Ethiopian News, Current Affairs and Opinion Forum
Sam Ebalalehu
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Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by Sam Ebalalehu » 21 Dec 2020, 07:16

I have not had patience to read a single paragraph, which seems a propaganda written by a TPLF cadre rather than a Guardian reporter. If it really is written by a Guardian reporter, I could only say it is sad.

Sam Ebalalehu
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Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by Sam Ebalalehu » 21 Dec 2020, 08:22

Yabaloo, maybe the TPLF is doling our to you enough money to make you silly.
Recently, you are becoming — writing rather — as a frustrated cadre.
If you believe this article has any merit to be read, it is time for you to seek a mental health professional help. He or she might clean out the brain of yours which is apparently clogged with tribal hearsay.

Selam/
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Re: Kichamam Woyane

Post by Selam/ » 21 Dec 2020, 09:40

Kichamo Komalo - I was expecting an update on OLF sheney from the fake Borana boy. Instead, you are now turned to a full time Woyane cyber rat. Well, here is the good news. While you're changing identity like a weasel, the feds shelled the hell out of TPLF thugs and slaughterd them like chicken. I would be upset, if they had slaughtered them like human beings. KIFU!
yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 07:04
THE GUARDIAN - LONDON: - 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

LONDON: DEC 20, 2020.


Despite denials by Ethiopia, multiple reports confirm killings, looting and forcible return of refugees by Asmara’s forces.



photo: A hotel damaged by mortar shelling in Humera, in Ethiopia’s Tigray region. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty Images.




In early December, Ethiopian state television broadcast something unexpected: a fiery exchange between civilians in Shire, in the northern Tigray region, and Ethiopian soldiers, who had recently arrived in the area.

To the surprise of viewers used to wartime propaganda, the Tigrayan elders spoke in vivid detail of the horrors that had befallen the town since the outbreak of war between the federal government of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), the region’s longstanding ruling party, which was ousted from the state capital of Mekelle in late November.

Residents had been “slaughtered like chicken”, the elders said, their corpses abandoned to be “eaten by hyenas”. They also spoke of rampant looting and vandalism: “All government assets have been destroyed and looted,” said one.

Perhaps most revealing, however, was the implication that those responsible for the carnage were not Ethiopian federal troops, but outsiders. “You need to solve this problem immediately,” said an elder addressing the generals and newly appointed Tigray president, Mulu Nega. “How can institutions that should serve the government of the day be allowed to be destroyed and looted by hooligans who do not have Ethiopian values in them?”


photo: Mulu Nega: ‘How can institutions that should serve the government of the day be allowed to be destroyed and looted by hooligans who do not have Ethiopian values in them?’ Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty.



Thousands are thought to have been killed, civilians among them, and nearly 50,000 people have fled to Sudan since Ethiopia’s Tigray war began on 4 November. Pitched battles involving tanks and fighter jets – as well as militia from Amhara, which borders Tigray to the south – have flattened villages and emptied towns.

But according to eyewitnesses, aid workers and diplomats, the fighting has also involved many thousands of soldiers from neighbouring Eritrea, suggesting that what the Ethiopian government calls a “law enforcement operation” bears the hallmarks of a regional conflict.

Abiy and Eritrea’s president, Isaias Afwerki, share a common enemy in the TPLF, which dominated Ethiopia’s federal government for nearly three decades before Abiy took office in 2018. Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a bloody war between 1998 and 2000, which claimed an estimated 100,000 lives.

Earlier this month the former president of Tigray, Debretsion Gebremichael, accused Eritrean forces of mass looting. Before that he alleged Tigrayan forces were fending off Eritrean divisions on several fronts. The TPLF has claimed responsibility for one of three missile strikes on Eritrea since the war began, arguing it had acted in self-defence since the airport in Asmara, the capital, which was hit by at least two rockets in the strike, had been used to launch attacks.


photo: Debretsion Gebremichael, Tigray’s former president, has accused Eritrean forces of mass looting. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty.





