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Ethiopia's World / የኢትዮጵያ ዓለም

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Posts Tagged ‘US report’

‘Leave No Tigrayan’ | in Ethiopia an Entire Ethnicity is Erased

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on April 7, 2021

👉 ትግራዋይን ጨርሷቸው አትተዋቸው! | በኢትዮጵያ መላው የትግራይ ጎሳ እየተደመሰሰ ነው

💭 “Their aim is to leave no Tigrayan,” she said. “I hope there will be a Tigray for my children to go home to.”

💭 “They told me, ‘Go home, you’re Tigrayan,’” she said. “We Tigrayans are Ethiopian. Why do they treat us as non-Ethiopian?”

💭 “They accidentally killed an ethnic Oromo in a Tigrayan household,” she said. “When they realized their ‘mistake,’ they came and buried him.”

💭“ዓላማቸው የትግራይን ተወላጅ አለመተው ነው። ልጆቼ ወደ ቤታቸው የሚሄዱበት ትግራይ ይኖራል ብዬ ተስፋ አደርጋለሁ።”

💭ወደ ቤትህ ሂድ አንተ ትግራዋይ ነህ” ብለውኛል። “እኛ የትግራይ ተወላጆች ኢትዮጵያዊ ነን። ለምን እኛ እንደ ኢትዮጵያዊ ያልሆነን አድርገው ይቆጥሩናል? ”

💭በትግራይ ተወላጆች ቤት ውስጥ የሚኖር አንድ ብሄር ኦሮሞ ገበአጋጣሚ ድለዋል፡፡ “ስህተታቸውን” ሲገነዘቡ መጥተው ቀበሩት።”

🔥 ዋውው! አይ አማራ! አይ ጋላ! አይ ጋላማራ! የዋቄዮ-አላህ-አቴቴ ባርያ! አዬዬዬ! ግድየለም! ንስሐ ብትገቡና ብትመለሱ ብልን እስከ ጌታችን ስቅለት ድረስ እየጠብቅኳችሁ ነው! ከዚያ እናንተን እና ዘር ማንዘራችሁን አያድርገን፤ የሚመጣውን ታዩታላችሁ! ወዮላችሁ! ወዮላችሁ!

🔥 ትግራይ ወገኖቼ ግን ኢትዮጵያዊነትንም ተዋሕዶ ክርስትናንም ከአማራና ጋሎች ንጠቋቸው፣ ሁለተኛም አታስጠጓቸው! ለእነዚህ አረመኔዎች ብቸኛው መድኃኒት ይህ ነው የሚሆነው!

The atrocities have been seared into the skin and the minds of Tigrayans, who take shelter by the thousands within sight of the homeland they fled in northern Ethiopia.

They arrive in heat that soars above 38 C (100 F), carrying the pain of gunshot wounds, torn vaginas, welts on beaten backs. Less visible are the horrors that jolt them awake at night: Memories of dozens of bodies strewn on riverbanks. Fighters raping a woman one by one for speaking her own language. A child, weakened by hunger, left behind.

Now, for the first time, they also bring proof of an official attempt at what is being called ethnic cleansing in the form of a new identity card that eliminates all traces of Tigray, as confirmed to The Associated Press by nine refugees from different communities. Written in a language not their own, issued by authorities from another ethnic group, the ID cards are the latest evidence of a systematic drive by the Ethiopian government and its allies to destroy the Tigrayan people.

The Amhara authorities now in charge of the nearby city of Humera took Seid Mussa Omar’s original ID card displaying his Tigrayan identity and burned it, the soft-spoken nurse said. On his new card examined by the AP, issued in January with the Amharic language, an Amhara stamp and a border of tiny hearts, even the word Tigray had vanished.

“I kept it to show the world,” Seid said. He added that only 10 Tigrayans remained of the roughly 400 who worked at the hospital where he had been employed, the rest killed or fleeing. “This is genocide … Their aim is to erase Tigray.”

What started as a political dispute in one of Africa’s most powerful and populous countries has turned into a campaign of ethnic cleansing against minority Tigrayans, according to AP interviews with 30 refugees in Sudan and dozens more by phone, along with international experts. The Ethiopian government of Nobel Peace Prize winner Abiy Ahmed is accused of teaming up with his ethnic group — his mother was Amhara — and soldiers from neighboring Eritrea to punish around 6 million people. Witnesses say they have split much of Tigray between them, with the Amhara in the west and Eritrean forces in the east.

Ethiopia claims that life in Tigray is returning to normal, and Abiy has called the conflict “tiresome.” But the refugees the AP spoke with, including some who arrived just hours before, said abuses were still occurring. Almost all described killings, often of multiple people, rapes and the looting and burning of crops that without massive food aid could tip the region into starvation.

For months, the people of Tigray have been largely sealed off from the world, with electricity and telecommunication access severed and mobile phones often seized, leaving little to back up their claims of thousands, even tens of thousands, killed. That has begun to change.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken asserted last month that “ethnic cleansing” has taken place in western Tigray, marking the first time a top official in the international community has openly described the situation as such. The term refers to forcing a population from a region through expulsions and other violence, often including killings and rapes.

Refugees told the AP that Amhara authorities and allied forces in western Tigray have taken over whole communities, ordering Tigrayans out or rounding them up. A refugee from Humera, Goitom Hagos, said he saw thousands of Tigrayans loaded into trucks and doesn’t know what happened to them.

The Amhara now control some government offices in western Tigray and decide who belongs — and even whether Tigrayans exist at all. Some were ordered to accept the Amhara identity or leave, and others were told to leave anyway, the refugees said.

Lemlem Gebrehiwet was forced to flee while heavily pregnant and gave birth three days after reaching Sudan. She recalled the new authorities telling her, “This is Amhara.”

Shy, her baby girl waiting, she struggled to comprehend. “Maybe we did something wrong.”

Seid, the nurse, fled Humera early in the conflict after his hospital came under heavy shelling, with the wounded carried in screaming and colleagues killed. He returned in January in the hope that conditions had improved, as Abiy’s government promised.

They hadn’t. His home had been looted, and the remaining Tigrayans had shrunk to a quiet population of the elderly, women and children who were discouraged from speaking their own language, Tigrinya.

At the hospital, Tigrayans had to pay for care, unlike the Amhara. Anyone who came was allowed to speak Amharic only. Tigrayan staffers weren’t paid, and every night there was gunfire.

Ten days after returning to the hospital, Seid left for Sudan. Now, at this dusty post, refugees pass blazing days sprawled on plastic mats under shelters of woven straw. They stay perilously close to the border in the hope that missing loved ones will emerge from Tigray.

“The federal government is trying to be king. We Tigrayans refuse,” said one refugee, Nega Chekole.

In response to allegations that the Amhara are ordering Tigrayans to leave and issuing new ID cards, the spokeswoman for the prime minister’s office, Billene Seyoum, said the area is under a provisional administration “who are all from the region.”

The Ethiopian government says it rejects “any and all notions and practices of ethnic cleansing” and will never tolerate such practices, “nor will it turn a blind eye to such crimes.” However, almost everyone the AP interviewed said they had watched fellow Tigrayans being killed or seen bodies on the ground.

In her town of more than a dozen ethnic groups, Belaynesh Beyene was dealt a ghastly lesson in just how little Tigrayans suddenly were worth.

In the early days of the fighting, she said she saw 24 bodies in the streets of Dansha in western Tigray. The 58-year-old grandmother and other residents were prevented from burying them by the Amhara youth militia, a practice that witnesses across Tigray have reported as an added insult to grief. The practice applies only to Tigrayan corpses.

“They accidentally killed an ethnic Oromo in a Tigrayan household,” she said. “When they realized their ‘mistake,’ they came and buried him.”

