Britain understands Sudan’s position on Ethiopia dam negotiations, says ambassador

MEMO | The UK Ambassador to Sudan, Irfan Siddiq, said on Tuesday that his country understands Sudan’s position on the negotiations over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance DamAnadolu News Agency reported.

Mr. Siddiq added during a meeting in Khartoum with the Sudanese Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources, Dr Yasir Mohamed, that London would support the dam negotiations until Sudan, Ethiopia and Egypt reach a satisfactory agreement, the Sudanese Irrigation Ministry said in a statement.

Last week, the Sudanese Foreign Minister, Omar Qamar al-Din announced that his country had submitted a list of conditions to the African Union before it returned to meaningful negotiations over the Renaissance Dam, noting that Khartoum was considering alternative options, which he did not clarify.

On 10 January, the Sudanese News Agency reported that the meeting of ministers of foreign affairs and irrigation of Sudan, Egypt and Ethiopia have failed to reach an acceptable formula to continue negotiations on the Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.

For nine years, the three countries have been locked in stalled negotiations over the dam.

FN avdekket kritikkverdige forhold i Tigray-flyktningleirer

Utrop | Titusenvis av eritreiske flyktninger har et presserende behov for hjelp i krigsrammede Tigray nord i Etiopia, ifølge FNs høykommissær for flyktninger (UNHCR).

Nylig fikk FN-organet tilgang til området, noe som skjedde to måneder etter at konflikten tvang humanitære arbeidere til å forlate Tigray-regionen.

Ifølge talsperson Babar Baloch for UNHCR er forholdene kritikkverdige i to flyktningleirer i den krigsrammede Tigray-regionen nord i Etiopia

Manglende drivstoff til brønnpumper gjorde at flyktninger måtte bruke vann fra en bekk til vask, matlaging og som drikkevann, noe som resulterte i diarélignende sykdommer.

Over 4,5 millioner mennesker trenger akutt mat, viser et referat fra et krisemøte mellom hjelpearbeidere, regjeringen og lokale myndigheter 1. januar. Det tilsvarer nesten hele Tigrays befolkning.

Den etiopiske hæren startet i november en omfattende militæroffensiv mot opprørere i den nordlige Tigray-regionen. Titusenvis flyktet, og FN har varslet om grove menneskerettighetsbrudd.

(©NTB)

Sudan calls on Ethiopia to withdraw its forces from the disputed Al-Fashaqa region

Source: Ecofin Agency |

Following an emergency meeting of its Security and Defense Council on Jan 17, Sudan called on the Ethiopian government to withdraw its forces from the Al-Fashaqa region, which the two countries have been disputing on for years.

“Despite the military mobilization and build-up carried out by Ethiopia in the areas facing our forces in Al-Fashaqa, we confirm that our forces will remain in their lands to preserve sovereignty stipulated in the charters and agreements that affirm Sudan’s entitlement,” Sudanese Defense Minister Lieutenant General Yassin Ibrahim Yassin said in a press release.

He called on Ethiopia to “withdraw its forces from the remaining positions it still occupies in Maraghad, Khor Hamar, and Ghatar (in the Al-Fashaqa region, ed) as soon as possible in compliance with international treaties and the sustainability of good-neighborly relations.”

The battle between the two countries over this region, inhabited by Ethiopian farmers (who operate land claimed by Sudan), has sharply increased in recent weeks. On Thursday, Sudanese authorities banned flights over the border area after declaring that an Ethiopian military plane had violated Sudanese airspace in a “dangerous and unjustified escalation.” The allegations were denied on Friday by the Ethiopian army chief of staff, General Berhanu Gula.

Last week, Sudan claimed at least five people died in border attacks by Ethiopian government-backed militias and that it will use all “available means” to respond. Earlier in December, Sudan accused Ethiopian “forces and militias” of ambushing Sudanese troops along the border, killing four people and wounding more than 20. The incident resulted in a large number of Sudanese military backups being sent to the border with Ethiopia to “recover land usurped by Ethiopian militias.”

Abdel-Fattah al-Burhan, Chairman of the Sovereignty Council of Sudan, said on Saturday his country did not mean to start a war with Ethiopia and has no interest in doing so. Sudan just wants to protect its border rights.

In a press conference on Friday, the Ethiopian army chief of staff also said Addis Ababa has no interest in going to war with Sudan. He added that if the Ethiopian army went to war, “we would not hide.”

The commander of the Ethiopian army added that a small group within the Sudanese government is working for the benefit of a third party and is standing behind the incursions.