Refugees crossing into Sudan have also made similar claims, telling reporters and aid workers that artillery shells that hit towns in western Tigray had come from Eritrea. But confirmation has been complicated by the lack of access for outsiders, including media, and the cutting off of communications to the region. Phone lines were restored in parts of Tigray this month, but there is still no internet.

As Ethiopia’s army declares daily victories, its people are being plunged into violence - Alex de Waal.



Abiy has denied all allegations, and told the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, on 9 December that he could guarantee no Eritrean troops had entered Ethiopian territory.

However, his government does acknowledge that Ethiopian troops who escaped to Eritrea at the start of the war were aided by Eritreans who fed, clothed and armed them before they returned to the fight in Tigray.

“The Eritrean people are not only our brothers,” Abiy told parliament last month. “They have also shown us practically that they are friends who stood by our side on a tough day.”

photo: Ethiopia’s prime minister, Abiy Ahmed (right), with Eritrea’s President Isaias Afwerki. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty.



But diplomatic sources have backed accusations that Eritrean soldiers have been actively involved in combat inside Tigray. Reuters, which interviewed several unidentified diplomats in the region and a US official, revealed earlier this month that the US government believed Eritrean soldiers had crossed into Ethiopian territory in mid-November via three northern border towns: Zalambessa, Rama and Badme.
Advertisement

A spokesperson for the US state department later confirmed the details, marking a shift among US officials, who have previously praised Eritrea for its “restraint”. “We are aware of credible reports of Eritrean military involvement in Tigray and view this as a grave development,” said the spokesperson. “We urge that any such troops be withdrawn immediately.”

“In the lingo of the state department that means they have intercepts, satellites and maybe even human intelligence as well,” a top EU diplomat in the region told the Guardian. “From everything we’ve been told it is incontrovertible they [Eritrean troops] are involved. It’s absolutely clear.”

Mesfin Hagos, a former Eritrean defence minister turned opposition figure, said in an article for online publication African Arguments, that Isaias had deployed four mechanised divisions, seven infantry divisions and a commando brigade, citing sources in the defence ministry among others.

Wallelegn, a Tigrayan working in Shire when the war began who later escaped to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, told the Guardian that the “Eritreans were really leading the Ethiopian forces in the area”.

“Their uniform is different and they are relatively old and skinny compared with the Ethiopian defence forces,” he said. “In the early days of their arrival to Shire they were looting, randomly shooting, mainly youngsters, and burning factories.”
Advertisement

He added: “At first the Ethiopian forces were emotional, and were not doing much to stop the attacks. But later on they started to take charge [and impose order].”


photo: A communal grave for victims of an alleged massacre in Mai Kadra. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty Images.




Tigray is also home to around 100,000 refugees from Eritrea, many of whom have fled indefinite national service and military conscription. When the war began they were caught in the middle and cut off from relief supplies.

A humanitarian worker in Shire told the Guardian that many refugees in Hitsats camp fled as soon as troops from Eritrea arrived in the vicinity on 19 November. According to the source, the approaching “north force” – a reference to Eritrean troops crossing the border from the north – armed refugees before looting property, slaughtering livestock and burning crops.

A senior UN official told the Guardian they had received similar allegations, including of the killing of three security guards employed by the UN at Hitsats camp who tried to prevent the abduction of refugees, and the forced conscription of refugees to fight alongside the Eritrean army.

On 11 December, the head of the UN refugee agency said it had received an “overwhelming” number of reports of Eritrean refugees in Tigray being killed, abducted or forcibly returned to Eritrea over the past month. That same day Ethiopian authorities started putting Eritrean refugees in Addis Ababa on buses and returning them to Tigray against their will. The Ethiopian government said it was “safely returning” refugees to camps where there would be access to “service delivery systems” in order to process their cases.

In recent days, according to a refugee based in Adi Harush camp, south of Hitsats, Eritrean soldiers accompanied by Ethiopian troops have patrolled the camp on the hunt for individuals. “They were searching name-by-name and home-to-home. Their main target seems to be opposition members,” said the refugee, who asked for anonymity for fear of reprisals.

