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Let’s See the Proof of “Ethnic Cleansing” in Ethiopia, New York Times! (Ambassador Fitsum Arega)

Posted: 03 Mar 2021, 23:06
by Zmeselo


Let’s See the Proof of “Ethnic Cleansing” in Ethiopia, New York Times!

https://ambassadorfitsumarega.medium.co ... e1df12b23b


Ambassador Fitsum Arega of Ethiopia

1 day ago

On Sunday, February 28, 2021, I sent an op-ed submission to the editor of the New York Times in response to the article Ethiopia’s War Leads to Ethnic Cleansing in Tigray Region, U.S. Report Says, https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/26/worl ... nsing.html along with the following note urging the Times to acknowledge my submission:

I should like to start by stating that I do not expect the New York Times to publish my response to your inaccurate and biased report on alleged “ethnic cleansing” in Tigray region of Ethiopia. Over the past months, I have made repeated efforts with the Times to respond to various similarly inaccurate and biased reports against Ethiopia, to no avail. I am submitting the op-ed piece below with the sanguine view, and in the interest of fundamental fairness, that you will publish it. Attached on official letterhead and below, please find my proposed op-ed piece.

My op-ed was ignored.

In your February 26, 2021 article, you claim,
Ethiopian officials and allied militia fighters are leading a systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing in Tigray, the war-torn region in northern Ethiopia.
You base this claim on an
internal United States government report obtained by The New York Times.
First, the Ethiopian Government categorically and completely rejects your unsubstantiated and inflammatory claim of “ethnic cleansing” in Tirgay. The Ethiopian Government unconditionally condemns any violation of human rights, including “ethnic cleansing” anywhere in the world.

Second, it is curious that the New York Times should be privileged to access an “internal U.S. Government report” when the subject matter of the report, the Government of Ethiopia, is kept in the dark about the existence of such a report. The Ethiopian Government has no knowledge of such a report and is therefore unable to respond to your characterization of the allegations.

Third, a core journalistic principle https://www.nytimes.com/editorial-stand ... AndPurpose of the New York Times declares,
Our fundamental purpose is to protect the impartiality and neutrality of The Times and the integrity of its report.
We understand this to mean the Times will, as a matter of principle, get both sides of the story before sharing them with their readership. Indeed, doing so is simply an act of journalistic fairness. It is regrettable that you failed to exercise minimum due diligence required under your own journalistic standards and contact the Ethiopian Government in Addis Ababa or its Embassy in the United States for comment before publishing the story.
Consistent with your own principles of impartiality and neutrality, it is important for those who are depicted in an unfavorable light in your report to have the opportunity to respond and not only present their side of the story but also to help ensure fair coverage and your readers are provided the most complete and accurate view of the subject matter reported.

Fourth, the fact that you have access to the alleged report and failed to make it public creates the inescapable impression that the report was either leaked to you in bad faith and with ulterior motives or the report itself lacks substantial evidential basis to support its purported conclusion of “ethnic cleansing.” As I indicated above, such an allegation of grave human rights violations is customarily shared with the government in question first, and not shared covertly with a news media outlet. Diplomacy-by-media leaks is counterproductive because it shrouds the truth in a fog of insinuations, hints and allegations.

Fifth, your story lacks any semblance of balance and context. The indisputable fact of the matter is that the leadership of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) launched an insurrectionary, massive and deadly attack on the Ethiopian National Defense forces on November 4, 2020. The Ethiopian Government, just like any other sovereign government in the world, took reasonable action to suppress the attack, restore constitutional supremacy and maintain law and order.

Your report completely ignores 1) the fact the TPLF committed the most heinous and treasonous crimes against a national defense force in the military history by killing, maiming, torturing and abusing Ethiopian federal troops stationed in Tigray region; 2) the massive atrocities committed by the TPLF in Mai Karda, documented by Ethiopian Human Rights Commission and Amnesty International; 3) the destruction caused by the TPLF to valuable infrastructure including electric power and communication services, and 4) TPLF’s release of untold numbers of convicted criminals who are reportedly committing atrocities today.

I also note with considerable dismay the fact that the New York Times has chosen to amplify the erroneous narratives of the diaspora supporters of the TPLF who traffic falsehoods and disinformation in its publications over the last several months.

