To Protect Civilians, Aid Workers

The federal forces last week claimed they had taken the region’s capital, Mekelle, but as the internet is down in the region verification is difficult. TPLF leaders whose whereabouts are not known have repeatedly vowed to fight on as long as federal forces are on Tigrayan soil.

‘Mekelle is ours, it was built with our own resources. We are not going to destroy it,’ Mr Abiy said. ‘Not even a single person was harmed by the operation in Mekelle.’

The International Committee of the Red Cross said on Sunday that hospitals in Mekelle were flooded with trauma patients. The NGO did not give an exact figure.

TPLF leader Debretsion Gebremichael has also maintained that air strikes have resulted in many civilian casualties.

Mr Abiy refuted the accusation. ‘Every missile launched is backed by the signature of an authority, 99 percent hit their target, and 99 percent did not have collateral damage,’ Mr Abiy said.

‘When it is suspicious, we don’t fire. Especially at night. Because we don’t want to kill children, they are ours,’ he added.

Mr Abiy said on Monday that when he took office, he was hemmed in by a TPLF-run security and intelligence apparatus.

‘My office in general was under the control of other forces. Even the key to my house was controlled by these people, they opened the door, they closed the door, morning and night,’ Mr Abiy said.

‘This was the scenario I was in… I was unable to safeguard the safety of my family,’ he said.

He accused the TPLF of fomenting internal conflict, including ethnic clashes, throughout the country during his tenure, leaving only Tigray unaffected.

The conflict has forced tens of thousands from their homes and across the border into neighbouring Sudan.
Families have been separated and farmers forced to abandon their crops to take refuge in vast camps across the border, with limited access to water, food and sanitary facilities.

Many are holding onto hopes that normality will soon be restored to Tigray and they will be able to return to their lives.

‘I love Ethiopia. I left my elderly mother and my farm behind. If there is peace and the war stops, I will immediately go back,’ Bergha Mongosto said last week at Sudan’s Village Eight transit centre near the Ethiopian border.

Mr Abiy vowed on Monday that Ethiopia would be able to quickly welcome back Ethiopian refugees in Sudan.

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

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