Ethiopia’s PM relishes victory, but Tigrayan leader says war not over
Addis Ababa/Nairobi, November 30
Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed lauded his soldiers on Monday for victory over a rebellious northern movement but the leader of Tigray’s forces said they were still fighting amid fears of a protracted guerrilla conflict.
The nearly month-long war has killed hundreds and probably thousands, sent refugees into Sudan, enmeshed Eritrea, affected a peacekeeping mission in Somalia and deepened divisions between Ethiopia’s myriad ethnic groups.
Abiy’s troops took Tigray’s capital Mekelle at the weekend and declared defeat for the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), a guerrilla movement-turned-political party that dominated national government for nearly three decades until 2018.
“Our constitution was attacked but it didn’t take us three years, it took us three weeks,” Abiy told Parliament, comparing his offensive with the American Civil War of the 1860s.
“Our army is disciplined and victorious,” he added, saying federal troops had not killed any civilians nor damaged Mekelle after launching a November 4 offensive in response to a TPLF attack on an army base.
Drones were used to watch the TPLF but federal forces declined to fire rockets in Tigray, Abiy said. “Even though we have better capacity, we won’t use it. We are not the junta. We conduct ourselves responsibly,” he added.
‘FIGHTING THE INVADERS’
Though the highland city of 5,00,000 people fell with little resistance, the TPLF later said it had shot down a plane, retaken one town, and was resisting.
TPLF leader Debretsion Gebremichael, a 57-year-old former radio operator, denied reports that he had fled to South Sudan and said his forces had captured some soldiers from neighbouring Eritrea around Wukro, about 50 km (30 miles) north of Mekelle.
“I’m close to Mekelle in Tigray fighting the invaders,” Debretsion Gebremichael told Reuters in a text message.
Claims from all sides are difficult to verify since phone and internet links to Tigray have largely been down and access has been tightly controlled since the war began.
There was no comment from the Eritrean government, though at the start of the war it denied involvement.
The TPLF has shelled Asmara airport and accused Eritrea of sending troops over the border to fight with Abiy’s forces but Eritrea’s Foreign Minister denied any role in a November 10 interview.
When he took office in 2018, Abiy pledged to unite Ethiopia’s 115 million people but there have been repeated bouts of ethnic bloodshed and hundreds of thousands have had to flee their homes due to those clashes.
In Tigray, both sides have spoken of hundreds of dead in the Tigray war, and diplomats believe the toll is in the thousands.
Tens of thousands more have been uprooted from their homes.
‘CRIMINAL CLIQUE’
Abiy’s spokeswoman Billene Seyoum dismissed the TPLF’s comments about still fighting, saying: “Tracking and responding to the many delusions of a disintegrating criminal clique that has become irrelevant is not our focus.”
But Debretsion’s defiance raises the spectre of a drawn-out insurgency. The battle-hardened TPLF helped to topple Ethiopia’s Marxist dictatorship in 1991 and knows how to exploit its mountainous terrain and borders with Sudan and Eritrea.
“Although it’s not clear how depleted Tigrayan security forces are by the conflict, armed resistance to federal rule may well be backed by much of the regional government and party apparatus, including local militia, as well as by other Tigrayan nationalist elements,” said International Crisis Group analyst Will Davison.
Abiy won a Nobel Peace Prize last year for making peace with Eritrea, whose government also regards the TPLF as a foe.
Abiy, whose parents are from the larger Oromo and Amharic groups, said that when he took office he felt like a “prisoner” and was uncomfortable flying around the nation which operates as a federation of 10 regions run by separate ethnic groups.
In total, there are more than 80 ethnicities in Ethiopia, Africa’s second-most populous nation.
During his rule, Tigrayans in senior military positions had been reduced to a quarter from 60 per cent of the top brass, Abiy said, adding: “We must build an army that looks like the country.”
Ethiopia’s military is also a major contributor to an African Union peacekeeping force fighting al Qaeda-linked militants in Somalia but has disarmed several hundred soldiers there of Tigrayan ethnicity, questioning their loyalty.
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