4. Social media war and cyberspace obfuscation
So much for the narratives of concern and accusation by the Atlantic partners and the UN. All these UN and Atlantic bloc statements tend to put the big blame on the Ethiopian federal government, Eritrean troops and Amhara forces, not on the TPLF. Sadly, the stories are often inaccurate and based on lack of solid information and appraisal, often echoing pro-TPLF voices. They eagerly cite unreliable and lying ‘
witnesses’ and show faulty estimates of the full context and facts of the conflict on the ground. The issue of the Eritrean army’s presence, the looting, etc. is a difficult point and must be investigated thoroughly (However, pro-TPLF complaints about Eritreans’ involvement now sound somewhat duplicitous because in May 1991 Eritrean Peoples Liberation Front forces, who afterwards formed the government in independent Eritrea, had a very important part in TPLF’s conquest of Addis Ababa – when they were still allies).
As noted, in the media wars a significant role was played by TPLF activists, journalists and academics
https://eastafricanist.com/2021/02/16/h ... da-ninjas/: they have been busy disseminating, with some success, a narrative on the conflict decentering the TPLF from their responsibility in initiating the fighting and from any abuse, like the massacre in Mai Kadra of 9 November 2020. The pro-TPLF supporters and ‘
cyber army’ are imaginative, many of them producing words and ‘
facts’ freely, under pseudonyms like ‘
Mistir Sew’ (= ‘mystery man’) and others. As we saw, certain non-Ethiopian academics uncritically swallowed any alarmist testimony from TPLF-affiliated ‘
locals’
and
https://eritreahub.org/interview-with-a ... yan-leader, although subsequent developments hardly confirmed any of it. On pro-TPLF websites,
Tigrai Media House, and via ‘
DigitalWoyane’, the social media propaganda arm of the TPLF and its sympathizers, instructions circulated on how to dupe foreigners in creating misinformation
and
Notorious also is one
Alula Solomon, of Tigrai Media House. His ‘
information’ is hardly ever reliable – and has more the character of incitement
There is even a bizarre hashtag #TigrayGenocide’…
http://awasaguardian.com/index.php/2021 ... act-check/. Surprisingly, these cyberspace pro-TPF people have been fairly successful, at least in the short run, in convincing certain naïve academics and Western press persons. The problem is simply that nothing emanating from these sources can be trusted without deep-checking
https://www.ethiopiancitizen.com/2020/1 ... flict.html. There were, for instance, fake reports on the downing on an Ethiopian warplane, of ‘
battle victories’ and of massacres that did not happen.
Out of an alleged concern with the people of Tigray, media and policy makers are focusing not on causes but on issues that result from those TPLF war acts, thereby exaggerating new stories of abuse, impending famine, and massacres across Tigray, preferably among innocent civilians. This in order to shift the blame from TPLF to the federal government of PM Abiy Ahmed. But as we saw, that government had no choice but to respond on 4 November 2020, and it has been making serious and costly efforts to undo the damage and resurrect Tigray via significant aid flows
https://ethiopianmonitor.com/2021/03/06 ... in-tigray/, investigative missions and rebuilding infrastructure and community life (See ‘
Statement on the Tigray Rule of Law Operations’ at
https://www.pmo.gov.et/press_release/). Meanwhile, the vehement social media and Internet site battles and recriminations that take weeks to sort out are continuing.