A spokesman for the Amhara regional government, Gizachew Muluneh, didn’t answer questions from the AP. The Amhara have said they are taking back land they claim belongs to them.

Soldiers from Eritrea, long an enemy of Tigray’s now-fugitive leaders, have also been blamed for some of the worst human rights abuses. Under pressure, Abiy said last month the soldiers will leave, after long denying their presence.

Hiwot Hadush, a teacher from Zalambessa, said scores of people were killed after the Eritreans went house to house, opening fire.

“Even if someone was dead, they shot them again, dozens of times. I saw this,” she said. “I saw many bodies, even priests. They killed all Tigrayans.”

In another border community, Irob, furniture maker Awalom Mebrahtom described hiding and watching Eritrean soldiers order 18 Tigrayans, mostly young men like him, to lie in a remote field. They were shot to death.

The killings continue. In early March, after months on the run, 30-year-old Alem Mebrahtu attempted a desperate crossing of the Tekeze river. Separated from her three small children in the early chaos of the conflict, she had heard they were in Sudan.

Sympathetic women from the Wolkait ethnic group pleaded with Eritrean soldiers near the river to let Alem cross, while urging her to pretend to be Wolkait, too. It worked, but she saw a grim reminder of what could have happened if she had failed.

Bodies lay scattered near the riverbank, she said. She estimated around 50 corpses.

“Some were face-down. Some were looking up at the sky,” she said.

Exhaustion still pressed deep under her eyes, Alem started to cry. There by the river, confronted with death, tears hadn’t been allowed. The Eritrean soldiers beat people for expressing grief, she said.

Samrawit Weldegerima, who had arrived just two weeks earlier in Hamdayet, also saw corpses by the river, counting seven. Freshly branded on their temples were the markings some Tigrayans have to express their identity, she said.

“When I saw them, I was terrified,” Samrawit said, touching her belly, six months pregnant. “I thought I was already dead.”

Those who crossed the river were amazed to find that the Amhara were now in charge in western Tigray. Alem’s home in Humera was occupied by Amhara militia. She asked them for her clothes, but they had been burned. She was told to get out.

Reluctantly, to protect herself, she is trying to learn Amharic.

“Their aim is to leave no Tigrayan,” she said. “I hope there will be a Tigray for my children to go home to.”

The idea of home remains dangerous. Days after Abiy urged people in Tigray to return in late March, at least two men trying to do so from Hamdayet were fatally shot within sight of the border crossing.

They were buried by hundreds of refugees at the Orthodox church in Hamdayet, where the blank walls are being mapped for murals of sacrifice and salvation. Some of the faithful drop to their knees and clutch the stones, deep in prayer. Others rest their foreheads against the entrance, as if they can’t go on.

Even as the Amhara fighters took turns raping her, they offered the young woman a twisted path to what they considered redemption.

She had returned to her looted home in Humera. There, she was seized by militia members speaking Amharic. When she asked them to speak her native Tigrinya, which she understood far better, they became angry and started kicking her.

She fell, and they fell upon her. She remembers at least three men.

“Let the Tigray government come and help you,” she recalled them saying.

They also made her a proposal: “Claim to be Amhara and we’ll give you back your house and find you a husband. But if you claim to be Tigrayan, we will come and rape you again.”

The woman’s Amhara neighbor was present during the attack. When she later approached him for help, there was none.

“So what?” she recalled him saying. “You came back. Behave and be quiet.”

The woman cried all night. The next day, she found little comfort in learning that many others in her neighborhood had been raped, too.

“One mother and daughter had been forced to watch each other,” she said. “One woman was raped on the road, with people watching. Other accounts were worse than mine.”

She left for Sudan. It was mid-February. Afraid to speak with anyone, she waited almost a month before seeking medical care.

“I was ashamed,” she said, and started to cry. She watched the doorway warily, fearing the rumors that can spread among the refugees.

She said she was grateful to be HIV-negative, but she is pregnant. For a long moment, she was silent. She can hardly think about that yet. Her family back home doesn’t know.

The United Nations has said more than 500 rapes in Tigray have been reported to health care workers. But the woman from Humera, whose account was confirmed by her doctor, assumes many more survivors are hiding it just as she did. The AP doesn’t name people who have been sexually abused.

Several refugees from different Tigray communities told the AP they watched or listened helplessly as women were taken away by Amhara or Eritrean fighters and raped. It was like taunting, said Adhanom Gebrehanis from Korarit village, who had just arrived in Hamdayet with the welts from a beating by Eritrean soldiers on his back.

“They do these things openly to make us ashamed,” he said.

He described watching Eritreans pull aside 20 women from a group of Tigrayans and rape them. The next day, 13 of the women were returned.

Go,” Adhanom said the Eritreans told the others. “We already have what we want.”

A midwife from Adwa, Elsa Tesfa Berhe, described treating women secretly after Eritrean soldiers swept through health centers, looting even the beds and telling patients to leave. As Berhe snuck out to deliver babies and care for the wounded, she saw people trying to bury bodies at the risk of being shot, or pouring alcohol on corpses in an attempt to hide the smell.

With the health centers destroyed, little if any care remains for women and girls who have been raped. No one knows how many now carry the children of their attackers.

Berhe had just arrived in Sudan. She cried as she recalled a 60-year-old woman who was raped vaginally and anally by Eritrean soldiers and then waited for days, trying to hide the bleeding, before seeking help.

“She didn’t want to tell anyone,” Berhe said. She heard the woman ask, “Can anyone trust me if I say I was raped?”

Another woman was raped by four Eritrean soldiers while her husband hid under the bed, Berhe said. Her husband recounted the attack when they sought an abortion.

A third woman described how Eritrean soldiers ordered her father to rape her, then shot and killed him when he refused. The soldiers raped her instead.

Berhe fears that the situation in rural areas is even worse, as described by the displaced people arriving in cities. So far, few from the outside world can reach the areas where the majority of Tigrayans lived before the conflict, as fighting continues.

“Do you think there is a word to explain this? There is no word,” said a midwife from Humera, who gave only her first name, Mulu.

In Hamdayet she befriended seven women from the same village, Mai Gaba, who said they were raped separately by various fighters, including Ethiopian federal forces. Mulu fears that Mai Gaba is a conservative example and estimates that some communities have seen scores of assaults.

“This is to harm the community psychologically,” Mulu said. “Most of the people in Tigray support the (fugitive Tigray leaders). To destroy them, you must destroy Tigrayans.”

There is more to come.

Almost every person interviewed described a worrying shortage of food, and some said Tigrayans are being starved. Many recalled seeing crops being looted or burned in communities by Amhara or Eritrean fighters, a toll that even shows up in satellite imagery.

Kidu Gebregirgis, a farmer, said he was questioned almost daily about his ethnicity, his shirt yanked aside to check for marks from the strap of a gun. He said the Amhara harvested around 5,000 kilograms (5.5 short tons) of sorghum from his fields and hauled it away, a task that took two weeks. He shook his head in amazement.

The conflict began shortly before the harvest in the largely agricultural region. Now the planting season approaches.

“But there is no seed,” Kidu said. “There’s nothing to start again.”

The prospect is terrifying, said Alex de Waal, the author of a new report warning of mass starvation in Tigray and a researcher at the Fletcher School at Tufts University.

“What I fear is that millions of people are in the rural areas, staying because they are hopeful they will be able to plant,” he said. “If they’re not able to plant, if food supplies run out, then all of a sudden we could see a mass migration.”

Tigrayans who passed through rural communities described starving people, often elderly, begging outside churches. Sometimes they did, too.

Alem, the exhausted mother, begged for money and tightened her clothes to control the hunger pangs. Abedom, a day laborer who only gave one name, begged while roaming the mountains and villages for three months.

“It was normal to go a whole day without food,” he said. “So many people were hungry. They loot everything, so if they take it all, how do I survive?”