Let me set the record straight. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has made provision of humanitarian relief to Tigray region his highest priority. Many international relief agencies are today operating in Tigray region, and the World Food Program has agreed to “scale up operations” to deliver aid. Relief aid has been distributed to over 3.1 million people, with the Ethiopian Government providing more than 70 percent of that aid. The Government has issued an urgent call to its international partners to strengthen existing delivery of humanitarian aid to those in need. The Provisional Administration of Tigray has restored civil administration and life in vast parts of the region has returned to normal.

Regarding allegations of human rights violations in Tigray region, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has tasked an investigative team consisting of representatives from the Federal Attorney General’s office and the Federal Police Commission to investigate the claims of human rights abuses in Axum and other places, including Mai Karda. Indeed, 36 suspects in the November 9, 2020 Mai Karda atrocities are awaiting trial at court. The Ethiopian Government will prosecute any persons suspected of human rights violations to the fullest extent of the law.

Regarding the baseless and inflammatory allegation of “ethnic cleansing” in Tigray, we respectfully request that you share us the “internal report by the U.S. Government” allegedly in your possession. Our view is that if such a report actually exists and is based on credible and substantial evidence, the proper U.S. authorities would have shared it with us before sharing it with members of the media. We believe our request is fair even after the fact of your reporting.

I trust this request will not present a challenge to the New York Times. After all, your core journalistic principle professes:
Our fundamental purpose is to protect the impartiality and neutrality of The Times and the integrity of its report.

Re: Let’s See the Proof of “Ethnic Cleansing” in Ethiopia, New York Times! (Ambassador Fitsum Arega)

Posted: 03 Mar 2021, 23:18
by Zmeselo

"A Southern Light at the end of the Tunnel"



WORLD
Breaking: British analyst for NYT admits link with TPLF in Ethiopia

awasaguardian

http://awasaguardian.com/index.php/2021 ... -ethiopia/

March 4, 2021

British politician Alex De Waal admitted Tuesday that he has connections with Tigrayan Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) fighters, who sparked a deadly insurrection in northern Ethiopia. He was the key analyst used by a New York Times (NYT) article spreading TPLF propaganda of “ethnic cleansing” in Tigray, without providing evidence.

In a new commentary defending the TPLF, the British analyst said he received “phone calls” that an Ethiopian army division was destroyed by “Tigray’s defense forces” (TPLF) and they informed him of the existence of “five Eritrean divisions.” Despite DeWaal’s past close relations with members of the TPLF dictatorship who ruled Ethiopia for 29 years, there was no previous evidence he had active links with the TPLF insurgents, until his recent admission.

In January, Mr DeWaal wrote a controversial tribute in honor of the late TPLF leader Seyoum Mesfin, who infamously promised to “turn Ethiopia into Syria” in October 2020. De Waal has also went on a media blitz, publishing Op-Ed articles and allegedly presenting himself as “independent researcher” in various European and United States media outlets. Despite publishing Mr DeWaal’s partisan comments, the New York Times refused to include a response by the Ethiopian government, even refusing to publish the reaction by Washington DC based Ethiopian ambassador Fitsum Arega.

De Waal is one of the top western analysts who have abruptly sprung up since the November TPLF insurrection; often ignoring or downplaying the massacre of Amharas and other minorities in Tigray by TPLF, while blaming only the government’s response to the insurrection. Another analyst, also British, is Martin Plaut who has allegedly overtly declared his allegiance to the TPLF and in some cases went on TPLF-affiliated media to provide military strategy in order for the rebellion to succeed in overthrowing the Ethiopian government.

Reacting to the unverified New York Times article, top US official Anthony Blinken outraged many Ethiopians, by demanding Amharas leave the Welkait region of Ethiopia, a place Amharas have lived in for over a millennia. Amhara officials of PP called the US State Department’s anti-Amhara comments “reckless” and an “incitement” that legitimizes the ostracizaton of ethnic minorities in Ethiopia. In light of the inclusive policies of the Democrat Party of the United States, several Ethiopian-Americans were also shocked of Anthony Blinken’s comments and some expressed regret online for voting for Joe Biden.

Both Tigrayans and Amhara have lived in Welkait peacefully for hundreds of years before the TPLF annexed the land in 1991 and made it part of “Western Tigray.”

Eritrean Refugees “Shot”

European anthropologist Natalia Paszkiewicz reported the plight of Eritrean refugees since TPLF trigged the war and a massive humanitarian crisis. Up to 300 Eritrean refugees in Hitsats camp were “shot” by a Tigrayan militia and the women were robbed by local Tigrayan “villagers,” according to Paszkiewicz. The villagers told the refugees
you are all Shabia anyway
as they plundered the camp.

