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Amnesty report implicates Isayas in Crime Against Humanity for Axum Massacre of hundreds of Ethiopian civilians

Posted: 25 Feb 2021, 22:12
by eden
Ethiopia: Eritrean troops’ massacre of hundreds of Axum civilians may amount to crime against humanity


26 February 2021, 00:01 UTC

  • Amnesty International interviewed 41 survivors and witnesses to mass killings in November
  • Troops carried out extrajudicial executions, indiscriminate shelling and widespread looting
  • Satellite imagery analysis shows evidence consistent with new burial sites

Eritrean troops fighting in Ethiopia’s Tigray state systematically killed hundreds of unarmed civilians in the northern city of Axum on 28-29 November 2020, opening fire in the streets and conducting house-to-house raids in a massacre that may amount to a crime against humanity, Amnesty International said today in a new report.

Amnesty International spoke to 41 survivors and witnesses – including in-person interviews with recently arrived refugees in eastern Sudan and phone interviews with people in Axum – as well as 20 others with knowledge of the events. They consistently described extrajudicial executions, indiscriminate shelling and widespread looting after Ethiopian and Eritrean troops led an offensive to take control of the city amid the conflict with the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in mid-November.

Satellite imagery analysis by the organization’s Crisis Evidence Lab corroborates reports of indiscriminate shelling and mass looting, as well as identifies signs of new mass burials near two of the city’s churches.

“The evidence is compelling and points to a chilling conclusion. Ethiopian and Eritrean troops carried out multiple war crimes in their offensive to take control of Axum. Above and beyond that, Eritrean troops went on a rampage and systematically killed hundreds of civilians in cold blood, which appears to constitute crimes against humanity,” said Deprose Muchena, Amnesty International's Director for East and Southern Africa.

This atrocity ranks among the worst documented so far in this conflict. Besides the soaring death toll, Axum’s residents were plunged into days of collective trauma amid violence, mourning and mass burials.

The mass killings came just before the annual celebration at Axum Tsion Mariam, a major Ethiopian Orthodox Christian festival on 30 November, compounding the trauma by casting a pall over an annual event that typically draws many pilgrims and tourists to the sacred city.

On 19 November 2020, Ethiopian and Eritrean military forces took control of Axum in a large-scale offensive, killing and displacing civilians with indiscriminate shelling and shooting.

In the nine days that followed, the Eritrean military engaged in widespread looting of civilian property and extrajudicial executions.

Witnesses could easily identify the Eritrean forces. They drove vehicles with Eritrean license plates, wore distinctive camouflage and footwear used by the Eritrean army and spoke Arabic or a dialect of Tigrinya not spoken in Ethiopia. Some bore the ritual facial scars of the Ben Amir, an ethnic group absent from Ethiopia. Finally, some of the soldiers made no secret of their identity; they openly told residents they were Eritrean.

‘All we could see were dead bodies and people crying’

According to witnesses, the Eritrean troops unleashed the worst of the violence on 28-29 November. The onslaught came directly after a small band of pro-TPLF militiamen attacked the soldiers’ base on Mai Koho mountain on the morning of 28 November. The militiamen were armed with rifles and supported by residents brandishing improvised weapons, including sticks, knives and stones.

Sustained gunfire can be heard ringing out across the city in a video recorded early that day from several locations at the bottom of the mountain.

A 22-year-old man who wanted to bring food to the militia told Amnesty International: “The Eritrean soldiers were trained but the young residents didn’t even know how to shoot… a lot of the [local] fighters started running away and dropped their weapons. The Eritrean soldiers came into the city and started killing randomly.”

Survivors and witnesses said Eritrean forces deliberately and wantonly shot at civilians from about 4pm onwards on 28 November.

According to residents, the victims carried no weapons and many were running away from the soldiers when they were shot. One man who hid in an unfinished building said he saw a group of six Eritrean soldiers kill a neighbour with a vehicle-mounted heavy machine-gun on the street near the Mana Hotel: “He was standing. I think he was confused. They were probably around 10 metres from him. They shot him in the head.”

A 21-year-old male resident said: “I saw a lot of people dead on the street. Even my uncle’s family. Six of his family members were killed. So many people were killed.”

The killings left Axum’s streets and cobblestone plazas strewn with bodies. One man who had run out of the city returned at night after the shooting stopped. “All we could see on the streets were dead bodies and people crying,” he said.

On 29 November, Eritrean soldiers shot at anyone who tried to move the bodies of those killed.

The soldiers also continued to carry out house-to-house raids, hunting down and killing adult men, as well as some teenage boys and a smaller number of women. One man said he watched through his window and saw six men killed in the street outside his house on 29 November. He said the soldiers lined them up and shot from behind, using a light-machine gun to kill several at a time with a single bullet.