Eritrean state television, the only broadcast media in the country, has made no mention of the conflict in Ethiopia since it began, Eritreans living in Asmara say. President Isaias has not uttered a word in public in response to the missiles fired at Asmara last month.

Nor has his minister of information, Yemane Gebremeskel, whose office building narrowly escaped a rocket strike on 13 November. Eritrea’s foreign minister, Osman Saleh Mohammed, acknowledged the war but denied any involvement. “We are not part of the conflict,” he told Reuters last month.

photo: Men who fled the conflict in Tigray watch the TV news at Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan. Photograph: Nariman El-Mofty/AP.



Ethiopian officials, meanwhile, have accused the TPLF of manufacturing fake Eritrean uniforms to falsely implicate their neighbours, and insist that the conflict remains an exclusively internal affair.

Meron Estefanos, director of the Eritrean Initiative on Refugee Rights, notes that not all allegations involving Eritreans are plausible. She told the Guardian that while some refugees and prominent opposition figures living in Ethiopia had certainly been forcibly returned to Eritrea, estimates of several thousand abductees are improbable.

But as for the broader claims of Eritrean involvement, she said: “People inside Eritrea know exactly what is going on.

“I am sick and tired of the fact that, no matter how many Eritreans say that Eritrean troops are in Tigray, it is not confirmed until a foreign diplomat says it is.”


SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON - https://www.theguardian.com/global-deve ... LnBs4l7msM


Selam/
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Re: Kichamam Woyane

Post by Selam/ » 21 Dec 2020, 11:32

Yaballo Komalo - The heading "Kichamo Komalo" must have gotten stuck in your cursed cerebellum. It instantly inspired you to derivate Selamicho. Just like that. Well, be my guest and mold it as your wicked self wishes. But the stem word in the Heavenly "SELAM" stands tall and stays strong.

Obviously, Woyane rats shiver to death whenever they hear that Godly word. You rather sync smoothly with Cybericho, Terroricho, Raticho, Wickedicho, etc. KIFU!

yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 10:43
Selamicha; [would've been 'Selamicho' for a male person]; ..

That is: the "cha" [female] & "cho" [male] suffix makes the subject a "XINB YE GUDEELA BARIYA" .. CAPITO?? ..

OMG! .. How many things must I have to teach these retarded & starving monkeys??? :shock:



አንቺ ቂንጥራም የወይጦ ዝንጀሮ፤ .. ሲጀመር አስተያየትሽን ማን ጠየቀ? ... መጥፎ ፉጋ+ባሪያ! ... Get lost!!











TGAA
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Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by TGAA » 21 Dec 2020, 12:53

After a long morose the grand old Arab pi..pm decided to come out of his filthy hole to tell us a report written by weyane pi..pmed child molester Alex de Waal. Yabloo the areb p..imp when did you MF said weyannes going to arrive in Addis? By the way it took only handful Fanos to kick Sudanese pu...y DF..what a treat.Old p...mps know nothing but wallow.

Selam/
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Posts: 17582
Joined: 04 Aug 2018, 13:15

Re: Kichamam Woyane

Post by Selam/ » 21 Dec 2020, 13:11

Kichamo Yaballo the Arab p!mp - As you rightly admitted, the chicken has be slaughterd not to come back to life. All other rattlings of yours are just background noises. The cowardly TPLF chickens have been killed and gegessesn. "Eat that chicken," I love Mingus.



yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 07:55
Samicho,

No one cares what a useless baboonish refugee like you thinks. The article provides more than enough justification/excuse to MASSACRE the remaining & still very much starving relatives of yours in Eritrea.

Just wait & have patience for the brave Tegarus to take this unjust war to your Eri towns, villages & even near you in diaspora.

You think that your selato-fucked Eri a*ss :shock: is safe just because you live on a ferenji welfare handout somewhere in Italy, Switzerland or the USA? .. Don't be silly! .. OMG - we shall see where you run to when the tides turn!


Fed_Up
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Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by Fed_Up » 21 Dec 2020, 13:34

Subru aka Yabello qilo the ቢሄረ የሞተ አጋሜ::


Would you provide us any evidence the presence of Eritreans troops. We will take any evidence... photo, video and satellite images.. anything?