The term “Shabia” refers to the current ruling party of the Eritrean government.

Such incidents add to the pattern of Tigrayan civilian active involvement in the conflict as TPLF leaders like Debretsion and Getachew Reda illegally demanded that all “Tigray people” raise arms in order to use a whole population as human shield, a violation of the Laws of war. Amnesty International’s latest report has also confirmed that even Tigrayan civilians were urged to use “improvised weapons” to join the war; which has exasperated the humanitarian crisis.

____________



Re: Let’s See the Proof of “Ethnic Cleansing” in Ethiopia, New York Times! (Ambassador Fitsum Arega)

Posted: 03 Mar 2021, 23:34
by Zmeselo


SECTION /OPINION

LETTER

Ethiopia right of reply


Hirut Zemene is the ambassador of Ethiopia to Belgium, Luxembourg, and the EU institutions (Photo: Ethiopia Embassy/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/MFAEthiopia/ph ... 335265454/)

By HIRUT ZEMENE

https://euobserver.com/opinion/151070

BRUSSELS, 1. MAR,

Letter to the editor of EUobserver,

We have come across an article issued by your media outlet under the title Ethiopia war creating new 'refugee crisis', EU envoy warns https://euobserver.com/foreign/151038 dated 24 February 2021, which was based on a briefing given by the Finnish foreign minister, Mr Pekka Haavisto, on the current situation in Tigray region of Ethiopia after his visit to Ethiopia on behalf of the HRVP of the European Commission.

It is regrettable that the statement and facts given by Mr Pekka Haavisto about the situation in Ethiopia do not reflect the reality on the ground and contain unsubstantiated claims.

Therefore, the embassy of Ethiopia would like to set the record straight to the esteemed readership by stating the following facts about the situation in Ethiopia, particularly in Tigray.

The Finnish foreign minister, during his visit to Ethiopia in mid-February, was accorded the opportunity to be briefed on the situation in Tigray by relevant higher government officials of Ethiopia, including with the prime minister.

The government of Ethiopia was also more than willing to facilitate travel to the region for the foreign minister to have a first-hand account of the situation in Tigray region.

However, minister Haavisto showed no interest to travel to the region, but instead resorted to visit the refugee camp in neighbouring Sudan and extrapolate grossly inadequate information to provide unfounded claims that put unnecessary pressure on the government of Ethiopia.

The assertion made by the minister stating that
you have come to a situation which is militarily and human rights-wise, humanitarian-wise very out of control,
does not reflect, by any means whatsoever, the tangible progress being registered thus far.

As has been verified by many including humanitarian aid providers on the ground, the fact is that so far 3.1 million people have benefitted from humanitarian aid distributed in 34 woredas/districts out of 36 in the region.

The minister's inaccurate narrative also does not go along with the testimonies given by officials from different international humanitarian organisations operating in the region.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, who also travelled to Ethiopia this month to assess the situation in Tigray, has said that
we have also established a system of coordination between civilian organisations like ours [and] the military (the Ethiopian military in the Tigray region) … all these foundations now will allow for this humanitarian operation to speed up and reach the people in need, who are in the millions.
Similarly, recent reports from UN agencies such as WFP and UNOCHA, indicated that there is an improved access for humanitarian supplies and personnel and the process of assessing, distributing, and delivering food items has continued.

The Finnish foreign minister's assertion that
the government themselves do not have a clear picture, particularly [in] areas controlled by Eritreans …
is what one would not expect from a person in high office and representing the European Union, as there was no such confusion and gap of information with regards to such critical matter of the control of the government of its own territory.

Such a statement is by far an erroneous claim and at best a condescending view towards Ethiopia.

Ethiopia with a long history of statehood and as a sovereign country is capable of handling its affairs.

It would have been easier for the distinguished minister to take note of the facts on the ground that the Tigray operation is over on 28 November, whilst like in any conflict some remnants of TPLF leadership and militias out of the loop are out there and are being dealt with.

It seems that he did not get his facts right. If there is any concern from any corner what Ethiopia appreciates is not a patronising attitude, but a constructive engagement.

AUTHOR BIO
Hirut Zemene is the ambassador of Ethiopia to Belgium, Luxembourg, and the EU institutions.