The Al-Fashaqa region borders the Tigray region of Ethiopia where the Ethiopian government has been waging a military campaign against the TPLF since November; a conflict that has led to the exodus of more than 45,000 Ethiopian refugees to Sudan, according to the United Nations.

Sivile til Bistandsaktuelt: Etiopia og Eritrea kjemper side om side i Tigray

©Bistandsaktuelt | Etiopias regjering avviser alle påstander om at Eritrea har vært involvert i krigen i Tigray. Sivile tigrayere som Bistandsaktuelt har snakket med forteller en helt annen historie. Eritreiske soldater har deltatt – og har stått bak plyndring, vandalisme og drap.

EUs utenriksminister Joseph Borrell annonserte sist fredag at EU stopper all budsjettstøtte til Etiopias regjering – bistand til en samlet verdi av drøyt 900 millioner kroner.

Den direkte årsaken var at Etiopia har nektet humanitære aktører tilgang til hjelpetrengende sivile i den krigsherjede Tigray-regionen. I tillegg uttrykker EU sterk bekymring over en rekke rapporter om etnisk baserte drap og krigsforbrytelser begått under militæroperasjonene i Tigray. På basis av sine rapporter fastslår EU samtidig at også eritreiske styrker har deltatt i krigshandlingene og overgrep mot sivile. Begge deler er stikk i strid med hva Etiopias regjering har hevdet.

Ifølge EU skal eritreiske og etiopiske myndigheter også ha samarbeidet om å pågripe og tvangsreturnere eritreiske flyktninger som var i FN-leirer i Tigray til hjemlandet. Dette skal ha startet allerede før krigshandlingene i november.

Soldater plyndret moské

Bistandsaktuelt har vært i kontakt med ulike tigrayiske sivile som alle bekrefter eritreiske soldaters rolle i krigføringen. Vi har blant annet snakket med folk fra Wukro, en by 35 kilometer fra provinshovedstaden Mekele.

Dette er en av byene i Tigray som var utsatt for omfattende ødeleggelser og plyndring under kampene i regionen. De langvarige kampene i utkanten av byen førte blant annet til store skader og plyndring av Al-Nejashi-moskeen, en historisk moské bygd på 600-tallet av profeten Mohammeds første tilhengere.

Noen sier det var eritreiske styrker, sammen med den etiopiske hæren, som ødela og plyndret moskeen. Andre hevder det var TPLF-lojale styrker som gjorde det, som ledd i en strategi for å trekke muslimer med i kampene.

Wukro ligger bare vel 260 kilometer fra Eritreas hovedstad Asmara. Ifølge vitner som bodde i Wukro kom det en strøm av eritreiske soldater dit under krigen i Tigray.

– De plyndret banken

Vi snakker med «Aida» (Bistandsaktuelt kjenner hennes egentlig navn, men har valgt å anonymisere) som er bankfunksjonær og arbeidet i Wukro. På grunn av kampene i byen bor hun nå hos sine foreldre i Mekele. Noen få bankfilialer har åpnet i Mekele, men i Wukro er de fortsatt stengt. Grunnen er at de ble plyndret ev eritreiske soldater, ifølge «Aida».

– Da den eritreiske hæren tok kontroll over Wukro, brøt eritreiske soldater seg inn i alle banker og stjal alt som var, sier «Aida».

– Jeg er arbeidsledig nå. Selv om jeg fortsatt mottar lønn, har jeg ikke noe håp om å komme tilbake på jobb med det første. Det vil ta tid å reorganisere bankfilialen jeg arbeidet for, fordi de eritreiske soldatene lot ikke engang en eneste stol bli igjen, sier hun.

– De er her blant oss

Liknende rapporter om plyndring og drap utført av eritreiske soldater er blitt vanlige i Tigray. Eritreiske styrker skal angivelig være til stede i de mest utilgjengelige delene av Tigray, der de plyndrer og dreper sivile. Ifølge et øyenvitne ble de også sett i Mekele så sent som i midten av januar.

– De er her blant oss, sier en mann vi snakker med som bor i Mekele.

En annen mann vi får kontakt med på telefon kommer fra Adigrat, en annen by som skal ha blitt utsatt for eritreiske soldaters plyndring, er på et kort opphold i Mekele. Han bekrefter at eritreiske styrker deltar i krigen i Tigray.

– Jeg kan ikke skjønne hvorfor det stilles spørsmåltegn ved dette. Eritreiske styrker var uten tvil i Adigrat da hæren tok kontroll over byen. De er der fremdeles. De går fritt omkring, de plyndrer alt, de dreper sivile. Vi ser dem hver dag. Dette er fakta, sier han.