That Western media and policy makers digest such ‘
information’ as gospel truth and blame the Ethiopian federal government and the Eritreans is worrying, and has overtones of a new sanctimonious round of lecturing an African country in crisis. Sincere concern about human rights and possible war abuses is fine, but the underlying attitude of teaching a developing African country a lesson is misplaced. Also Europe, with its own weak and sub-standard approach to the refugees and asylum seekers coming to its shores (think of those in the Greek island camps) and its spectacularly unsuccessful approach to post-Qadhafi Libya, on the Ethiopia issue again falls back on haughty behavior, exemplified best in
J. Borrell https://www.euractiv.com/section/africa ... criticism/,
https://ethiopianmonitor.com/2021/03/21 ... se-forces/ and
https://ec.europa.eu/commission/pressco ... ENT_21_888 and J. Urpilainen (
see above). On Ethiopia, they have not made a deep comparative assessment of the facts on the ground and their context, and also routinely belittle or ignore statements and explanations made by the Ethiopian federal government. But this is not a government like the TPLF-EPRDF government was. The latter is known for durable repression and deceit (from the start in 1991, as Professor
Ivo Strecker has shown recently
https://sites.tufts.edu/reinventingpeac ... -reminder/. The current government is different. One does not have to believe or accept all of its statements, but certainly PM Abiy Ahmed’s government is marked by the reform agenda set in 2028-19 and appeals to the public to forge a new political culture, away from authoritarianism and recrimination, the hallmarks of the former TPLF regime. To by definition slight the approach that the Addis Ababa government and the interim government in Tigray are pursuing is a wrong if not neo-colonialist attitude. Remarkably, it is being routinely produced also by the international press. The head of the interim government Dr.
Mulu Nega recently noted that, although they had given full access to foreign news agency correspondents to go anywhere in Tigray, the latter don’t ask for interviews or information from the Tigray regional administration involved in rehabilitation and aid provision. They prefer to follow only the contact lists they received abroad, likely from pro-TPLF networks and other professional critics of the Ethiopian federal government
They look primarily for ‘
bad news’. Earlier, Mr.
Muluberhan Haile, administrator of Northern Tigray, in some interesting interviews already noted similar things
and
Here the attitude of the foreign press often seems to be hardly different from that of British author
Evelyn Waugh in the 1930s in his reports and book on Ethiopia, widely condemned as arrogant and racist
https://jeffpearce.medium.com/how-weste ... 9ceddc9e18. Western countries, e.g., the USA, also exerted undue pressure on neighbouring African countries to join them in the UNSC and put Ethiopia in the dock. Remarkable is that US President Joe Biden recently made a telephone call to Kenyan President
Uhuru Kenyatta on the Ethiopia conflict but did not talk to PM Abiy Ahmed about it. On 21 March, however, the special delegate US Senator Chris Coons, personally sent by President Biden, entered into talks in Addis Ababa with the Ethiopian leadership, first with Minister of Foreign Affairs and vice-PM
Demeqe Mekonnen, and later on 26 March 2021 with PM Abiy. In that talk, Sen. Coons brought up the bizarre idea of a unilateral ‘
cease-fire’ – as if two sovereign countries were fighting. Of course idea this was rejected by PM Abiy
https://www.voanews.com/africa/us-appea ... y-rejected.
What we learned in this crisis is that the global press does not care to deeply check veracity and that Western policy makers love to pose all kinds of demands in a context they do not really understand or appreciate. As to the press, in fact, many of the incomplete and incorrect news items now disproved are still found on the websites of the news media, from the
BBC (falsely attributing certain tweets to Abiy Ahmed on 25 November 2020) to the New York Times to the Washington Post to even a ridiculous item in
The Economist https://www.economist.com/leaders/2021/ ... s-a-weapon. Some journals followed suit with dubious tales, e.g.
Foreign Policy with an article on 14 November 2020, entitled ‘
Sudan Will Decide the Outcome of the Ethiopian Civil War’
https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/11/14/su ... iy-tigray/. That the global media and policy makers in the Atlantic countries are susceptible to partial and often misinformation is partly due to the fact that the TPLF-EPRDF was in power for 27 years, gave a semblance of stability and growth to the country, and was diplomatically and economically well-represented in the capitals of the world, including in the USA and the EU. They had established themselves well in the international community institutions. One example is Dr.
Tedros Adhanom, now chief of the WHO: he was a member of the TPLF Executive Committee (the 9-member top group within the Central Committee or Politburo), keeping contact still after his appointment at the WHO on 1 July 2017
https://ecadforum.com/2017/02/28/is-wor ... s-adhanom/.
5. Analysing (mis)information
Via Internet fakes, unverified entries on
Wikipedia, and social media rumor-mongering, dubious news is being distributed on a wide scale, and in crises such as this we see how this threatens information transparency, policy thinking and the democratic process. As time goes by, all these incorrect messages will be refuted, but they meanwhile are doing serious damage and make good press reporting difficult. So background information is doubly important. I give some instances below.
1.
