One of the world’s deadliest conflicts is reaching a tipping point
By the Editorial Board
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Editorials represent the views of The Washington Post as an institution, as determined through debate among members of the Editorial Board, based in the Opinions section and separate from the newsroom.
One of the world’s worst humanitarian crises has escalated dramatically over the past two months — but has received scant attention from the international community. In Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, where federal forces have been battling regional rebels, the resumption of fighting has resulted in civilian casualties, the destruction of critical infrastructure and the displacement of tens of thousands of people since August. As peace talks between the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan representatives begin this week, it is imperative for regional and world leaders and multilateral institutions to press for an immediate cessation of hostilities — and serious, sincere negotiations.
The conflict in Tigray has taken an unimaginable human toll since it first erupted in November 2020. From the outset, the war has been marked by brutality and a stark disregard for civilian life. According to an international commission convened by the U.N. Human Rights Council, there is evidence to suggest combatants on all sides have engaged in serious human rights abuses, including extrajudicial killings, mass rapes and deliberate starvation. The full scale of the devastation is difficult to gauge, thanks to a two-year internet blackout and restrictions on access to Tigray. Yet researchers from Ghent University estimate the war, resulting famine and lack of health-care services have claimed between 385,000 and 600,000 lives. Millions more have been displaced.
When a humanitarian truce was agreed to in March, some hoped it would herald a lifting of Ethiopia’s “de facto blockade” and set the stage for broader peace negotiations. But fighting recommenced in August. In recent weeks, Ethiopian forces have seized control of several key towns in Tigray, including the strategic city of Shire.
The federal offensive has been supported by troops from neighboring Eritrea, a longtime enemy of Ethiopia that made peace with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government in 2018 — an act for which Mr. Abiy was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Now, those who sang Mr. Abiy’s praises four years ago are sounding the alarm. U.N. Secretary General António Guterres recently warned that “the situation in Ethiopia is spiraling out of control.” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director general of the World Health Organization and a Tigrayan, went even further, arguing that “there is a very narrow window now to prevent genocide” in Tigray.
So far, diplomatic efforts have been inconsistent and uncoordinated. As the war enters a critical period, the international community should ramp up engagement. For a start, world leaders should push both sides to negotiate in good faith during the ongoing African Union-led peace talks. They should urge an immediate end to fighting, protection for aid workers and opening access for desperately needed humanitarian assistance. The United States and its allies have some leverage: They could threaten to impose new targeted sanctions on actors who have committed abuses and continue to withhold non-humanitarian assistance until there is progress. With Ethiopia’s economy floundering because of the conflict, global powers can also make clear that debt relief is available — but only if the situation improves.
As fears of atrocities mount and the death toll increases by the day, there is no excuse for the world to look away.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions ... ace-talks/
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DefendTheTruth
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Re: One of the world’s deadliest conflicts is reaching a tipping point - By the Washington Post Editorial Board
Your Washington post has a backlog, obviously. Go and advice them to update themselves before trying to prescribe what others should do and shouldn't do.sarcasm wrote: ↑26 Oct 2022, 14:42....
So far, diplomatic efforts have been inconsistent and uncoordinated. As the war enters a critical period, the international community should ramp up engagement. For a start, world leaders should push both sides to negotiate in good faith during the ongoing African Union-led peace talks. They should urge an immediate end to fighting, protection for aid workers and opening access for desperately needed humanitarian assistance. The United States and its allies have some leverage: They could threaten to impose new targeted sanctions on actors who have committed abuses and continue to withhold non-humanitarian assistance until there is progress. With Ethiopia’s economy floundering because of the conflict, global powers can also make clear that debt relief is available — but only if the situation improves.
As fears of atrocities mount and the death toll increases by the day, there is no excuse for the world to look away.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions ... ace-talks/
The Ethiopian government has already contacted the concerned aid agencies and organizing the delivery of aids to the needy. It has pledged to protect the innocent civilians while making a push to remove the goiter from the people of Tigray.
They missed that the negotiation is already underway or it seemed to them not that "promising" for their protégé.
In both case it is a bad omen for them, they have to ask themselves about what they achieved by touring african nations to discuss Ethiopia, before trying to prescribe what we should do and shouldn't do.
Re: One of the world’s deadliest conflicts is reaching a tipping point - By the Washington Post Editorial Board
The billions of dollars Tigray terrorists had borrowed to enrich themselves-- a $40 billion foreign debt that was left for Ethiopia's poor to carry-- the ill-gotten money is now being used to bribe Washington Posts' journalists to write biased news articles, threatening Ethiopia with economic hardship by leveraging "debt relief", and making it conditional to allowing the return of the Banda terrorist group back to power to ensure Ethiopia's return to its neo-colony past.
When the war on the ground is being won decisively by Ethiopia, expect to see massive media disinformation campaign designed to create an alternate reality.
When the war on the ground is being won decisively by Ethiopia, expect to see massive media disinformation campaign designed to create an alternate reality.