__________________



😂🤣🤣 Dannng! We're everywhere!

Re: Let’s See the Proof of “Ethnic Cleansing” in Ethiopia, New York Times! (Ambassador Fitsum Arega)

Posted: 04 Mar 2021, 00:12
by Zmeselo


OPINION
In the Ethiopian War the West Sides with a Terrorist Group

March 3, 2021


Yonas Biru, The author

https://borkena.com/2021/03/03/in-the-e ... ist-group/

As Noah Smith, a Bloomberg Opinion columnist, took note,
the most-educated immigrant group in the U.S. isn’t East Asians. It’s Africans.
Ethiopians are among the African groups that are doing well. They occupy faculty positions in America’s flagship universities, including Harvard, Yale, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, Stanford, Columbia, Cornell, among others. At some point there were four full professors as well as associate and assistant professors at Mayo Clinic, America’s number 1 ranked Medical School.

An Ethiopian immigrant, Joe Mamo, is building an iconic skyscraper in Tysons, Virginia, that will be
the tallest of any currently standing between Philadelphia and Charlotte
– 539 miles (867 km).

And this is one of five high-rise buildings he has filed for permit to build, simultaneously. Yohannes Abraham, another Ethiopian American was the Executive Director of the Biden-Harris Transition,
overseeing preparation for the implementation of Biden-Harris policy and management priorities.
Why, then, are Africans poor and often at war in their country, while peaceful and successful in the West? Simply put, the West’s intervention in African politics has distorted the political incentive structure and the constraint matrix, institutionalizing a power calculus in favor of terrorist political groups. The push from such a system explains the mass exodus of African elite more than the lure of economic opportunities in the west.

The problem emanates from a racist misconception that Africans cannot be held to high democratic standards. Having a stable system is good enough even if it does not meet democratic standards. Consequently, a stable system that is enforced through terror became the source of political legitimacy.

Here is how African politics is seduced with terrorism. Unscrupulous politicians use the barrel of the gun and the state’s security apparatus to take over or remain in power, invade the economic space to collect rent, and hold the people hostage for ransom as bargaining chips to milk financial aid from the West. Evidently, violence and poverty have become key elements of the political equation in the game theoretic sense. The calculus of political profiteering embedded within the geometry of the vicious cycle of violence and poverty is what brought the current war in Ethiopia, and, sadly, what is sustaining the aftermath.

The war at issue is between the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) that was running the Tigray regional state, and the Ethiopian Federal government. Understanding this war is understanding how the West’s intervention in African politics has distorted the political incentive structure and the constraint matrix, institutionalizing a power calculus that favors authoritarian leaders who use acts of terrorism to establish a predatory political and economic governance.

TPLF was established in 1975 by hardened communists who fancied themselves as followers and later heirs of Enver Hoxha, the supreme leader of Albanian Communism. Soon after TPLF was established, it was listed as a terrorist organization in a US-based global terrorist database, Terrorism Research and Analysis Consortium.

After 16 years of guerrilla warfare, the terrorist establishment took over the government, in 1991. Once in power, the US removed them from the global terrorist list. To remain off the terrorist list all they had to do was to pretend to run elections every five years with no intention of losing power or conceding seats – often winning 100% of all national and regional elections.

The 2005 general elections proved an anomaly in TPLF’s uncontested reign. The incident is the window through which Kjetil Tronvoll, a professor of peace and conflict studies at Bjørknes University College, showed us a glimpse of TPLF’s sheer terror. He exposed TPLF’s threat of mass murder and sustained poverty that brought both the people of Ethiopia and Western nations to their knees.

In 2005, the unthinkable happened. The TPLF-led government, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), lost the election. The government delayed the announcement of the results, triggering the people to take the streets in protest. As a result,
security forces and police killed at least 36 people….5,000 people were arrested and detained,
Tronvoll documented.

According to Reuters, the government refused to concede defeat and, in the aftermath, additional 200 civilians were killed, 800 wounded, and 30,000 arrested. As Tronvoll noted, in a unanimous disapproval of the government’s terrorist actions,
the donor group tried to play tough.
The group decided to withhold international aid until those who won the election were allowed to take their rightful seats in the Parliament and those who ordered the police to shoot to kill peaceful protesters were held accountable.