The hunger was staggering. One refugee saw a man faint on the road in Adi Asr, close to death. Another described a fellow traveler so tired he simply stopped walking. Yet another saw a child, too weak to go on, left behind.

Again, ethnicity was crucial. Belaynesh, from Dansha, said she made sure to speak Amharic when approaching farmhouses in western Tigray for food.

Ethiopia, under international pressure, has said food aid has been distributed to more than 4 million people in Tigray. Refugees disagreed, saying they saw no such thing in their communities or asserting that food was being diverted.

Maza Girmay, 65, said she heard food was being distributed, so she went to the government office in her community of Bahkar to inquire.

“They told me, ‘Go home, you’re Tigrayan,’” she said. “We Tigrayans are Ethiopian. Why do they treat us as non-Ethiopian?”

The rejection brought her to tears. An Orthodox cross tattooed on her forehead, long faded from childhood, wrinkled with her sorrow.

In the community of Division, farmer Berhane Gebrewahid said he was shot by Amhara fighters seeking his cattle. He said food aid was distributed in February by Amhara authorities but refused to Tigrayans, including him. Even the name of his homeland had been changed to Northern Gondar, after a major city in Amhara.

A colonel with the Tigray fighters, Bahre Tebeje, worried that starvation will kill more people than the war itself.

“Most food aid returns to the Amhara and Eritreans,” he asserted, leaning forward intently, a tattered black-and-white kaffiyeh around his neck. “It’s not being distributed to the people.”

Severe malnutrition is already above emergency levels as humanitarian workers rush to reach communities, the U.N. has said. In Hamdayet, a handful of such cases were recently sent to a regional hospital for treatment, according to a doctor there. One woman, recovering, still couldn’t produce milk for her baby, who whimpered and sucked at a limp breast.

Battered and hungry, Tigrayans still arrive daily at the border post where Sudanese soldiers watch a no man’s land in the shadow of a fading flag. One recent evening, the AP saw three new refugees approaching.

In Sudan, the Tigrayans are registered and asked for their ethnicity. For once, they are free to answer.

Source

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Ethiopia Accused of Using Rape as a Weapon of War in Tigray as New Evidence Emerges of Massacres

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on April 5, 2021

🔥 #TigrayGenocide / የትግራይ ጀነሳይድ

💭 “Many people believe that it is now genocidal, that what is a political intent to destroy is becoming now an intent to destroy, in whole or part, a people,”

💭“ብዙ ሰዎች አሁን የዘር ማጥፋት ነው ብለው ያምናሉ ፣ ለማጥፋት የታቀደው የፖለቲካ ዓላማ አሁን ሙሉ በሙሉ ወይም በከፊል ህዝብን የማጥፋት ፍላጎት እየሆነ ነው”

👉 አዲስ የጅምላ ጭፍጨፋዎች ማስረጃ ብቅ ብቅ ሲል የኢትዮጵያ መንግስትአስገድዶ መድፈርን እንደ ጦር መሳሪያ ይጠቀማል ተብሎ ተክስሷል

የኢትዮጵያ መንግስት የኤርትራ ወታደሮች በሰሜን ኢትዮጵያ ከሚገኘው የትግራይ ክልል እየወጡ መሆናቸውን ካስታወቀበት አዲስ መረጃ አግኝተናል፡፡ የኤርትራ ወታደሮች የትግራይ ተወላጆችን እና ወንዶችን ሲገድሉ እና አስገድዶ መድፈር የኢትዮጵያ እና የኤርትራ ወታደሮች ለጦር መሳሪያነት መጠቀማቸውን የሚያሳዩ ምስክሮች እየወጡ ነው፡፡ የኢትዮጵያ ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር አብይ አሕመድ በኅዳር ወር የትግራይ ሕዝብ ነፃ አውጪ ግንባርን ያነጣጠረ ወታደራዊ ጥቃት ለመደገፍ ኤርትራና ወደ ትግራይ ክልል አስገባት። በግጭቱ እውነተኛው የሟቾች ቁጥር እስካሁን አልታወቀም ፣ ግን ተመራማሪዎቹ በቅርቡ እንደገለጹት በጦርነቱ በ ፻፶/150 የጅምላ ጭፍጨፋዎች የተገደሉ ወደ ፪ሺ/2,000 የሚጠጉ ሰዎችን በስም ለይተው ለማሳወቅ በቅተዋል፡፡ ስለ አካባቢው መረጃዎችን አቅርባ የተመለሰችው የሲኤንኤን ከፍተኛ ዓለም አቀፍ ዘጋቢ ኒማ ኤል-ባጊር “በሥልጣን ፉክክር” ተብሎ የተጀመረው ወደ ብሔር ማጽዳት መግባቱን ትናገራለች፡፡ “ብዙ ሰዎች አሁን የዘር ማጥፋት ነው ብለው ያምናሉ ፣ ለማጥፋት የታቀደው የፖለቲካ ዓላማ አሁን አንድን ህዝብ በሙሉ ወይም በከፊል የማጥፋት ዓላማ እየሆነ ነው” ብላለች።

We get an update on how the Ethiopian government has announced Eritrean forces are withdrawing from the Tigray region in northern Ethiopia, where harrowing witness accounts have emerged of Eritrean soldiers killing Tigrayan men and boys and rape being used as weapon of war by Ethiopian and Eritrean soldiers. Eritrea entered the Tigray region to support Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s military offensive in November targeting the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. The true death toll from the conflict remains unknown, but researchers recently identified almost 2,000 people killed in 150 massacres by warring factions. CNN senior international correspondent Nima Elbagir, who just returned from reporting on the region, says what started as a “competition for power” has descended into ethnic cleansing. “Many people believe that it is now genocidal, that what is a political intent to destroy is becoming now an intent to destroy, in whole or part, a people,” says.

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Posted in Ethiopia, Infos, Life, Media & Journalism | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

NPR | The Case of PM Abiy Ahmed | What is Happening in Tigray is Worse Than War

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on March 22, 2021

🔥 A Nobel Peace Laureate and Horror in Ethiopia

🔥 የኖቤል የሰላም ተሸላሚ እና አስፈሪ ሰቆቃ በኢትዮጵያ

👉 የጠ / ሚ አብይ አህመድ ጉዳይ | በትግራይ እየሆነ ያለው ከጦርነት የከፋ ነው

🔥 ዛሬ ኢትዮጵያ በሀገሪቱ ሰሜናዊ ክፍል በጦርነት በምትገኘዋ ትግራይ ምክኒያት እንደገና በዜና ውስጥ አለች። እዚያ እየሆነ ያለው ከጦርነት የከፋ ነው ፥ ትግራይ የጦር ወንጀልና በሰው ልጆች ላይ የሚፈጸሙ ወንጀሎች ቲያትር ናት።

🔥 አስገድዶ መድፈር ከረጅም ጊዜ በፊት የጦር መሣሪያ ሆኖ ቆይቷል ፥ በሱዳን ፣ በባልካን ፣ በበርማ እና በሌሎች በርካታ ቦታዎች። በትግራይ በጅምላ መድፈር እጅግ ዘግናኝ በሆነ ደረጃ ላይ ይገኛል። እ... ጃንዋሪ 21 አንድ የተባበሩት መንግስታት ባለስልጣን ፕራሚላ ፓተን መግለጫ ሰጡ። የተባበሩት መንግስታት “በግጭቶች ውስጥ ወሲባዊ ጥቃት” በሚለው ርዕስ ጉዳይ ላይ “ልዩ ተወካይ” ነች። የእርሷን መግለጫ የመጀመሪያዎቹን ሁለት ዓረፍተ ነገሮችን ብቻ እጠቅሳለሁ፦

