Ethiopian government begins offensive in Tigray capital city of Mekelle

Tigray people who fled the conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray region stand on a hill above Umm Rakouba refugee. Eastern Sudan. Nov 26, 2020.
Tigray people who fled the conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray region stand on a hill above Umm Rakouba refugee. Eastern Sudan. Nov 26, 2020. Copyright AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty
By AP
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The Ethiopian military has begun an offensive in Tigray's capital city of Mekelle, according to reports from the region.

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The Ethiopian military on Saturday began an offensive in the Tigray regional capital in its quest to arrest the region’s defiant leaders.

Tigray TV announced the shelling midday in Mekele, a city of a half-million people. A report from the city confirmed this information, according to AP.

Communications remain largely severed to the Tigray region of around 6 million people, making it difficult to verify claims by the warring sides in the conflict between Ethiopia’s government and the TPLF, which once dominated the country’s ruling coalition but was sidelined under new Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

Ethiopia’s government had warned Mekele residents there would be “no mercy” if they didn’t move away from the leaders of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front in time.

Abiy has rejected dialogue with the TPLF. Each government regards the other as illegal.

The offensive on the densely populated city, and the threat of civilian deaths, has alarmed the international community. 

The United Nations said people were fleeing Mekele as forces closed in. Abiy’s government has said it will take care to avoid harming civilians in the tank-led assault.

As Ethiopian forces moved in, Maj Gen. Hassan Ibrahim vowed to capture the city “on all fronts.”

“It is possible that some of the wanted people may go to their families or neighbouring areas and try to hide for a few days. But our armed forces after seizing the control of Mekele city will be tasked to hunt down and capture these criminals one by one wherever they may be,” he said in comments carried by the Ethiopian News Agency.

The Tigray region has been almost entirely cut off from the outside world since November 4, when Abiy announced a military offensive in response to a TPLF attack on a military base. Humanitarians have said at hundreds of people, if not more, have been killed.

The fighting threatens to destabilise Ethiopia, which has been described as the linchpin of the strategic Horn of Africa.

With transport links cut, food and other supplies are running out in Tigray, the United Nations has asked for immediate and unimpeded access for aid.

Multiple crises are growing. More than 40,000 refugees have fled for Sudan, where people struggle to give them food, shelter and care. 

One humanitarian agency says hospitals in Tigray are running out of drugs. And fighting near camps of Eritrean refugees in northern Ethiopia has put them in the line of fire.

Worryingly, refugees in Sudan have told AP that Ethiopian forces near the border are stopping people from leaving and reporters from the news agency have said that crossings have slowed to a trickle in recent days. Ethiopia’s government has not commented on this information.

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