The 3-4 November 2020 attack: what happened?
The attack on federal army bases by the TPLF late at night on 3 November 2020 came after a telephone conversation that day between Tigray Region President
Debretsion and PM Abiy, whereby the Tigray leader said
he wanted to negotiate and solve the problems.
It was a false offer and a deflection: that same night he ordered his troops to attack, together with a wholesale sabotage of the Internet and ICT communications structure in Tigray, to incapacitate the federal army response but also hurting the entire Region. As PM Abiy Ahmed noted in his 23 March 2021 parliamentary speech, the attacks were not only in Dansha and Meqele but all in all ca. 200 places where federal troops and officers were located. It was a highly organized operation, admitted by TPLF leaders to be a lighting, pre-emptive strike
at 13.00’.
One more characteristic detail of this attack (in Meqele) is worth noting: several federal soldiers that had survived the nightly slaughter were gathered the next day and then sent away. A few dozen of them were told to pass down a specific road and to ‘
keep to the middle’. Then the TPLF unit ordered a few heavy Sino-Truck lorries to drive and run over the soldiers. Seventeen were killed, a few survived by pretending to be dead. Some of them, severely injured and now handicapped, told their story on
Ethiopian TV and one of them said
Why didn’t I die with my comrades there and then,
and that he never expected such dirty behavior from what they thought were fellow army colleagues.
Many other federal soldiers were chased out towards the Eritrean border, where they received food and clothing from Eritrean troops. Female federal soldiers were submitted to gross abuse.
2. Together with the attack, the TPLF regime perpetrated massive destruction of the ICT infrastructure and telecom lines in Tigray.
CCTV footage is available on the sabotage in Meqele
https://www.ethiopiancitizen.com/2020/1 ... twork.html.
3. In addition, grave economic sabotage was carried out, including the destruction of Aksum airport with the ripping up of the runway so that planes could not land there
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-55058212 and
https://www.fanabc.com/english/desperat ... m-airport/. The TPLF regime had already practiced economic sabotage before: withholding fuel
https://newbusinessethiopia.com/crime/e ... in-tigray/ and food resources from the Tigray population before November 2020, and kept it up until the last moment: it was printing false money even recently
https://www.fanabc.com/english/tplf-age ... an-monies/;
https://ethiopianmonitor.com/2021/03/14 ... -mekelle/-. There are also indications that arms smuggling from abroad is ongoing
4. While this does not deny the presence of (too many) Eritrean troops in Tigray, TPLF also mass-produced fake Eritrean and Ethiopian federal army uniforms in Almeda Textile Factory in Adwa and had some of its own units wear them, which contributed to the mayhem in the Region and probably to the violence perpetrated towards civilians.
5. The TPLF regime, just before its defeat in November 2020, opened all nine regional state prisons, releasing ca.30,000 prisoners of all kinds, thus contributing to local chaos.
https://www.thereporterethiopia.com/art ... on-reveals Also many of the Region’s own health facilities were looted, not only Eritrean troops being responsible for this, as alleged by pro-TPLF groups.
6. The massacre in Mai Kadra (in the Kafta-Humera district) on 9 November 2020 just before the federal army arrived, was a defining moment in the conflict. Over 800 ordinary, non-combatant people of mainly Amhara background, but also some Agäw, Oromo and Wolaitta were killed, even with machetes.
https://www.ethiopiancitizen.com/2020/1 ... d%20in%20m ai%20kadra%20by%20tplf%20forces.html and
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vS- ... l7pCHolj-s This tragic event – as case of classic ‘
ethnic cleansing’ – was a point of no return. It led to the increased local involvement of Amhara Region militias and probably also to Eritrean interference: some observers say that it is likely that Eritrean military involvement on the Humera front on11-12 November 2020 deterred TPLF forces from repeating a Mai Kadra-like ‘
ethnic cleansing’ massacre in Humera – also a mixed town with many non-Tigrayan inhabitants.