As far as I know FANOS bend your agamieee arse and mounting ya and destroyed your skinny starved agamieee arse beyond repair within 21 days. Case close




As of your claim about the presence of shabia’s armies per the tabloids like the Guardian or whatever the name is .. we will wait .. take your time ..... go bring to us ... Don’t say “the guardian “ didn’t provide me”

Dûmb arse agame



yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 07:55
Samicho,

No one cares what a useless baboonish refugee like you thinks. The article provides more than enough justification/excuse to MASSACRE the remaining & still very much starving relatives of yours in Eritrea.

Just wait & have patience for the brave Tegarus to take this unjust war to your Eri towns, villages & even near you in diaspora.

You think that your selato-fucked Eri a*ss :shock: is safe just because you live on a ferenji welfare handout somewhere in Italy, Switzerland or the USA? .. Don't be silly! .. OMG - we shall see where you run to when the tides turn!


In the meantime, try to enjoy these nice old Sudanese/Nubian songs ...



song: [can you tell the Amharic version of this classic Nubian/Sudanese song by Tilahun Gessesse??] .. الكورال - عزه في هواك




song:
محمد وردي - عذبني Mohammed Wardi - Azibni






song:
محمد وردي -بين الريد والهوى (تسجيل اذاعي) Mohammed Wardi - Bain Al-raid W Al-hawa






song: احمد المصطفى - رحماك يا ملاك Ahmed Al-Mustafa - Rahmak Ya Malak



TGAA
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Joined: 07 Apr 2019, 20:34

Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by TGAA » 21 Dec 2020, 19:43

yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 08:57
MEANWHILE IN THE OUT-OF-CONTROL WEITO KILIL ...


Yabello the man prostitute and professional old p..imp is the best p..imping you can do? Weyannes have invested in 20000000 bust now you p...imped brain the small train that could came up with 10 $ t-shirt 👕 😀 to hoodwin the great people of Ethiopians and Eritrean?;) old Arab pim..p check your shelf life ...expired .

Hawzen
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Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by Hawzen » 21 Dec 2020, 21:15

Brother yaballo,

I understand that it has not been easy for you and your TPLF Junta. But I just want to give you a wise advice if I may...

First, it is time to man up and accept your absolute DEFEAT. FYI...there are to kinds of losers: bad loser and good losers and it up to you to choose one of them but I advise you to be a good loser. Second, you need to give credit where credit is due.. i.e. The Amhara Militia warriors in collaboration with the Ethiopian Federal Army are solely responsible for the disappearance of your TPLF. Now, Amhara militia warriors have recovered every inch of their stolen fertile lands from Tigray.. such as Humera, Welqait, Tsegede, Tselemti, Raya e.t.c

In the mean time, Eritrean troops have always been within Eritrean territory just patrolling the border.... except now, they have taken control of the Eritrean land Badme which has been decided by international boundary commission as Eritrean territory....

In short, TPLF and agames lost badly! Amhara recovered their fertile lands! Honorable Dr. Abby led Ethiopia clearly won! Eritrea and its troops are just watching from the border!!! Majesty Hawzen has been enjoying every single minute from sofa with Red Wine :lol: :lol:

Dedebit is always dedeb
R.I.P Abay Tigray and TPLF

yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 07:04
THE GUARDIAN - LONDON: - 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

LONDON: DEC 20, 2020.


Despite denials by Ethiopia, multiple reports confirm killings, looting and forcible return of refugees by Asmara’s forces.



photo: A hotel damaged by mortar shelling in Humera, in Ethiopia’s Tigray region. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty Images.




In early December, Ethiopian state television broadcast something unexpected: a fiery exchange between civilians in Shire, in the northern Tigray region, and Ethiopian soldiers, who had recently arrived in the area.

To the surprise of viewers used to wartime propaganda, the Tigrayan elders spoke in vivid detail of the horrors that had befallen the town since the outbreak of war between the federal government of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), the region’s longstanding ruling party, which was ousted from the state capital of Mekelle in late November.