– De ruinerte byen

Ifølge denne kilden har eritreerne “ruinert byen”.

– Men nå blir det færre av dem. Jeg tror det kommer av presset mot Abiy-regjeringen i internasjonale medier. Jeg tror regjeringen gir dem ordre om å dra tilbake. De er ikke så mange som før, legger han til.

Det er vanskelig å få bekreftet eller avkreftet rapportene om krigshandlinger, siden store deler av regionen fortsatt er utilgjengelig.

Etiopia og Eritrea var i mange år i krig, og mange mennesker ble drept i krigen. Hatet er ennå sterkt hos mange etiopiere, ikke minst i Tigray som var krigsarena og har grense mot Eritrea. Dersom meldingene om at eritreiske styrker har deltatt i krigen i Tigray er riktige, betyr det at statsminister Abiy Ahmed har begått forræderi mot sitt eget folk ved å alliere seg med en annen makt, vil mange etiopiere mene.

Abiys regjering avviser beskyldningene som falske.

– TPLF laget falske uniformer!

Nebyu Sehulmicheal er leder for regjeringspartiet Tigray Prosperity Party (Abiy Ahmeds parti). Ifølge han er det andre grupper som står bak plyndringene og drapene.

– Før de ble drevet ut av Mekele, produserte TPLF eritreiske uniformer. Det var for å lure folk til å tro at Eritrea var involvert i krigen. De laget også uniformene til den nasjonale hæren. Like før de ble slått, løslot de i tillegg mer enn 10 000 fanger fra hele Tigray, som var fengslet for alvorlige forbrytelser. Alt dette var en TPLF-konspirasjon for å destabilisere overgangsregjeringen i Tigray, sier Nebyu.

Bistandsaktuelt har spurt kildene som forteller om eritreiske soldater i Tigray, hvordan de kan vite at det virkelig er soldater fra den eritreiske hæren og ikke grupper organisert av TPLF? Folk fra Tigray og Eritrea snakker jo samme språk.

– Jeg hørte det på aksenten deres. Eritreere har en annen aksent enn tigrayere. Alle kan skille dem fra hverandre på måten de snakker. Jeg er ganske sikker på at de var eritreere, svarer «Aida».

– På aksenten, men også fordi de kjører gamle lastebiler. Lastebilene deres er forskjellige fra de etiopiske. Jeg har med egne øyne sett eritreisk nummerskilt på en av lastebilene deres, svarer mannen fra Mekele.

– På språket, uniformene og utseende – de ser veldig fattigslige ut, svarer han fra Adigrat.

Sensitivt spørsmål

Etiopiske samfunnsforskere og eksperter som følger nøye med på disse spørsmålene, avstår fra å gi offentlige kommentarer. De ser temaet som meget sensitivt, og de fleste frykter reaksjoner fra myndighetene. Men en etiopisk forsker som er ekspert på Afrikas Horn kommenterer anonymt:

– Det er vanskelig å kommentere dette spørsmålet i en situasjon der det ikke finnes konkrete bevis for situasjonen på bakken. Så det vi kan gjøre er å analysere rapportene i lys av tidligere trender, framferden til den eritreiske regjeringen og dens tidligere forhold til Etiopia, sier eksperten.

Eksperten mener det er så godt som sikkert at Abiy fikk indirekte støtte fra Eritrea til å kaste ut TPLF.

– Det er ingen tvil om at Eritreas regjering er en svoren fiende av TPLF. De har i årevis arbeidet for å styrte TPLF, fordi TPLF sto i veien for deres økonomiske interesser med Etiopia, sier eksperten, som legger til at Eritrea framskyndet TPLFs nederlag ved å hjelpe etiopiske soldater som flyktet til Asmara i første fase av krigen, samt gjennom diplomatisk støtte.

Afwerki besøkte Egypt og Sudan

– Eritreas president Isaias Afwerki var i Sudan og Egypt under Tigray-krigen. Det er svært sannsynlig at han overtalte de to landene til ikke å støtte TPLF. Isaias har avhjulpet de diplomatiske utfordringene Abiy kunne stått overfor ved å justere det regionale diplomatiet til Etiopias fordel, sier eksperten.

I et ekstraordinært møte i nasjonalforsamlingen 30. november vedgikk statsminister Abiy selv at Eritrea hadde utstyrt og forpleid etiopiske styrker som søkte tilflukt i Asmara.