7. One of the most notorious talking points in the global press recently is the Aksum violence, which is said to have happened near the Maryam Tsiyon central church of the town, allegedly in November 2020. There has long been exaggerated and premature reporting on this, with some pro-TPLF reports saying ca. 750 people were killed. Certainly fighting already took place in and near Aksum between army units, e.g. around the army camp outside town, and escalating skirmishes between army soldiers and TPLF elements that had provoked federal army members who lost their comrades in an ambush. A video taken two days after the purported killings shows a large, peaceful assembly of worshippers on the church square: not much evidence of mourning and distress (
The
Voice of America in its transmission of 12 March 2021
even screened images and videos of the Amhara victims of the Mai-Kadra massacre (9 November 2020) as if presenting the alleged Aksum violence and suggested that Amhara militia and Eritrean forces committed it … Blaming the victims: remarkable misinformation by VOA. It looks like those pro-TPLF digital activists who presented photos of a massacre in Nigeria by ‘
Boko Haram’ (taken on 29 November in Northern Nigeria)
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/11/ ... a-massacre and
https://www.the-star.co.ke/news/fact-ch ... tIMiuNffls as being taken in Aksum under the heading ‘
Aksum massacre’
Also the superficial and hasty reports by Amnesty International and its competitor Human Rights Watch had no conclusive evidence based on real eye witnesses, despite their protestations to the contrary. There was also an embarrassing case of a lying Tigray man posing as an Aksum ‘
priest’ and ‘
eyewitness’ of the ‘
massacre’ but was talking from Boston, Mass.
https://www.ena.et/en/?p=22049. Still, a credible but preliminary report based on fieldwork from 27 February 27 to 5 March 2021 by the independent Ethiopian Human Rights Commission
https://ethiopianmonitor.com/2021/03/23 ... c-reports/ confirmed that ca. 100 civilians were killed in Aksum on 28 and 29 November, with fingers pointed to Eritrean troops, and according to the EHRC this may constitute
grave contraventions of applicable international and human rights laws and principles.
The issue has already been a major issue raised in the EU and USA labeling of Ethiopia. In general, the Eritrean presence in Tigray is a moot, controversial point indeed, and no doubt, such troops are/were active in the Region almost from the start, as General Belay Seyoum of Ethiopia’s Northern Command reluctantly had said (
see above), repeated by the interim mayor of Meqele
https://allafrica.com/stories/202101050414.html and the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (in its report of 10 February 2021). Still, the full details on Aksum are not yet known. On the basis of the EHRC report, the killings in the city were terrible, although the nature and scale of it as depicted in the earlier Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch reports stands to be seen: they relied only on TPLF-linked ‘
witnesses’ who were not even in Aksum on the days of the alleged killings but 350 km. away in Sudan. A previous dissection of the evidence by
Jeff Pearce showed no clear evidence of mass killing, only of mass duping for foreign medias and NGOs
https://jeffpearce.medium.com/ethiopia- ... 2f471c45ae. As noted above, video recordings uploaded on
YouTube originally on 4 December 2020 show that on 29 and 30 November there was a large religious gathering in the square where much of the purported killings took place, so this is puzzling. If killings occurred, they are of course unacceptable and the perpetrators are surely to be prosecuted. Still, the general context of the Eritrean troops’ presence in Tigray should not be forgotten: first the relationship between TPLF regime and Eritrea’s government was very tense for 20 years, and at the time of the 3-4 November TPLF attack on federal forces, the Eritrean-Ethiopian border was not well-defended because troops had to disperse and move south for battle. It is said that Eritrea aimed to protect her border and to secure the huge trench-system along the border to prevent it from being taken by TPLF forces: that would have given them a major advantage. PM Abiy Ahmed, in his 23 March 2021 parliamentary address acknowledged the role of Eritrea forces. The Eritrean government, he said, had a national security concern to not control the border area after the Ethiopian army was forced to abandon positions following the attack on 4 November 2020
In addition, the TPLF, in an effort to ‘
internationalize’ the war, fired missiles into Eritrea, hitting Asmara on 14 and 28 November 2020. Few countries in such a situation would sit idle and not take retaliatory action. It is therefore strange for the TPLF supporters and foreigners to now complain about the presence of Eritrean troops in Tigray when they were ‘
invited’ by the TPLF’s own actions.