Residents had been “slaughtered like chicken”, the elders said, their corpses abandoned to be “eaten by hyenas”. They also spoke of rampant looting and vandalism: “All government assets have been destroyed and looted,” said one.

Perhaps most revealing, however, was the implication that those responsible for the carnage were not Ethiopian federal troops, but outsiders. “You need to solve this problem immediately,” said an elder addressing the generals and newly appointed Tigray president, Mulu Nega. “How can institutions that should serve the government of the day be allowed to be destroyed and looted by hooligans who do not have Ethiopian values in them?”


photo: Mulu Nega: ‘How can institutions that should serve the government of the day be allowed to be destroyed and looted by hooligans who do not have Ethiopian values in them?’ Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty.



Thousands are thought to have been killed, civilians among them, and nearly 50,000 people have fled to Sudan since Ethiopia’s Tigray war began on 4 November. Pitched battles involving tanks and fighter jets – as well as militia from Amhara, which borders Tigray to the south – have flattened villages and emptied towns.

But according to eyewitnesses, aid workers and diplomats, the fighting has also involved many thousands of soldiers from neighbouring Eritrea, suggesting that what the Ethiopian government calls a “law enforcement operation” bears the hallmarks of a regional conflict.

Abiy and Eritrea’s president, Isaias Afwerki, share a common enemy in the TPLF, which dominated Ethiopia’s federal government for nearly three decades before Abiy took office in 2018. Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a bloody war between 1998 and 2000, which claimed an estimated 100,000 lives.

Earlier this month the former president of Tigray, Debretsion Gebremichael, accused Eritrean forces of mass looting. Before that he alleged Tigrayan forces were fending off Eritrean divisions on several fronts. The TPLF has claimed responsibility for one of three missile strikes on Eritrea since the war began, arguing it had acted in self-defence since the airport in Asmara, the capital, which was hit by at least two rockets in the strike, had been used to launch attacks.


photo: Debretsion Gebremichael, Tigray’s former president, has accused Eritrean forces of mass looting. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty.





Refugees crossing into Sudan have also made similar claims, telling reporters and aid workers that artillery shells that hit towns in western Tigray had come from Eritrea. But confirmation has been complicated by the lack of access for outsiders, including media, and the cutting off of communications to the region. Phone lines were restored in parts of Tigray this month, but there is still no internet.

As Ethiopia’s army declares daily victories, its people are being plunged into violence - Alex de Waal.



Abiy has denied all allegations, and told the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, on 9 December that he could guarantee no Eritrean troops had entered Ethiopian territory.

However, his government does acknowledge that Ethiopian troops who escaped to Eritrea at the start of the war were aided by Eritreans who fed, clothed and armed them before they returned to the fight in Tigray.

“The Eritrean people are not only our brothers,” Abiy told parliament last month. “They have also shown us practically that they are friends who stood by our side on a tough day.”

photo: Ethiopia’s prime minister, Abiy Ahmed (right), with Eritrea’s President Isaias Afwerki. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty.



But diplomatic sources have backed accusations that Eritrean soldiers have been actively involved in combat inside Tigray. Reuters, which interviewed several unidentified diplomats in the region and a US official, revealed earlier this month that the US government believed Eritrean soldiers had crossed into Ethiopian territory in mid-November via three northern border towns: Zalambessa, Rama and Badme.
Advertisement

A spokesperson for the US state department later confirmed the details, marking a shift among US officials, who have previously praised Eritrea for its “restraint”. “We are aware of credible reports of Eritrean military involvement in Tigray and view this as a grave development,” said the spokesperson. “We urge that any such troops be withdrawn immediately.”

“In the lingo of the state department that means they have intercepts, satellites and maybe even human intelligence as well,” a top EU diplomat in the region told the Guardian. “From everything we’ve been told it is incontrovertible they [Eritrean troops] are involved. It’s absolutely clear.”