The then Prime Minster Meles shrugged them off and told them
pack up and go home if they were not interested in helping the country to develop.
As Tronvoll put it succinctly, in commiseration of the poor people whom TPLF holds as hostage, the donor community and decided to
stay quiescent on internal human rights violations and lack of democracy.
In the next election cycle, the opposition pleaded with the donor nations to use their leverage to observe the elections.
Fourteen foreign embassies generally washed their hands of the whole exercise for fear of provoking the government
Tronvoll lamented.

The UN defines terrorism as:
criminal acts, including against civilians, committed with the intent to cause death or serious bodily injury, or taking of hostages, with the purpose to provoke a state of terror in the general public or in a group of persons or particular persons, intimidate a population or compel a government or an international organization to do or to abstain from doing any act.
This is how TPLF governed Ethiopia for 27 years.

It needs to be remembered, during its reign as the head of government, TPLF was not a rent-seeking force in the traditional sense of the term where politicians extort kickback from the business community. It was an armed looting enterprise. The Party was running business for profit, curving out all lucrative sectors for a near monopolistic control and enforcing its privileged position through terror.

Speaking of TPLF’s armed rent-seeking endeavor, Martin Plaut, BBC World Service Africa editor, flagged:
TPLF’s tight rein on political freedoms and human rights, while giving privileged access to resources to the prime minister’s core constituency in Tigray.
There is no question that the Tigray region benefited during the TPLF’s era. This has been documented in World Bank reports in 2017 and 2020. Another legacy of TPLF was illicit funds transfer out of the country. According to IMF data, as presented on the Brookings Institute website,
the top four emitters of illicit flows— South Africa, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, and Nigeria—emit over 50 percent of total illicit financial flows from sub-Saharan Africa.
Two numbers tell TPLF’s looting enterprise, as described in the Forbes Magazine:
The amount of American financial aid received by Ethiopia’s government since it took power: $30 billion;
and
The amount stolen by Ethiopia’s leaders since it took power: $30 billion.
TPLF’s motive in launching the current war, according to the US government, was
to overthrow the Prime Minister and return to the type of privilege they had enjoyed within the Ethiopian State for the last 27 years.
Contexts and pretexts matter.

Let us retreat a bit to 2018 and look at what transpired since TPLF lost its firm grip on the leavers of power, after a nationwide uprising. It left behind over a million forcefully displaced people, a nation gripped with political anxiety and tittering at the verge of a civil war fueled by ethnically charged and restive unemployed youths. To top it off, the nation was mired in economic despair.

Dr. Abiy Ahmed was selected as Prime Minister. At the time, his challenge was approximated by an unlucky pilot pushed into the cockpit of a crippled plane in flight occupied by unruly travelers and asked to land it safely.

Across the conservative-liberal spectrum, international observers cheered his stewardship. The conservative Fox News reported about
sweeping changes that seemed unthinkable just weeks ago have been announced almost daily.
Five months after Prime Minister Ahmed took office, the liberal leaning CNN praised him for
electrifying Ethiopia with a dizzying array of reforms credited by many with saving the country from civil war.
Others also piled on accolades for the Prime Minister’s “path for prosperity” whose success
could ignite economic change through emulation equivalent to South Korea’s influence on Asia in the 1970s
In October 2019, at the age of 42, the Prime Minister won the Nobel Prize for Peace for, among others, ushering in
important reforms that give many citizens hope for a better life and a brighter future.
The US-based Freedom House flagged Ethiopia as one of the five
most encouraging examples of democratic progress over the past two years
in the world.

What the Ethiopian populace and the rest of the world hailed as a promissory note for Ethiopia’s peace, security and prosperity, TPLF saw as a declaration of proclamation to end its political dominance and economic rentseeking empire. It vehemently objected every aspect of the reform from releasing political prisoners to liberalizing the economy.

Yearning to regain its heydays of armed looting, TPLF leaders retreated to Mekele, the capital of Tigray, and began building a militia force that ultimately reached 250,000. Once in Mekele, they constantly objected the Prime Minister’s agenda, looking for a fight.

As the BBC reported, they declared the Prime Minister
an illegitimate leader, because his mandate ran out when he postponed elections due to coronavirus.
The fact is that it was the National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE – a constitutionally empowered autonomous government agency) that decided to postpone the national and regional election because of Covid-19. The federal government and all regional states barring TPLF agreed to be governed by the decision of the NEBE.