በትግራይ ዋና ከተማ በመቐለ ከፍተኛ ቁጥር ያላቸው አስገድዶ መድፈርን ጨምሮ ከባድ የወሲብ ጥቃቶች መከሰታቸው በጣም አሳስቦኛል። በቅርቡም “የኃይል እርምጃ ይወሰድባችኋል” የተባሉ ግለሰቦችም በማስፈራራት የገዛ ቤተሰቦቻቸውን ለመድፈር ተገደዋል የሚሉ የሚረብሹ ዘገባዎች አሉ።”

🔥 ለትግራይ ሲኦል ተጠያቂው ማነው? ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትሩ ፣ የኖቤል የሰላም ተሸላሚ? የጥፋተኝነት ምደባ ብዙ የመተንተን ገጾችን ይወስዳል። በትግራይ እና በውጭው ዓለም መካከል ያለው የግንኙነት መቆራረጥ እና የሰብዓዊ ዕርዳታ መዘግየትን ለክልሉ በጣም አስፈላጊ በመሆኑ ፣ በብዙዎች ዘንድ ዋናው ተጠያቂ አብይ አህመድ እንደሆነ ግልጽ ነው። ብዙዎች የአብይ የኖቤል የሰላም ሽልማት እንዲሰረዝ/ እንዲሻር ጥሪ እያደረጉ ነው።

🔥 የኖርዌይ የኖቤል ኮሚቴ ዛሬ ፊቱ ላይ እንቁላል አለበት። ከበርማዋ ጠቅላይ ሚንስትር ኦንግ ሳን ሱ ኪይ ጎን ለጎን የኮሚቴው የ 2019 ተሸላሚ ይህንን ነፍሰ ገዳይ እና ጭራቃዊ/ አሰቃቂ ጭፍጨፋ በትግራይ እየመራ ነው። ግን የ 2019 ሽልማት በኖቤል ውሎች ትርጉም አለው።

🔥 የኖርዌይ የኖቤል ኮሚቴ ዛሬ ፊቱ ላይ እንቁላል አለበት። ከበርማዋ ጠቅላይ ሚንስትር ኦንግ ሳን ሱ ኪይ ጎን ለጎን የኮሚቴው የ 2019 ተሸላሚ ይህንን ነፍሰ ገዳይ እና ጭራቃዊ/ አሰቃቂ ጭፍጨፋ በትግራይ እየመራ ነው።

🔥 በትግራይ ያለው ገሃነም ሳይቋረጥ ሊቀጥል ይችላል። ሊዛመትና ኢትዮጵያንም የከሸፈች/ ያልተሳካች ሀገር ሊያደርጋት ይችላል።

🔥 ኢትዮጵያ የተወሳሰበች ሀገር ናት ፣ ግን እኔ ለማንኛውም ለኢትዮጵያተመልካቾች ወይም በአጠቃላይ ለተመልካቾች ምክር አለኝ። ምክሩ የእኔ አይደለም ፣ ግን በባግዳድ ኢራቅ የተወለደው እና ያደገው ታላቁ የእንግሊዛዊ የታሪክ ምሁር ኤሊ ኬዱሪ፤ “አይናችሁን በሬሳዎች ላይ አድርጉ!” ሲል ለዴቪድ ፕራይስጆንስ የሰጠው ምክር ነው።

🔥 Today, Ethiopia is again in the news, for war in Tigray, a region in the country’s north. What is happening there is worse than war, if such a thing is possible: Tigray is a Theater For War Crimes & Crimes Against Humanity.

🔥 Rape has long been a weapon of war — in Sudan, the Balkans, Burma, and any number of other places. Rape in Tigray is on a mass, horrific scale. On January 21, a U.N. official, Pramila Patten, issued a statement. She is the U.N. “special representative” on the subject of “sexual violence in conflict.” I will quote just the first two sentences of her statement:

🔥 „I am greatly concerned by serious allegations of sexual violence in the Tigray region of Ethiopia, including a high number of alleged rapes in the capital, Mekelle. There are also disturbing reports of individuals allegedly forced to rape members of their own family, under threats of imminent violence.”

🔥 Who is responsible for the hell in Tigray? The prime minister, the Nobel peace laureate? The assignment of blame would take many pages of analysis. Suffice it to say, Abiy Ahmed is to blame for a lot, including the cut-off of communication between Tigray and the outside world, and the delay of humanitarian aid — desperately needed — to the region. Many are calling for the revocation of Abiy’s Nobel Peace Prize.

🔥 Today, the Norwegian Nobel Committee has egg on its face. Aung San Suu Kyi aside, the committee’s 2019 laureate is presiding over this murderous, monstrous mayhem in Tigray. But the 2019 award made sense, on Nobel terms. Classically, a committee asks itself, “Who has done the most or best work for fraternity between nations during the preceding year?”

🔥 The hell in Tigray may go on and on. It may spread, making Ethiopia a failed state.

🔥 Ethiopia is complicated, but I have advice for any Ethiopia-watchers, or watchers in general. It is not my advice, but the advice that Elie Kedourie, the great British historian, born and raised in Baghdad, gave to David Pryce-Jones: “Keep your eye on the corpses.”

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Posted in Ethiopia, Infos, Life | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CNN:’Practically This Has Been a Genocide’ | Rape Used as a Weapon of War in Ethiopia

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on March 20, 2021

Thank you, CNN! We love you, dear Nima Elbagir! You are a real woman, a good-hearted, bright woman – a lot better than the current female president of Ethiopia and her wicked female ministers. They all are in a conspiracy of silence with evil Abiy Ahmed’s riffraff female ministers and president. You, Nima, from now on you are a citizen of the one and only true Ethiopia — which at the moment, and only at the moment, sadly exists only in virtual and celestial hug. But soon!

እናመሰግናለን፡ ሲ.ኤን.ኤን! ውድ ኒማ ኤልባጊር፤ እንወድሻለን! እውነተኛ ሴት ነሽ ፣ ጥሩ ልብ ያለሽ፣ ብሩህ ሴት ነሽ ፥ ከአሁኗ ከንቱ የኢትዮጵያ ሴት ፕሬዚዳንት እና ከትርፍራፊ ሴት ሚኒስትሮች እጅግ በጣም የተሻልሽ ሴት ነሽ፡፡ እነዚህ የአረመኔው የአብይ አህመድ ሴት ሚኒስትሮች እና ፕሬዝዳንቷ ሁሉም የዝምታ ሴራ ላይ ናቸው፡፡ ኒማ ኤልባጊር ከአሁን በኋላ የአንዷ እና ብቸኛዋ የእውነተኛዋ ኢትዮጵያ ዜጋ ነሽ ፥ በአሁኑ ወቅት እና በአሁኑ ጊዜ ፣ ይህች ኢትዮጵያ በምናባዊ እና ሰማያዊ እቅፍ ብቻ የምትኖር እንጂ በሚያሳዝን ሁኔታ እዚህ የለችም። ግን በቅርቡ!