Mesfin Hagos, a former Eritrean defence minister turned opposition figure, said in an article for online publication African Arguments, that Isaias had deployed four mechanised divisions, seven infantry divisions and a commando brigade, citing sources in the defence ministry among others.

Wallelegn, a Tigrayan working in Shire when the war began who later escaped to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, told the Guardian that the “Eritreans were really leading the Ethiopian forces in the area”.

“Their uniform is different and they are relatively old and skinny compared with the Ethiopian defence forces,” he said. “In the early days of their arrival to Shire they were looting, randomly shooting, mainly youngsters, and burning factories.”
Advertisement

He added: “At first the Ethiopian forces were emotional, and were not doing much to stop the attacks. But later on they started to take charge [and impose order].”


photo: A communal grave for victims of an alleged massacre in Mai Kadra. Photograph: Eduardo Soteras/AFP/Getty Images.




Tigray is also home to around 100,000 refugees from Eritrea, many of whom have fled indefinite national service and military conscription. When the war began they were caught in the middle and cut off from relief supplies.

A humanitarian worker in Shire told the Guardian that many refugees in Hitsats camp fled as soon as troops from Eritrea arrived in the vicinity on 19 November. According to the source, the approaching “north force” – a reference to Eritrean troops crossing the border from the north – armed refugees before looting property, slaughtering livestock and burning crops.

A senior UN official told the Guardian they had received similar allegations, including of the killing of three security guards employed by the UN at Hitsats camp who tried to prevent the abduction of refugees, and the forced conscription of refugees to fight alongside the Eritrean army.

On 11 December, the head of the UN refugee agency said it had received an “overwhelming” number of reports of Eritrean refugees in Tigray being killed, abducted or forcibly returned to Eritrea over the past month. That same day Ethiopian authorities started putting Eritrean refugees in Addis Ababa on buses and returning them to Tigray against their will. The Ethiopian government said it was “safely returning” refugees to camps where there would be access to “service delivery systems” in order to process their cases.

In recent days, according to a refugee based in Adi Harush camp, south of Hitsats, Eritrean soldiers accompanied by Ethiopian troops have patrolled the camp on the hunt for individuals. “They were searching name-by-name and home-to-home. Their main target seems to be opposition members,” said the refugee, who asked for anonymity for fear of reprisals.

Eritrean state television, the only broadcast media in the country, has made no mention of the conflict in Ethiopia since it began, Eritreans living in Asmara say. President Isaias has not uttered a word in public in response to the missiles fired at Asmara last month.

Nor has his minister of information, Yemane Gebremeskel, whose office building narrowly escaped a rocket strike on 13 November. Eritrea’s foreign minister, Osman Saleh Mohammed, acknowledged the war but denied any involvement. “We are not part of the conflict,” he told Reuters last month.

photo: Men who fled the conflict in Tigray watch the TV news at Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan. Photograph: Nariman El-Mofty/AP.



Ethiopian officials, meanwhile, have accused the TPLF of manufacturing fake Eritrean uniforms to falsely implicate their neighbours, and insist that the conflict remains an exclusively internal affair.

Meron Estefanos, director of the Eritrean Initiative on Refugee Rights, notes that not all allegations involving Eritreans are plausible. She told the Guardian that while some refugees and prominent opposition figures living in Ethiopia had certainly been forcibly returned to Eritrea, estimates of several thousand abductees are improbable.

But as for the broader claims of Eritrean involvement, she said: “People inside Eritrea know exactly what is going on.

“I am sick and tired of the fact that, no matter how many Eritreans say that Eritrean troops are in Tigray, it is not confirmed until a foreign diplomat says it is.”


SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON - https://www.theguardian.com/global-deve ... LnBs4l7msM

Fed_Up
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Posts: 23806
Joined: 15 Apr 2009, 10:50

Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by Fed_Up » 21 Dec 2020, 22:03

What we did to you will remain in history. We are the doers not the talkers. We put you where agamieee categorized, starvin marvin tribe. After what we did to you, you have no option and the right of እንደ መንደር ሴት ወግብን ይዞ መሳደብ will remain according until we cut your tongue and unhygienic fingers. As we put you up, we dragged you like dead dog to the mud then buried 100 fts deep to the ground. Now you agamewoch will NEVER EVER FORGET Eritreans and FANOs men’s dïck the rest of your miserable existence and beyond generations to come. We will make sure you idiots to stay in the mud. We will step our boots in your faces for eternity. It will be our sworn duty. Mark that!!