On November 3, TPLF launched a surprise attack against the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF). The former US Secretary of State, Michael Pompeo made this clear, stating:
The United States is deeply concerned by reports that the Tigray People’s Liberation Front carried out attacks on ENDF bases in Ethiopia’s Tigray region on November 3. We are saddened by the tragic loss of life.
What Mr. Pompeo did not disclose is that the ENDF was attacked from within by officers of Tigrayan origin, who slaughtered their fellow soldiers who hailed from other parts of the country in their sleep. Having invaded the ENDF in Tigray, next on TPLF to-do list was invading the neighboring Amhara regional state to take over two ENDF garrisons stationed there with the aim of strengthening their fire power, before marching to Addis Ababa to overthrow the Prime Minister’s administration.

After his futile plan failed, the head of TPLF called upon the US and European capitals to pressure Prime Minister Abiy to negotiate a power sharing settlement. The alternative, he said, will be bloodshed, hunger that will affect over 6 million people in the Tigray regional state and a destabilized Horn of Africa. As noted in the Washington Post, the US Secretary of State for Africa, Tibor Nagy, is on the record, stating TPLF is motivated by a desire
to internationalize the conflict in Tigray.
TPLF’s terrorist actions worked well for its architects. It did not take long for Western governments to start exerting pressure on Prime Minister Ahmed to negotiate with the terrorist group. Ethiopia was confronted with two choices: Allowing TPLF to extort political concession to stop the reform through war or reject its reckless gambit and launch a law enforcement campaign. The government chose the latter.

A recent Washington Post editorial portrayed Ethiopia’s law enforcement campaign as
an invasion
against the Tigray regional state.

It further characterized it as having
all the earmarks of Ethiopia’s previous dictators.
At best, this arrogance fueled by utter ignorance of the pretext of the war. At worse, it is a repulsive racist policy that uses a different standard for Africa.

It merits recalling that when the mob invaded the US Capitol Building, on January 6, the Washington Post was singing a different tune. It never questioned why 25,000 army forces were brought in rather than the police. It did not talk about mediating and reconciling with the insurgents. Rather its call was to hunt them down and bring them to justice.

TPLF is singularly responsible for the war. This does not mean the Ethiopian government gets a free hand in the way it conducted the law enforcement campaign. Its delay in allowing unfettered access to international agencies to investigate atrocities committed during the war played in the hands of TPLF heired American and European lobbyists.

And then there is the 800-pound gorilla in the room: the Eritrean involvement in the war. Many including the US government have concluded Eritrea was involved. There are two issues. First is the intervention of Eritrean forces. I found it amusing that TPLF is complaining about it. It is to be remembered that TPLF took power in Addis Ababa in 1991 with Eritrean forces fighting alongside it.

Second, more recently TPLF tried all it could to get Eritrea on its side. Daniel Berhane, TPLF’s senior advisor posted on his Twitter handle:
To my Eritrean brothers and sisters. There is a war in Tigray. Make no mistake, it is a war on all of us. Whoever wants to kill Tigrayans would have you as his next target. We’d better stand together.
The involvement of Eritrean army in the war is an issue that the Ethiopian government should be fully transparent. It can explain or even defend its decision to involve Eritrea. The second issue is the widely held accusations that atrocities including widespread rapes and mass murders are committed by Ethiopian and Eritrean forces. This has to be investigated both by the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission and by international organizations. The investigation must include the Mai Kadra mass massacre and the November 3 war crime of murdering Ethiopian solders and generals in their sleep.

The government needs to understand TPLF’s survival strategy remains creating a risk for mass starvation and regional instability for political gains. Those who believe that TPLF cares for the people of Tigray should read Martin Plaut’s 2010 expose. During the 1984/85 famine that claimed over a million lives (most of them in Tigray) TPLF was selling sacks of grains mixed with sacks of sand to international NGOs who were buying grains for food aid.

Currently, TPLF is all but a totally destroyed entity. Its effort to resuscitate itself draws its energy from the oxygen it gets from international intervention. The international Community’s policy must be two pronged. First, it must reject TPLF’s futile effort to resuscitate itself with the help of the international community. Second, it must exert maximum pressure against the Ethiopian government to open and maintain unfettered access to international investigation and bring those who perpetrated war crimes and crime against humanity to justice, if the allegations are confirmed by credible and independent investigators. Anything more is a violation of Ethiopia’s sovereignty. Anything less is a dereliction of international moral obligation.