Påstandene om eritreisk innblanding i Tigray har lenge blitt framsatt av TPLF. Selv før krigen hevdet TPLF at Abiy og Isaias hadde en plan om krig mot Tigray. Abiy avviser påstandene som sprø propaganda.

Både 14. og 27. november skjøt TPLF raketter mot Eritreas hovedstad, med begrunnelsen at Eritrea sendte soldater til Tigray på invitasjon fra Abiy Ahmed. Eritrea nektet for at de var involvert. Men medier med tilknytning til opposisjonsgrupper i Eritrea rapporterte samtidig om Eritreas engasjement i Tigray-krigen.

Topp-militær og ordfører bekreftet

Generalmajor Belay Seyoum i den etiopiske hæren sa 25. desember at eritreiske styrker hadde rykket inn i Etiopia uten invitasjon. Generalen sa dette da han svarte på spørsmål fra innbyggere i Mekele under et offentlig møte med overgangsregjeringen i Tigray. På det samme møtet opplyste den nåværende ordføreren i Mekele, Atkelt Haileselassie, at regjeringen arbeider hardt for å få disse styrkene til å forlate Tigray.

En talsperson for USAs utenriksdepartement sa 10. desember til nyhetsbyrået Reuters at påstander om Eritreas deltakelse i Tigray-krigen var basert på troverdige rapporter. Talspersonen oppfordret Eritrea sterkt til å trekke sine styrker ut av Tigray.

Forrige uke ba Ethiopian Citizens for Justice, et nasjonal-liberalt opposisjonsparti dannet av den prominente politikeren Berhanu Nega, om et klart svar fra Abiy-regjeringen om eventuell involvering fra andre land i krigen i Tigray.

19/01/2021 News and Commentaries

  1. ‘Swift action’ needed in Tigray to save thousands at risk, UNHCR warns. UN News
  2. Starvation crisis looms as aid groups seek urgent Tigray access. Al Jazeera
  3. Can Ethiopia heal after the TPLF killings? The African Report
  4. ‘No Somali soldier killed in Ethiopia-Tigray conflict’ Anadolu Agency
  5. Anthony Blinken | Actions of the Ethiopian federal government could destabilize the Horn Of Africa. YouTube
  6. Somali mothers protest in Galkayo demanding answers to whereabouts of their missing children.
  7. China at the heart of rising Nile River conflict Asian Times
  8. Podcast: Red Sea rivalries: The Gulf, the Horn, and the new geopolitics of the Red Sea. Brookings | Transcript

 

1. ‘Swift action’ needed in Tigray to save thousands at risk, UNHCR warns. UN News

” … help is urgently needed for the tens of thousands of Eritrean refugees in northern Ethiopia”

 

2. Starvation crisis looms as aid groups seek urgent Tigray access. Al Jazeera

Humanitarians sound alarm for millions of people in need of emergency assistance in Ethiopia’s conflict-hit northern region.

“People are dying of starvation. In Adwa, people are dying while they are sleeping. [It’s] also the same in other zones in the region,” said Berhane Gebretsadik, interim

“Deliberate obstruction of humanitarian access is a classic method of systematic starvation of people,” Mehari told Al Jazeera. “Ethiopian government and Eritrean troops continue to obstruct access to humanitarian aid. The blanket continues and thus first-hand information is almost impossible to get. The restriction of information is in itself a crime of the state to hide other crimes.”

 

3. Can Ethiopia heal after the TPLF killings? The African Report

“It is difficult, the defence force is in a very remote region. We cannot bury everyone, if we could we would. Their families can ask for their bodies.” ENDF’s Brigadier General Tesfaye Ayaylew says.

 

4. Anthony Blinken | Actions of the Ethiopian federal government could destabilize the Horn Of Africa. YouTube

Joe Biden’s candidate for the US State Department, Anthony Blinken, said before the Senate, “We are concerned about the actions of the #Ethiopia|n federal government and what is happening there could destabilize the #HornOfAfrica.”

 

5. ‘No Somali soldier killed in Ethiopia-Tigray conflict’ Anadolu Agency 

  • Mogadishu denies claims that hundreds of Somali soldiers killed while fighting against Tigray rebels

 

6. Somali mothers protest in Galkayo demanding answers to whereabouts of their missing children.  

 

7. China at the heart of rising Nile River conflict. Asian Times

China-financed Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is Africa’s largest and most divisive development project.

The Chinese-financed Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), despite a recent breakdown in talks on Africa’s largest development project, risks powering up a range of downstream tensions and rivalries.

These run from rising rivalry between Egypt and Ethiopia to a festering border war between Ethiopia and neighboring Sudan. At stake, too, is the future of almost 90% of the water in the Nile River, the world’s longest waterway.