Interviewees named scores of people they knew who were killed, and Amnesty International has collected the names of more than 240 of the victims. The organization has been unable to independently verify the overall death toll, but consistent witness testimonies and corroborating evidence make it plausible that hundreds of residents were killed.

Most of the burials took place on 30 November, but the process of collecting and burying the bodies lasted several days.

Many residents said they volunteered to move the bodies on carts, in batches of five to 10 at a time; one said he transported 45 bodies. Residents estimate that several hundred people were buried in the aftermath of the massacre, and they attended funerals at several churches where scores were buried. Hundreds were buried at the largest funeral, held at the complex that includes the Arba’etu Ensessa church and the Axum Tsion St Mariam Church.

Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab geolocated a video showing people carrying a dead man on a stretcher in Da’Ero Ela Plaza (14.129918, 38.717113), towards Arba’etu Ensessa church. High-resolution satellite imagery from 13 December shows disturbed earth consistent with recent graves around the Arba’etu Ensessa and the Abune Aregawi churches.

In the days following the burials, the Eritrean army rounded up hundreds of residents in different parts of the city. They beat some of the men, threatening them with a new round of revenge killings if they resisted.

Axum residents witnessed a surge in the Eritrean army’s looting during this period, targeting stores, public buildings including a hospital, and private homes. Luxury goods and vehicles were widely looted, as well as medication, furniture, household items, food, and drink.

International humanitarian law (the laws of war) prohibits deliberate targeting of civilians, indiscriminate attacks, and pillage (looting). Violations of these rules constitute war crimes. Unlawful killings that form part of a widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population are crimes against humanity.

“As a matter of urgency, there must be a UN-led investigation into the grave violations in Axum. Those suspected of responsibility for war crimes or crimes against humanity must be prosecuted in fair trials and victims and their families must receive full reparation,” said Deprose Muchena.

“We repeat our call on the Ethiopian government to grant full and unimpeded access across Tigray for humanitarian, human rights, and media organizations.”




Amnesty.org

Re: Amnesty releases report, implicates Isayas in Crimes Against Humanity for Axum massacre of hundreds of civilians

Posted: 25 Feb 2021, 22:23
by sesame
መስኪን ዓጋመ

Not a single picture of a single dead Agame. How can the evidence be compelling. Good to see agames reduced to this, waiting for salvation from outside. No one is going to come to save Agames. Get that dumbo! This IS TIGRAY FOREVER! Recognize and remember it. You agames are a diminished people henceforth.


Re: Amnesty report implicates Isayas in Crime Against Humanity for Axum Massacre of hundreds of Ethiopian civilians

Posted: 26 Feb 2021, 00:20
by eden
Why are you sticking your neck out all by yourself when the rest of the blind HGDEF follower crew is out of ER trying to process all this and what it means?

Expect Human Rights Watch and Ethiopia Human Rights Commission reports on this same City.

And if you must watch video, then give it a couple of months and either Abiy or his successor will grant access to these institutions. This is not hard to prove.

It took me long for this to sink in, too. I even called Martin Plaut dangerous when he first reported it. I am still in shock this is the ugly history of my country. At some point we have to come to terms. We cannot deny it.

Re: Amnesty report implicates Isayas in Crime Against Humanity for Axum Massacre of hundreds of Ethiopian civilians

Posted: 26 Feb 2021, 00:27
by Cigar
eden the agame hoe, all the photos of other countries dead, hungry, Cambodian camels carrying good as Eritreans camels hauled by Eritreans and numerous unfortunate other national people you stupid agames posted as are your supposedly dead or hungry agame people will come back to haunt your qondaf as*ses.
Not that I am saying you have any case, but if you try you will be told to go fu*ck your agame selves.
You agames have the longest rap sheet of lie, deceit, cowardiness and in a court of law, such behaviour is the first thing a judge checks.
Your agames massacred sleeping Ethiopian army, you massacred thousands in Maykadra, destroyed airport, bridges, cut power and the Ethiopian govt didn't cry about it or opted to drag the 5 million filthy agames to court and you have nerves to play a victim?
You might get what you are asking for. More miseries that is...I mean like you got your a*ss spanked in the war of 1998-2000 and in the international court house.
GTFO. Which is your country you weasel?
Sherm*utta agame has no country. You belong to the lesst important kilil of Ethiopia.
Deal with it.
Because we didn't respond to your garbage doesn't mean you are right.
Remember we are Shaebia aka hgdef. And we specially our govt doesn't read what you say, what you write and certainly doesn't respond to any nut case or entity.