8. Case misrepresentation. A recent item was the alleged rape of a Tigray girl calling herself ‘
Muna Lisa’
Abraha was in the news (dumbly repeated by the BBC,
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-55832711): she said in an hospital interview to
Al Jazeera that she was shot at as she tried to escape Eritrean soldiers who tried to rape her. But even her father denied it, and it turned out she was a sniper and member of the TPLF youth militia, wounded in a fight with federal troops and admitted to hospital well before the time she claimed the incidence took place.
9. Certain Western media and erring academics
are citing one of the former propaganda chiefs of the TPLF as a source of news and updates from Tigray, but this man,
Getachew Reda (still in hiding), has been known for years as unreliable and irresponsible. In tandem with former regional chief Debretsion Gebre-Mikael, Getachew was the one calling on the Tigrayan common people to attack the federal army with everything they had –
…even with spears and knives
(
and was producing standard fake news on ‘
battles won’ by the TPLF army, e.g. on his twitter account
When media and pro-Tigray persons refer to men of this low caliber
to sustain their arguments, then their credibility evaporates.
10. An interesting fact is also that the EU, the USA and other international parties rarely talk about other, this time real and documented, ‘
ethnic cleansing’ episodes in Ethiopia: the ongoing mass killings of Amharic-speaking and other minority groups in different parts of Ethiopia before November 2020. In the 2-3 past years, there has been a series of shocking terrorist attacks by ‘
ethnicist’ and perhaps also religious extremist groups on innocent civilians (farmers, traders, civil servants) in Western Ethiopia, notably in Shashemene, Wollega (Oromia) and the Metekkel area (Benishangul-Gumuz State). I mention some recent cases: in September 2020 in Metekkel, with more than a 100 killed
https://addisstandard.com/analysis-week ... uz-region/, in Gulisso district on 1 November 2020 (with ca. 54 people killed), and in Gurafarda, Southwest Ethiopia, with 31 people killed, from 18-21 October 2020
https://www.thereporterethiopia.com/art ... gura-farda, and on 12 January 2021 over 80 people killed in Daletti village in Benishangul-Gumuz region
https://www.africanews.com/2021/01/13/m ... ia-attack/. The latest were on 5 March in Horo Gudru
https://addisstandard.com/news-gunmen-w ... rn-oromia/, and even in the town of At’aye, in central Amhara Region’s Efrata Gedim district, where since 19 March 2021 dozens of local people were killed in gratuitous violence and local banks were robbed
The Ethiopian federal troops do their best to root out such terrorist groups but lack capacity and ability to cover large areas and control such purely negative killings, that could target anyone. The majority local population of Oromo or Gumuz or other ethnic-cultural groups do not necessarily support such actions (as they partly have also been victims and have protested the violence
but there, such violent movement remain active, like ‘
OLF-Shené (the ‘
Oromo Liberation Army’), a split-off group from the Oromo Liberation Front. While the latter is now a registered political party in Addis Ababa, the first has developed into a genuine terrorist group, with a program of wanton killing of ‘
non-Oromo’ and other perceived opponents, including local Oromo. There are clear indications that this and similar groups, killing civilians and operating from forested border areas, have often been armed and urged to carry out such actions by the TPLF, as claimed by Region’s communication office head,
Getachew Balcha (interview with
Deutsche Welle Amharic, 16-12-2020). In his speech to Parliament on 23 March 2021 PM Abiy Ahmed mentioned that ca. 300 OLF-Shené people were recently arrested in Tigray (
And see also https://addisstandard.com/news-ruling-p ... r-actions/ and
https://www.enca.com/news/african-union ... r-massacre and
https://www.aa.com.tr/en/africa/ethiopi ... ng/2028623 and
These killings of local villagers and civil administration servants are akin to those of the ’
Boko Haram’ in Northeastern Nigeria, although not in the name of Islamism.
Understanding this trail of violent incidents is necessary for foreign observers/policy makers to grasp in the wider context. Although it is likely that many would tend to blame the Ethiopian government again, for not so-called paying
attention to the grievances of ethnic rebel movements,
or of
failing to offer proper security to local people,
etc.