 

8. Red Sea rivalries: The Gulf, the Horn, and the new geopolitics of the Red Sea. Brookings | Transcript

The emergence of the Red Sea as a common political and economic arena offers opportunities for development and integration, but it also poses considerable risks. As Gulf countries seek to expand their influence in the Horn of Africa, they risk exporting Middle Eastern rivalries to a region that has plenty of its own; and they aren’t the only outside powers now paying attention. China recently established its first-ever overseas military base in Djibouti, just six miles from the only U.S. base in Africa. Amid historic changes in the Horn and a rapidly-changing landscape in the Red Sea, states with different cultures, models of government, and styles of diplomacy are shaping a new frontier where the rules of the game are yet to be written.

Grim picture emerges from glimpses of Ethiopia’s Tigray war

Special forces troops, pictured last month in the Tigrayan city of Alamata EDUARDO SOTERAS AFP/File

 

Addis Ababa (AFP) | Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed declared victory in his military operation in the northern region of Tigray, but there are clear signs that fighting persists despite a claimed return to normalcy.

Abiy launched the offensive last November against Tigray’s ruling party, which he accused of attacking federal army camps and seeking to destabilise the country.

Within weeks troops entered the regional capital of Mekele and Abiy announced military operations were “completed.”

But the government continues to give accounts of TPLF leaders slain in gun battles while the United Nations reports “insecurity” hampering aid access.

And in recent weeks satellite images, public statements from military and civilian officials in Tigray and scattered accounts from residents have added to evidence of a conflict unfolding largely in the shadows.

A communications blackout in much of Tigray means confirmable details remain scant.

– Region still ‘volatile’ –

When federal forces arrived in Mekele in late November, they encountered little resistance as the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) leadership appeared to have already fled.

And a triumphant Abiy claimed no civilians had been killed during the capture of Tigrayan cities.

Doctors at one Mekele hospital told a different story, though, saying at least 20 civilians died in shelling.

They provided AFP with photos of survivors with gruesome injuries, including lost limbs and exposed internal organs.

The International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank says thousands have died so far, and tens of thousands of refugees have streamed across the border into neighbouring Sudan.

Federal officials have described subsequent fighting as minor operations centred on Tigrayan leaders like former regional president Debretsion Gebremichael, who has been out of contact for more than a month.

But a UN humanitarian assessment dated January 6 said Tigray remained “volatile”, with “localised fighting”.

The UN is especially worried about what happened at two camps housing over 30,000 Eritrean refugees that are inaccessible.

Top officials have repeatedly sounded the alarm about reported killings, abductions and forced repatriations from the camps back to neighbouring Eritrea.

The alleged presence of soldiers from the isolated and iron-fisted Eritrean regime in Tigray has been a hotly contested aspect of the conflict.

Five humanitarian workers have been confirmed killed at one of the camps, known as Hitsats.

“Reports of additional military incursions over the last 10 days are consistent with open source satellite imagery showing new fires burning and other fresh signs of destruction at the two camps,” UN refugees chief Filippo Grandi said in a statement Thursday.

“These are concrete indications of major violations of international law.”

– Eritrea’s role –

Ethiopia has strenuously denied Eritrean soldiers played an active role in the fighting, contradicting witness accounts.

But in December the US State Department said it was “aware of credible reports of Eritrean military involvement in Tigray” and called for Eritrean troops to be withdrawn.

Eritrea fought a brutal border war with Ethiopia in 1998-2000, back when the TPLF dominated Ethiopia’s governing coalition.

Abiy won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 in large part for initiating a rapprochement with Eritrea, whose President Isaias Afwerki and the TPLF remain bitter enemies.

In late December a top-ranking member of Ethiopia’s army told a meeting of Mekele residents that Eritrean troops had entered Tigray, but insisted they were “unwanted”.

Awet Woldemichael, a Horn of Africa security expert at Queen’s University in Canada, said this explanation was dubious.

“Eritrean involvement in the war in Tigray is not considered a violation of Ethiopia, and the international community is not worked up about it, precisely because the Ethiopian government invited it,” he said.

– Starvation warnings –

Perhaps the most immediate concern for Tigray’s estimated population of six million is humanitarian access.

So far “the number of people reached is extremely low compared with the number of people we estimate to be in need of life-saving assistance, around 2.3 million people,” said Saviano Abreu, spokesman for the UN’s humanitarian coordination office.

The government’s Tigray Emergency Coordination Centre puts the number of people needing food assistance at 4.5 million and says 2.2 million have been displaced.