Game Over.


yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 14:14
Fedicho [aka 'Fed-up of being raped by Arab kidney-snatchers'] ..

The participation of the starving Eri soldiers in Tigray has even been confirmed by US & EU [European] diplomats in Addis Ababa, Asmara, Khartoum, Cairo,Djibouti, Nairobi, etc.

Of course, the best - MOST RELEVANT - evidence comes from the actual tegarus & THAT is the proof that WILL sign the fate aka the massacre of starving relatives of yours still stranded in Isayas's North Korea of Africa.

You WILL know the proof of Eri soldiers' despicable acts of looting & massacring their fellow agames from south of the mereb river WOULD'VE BEEN RECEIVED when hordes of armed tegarus march into your/Eri villages, Italian-built but now weirdly youth-devoid ghost towns such as Deqe-mehari, Mendefera, Karen, Asmara, Massawa, etc, & start smashing them as well as butchering the locals en-mass.

Just wait for a while & then .. voila! .. agames from north of the mereb river WILL be remembering the long-lost-names of their ancient agame relatives from south of the mereb river [Tigray] in a bid to beg why the tegarus from Tigray won't burn-them-alive & massacre them in the most brutal - and graphic manner. Just wait .. OK? .. Bye.






kerenite
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Posts: 4680
Joined: 16 Nov 2013, 13:15

Re: THE GUARDIAN - LONDON:- 'Slaughtered like chickens': Eritrea heavily involved in Tigray conflict, say eyewitnesses.

Post by kerenite » 22 Dec 2020, 14:55

yaballo wrote:
21 Dec 2020, 14:14
Fedicho [aka 'Fed-up of being raped by Arab kidney-snatchers'] ..

The participation of the starving Eri soldiers in Tigray has even been confirmed by US & EU [European] diplomats in Addis Ababa, Asmara, Khartoum, Cairo,Djibouti, Nairobi, etc.

Of course, the best - MOST RELEVANT - evidence comes from the actual tegarus & THAT is the proof that WILL sign the fate aka the massacre of starving relatives of yours still stranded in Isayas's North Korea of Africa.

You WILL know the proof of Eri soldiers' despicable acts of looting & massacring their fellow agames from south of the mereb river WOULD'VE BEEN RECEIVED when hordes of armed tegarus march into your/Eri villages, Italian-built but now weirdly youth-devoid ghost towns such as Deqe-mehari, Mendefera, Karen, Asmara, Massawa, etc, & start smashing them as well as butchering the locals en-mass.

Just wait for a while & then .. voila! .. agames from north of the mereb river WILL be remembering the long-lost-names of their ancient agame relatives from south of the mereb river [Tigray] in a bid to beg why the tegarus from Tigray won't burn-them-alive & massacre them in the most brutal - and graphic manner. Just wait .. OK? .. Bye.





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Yabello greetings,

The ongoing sad civil war in ethiopia is getting uglier. Sudan is indirectly invloved and behind the scene egypt is fanning the flames of war and nobody can foretell how and when it will end.

My friend, please differentiate eritreans ground eritreans. The overwheming majority of eris do not condone such bloody civil war. Save few who suffer from identity crisis such as the amiche dude above. Those are the ones who are standing with one party, namely with the 7th king's biltsigina party.

Finally,

Thanks for sharing with us the lovely sudanese songs among them my very very favorite al belabil's lovely song LON EL MENGA.

In conclusion,

Be kind to the majority of eris who have nothing to do with the ugly civil war which is being waged in ethiopia as we speak. We hope sanity prevails and ethios resolve their problems without further bloodshed.

P. S. Are poor forced eri troops involved? Yes and no. We will know more when the dust settles.

Cheers!

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