So indeed, nothing is what it seems in digital fake news space, the source of most of the press items. The EU, USA and UN statements, pronouncements and threats using such ‘
information’ are not helpful. And Human Rights Watch had already indicted itself earlier as totally off track with an unacceptable comment (on 24 November 2020) on the Mai Kadra massacre by its Horn of Africa director,
Laetitia Bader:
The lack of independent investigations & access to monitors make it difficult to corroborate and identify claims of who may be responsible for such abuses.
This is duplicitous nonsense. And worse, she had no such caveats about the veracity of the ‘
Aksum massacre’.
6. Back to policy: the idea of ‘dialogue’ and ‘negotiations’
Both the EU, the USA and UN spokespersons have repeatedly said – in a kind of reflex way -that ‘
negotiations’ and ‘
dialogue’, etc. should be held among warring parties to ‘
solve the problems in Tigray’. A similar attitude is found in the reports of the International Crisis Group, e.g., in its report of 11 February 2021
https://www.crisisgroup.org/africa/horn ... ray-region. But the question at this point is, dialogue with whom, and why? With the TPLF? With a former self-appointed elite dictatorial party – that ruled the country in a repressive way for 27 years like a well-organized mafia-like outfit, had thousands of people killed, via targeted killings (e.g. of
Assefa Maru in 1997,
https://www.ethiopianreview.com/index/58), by having them disappear in prisons, and by killing hundreds of demonstrators after election protests (like Ms.
Shibre Desalegn,
https://www.ethiopianreview.com/index/73) and mass protests in Oromia and Amhara regions in 2016-2019)?
Dialogue with a group that perpetrated one of the most atrocious and cruel attacks in modern Ethiopian history, on the federal army’s Northern command in the night of 3-4 November 2020, killing federal soldiers (their erstwhile comrades) in their sleep and abusing or chasing out hundreds of others without clothes?
With a TPLF-Tigray leadership that refused repeated calls to surrender to the federal government in this war started by them, but instead urging the Tigray common people to
fight back with all possible means,
thereby destroying Tigray even further?
Dialogue with a movement that was responsible for a massacre of hundreds of non-Tigrayan people in Mai Kadra on 9 November 2020? USA Secretary of State A. Blinken did not mention this defining dramatic event in his statements. What happened to the perpetrators of that crime (TPLF-affiliated people and youths known as
Samri)? They mostly fled to the Sudan refugee camps, where they will ask asylum to Europe and the US. And the Europeans and Americans will be gullible enough to grant it to them. In addition, TPLF cadres and leaders have tried to escape from Tigray to Sudan via international organizations. It is known that some of the international organizations 4WDs have tried to jump the border and refused check-point controls by the Ethiopian federal troops. It is also rumored that TPLF’s former leader Debretsion Gebre-Mikael had his wife and son transported out of Tigray via circuitous ways, reputedly with the help of US Embassy personnel, but was meanwhile calling on Tigrayans
…to send your sons and daughters to join the struggle.
https://jeffpearce.medium.com/tigray-in ... 0796ac9c87.
On the issue of ‘
negotiations’, the EU and USA foreign policy people also seem blind to the fact that since April 2018, when PM Abiy Ahmed became the new leader of Ethiopia in a regular ruling party vote, he tried in all possible ways to engage in dialogue and negotiation with the TPLF leaders
https://associatedmedias.com/en/operati ... -get-here/. But they, angry and sulking over losing privilege and power on the federal government machinery and the premiership, refused, rejecting all initiatives
https://www.ena.et/en/?p=18951. They surely were apprehensive because not being in power meant the potential exposure of their many illegal political and economic practices over the past decades. The TPLF leadership and top cadres retreated gradually to Meqele and turned down federal government overtures short of their own return to central power. They even refused to properly receive delegations of Ethiopian elders and religious leaders from all walks of life and from across the country who came to mediate: they had to return with empty hands. PM Abiy Ahmed revealed in his parliament speech of 23 March 2021 that in 2019-2020 secret (an unnamed) diplomatic community member, and later government negotiating teams were sent by him to Meqele to find agreement, but also these were rejected. While all initiatives and offers were refused, the TPLF held its own parliamentary elections in the Region despite the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, declared under constitutional mandate (
Art. 93, 1-2). They won a Stalinist 98,5% of the vote and refused to recognize the authority of the federal government. But Tigray is a regional autonomous state subject to Ethiopian federal law. So the ex-TPLF has shown that it cannot negotiate and does not want to. At present, after having provoked war in a most appalling way, the time for negotiation has passed. The choice for armed conflict, with the callous attack on the federal army bases in Dansha and Meqele, and for trying to continue it until today, has created its own unstoppable momentum.