Officials from the new caretaker administration have warned of widespread starvation if food aid does not arrive soon, according to humanitarian officials briefed on their assessments.

A letter from a Catholic church official in the town of Adigrat, dated January 5 and seen by AFP, says residents have run out of food, water and medicine and are living without electricity and other basic services.

“It is a daily reality to hear people dying from the fighting consequences, lack of food, insulin & other basic medicines,” the letter reads.

Government statements about the conflict have recently focused on TPLF leaders who have been killed or captured.

William Davison, the ICG’s Ethiopia analyst, said this could complicate the caretaker administration’s efforts to win over Tigrayans, raising questions about Abiy’s long-term strategy.

“From the outset of the conflict,” Davison said, “the major challenge for the federal government has been how to defeat Tigray’s leadership without alienating the Tigrayan people.”

© 2021 AFP

Hundreds of Somali soldiers killed in Tigray war

Suna Times – Former deputy head of Somalia’s Intelligence Agency Abdisalan Guled said hundreds of Somali recruits deployed by Eritrea to Tigray region were killed in the initial offensive in the northern Ethiopian region.

Former deputy head of the Somali Intelligence Agency (NISA) Abdisalan Guled, in an interview with Kulmiye radio based in Mogadishu, stated that he received information saying that 370 Somali recruits trained by Eritrea had been killed in the recent war in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

“Following an investigation and contacts I made with different people, it was confirmed that 4000 Somali soldiers participated in Tigray war, who were fighting alongside Ethiopian and Eritrean forces against the TPLF,” said Abdisalan Guled.

“I was shocked when I was told that nearly 400 of those Somali recruits trained by Eritrea were killed and hundreds more were wounded [in Tigray war], and those wounded were returned to Eritrea.”

Abisalan Guled citing Ethiopian military sources told Kulmiye radio that “only a few men have survived from recruits numbered between 900 and 1100 who had been deployed on just one frontline, nearly all of them were killed,”

Speaking further, Mr Guled said he was told that the Somali recruits thrown into the battle were led by Eritrean military officers.

“When i asked the officers, they told me that Somalia had signed agreement with Ethiopia and Eritrea that required Farmajo [Somalia’s president] to prepare Somali troops who would take part in the stabilization of Tigray, which he accepted,”

The former deputy head of the Somali Intelligence Services said president Farmajo had requested his Eritrean counterpart not to return those soldiers to their country if he does not win reelection.

“I have heard two days ago that president Farmajo said ‘those soldiers should not be returned home, if I win reelection the matter will be discussed with me, if I don’t return, it will be dealt with those in power but during this sensitive election time I should not be given information on whether they are alive or dead’.”


Alternative Sources:

U.S. military completes removal of troops from Somalia

Global News – AP |  

The U.S. military says its troop withdrawal from Somalia is complete, in one of the last actions of President Donald Trump’s presidency.

Some experts have warned that the withdrawal of an estimated 700 U.S. military personnel comes at the worst possible time for Somalia, as the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab extremist group improves its bomb-making skills and continues to attack military and civilian targets even in the capital, Mogadishu. The withdrawal comes less than a month before Somalia is set to hold a national election.

The U.S. personnel trained and supported Somali forces, including its elite special forces, in counter-terror operations. They are being moved to other African countries such as neighbouring Kenya and Djibouti, home of the only permanent U.S. military base in Africa, but U.S. Africa Command spokesman Col. Chris Karns would not say how many are going where.

Asked whether the administration of President-elect Joe Biden will reverse the withdrawal, Karns replied in an email: “It would be inappropriate for us to speculate or engage in hypotheticals.”

Karns said the operation enters its “next phase of periodic engagement with Somali security forces.” He would not go into details.

The withdrawal was announced late last year, with a Jan. 15 deadline. The U.S. military, which has carried out a growing number of airstrikes against al-Shabab and a small band of fighters linked to the Islamic State group during Trump’s administration, says it will continue to pressure al-Shabab. The extremist group has an estimated 5,000 to 10,000 fighters.

Those Somali forces, even U.S. assessments have said, are not ready to take over responsibility for the country’s security, especially as a 19,000-strong multinational African Union force is also set to withdraw by the end of this year.

The U.S. Africa Command commander, Gen. Stephen Townsend, noted “no serious injuries or significant loss of equipment, despite significant efforts to target us by al-Shabab” during the “intense” operation to remove the U.S. personnel.