💭 ሲ.ኤን.ኤን. ‘በተግባር ይህ የዘር ማጥፋት ወንጀል ሆኗል’ | አስገድዶ መድፈር በኢትዮጵያ እንደ ጦር መሣሪያነት አገልግሏ

🔥“እሱ ገፋኝና “እናንተ የትግራይ ተወላጆች ታሪክ የላችሁም ፣ ባህል የላችሁም ፣ የምፈልገውን ላደርግባችሁ እችላለሁ፣ ማንም ግድ አይሰጥም!” አለኝ ፡፡”

🔥 ተደፋሪዎቹ ሴቶች ደፋሪዎቻቸው የነገሯቸውን ነገሮች ሲገልጹ፤ “ማንነታቸውን መለወጥ እንዳለባቸው ፥ ወይ አማራ ለማድረግ ወይም ቢያንስ የትግሬ ማንነት ደረጃቸውን እንዲተው… እና እዚያ የመጡትም እነሱን ለማጥራት፣ የደም መስመሩን ለማጥራት እንደሆነ” ይናገራሉ … “። ዶ / ር ቴድሮስ ተፈራ አክለውም፤ “በተግባር ይህ የዘር ማጥፋት ወንጀል ነው!” ብለዋል፡፡

🔥 እንደ ሀኪሞቹ ገለፃ የሚያክሟቸው ሁሉም ሴቶች ማለት ይቻላል በኢትዮጵያና በኤርትራ ወታደሮች የተደፈሩት ሁሉ ተመሳሳይ ታሪኮችን ይተርካሉ።፡ ሴቶቹ እንዳሉት ወታደሮቹ የመበቀል ተልእኮ ላይ እራሳቸውን አውጀዋል እና በክልሉ ውስጥ ከሞላ-ጎደል-የጅምላ ቅጣት ጋር ይንቀሳቀሳሉ።

🔥 “አንዲት ሐኪም እንዳስተናገደቻቸው ያከሟቸው ብዙ ሴቶችም በአካል ተጎድተዋል ፣ አጥንቶቻቸው ተሰባብረዋል፣ የአካል ክፍሎቻቸው ቆሳስለዋል፡፡ ከታካሚዎቹ መካከል ትንሹ ልጃገረድ የ ፰/8 ዓመት ልጅ ስትሆን ትልቋ ደግሞ የ፷/60 ነበሩ።”

🔥 “He pushed me and said, ‘You Tigrayans have no history, you have no culture. I can do what I want to you and no one cares.'”

🔥 “The women that have been raped say that the things that they say to them when they were raping them is that they need to change their identity — to either Amharize them or at least leave their Tigrinya status … and that they’ve come there to cleanse them … to cleanse the blood line,” Dr. Tedros Tefera said.

“Practically this has been a genocide,” he added.

🔥 According to the doctors, almost all the women they treat recount similar stories of being raped by Ethiopian and Eritrean soldiers. The women said the troops were on a self-proclaimed mission of retribution and were operating with near-total impunity in the region.

🔥 One doctor said many of the women she treated were also physically abused, with broken bones and bruised body parts. She said the youngest girl she treated was 8 years old, while the oldest was 60.

More evidence of sexual violence being used as a deliberate weapon of war is emerging from Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, where an armed conflict has been raging for months.

Women are being gang-raped, drugged and held hostage, according to medical records and testimonies from survivors shared with CNN. In one case a woman’s vagina was stuffed with stones, nails and plastic, according to a video seen by CNN and testimony from one of the doctors who treated her.

CNN has spoken with nine doctors in Ethiopia and one in a Sudanese refugee camp who say they’ve seen an alarming increase in sexual assault and rape cases since Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed launched a military operation against leaders in Tigray, sending in national troops and fighters from the country’s Amhara region. Forces from neighboring Eritrea are participating in the military campaign on the side of Ethiopia’s government, as CNN has previously reported.

“He pushed me and said, ‘You Tigrayans have no history, you have no culture. I can do what I want to you and no one cares.'”

According to the doctors, almost all the women they treat recount similar stories of being raped by Ethiopian and Eritrean soldiers. The women said the troops were on a self-proclaimed mission of retribution and were operating with near-total impunity in the region.

A CNN team in Hamdayet, a sleepy Sudanese town on the Ethiopian border where thousands of refugees from Tigray have gathered in recent months, spoke with several women who described being raped as they fled fighting.

“He pushed me and said, ‘You Tigrayans have no history, you have no culture. I can do what I want to you and no one cares,'” one woman said of her attacker. She told CNN she is now pregnant.

Many say they were raped by Amhara forces who told them they were intent on ethnically cleansing Tigray, a doctor working at the sprawling refugee camp in Hamdayet told CNN.

“The women that have been raped say that the things that they say to them when they were raping them is that they need to change their identity — to either Amharize them or at least leave their Tigrinya status … and that they’ve come there to cleanse them … to cleanse the blood line,” Dr. Tedros Tefera said.

“Practically this has been a genocide,” he added.

The flood of refugees has become a trickle since Ethiopian forces reinforced the border in recent days, worrying refugees who are still hoping to be reunited with family members.

The Ethiopian and Eritrean governments didn’t immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment on allegations that their forces are carrying out a coordinated campaign of sexual violence against women in Tigray.

Thousands of civilians are believed to have been killed in the conflict. CNN has previously reported that soldiers from neighboring Eritrea have perpetrated extrajudicial killings, assaults and human rights abuses in the Tigray region. Separate investigations by CNN and Amnesty International in February revealed evidence of massacres carried out by Eritrean forces in Dengelat and Axum. Eritrea’s government has denied involvement in the atrocities.

The new reports of sexual violence come as US President Joe Biden dispatches Senator Chris Coons to meet with Abiy and convey US “concerns about the humanitarian crisis and human rights abuses in the Tigray region.” The State Department has previously called for an independent investigation into atrocities committed during the war.

Ethiopia’s government has severely restricted access to journalists until recently, making it challenging to verify survivors’ accounts. And an intermittent communications blackout during the fighting has effectively blocked the war from the world’s eyes. But in recent weeks, as foreign journalists have been allowed in, horrifying stories of rape and sexual violence are beginning to surface.

On Thursday, CNN affiliate Channel 4 News published a harrowing report into sexual violence against women in Tigray. The report included interviews from a safe house — the only one believed to be operating in Tigray for rape survivors — where around 40 women too traumatized to return to their families are receiving shelter and support.

“… they’ve come there to cleanse them … to cleanse the blood line.”

Dr. Tedros Tefera

One of the survivors told Channel 4 News that she and five other women were gang-raped by 30 Eritrean soldiers who were joking and taking photos throughout the attack. She said she knew they were Eritrean troops because of their dialect and uniforms. She said she was able to return home only to be raped again. When she tried to escape, she recalled being captured, injected with a drug, tied to a rock, stripped, stabbed and raped by soldiers for 10 days.

Outside of the safe house, many more women and young girls are being treated in Ayder Referral Hospital, the main medical facility in the regional capital Mekelle. Most have been referred there by hospitals in rural areas that are not equipped to handle rape cases, Channel 4 News reported.

One doctor at the hospital told CNN that more than 200 women had been admitted for sexual violence in recent months, but many more cases have been reported in rural villages and centers for the internally displaced, with limited to no access to medical care.

The fighting in Tigray, which has included attacks on health care facilities, has severely restricted access to medical treatment, according to a report published Thursday by international medical humanitarian organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF). Of the 106 medical facilities MSF visited in the region, barely one in 10 were still operating, and one in five had been or was occupied by armed soldiers. One facility was being used as an army base, MSF said.

Between a lack of access to medical services and stigma surrounding sexual violence, doctors CNN interviewed said they suspect the true number of rape cases is much higher than official reports.

On February 10, the state-appointed Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) admitted that the war and associated dismantling of the regional administration in Tigray had “led to a rise in gender-based violence in the region.”

A month later, on March 4, the United Nation’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, demanded an “objective, independent assessment” of the situation on the ground in Tigray.

According to the UN statement, more than 136 cases of rape were reported in eastern region hospitals in Mekelle, Ayder, Adigrat and Wukro between December and January.

One coordinator at a gender-based violence crisis center in Tigray told CNN they used to hear of cases every few days or once a week. Since the conflict broke out, up to 22 women and girls seek treatment for rape every day, she said.

Demand for emergency contraception and testing for sexually transmitted infections have also surged in recent months. Many of the women who have been raped have contracted sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV, doctors told CNN.

One doctor said many of the women she treated were also physically abused, with broken bones and bruised body parts. She said the youngest girl she treated was 8 years old, while the oldest was 60.

The doctor said that many women who come forward share stories of others who haven’t — mothers, sisters, friends and other acquaintances.