Obviously the conflict has been vehement and many thousands have died. At the time of writing in March 2021, there are still skirmishes with retreating TPLF units, e.g., on 18 March in the Raya Dera and Bora area in Southern Tigray, where a group of TPLF generals and militia forces had ensconced themselves and instead of surrender to requests of federal forces encircling them, they fought. In the ensuing firefight hundreds were killed, including civilians taken as hostage. No doubt new fake stories will be produced on this sad battle, to blame the federal army. This event again shows that calls to TPLF elements to surrender and negotiate are not successful. And even if they would be able or willing to ‘
negotiate’ – which they are not – there is little chance that anything positive would come out of this.
We must conclude that, unfortunately, in view of the event of 3-4 November and what followed, the EU, USA and others’ calls for ‘
negotiations’ with a manifestly unreliable and a systematically lying party are unconvincing, dishonest and will not work. These calls show a lack of realism or understanding of the complexities of Ethiopia.
Finally, a few words about the UN. Ethiopia has always been a loyal and constructive member of the UN, even in the days of the TPLF. It contributed to international peace-keeping missions , e.g., in Darfur and DRC, and was an ally of the USA and the UN in Somalia, containing the Al Shabaab terrorists. To single out and undermine the country, on the basis of ill-substantiated accusations in the current Tigray conflict is unjustified and damaging. For the UN to let Ethiopia down and submit it to eventual sanctions or intervention would repeat the historic mistake made by its predecessor the League of Nations in 1936, where Emperor
Haile Selassie in vain called upon the international community to stop Fascist Italy under
B. Mussolini waging war on Ethiopia.
The League of Nations was on the wrong side of justice, did nothing and thus precipitated the march to World War II.
The costs of the current conflict for Ethiopia have been tremendous, and it so far has done this with disappointing international humanitarian resources and threats of aid cuts. In the past months, substantial gifts of money, food and goods have been sent from all over Ethiopia in support to Tigray and the armed forces – by common people and by local governments across the nation
The Tigrayan diaspora abroad has so far not been known for giving humanitarian aid to their own region and people: they prefer to buy air time for their propaganda war
https://mereja.com/index/348846.
In sum, the Atlantic Community’s rash judgements toward Ethiopia are marked by excessive skepticism, prevarication, and a biased, accusatory approach foremost towards the federal government. They use ill-digested half-truths and unreliable and incomplete information, often even misinformation. Of course, monitoring of abuse and calling all parties involved in the conflict to account if there are serious indications is necessary. But ‘
negotiation’ or a ‘
political solution’ with the TPLF (or what remains of it) is no longer an option.
7. Ways forward
– EU, USA and the UN do better to re-engage and rebuild a constructive and balanced relationship with the Ethiopian federal government, led by one of the most astute and capable leaders of Africa. Look at the rest of his political and economic programme, and the large number of initiatives and projects he has already started. Do no longer hope for any resurrection of the TPLF, a spent force that, regardless of their past achievements of economic growth and development, is not missed by most Tigrayan people, only by those who have personally and materially benefited.
– Donor countries should focus on more specifically long-term on development and humanitarian goals and less on reprimanding the Ethiopian government without clear evidence over its alleged human rights record or alleged excesses committed during the conflict. In this respect, one ‘
damage control’ move appeared to be the talks held between Ethiopian finance minister
Ahmed Shide and EU Commissioner Jutta Urpilainen in Brussels on 24 March 3021
https://www.fanabc.com/english/ethiopia ... ooperation and
https://www.facebook.com/75432457792326 ... 181334007/.
– Recognizing, that TPLF is not the Tigray people. TPLF remnants and its social media activists still pursue this narrative, and push it on the global media. But such ‘
identity politics’ is not the right approach. The federal government does not follow it either. The rehabilitation and normalization of Tigray Region and its population is a collaborative effort, in which the TPLF as such has no role. The relationship between the Ethiopian federal government and the Tigrayan people, should be reset on a basis of respect and cooperation.