Townsend on Saturday visited Manda Bay in Kenya, where the U.S. Africa Command said “substantial enhancements have been made to physical security” after a deadly al-Shabab attack a year ago destroyed U.S. aircraft used against it in Somalia.

‘Extreme urgent need’: Starvation haunts Ethiopia’s Tigray

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — From “emaciated” refugees to crops burned on the brink of harvest, starvation threatens the survivors of more than two months of fighting in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

The first humanitarian workers to arrive after pleading with the Ethiopian government for access describe weakened children dying from diarrhea after drinking from rivers. Shops were looted or depleted weeks ago. A local official told a Jan. 1 crisis meeting of government and aid workers that hungry people had asked for “a single biscuit.”

More than 4.5 million people, nearly the region’s entire population, need emergency food, participants say. At their next meeting on Jan. 8, a Tigray administrator warned that without aid, “hundreds of thousands might starve to death” and some already had, according to minutes obtained by The Associated Press.

“There is an extreme urgent need — I don’t know what more words in English to use — to rapidly scale up the humanitarian response because the population is dying every day as we speak,” Mari Carmen Vinoles, head of the emergency unit for Doctors Without Borders, told the AP.

But pockets of fighting, resistance from some officials and sheer destruction stand in the way of a massive food delivery effort. To send 15-kilogram (33-pound) rations to 4.5 million people would require more than 2,000 trucks, the meeting’s minutes said, while some local responders are reduced to getting around on foot.

The specter of hunger is sensitive in Ethiopia, which transformed into one of the world’s fastest-growing economies in the decades since images of starvation there in the 1980s led to a global outcry. Drought, conflict and government denial contributed to the famine, which swept through Tigray and killed an estimated 1 million people.

The largely agricultural Tigray region of about 5 million people already had a food security problem amid a locust outbreak when Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Nov. 4 announced fighting between his forces and those of the defiant regional government. Tigray leaders dominated Ethiopia for almost three decades but were sidelined after Abiy introduced reforms that won him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019.

Thousands of people have been killed in the conflict. More than 50,000 have fled into Sudan, where one doctor has said newer arrivals show signs of starvation. Others shelter in rugged terrain. A woman who recently left Tigray described sleeping in caves with people who brought cattle, goats and the grain they had managed to harvest.

“It is a daily reality to hear people dying with the fighting consequences, lack of food,” a letter by the Catholic bishop of Adigrat said this month.

Hospitals and other health centers, crucial in treating malnutrition, have been destroyed. In markets, food is “not available or extremely limited,” the United Nations says.

Though Ethiopia’s prime minister declared victory in late November, its military and allied fighters remain active amid the presence of troops from neighboring Eritrea, a bitter enemy of the now-fugitive officials who once led the region.

Fear keeps many people from venturing out. Others flee. Tigray’s new officials say more than 2 million people have been displaced, a number the U.S. government’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance calls “staggering.” The U.N. says the number of people reached with aid is “extremely low.”

A senior Ethiopian government official, Redwan Hussein, did not respond to a request for comment on Tigray colleagues warning of starvation.

In the northern Shire area near Eritrea, which has seen some of the worst fighting, up to 10% of the children whose arms were measured met the diagnostic criteria for severe acute malnutrition, with scores of children affected, a U.N. source said. Sharing the concern of many humanitarian workers about jeopardizing access, the source spoke on condition of anonymity.

Near Shire town are camps housing nearly 100,000 refugees who have fled over the years from Eritrea. Some who have walked into town “are emaciated, begging for aid that is not available,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said Thursday.

Food has been a target. Analyzing satellite imagery of the Shire area, a U.K.-based research group found two warehouse-style structures in the U.N. World Food Program compound at one refugee camp had been “very specifically destroyed.” The DX Open Network could not tell by whom. It reported a new attack Saturday.

It’s challenging to verify events in Tigray as communications links remain poor and almost no journalists are allowed.

In the towns of Adigrat, Adwa and Axum, “the level of civilian casualties is extremely high in the places we have been able to access,” the Doctors Without Borders emergency official Vinoles said. She cited the fighting and lack of health care.

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — From “emaciated” refugees to crops burned on the brink of harvest, starvation threatens the survivors of more than two months of fighting in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.

The first humanitarian workers to arrive after pleading with the Ethiopian government for access describe weakened children dying from diarrhea after drinking from rivers. Shops were looted or depleted weeks ago. A local official told a Jan. 1 crisis meeting of government and aid workers that hungry people had asked for “a single biscuit.”

More than 4.5 million people, nearly the region’s entire population, need emergency food, participants say. At their next meeting on Jan. 8, a Tigray administrator warned that without aid, “hundreds of thousands might starve to death” and some already had, according to minutes obtained by The Associated Press.