A spokesperson for the UN Human Rights Office told CNN that they would carry out a joint investigation with EHRC into allegations of serious human rights violations in Tigray.

Source

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የአጥፍቶ-ጠፊዎችን ፈለግ የተከተለው የአማራ/ ጋላማራ “የዘር ማጽዳት” ዘመቻ በትግራይ

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on March 20, 2021

🔥 ክፍል ፩

በምዕራብ ትግራይ ትግሬዎች በፋሺስቱ የአማራ ፋኖ ሚሊሺያ እየተገደሉና ለስደት እየተዳረጉ ነው፣ ቤቶቻቸውም እየተቃጠሉ ነው

🔥 ክፍል ፪

ዶ/ር + ☆ዶ/ር + ☆ ዶ/ር ዋውውውው! ንጹሕ ኢትዮጵያውያን ይህን ጉድ ሰምታችሁ አትደንግጡ፣ አትበሳጩ! ጥሩ ትምህርት ነው! የአማራ / ጋላማራ ሊሂቃን በዋቄዮ-አላሁ-አቴቴ-ኤልዛቤል የጥላቻ መንፈስ ሥር

የትግራይ ኢትዮጵያውያን፡ ምንም እንኳን መሪዎቻቸው በይሉኝታ ከትግራዋይ ይልቅ ሌሎች ኢትዮጵያውያንን በተለይ ኦሮሞ እና አማራ ኢትዮጵያውያንን በይበልጥ በመጥቀም፤ ኢትዮጵያን ባልተጠበቀና በሚያስደንቅ መልክ አልምተዋትና፣ በሰላም ጠብቀዋትም ነበር። እነዚህ ሰሜን ኢትዮጵያውያን ኢትዮጵያ ዘ-ነፍስ በኢትዮጵያ ዘ-ስጋ ዘንድ ለአንዴም እንኳን ተወዳጅነትን ሳያገኙና በዚህም ብዙም ሳይቀየሙ፣ ሳይበቀሉና በአማራዎች፣ ኦሮሞዎች፣ ሶማሌዎችና ደቡቦች ላይ አንዲትም ጥይት ሳይተኩሱ ፺/90% የምትሆነውን ኢትዮጵያን ትተውላቸው ወደ ሚጢጢዋ ትግራይ ኮሮጇቸውን ጠቅልለው ሄዱ። እዚያም ብዙም ሳያማርሩና “ያንንም ይሄንም አምጡ፣ ጎንደር እርስቴ፣ አዲስ አበባ ኬኛ”(ለነገሩማ ሁለቱም የአክሱም ግዛቶች ናቸው) ሳይሉ በሰላም መኖር ጀምሩ፣ ብዙም ሳይቆን ሁሉም በድብቅና በግልስ በትግራይ ሕዝብ ላይ ያነጣጠር ሤራ ጠንስ ሰው ጦርነት አወጁበት። ዛሬ በኢትዮጵያ ታሪክ ታይቶም ተሰምቶም ለማይታወቅ ግፍ ሰለባ ሲሆኑ፤ ቪዲዮው ላይ የምናያቸው የአማራ/ጋላማራ ልሂቃን ብቅ ብለው ደስታቸውን ለማሳየትና ትክክለኛዎቹ ኢትዮጵያውያን በሆኑት የጽዮን ልጆች ላይ ለመሳለቅ በቅተዋል።

ይህ ሁሉ እንግዲህ የሚያሳየን እነዚህ ደካሞችና ግብዞች በዋቄዮአላህአቴቴኤልዛቤል መንፈስ ሥር መውደቃቸውን ነው። የቃኤላዊ ማንነት ይህ ነው! የዛሬዎቹን ልሂቃኑን የፈለፈለው ያ ትውልድ በእነ ጥላሁን ገሠሠ እና ብዙነሽ በቀለ የፍዬል ድምጽ በኩል አቴቴ ሥራዋን እንድትሠራበት የፈቀደ መሰሪ ትውልድ ነው። ልክ በአረቦችና በመሀመዳውያኑ ዘንድ እንደምናየው እነርሱም አመጸኞች፣ ትዕቢትን፣ እብሪትንና ተንኮልን እንደ ብልኸነት የሚቆጥሩ፣ እንደ ፍዬል ደፋርነትን ጀግነነት አድርገው የሚወስዱ፣ ምስጋናቢሶች፣ የበሉበትን ወጪት ሰባሪ፤ ያጎረሳቸውን እጅ ነካሾች፣ ስጋዊ፣ ክፉና ዲያብሎሳዊ የባዕድ ርዕዮተ ዓለማትን መከተል የመረጡ ናቸው። “አምጡ!” እንጅ “እንኩን!” ያልለመዱ፣ “በቃኝን” ፣ “ትህትናን” እና “ይቅርታን” የማያውቁ “ሁሉ ኬኛ፣ ሁሉም እርስቴ፣ ሁሌ እኛ እንጂ ሌላው አልተበደለም” እያሉ እንደ ጅራፍ እራሳቸው ገርፈው እራሳቸው ሲጮሁ የሚሰሙ ውዳቂዎች ናቸው።

የሞናሊዛን አሰቃቂ ታሪክ የሰማና ያየ፣ በትግራይ ሴቶች ላይ እየተፈጸመ ያለውን ኢኢትዮጵያዊ፣ ኢሰብዓዊና ኢሴታዊ ከባድ ወንጀል መላው ዓለም “ኡ! !” እያለ በመዘገብ ላይ እያለ እነዚህ የአማራ/ ጋላማራ ልሂቃን፣ ያውም ሴት ዶ/ሮች በጾታ አጋሮቻቸው ላይ ይህን ያህል መሳለቅ ምን ያህል ጥልቅ መንፈሳዊ ውድቀት ላይ እንዳሉ ነውና የሚያሳየን እንዲህ በርህራሄአልባ በሆነ መልክ በአደባባይ እየወጡ ቆሻሻ ሲያስታውኩ ስናይና ስንሰማ እንዘንላቸው፣ ግን አንደናገጥ፣ አትበሳጩ! ጥሩ ትምህርት ነው!

[ኦሪት ዘዳግም ምዕራፍ ፲፭፥፱]

ባተኛው ዓመት የዕዳ ምሕረት ዓመት ቀርቦአል ብለህ ክፉ አሳብ በልብህ እንዳታስብ፥ ለድሀውም ወንድምህ አንዳች የማትሰጥ እንዳትሆን፥ ዓይንህም በእርሱ ላይ ክፉ እንዳይሆን፥ እርሱም ወደ እግዚአብሔር በአንተ ላይ እንዳይጮህ፥ ኃጢአትም እንዳይሆንብህ ተጠንቀቅ።”

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US Poised to Intervene in Ethiopia Crisis | Amhara/ Oromara Ethnic-Cleansing in Tigray

