is stated in a clear words, to afflict and shut down this economic backbone of the country, putting the lives of millions of people at risk. We need to get up for the country and its people and defend against power of evils.Ethiopian Airlines is a state-owned economic powerhouse that generates billions of dollars a year carrying passengers to hubs across the African continent and all over the world, and it is also a member of the Star Alliance, a group of some of the world's top aviation companies.
The war, which is the subject of the major issue at hand here "exploded" when "Ethiopia accused" the TPLF. Ethiopia is a unique place on this world because war erupts due to "accusation".
CNN is also refuting the accusations that "both sides have committed grave human rights" and labeling it on the government side alone, which itself has been just a lip-service, to begin with.Long-simmering tensions between Ethiopia's government and the ruling party in the Tigray region exploded on November 4, when Ethiopia accused the Tigray People's Liberation Front of attacking a federal army base.
If you repeat falsehood again and again, then it will start to apear true to the listners. Look at the number of times accusations like the following are repeated in the article.While all sides have been accused of committing grave human rights abuses during Tigray's war, previous CNN investigations established that Eritrean soldiers have been behind some of the worst atrocities, including sexual violence and mass killings
CNN also admits that it has in fact no hard evidence:Cargo documents show that the series of flights between Ethiopia and Eritrea continued until at least November 28, 2020.
Can someone please tell me why CNN opted to depend on what it heard from an employee of the airlines when it also claimed on multiple counts of having contacted aviation experts? Is something not very much odd here?Both cargo and passenger planes were used in the operation, though CNN has no evidence that commercial passengers were on any of the flights carrying weapons. Many of these flights do not appear on popular online flight tracking platforms such as Flightradar24. When they do, the destination in Eritrea is often not visible and the flight path vanishes once the plane crosses the border from Ethiopia.
Someone who is assigned to load the planes were also able to see what was in the luggage, it seems has got also a rader in the hand.The employees told CNN the staff could manually turn off the ADS-B signal on board to prevent the flights being publicly tracked.
Just look at the following statement:One former employee told CNN they were instructed at Addis Ababa's Bole International Airport to load guns and four military vehicles onto an Ethiopian Airlines cargo plane that was due to fly to Belgium but was sent instead to Eritrea.
Why is someone who has already fled Ethiopia and opted to take side with the TPLF still chose to hide his identity and denying CNN a single credible source, who at least identifies him/herself in public for a cause he/she believed in?Days later, the employee said they were temporarily suspended from work. They believe they were suspended for being Tigrayan but also for the incident with the soldiers. The employee fled Ethiopia in March.
Someone is suspended because of his/her ethnic background while the head of the airline itself is a Tigrean.
Flow is on both sides, funny.
People have got no more important issue other than fleeing weapons forth and back between Ethiopia and Eritrea.Several employees at the Addis Ababa airport said they saw multiple weapons flights leave for Eritrea each day at the outset of the conflict. They also spoke about flights carrying weapons from Eritrea back to Ethiopia. It's unclear why armaments were being transferred back to Ethiopia
Why is someone refusing to give information for something which is already in a public database? Which logic dictates this?
CNN has contacted the Bulgarian government and reached out to Bulgarian arms producers but received no response. According to the EU's public database, Bulgaria sold weapons to Ethiopia as recently as 2020.