– Improve information gathering and assessment. The policy statements and complaints of the Western countries and Western media tend to selectively exaggerate issues they find important and neglect others that are virtually identical in nature but happen to be ‘
on the other side’, with (non-Tigray) different victims. Best example: the 9 November Mai Kadra massacre, now pushed to the background in EU-US-UN narrative.
– Check all accusations of ‘atrocities’, mass murder, abuse, etc. produced by pro-TPLF circles and used as a smokescreen, in collaboration with local HR organizations such as the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission. Not all will stand up to scrutiny; there are few if any indications on the side of the federal government of ‘targeting civilians’, ‘
bombing of residential areas’, ‘massacres’, blocking of humanitarian aid’, or ‘
ethnic cleansing’. In this war, started by the TPLF in a gruesome manner (see above), there will certainly be abuses, as in any such armed conflict, and if relevant, not only the former TPLF elite but also the federal authorities or Eritrean troops are to be held to account. On this issue the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission has even approached the UN Human Rights Commission to undertake joint investigations into the situation in Tigray as a whole, and finally on 18 March 2021 the UN body consented to this
Reuters, 18-3-2021;
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/P ... D=26949&La ngID=E. Knowing the rather bad reputation of the UNHRC that is a risky operation, but the federal government is allowing it. Hopefully it will be an investigation that takes its time to get to the bottom of things and will use real witnesses, not those pressured by DigitalWoyane and other pro-TPLF groups.
– Assist Ethiopia in its overall developmental efforts to enhance Horn of Africa regional stability. E.g., support a reasonable approach to the Blue Nile Dam (GERD) issue and do not prejudice the side of Egypt on this – which is eternally refusenik and will block the dam at whatever cost
https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article ... of-africa/ – including meddling in Ethiopia’s internal affairs.
– Assist inquiries into the trail of repeated pre-war ethnic-styled massacres in Western Ethiopia (Wollega, Metekkel, a.o.) and elsewhere over the past 4-5 years where the hand of the TPLF, providing money and logistical support, has often been often present.
– Contribute to a de-escalation and mediated solution of the suddenly pushed ‘
border inconflict’ with Sudan, on the basis of the agreement reached in 1972 in the ‘
Exchange of Notes’, to come to final negotiations on border demarcation (
See https://doi.org/10.1080/02589001.2016.1143602). The status quo was disrupted by Sudanese military action in early November 2020 by raiding disputed areas, chasing away Ethiopian farmers, and looting and burning their properties
https://www.thereporterethiopia.com/art ... r-squabble. This conflict, if not handled well, will bash Sudan’s own post-al Bashir reform agenda and produce needless instability.
– Assist Ethiopia in its development of a full ‘
Climate-resilient green economy’ (announced under the TPLF regime in 2011) and with its ‘
Home-Grown Economic Reform’ programme (since 2019) – both forcefully stimulated by the current Ethiopian government.
– Support the National Electoral Board of Ethiopia in enhancing favourable conditions for the electoral process in Ethiopia for the 5 June 2021 parliamentary elections.
– Consider Ethiopia and other African countries as partners, not as incorrigible cases of backwardness, institutional failure and conflict, even if there are very challenging problems to deal with.
– Help in expanding the humanitarian aid but also the institutional infrastructure and developmental potential of Tigray region, neglected by the TPLF. How come (
see above) that before the November 2020 conflict there were at least 950,000 people in Tigray alone in dire need of food aid and other life support and ca. 1.8mln in the food security safety net programme? How come there were no opposition parties, no press freedom, no independent NGOs, no open cultural life in Tigray?
– A stable federal Ethiopia is in the interests of Ethiopia and its citizens, the wider Horn of Africa region and Western countries, in particular the EU (as it does not need new waves of refugees and asylum seekers).
In this challenging time, the record of the EU, USA and UN on Ethiopia so far has been disappointing, to say the least. They tend to deliberately exacerbate the situation in Ethiopia. There is an urgent need to remedy this and develop a more informed, balanced and responsible approach.
March 2021
ASC Working Papers
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