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on March 20, 2021

አይ አማራ/ ጋላማራ፤ ኢትዮጵያን እንዲህ ታዋርዷት?! እንደው ከኢትዮጵያ እና ተዋሕዶ እምነቷ ታሪካዊ ጠላቶች ከሆኑት አህዛብ ጎን ተሰልፋችሁ በጽዮን ላይ ትዘምቱ?! እስኪ አስቡት፤ አብረን ተባብረን መላዋ አፍሪቃን ነፃ እናውጣ በማለት ሌሎች ሕዝቦች ሁሉ በተለይ በዚህ ዘመን እንደሚያድርጉት ቅርርቦሽንና ፍቅርን በመፍጠር ፈንታ፤ ለብዙ ሺህ ዓመታት ከአክሱም እስከ ሞቃዲሾ አብሯቸው የኖረውን የትግራይን ሕዝብ “ከወልቃይት እርስቴ ውጣ”እያለ ሲያባርር እና ሲገድል። ይህን እኮ ነው የዋቄዮ-አልህ-አቴቴ ዲያብሎሳዊ መንፈስ የምንለው። ከአምስት መቶ ዓመታት በፊትና በኋላም በጣሊያን እና ቱርክ-ግብጽ-ድርቡሽ ወረራዎች ጊዜ እናንተ ነበራችሁ ማለት ነው ባንዳዎቹ። “ያለፈው ታሪክ የዛሬና የወደፊቱ ታሪክ መስተዋት ነው” የተባለው በእናንተ በኩል ሲፈጸም እያየነው እኮ ነው። እንደው በስንፍናችሁ እንዲህ በቀላሉ የትንቢት መጸፈሚያ ትሁኑ?!እጅግ በጣም አዝናለሁ! 😢😢😢 መቼስ አሁን ውጊያችሁ ከእግዚአብሔር ጋር ነውና የእናቶች እንባ በጣም ከባድ ዋጋ ያስከፍላችኋል! ጥቂት ቀናት ቀርተዋና፤ “እስከ ጌታችን ስቅለት ዕለት ድረስ ንስሐ ግቡ” ብለናል። ❖

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Ethiopia’s War Leads to Ethnic Cleansing in Tigray Region, U.S. Report Says | የአማራ ዘር ማጽዳት ወንጀል በትግራይ

Posted by addisethiopia / አዲስ ኢትዮጵያ on February 27, 2021

🔥 የኢትዮጵያ ጦርነት በትግራይ ክልል ወደ ዘር ማፅዳት እያመራ እንደሆነ የአሜሪካ ዘገባ ይናገራል

👉 ገብርኤል 👉 ማርያም 👉 ኡራኤል 👉 ጊዮርጊስ 👉 ተክለ ሐይማኖት 👉 ዮሴፍ 👉 መድኃኔ ዓለም

From The New York Times

💭 “ከአማራ ክልል የመጡ ጎሰኛ ታጋዮች – ከትግራይ ጋር የረጅም ጊዜ ፉክክር ያለው ክልል – ምዕራብ ትግራይን በማጥለቅለቅ ሚስተር አብይ አካባቢውን እንዲይዝ በፍጥነት ረዱት፡፡”

የአሜሪካ መንግስት ባወጣው ዘገባ በአሁኑ ወቅት በአብዛኛው በአማራ ታጣቂዎች ቁጥጥር ስር በዋለው የምዕራብ ትግራይ አካባቢ ስላለው ሁኔታ አማራዎች የትግራይ ተወላጆችን በጦር ሽፋን ለማባረር እንደ ግልፅ ዘመቻ አድርገው መውሰዳቸውን ቁልጭ አድርጎ ያሳያል፡፡”

ሪፖርቱ በበርካታ ከተሞች ውስጥ የትግራይ ተወላጆች እንዴት ጥቃት እንደተሰነዘረባቸው እና ቤቶቻቸው እንደተዘረፉ እና እንደተቃጠሉ ያሳያል። አንዳንዶቹ ወደ ጫካ ሸሽተው ነበር; ሌሎች በህገወጥ መንገድ ወደ ሱዳን ተሻግረው ሌሎች ደግሞ ተሰብስበው ወደ ሌሎች የትግራይ አካባቢዎች በግዳጅ እንዲዛወሩ ተደርጓል ብሏል ዘገባው።”

አሁን ባለሙያዎች እንደሚሉት የጦር ወንጀሎች ሊሆኑ የሚችሉትን አስገድዶ መድፈርን ፣ ዝርፊያን እና እልቂትን ጨምሮ እጅግ ከባድ ክሶችን የሚጋፈጡት ኤርትራዊያን እና አማራ ተዋጊዎች ናቸው፡፡”

ዋይ! ዋይ!ዋይ! በህይወቴ እንደዚህ ወቅት “አማራን ነን” በሚሉት ቃኤላውያን ላይ አዝኜ፣ ተበሳጭቼ እና ተቆጥቼ አላውቅም።

እስኪ እንመልከተው፤ ላላፉት ሦስት ዓመታት በደቡብ ኢትዮጵያ እና አማራ በተባለው ክልል ሳይቀር አብዮት አህመድ አሊ በሚመራው የዋቄዮአላህ ጋላ መንግስት ሲበደሉና ብዙ ግፍ ሲደርስባቸው የነበሩት ኦሮሞ እና ተዋሕዶ ካልሆኑ ኢትዮጵያውያን መካከል አማራዎች ዋንኛዎቹ ነበሩ። እንደው ቅናት፣ ምቀኝነትና የበታችነት ስሜት ከፈጠረባቸው መንፈስ ወጥተው ካልሆነ በቀር ልሂቃኖቻቸው እንደሚሉት ላለፉት ሃያ ሰባት ዓመት ህወሃት ከአማራውም ከኦሮሞውም በይበልጥ ጎድቶ የነበረው የራሴ ነው የሚለውን የትግራይ ሕዝብን መሆኑን ያው እያየነው ነው። ላለፉት ሦስት ዓመታት እንግዲህ አማራውን እና ኦሮሞ ያልሆኑትን ኢትዮጵያውያንን እና ተዋሕዷውያንን ሲያፈናቅል፣ ሲያሳድድ፣ ሲያግትና ሲገድል የነበረው፤ ዛሬም የቀጠለው ኦሮሞው ነው።

በጣም የሚገርም እኮ ነው፤ (ስቶኮልም ሲንድሮም?) ጋላው አማራውን ከደቡብ ኢትዮጵያ እና አዲስ አበባ ይጠራርጋል፤ አማራው (ጋላማራው) ደግሞ ትግራውያንን ከአዲስ አበባ፣ ከጎንደርና ከራሳቸው ከትግራይ ክልል ሳይቀር ይጠራርጋል። የዋቄዮአላህ ልጅ ማህተብ ያሰረውን “ክርስቲያን” አማራ በደቡብ ኢትዮጵያ እና በአዲስ አበባ ያሳድዳል፤ ይህ ማህተብ ያሰረው “ክርስቲያን” አማራ ደግሞ ፊቱን ወደ ሰሜን አዙሮ “ወንድሞቹንና እህቶቹን” ማህተብ ያሰሩትን ክርስቲያን ትግራዋያን በሰሜን ኢትዮጵያ ያሳድዳል። አቤት ቅሌት! አቤት ሃጢአት!

ለካስ አማራው በደቡብ ኢትዮጵያ በጋሎቹ ግፍ ሲደርስበት እነ ገዱ አንዳርጋቸው ግድ ያልሰጣቸው፣ ሴት ተማሪዎች ከደምቢዶሎ ታግተው ሲሰወሩ እነ ዮሐንስ !’ያሉት ጋላው አብዮት አህመድ ትግራይን ለመውረርና ላሞቿንና በጎቿን ለመጨፍጨፍ ዕቅድ እንዳለው አስታውቋቸው ስለነበረ ነው። ለካስ ቧ!እያሉ ጂኒውን ሽመልስ አብዲሳን ካባ ያለበሱት ጋሎቹ ሁመራንና ወልቃይትን ለአማራ ለመሸለም ቃል ገብተውላቸው ስለ ነበር ነው።

ዛሬ የቃኤልን ወንበር የተረከበው አማራው ሐረርን፣ ናዝሬትን፣ ደብረዘይትን፣ አዲስ አበባን፣ መተከልንና ታግተው የተሰወሩትን ሴት ልጆቹን ከመጤዎቹ ጋሎች የባርነት ቀንበር አላቅቆ ነፃ በማውጣት ፈንታ ነፃ የወጣውን፣ ማህተብ ያሰረውንና ያልበደለውን ወንድሙን ለመግደል ወደ ትግራይ አመራ።

አሁን የጋላው ቁራ ሰሜኖቹን ድመቶች እርስ በርስ ካባላ በኋላ ጋሎቹን ወገኖቹን ከጦር ወንጀል ክስ ለማትረፍና ትግራውያኑን የአክሱ ጽዮን ልጆችም በመፍራትና ለማታለል “የድጋፍ ሰልፎችን” በውጩ ዓለም በማዘጋጀት ላይ ይገኛል። እንግዲህ እራሱ እየገደለና እያስገደለ እንደለመደው የትግራዋያኑን ጩኸት፣ ሃዘንና ለቅሶ በዚህ መልክ ለመስረቅ ይሞክራል ማለት ነው። ጎን ለጎን ደግሞ ጋሎቹን ከደሙ ንጹሕ አድርጎ አማራና ኤርትራውያን በጦር ወንጀልነት እንዲከሰሱ ያደርጋል። ዲያብሎሳዊ እባባዊነታቸውን እያየን ነው?!