“There is an extreme urgent need — I don’t know what more words in English to use — to rapidly scale up the humanitarian response because the population is dying every day as we speak,” Mari Carmen Vinoles, head of the emergency unit for Doctors Without Borders, told the AP.

But pockets of fighting, resistance from some officials and sheer destruction stand in the way of a massive food delivery effort. To send 15-kilogram (33-pound) rations to 4.5 million people would require more than 2,000 trucks, the meeting’s minutes said, while some local responders are reduced to getting around on foot.

The specter of hunger is sensitive in Ethiopia, which transformed into one of the world’s fastest-growing economies in the decades since images of starvation there in the 1980s led to a global outcry. Drought, conflict and government denial contributed to the famine, which swept through Tigray and killed an estimated 1 million people.

The largely agricultural Tigray region of about 5 million people already had a food security problem amid a locust outbreak when Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Nov. 4 announced fighting between his forces and those of the defiant regional government. Tigray leaders dominated Ethiopia for almost three decades but were sidelined after Abiy introduced reforms that won him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019.

Thousands of people have been killed in the conflict. More than 50,000 have fled into Sudan, where one doctor has said newer arrivals show signs of starvation. Others shelter in rugged terrain. A woman who recently left Tigray described sleeping in caves with people who brought cattle, goats and the grain they had managed to harvest.

“It is a daily reality to hear people dying with the fighting consequences, lack of food,” a letter by the Catholic bishop of Adigrat said this month.

Hospitals and other health centers, crucial in treating malnutrition, have been destroyed. In markets, food is “not available or extremely limited,” the United Nations says.

Though Ethiopia’s prime minister declared victory in late November, its military and allied fighters remain active amid the presence of troops from neighboring Eritrea, a bitter enemy of the now-fugitive officials who once led the region.

Fear keeps many people from venturing out. Others flee. Tigray’s new officials say more than 2 million people have been displaced, a number the U.S. government’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance calls “staggering.” The U.N. says the number of people reached with aid is “extremely low.”

A senior Ethiopian government official, Redwan Hussein, did not respond to a request for comment on Tigray colleagues warning of starvation.

In the northern Shire area near Eritrea, which has seen some of the worst fighting, up to 10% of the children whose arms were measured met the diagnostic criteria for severe acute malnutrition, with scores of children affected, a U.N. source said. Sharing the concern of many humanitarian workers about jeopardizing access, the source spoke on condition of anonymity.

Near Shire town are camps housing nearly 100,000 refugees who have fled over the years from Eritrea. Some who have walked into town “are emaciated, begging for aid that is not available,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said Thursday.

Food has been a target. Analyzing satellite imagery of the Shire area, a U.K.-based research group found two warehouse-style structures in the U.N. World Food Program compound at one refugee camp had been “very specifically destroyed.” The DX Open Network could not tell by whom. It reported a new attack Saturday.

It’s challenging to verify events in Tigray as communications links remain poor and almost no journalists are allowed.

In the towns of Adigrat, Adwa and Axum, “the level of civilian casualties is extremely high in the places we have been able to access,” the Doctors Without Borders emergency official Vinoles said. She cited the fighting and lack of health care.

Hunger is “very concerning,” she said, and even water is scarce: Just two of 21 wells still work in Adigrat, a city of more than 140,000, forcing many people to drink from the river. With sanitation suffering, disease follows.

“You go 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the city and it’s a complete disaster,” with no food, Vinoles said.

Humanitarian workers struggle to gauge the extent of need.

“Not being able to travel off main highways, it always poses the question of what’s happening with people still off-limits,” said Panos Navrozidis, Action Against Hunger’s director in Ethiopia.

Before the conflict, Ethiopia’s national disaster management body classified some Tigray woredas, or administrative areas, as priority one hotspots for food insecurity. If some already had high malnutrition numbers, “two-and-a-half months into the crisis, it’s a safe assumption that thousands of children and mothers are in immediate need,” Navrozidis said.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network, funded and managed by the U.S., says parts of central and eastern Tigray are likely in Emergency Phase 4, a step below famine.

The next few months are critical, John Shumlansky, the Catholic Relief Services representative in Ethiopia, said. His group so far has given up to 70,000 people in Tigray a three-month food supply, he said.

Asked whether combatants use hunger as a weapon, one concern among aid workers, Shumlansky dismissed it by Ethiopian defense forces and police. With others, he didn’t know.

“I don’t think they have food either, though,” he said.

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