👉 “አታላዩና አምታቹ ቁራ ነፃነትና ሕይወት አፍቃሪዎቹን ድመቶች እርስበርስ ሲያባላቸው”

👉 “አማራና ትግሬ ተባበሩ፤ የተነሳባችሁን ጠላት ቄሮ ቁራ በአንድነት አባርሩ”

💭 “In western Tigray ethnic fighters from Amhara — a region with a long rivalry with Tigray — flooded in, quickly helping Mr. Abiy capture the area.”

The American government report about the situation in western Tigray, an area now largely controlled by Amhara militias, documents in vivid terms what it describes as an apparent campaign to force out the ethnic Tigrayan population under the cover of war.”

The report documents how in several towns ethnic Tigrayans had been attacked and had their homes pillaged and burned. Some had fled into the bush; others crossed illegally into Sudan and still others had been rounded up and forcibly relocated to other parts of Tigray, the report said.”

Now it is the Eritreans and Amhara fighters who face the most serious accusations including rape, plunder and massacres that, experts say, could constitute war crimes.

👉 A confidential U.S. government report found that people in Tigray are being driven from their homes in a war begun by Ethiopia, an American ally — posing President Biden’s first major test in Africa.

It wasn’t so long ago that the Prime Minister of Ethiopia was receiving the Nobel Peace Prize for ending a conflict with Eritrea.

Today Amnesty International released a report accusing both the Eritrean and Ethiopian governments of working alongside each other to commit atrocities.

Ethiopia and Eritrea brought their two-decade long conflict with each other to an end in 2019.

Now it seems they have a common enemy in Tigray, an Ethiopian province along the border with Eritrea.

Amnesty says Eritrean forces massacred hundreds of civilians in the sacred city of Axum last November.

We report from the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, and a warning: his report has distressing images from the start.

Ethiopian officials and allied militia fighters are leading a systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing in Tigray, the war-torn region in northern Ethiopia, according to a confidential United States government report obtained by The New York Times.

The report, written earlier this month, documents in stark terms a land of looted houses and deserted villages where tens of thousands of people are unaccounted for.

Fighters and officials from the neighboring Amhara region of Ethiopia, who entered Tigray in support of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, are “deliberately and efficiently rendering Western Tigray ethnically homogeneous through the organized use of force and intimidation,” the report says.

“Whole villages were severely damaged or completely erased,” the report said.

In a second report, published Friday, Amnesty International said that soldiers from Eritrea had systematically killed hundreds of Tigrayan civilians in the ancient city of Axum over a 10-day period in November, shooting some of them in the streets.

The worsening situation in Tigray — where Mr. Abiy, winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize, launched a surprise military offensive in November — is shaping up to be the Biden’s administration first major test in Africa. Former President Donald J. Trump paid little attention to the continent and never visited it, but President Joseph R. Biden has promised a more engaged approach.

In a call with President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya on Thursday, Mr. Biden brought up the Tigray crisis. The two leaders discussed “the deteriorating humanitarian and human rights crises in Ethiopia’s Tigray region and the need to prevent further loss of life and ensure humanitarian access,” a White House statement said.

But thus far Mr. Biden and other American officials have been reluctant to openly criticize Mr. Abiy’s conduct of the war, while European leaders and United Nations officials, worried about reports of widespread atrocities, have been increasingly outspoken.

On Tuesday a European Union envoy, Finland’s foreign minister, Pekka Haavisto, told reporters the situation in Tigray was “very out of control,” after returning from a fact-finding trip to Ethiopia and Sudan. The bloc suspended $110 million in aid to Ethiopia at the start of the conflict, and last month the E.U.’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, warned of possible war crimes in Tigray and said that the crisis was “unsettling” the entire region.

Ethiopia routinely dismisses critics of its campaign in Tigray as stooges of its foes in Tigray. But on Friday afternoon, in response to the Amnesty International report, Mr. Abiy’s office said it was ready to collaborate in an international investigation into atrocities in Tigray. The government “reiterates its commitment to enabling a stable and peaceful region,” it said in a statement.

Mr. Abiy’s office also claimed that Ethiopia has given “unfettered” access to international aid groups in Tigray — in contrast with U.N. officials who estimate that just 20 percent of the region can be reached by aid groups because of government-imposed restrictions.

The new U.S. Secretary of State, Antony J. Blinken, spoke with Mr. Ahmed by phone on Feb. 4 and urged him to allow humanitarian access to Tigray, the State Department said.

Alex de Waal, an expert on the Horn of Africa at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, said it is time for the United States to urgently focus on the crisis in Tigray, before more atrocities are committed and the humanitarian crisis lurches toward a famine.

“What is needed is political leadership at the highest level, and that means the U.S.,” he said.

When the United States assumes the chair of the United Nations Security Council in March, Mr. de Waal said, it should use that position to bring international pressure to bear on the belligerents to step back from a ruinous conflict.

Mr. Abiy launched the Tigray campaign on Nov. 4 following months of tension with the regional ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, which ruled Ethiopia with a tight grip for almost three decades until Mr. Abiy came to power in 2018.

But many of the worst abuses of the war have been blamed not on the Ethiopian military or the T.P.L.F. — whose armed wing is now known as the Tigray Defense Forces — but on the irregular and undeclared forces that have rallied behind Mr. Abiy’s military campaign.

Within weeks of the start of the conflict came the first reports that soldiers from Eritrea —Ethiopia’s bitter rival until the two countries reached a peace deal in 2018 — had quietly crossed into Tigray to assist Mr. Abiy’s overstretched federal forces.

In western Tigray ethnic fighters from Amhara — a region with a long rivalry with Tigray — flooded in, quickly helping Mr. Abiy capture the area.

Now it is the Eritreans and Amhara fighters who face the most serious accusations including rape, plunder and massacres that, experts say, could constitute war crimes.

The American government report about the situation in western Tigray, an area now largely controlled by Amhara militias, documents in vivid terms what it describes as an apparent campaign to force out the ethnic Tigrayan population under the cover of war.

The report documents how in several towns ethnic Tigrayans had been attacked and had their homes pillaged and burned. Some had fled into the bush; others crossed illegally into Sudan and still others had been rounded up and forcibly relocated to other parts of Tigray, the report said.

A woman is seen through the shattered windshield of a military truck that belonged to Tigrayan forces.

In contrast, towns with a majority Amharan population were thriving, with bustling shops, bars and restaurants, the report said.

The American report is not the first accusation of ethnic cleansing since the Tigray crisis erupted. But it does highlight how U.S. officials are quietly documenting those abuses, and reporting them to superiors in Washington.

The looming specter of mass hunger is also driving the sense of urgency over Tigray. At least 4.5 million people in the region urgently need food aid, according to the Tigray Emergency Coordination Center, which is run by Ethiopia’s federal government. Ethiopian officials say that some people have already died.

A document from Tigray’s regional government dated Feb. 2 and obtained by The Times notes that 21 people starved to death in the eastern Tigray district of Gulomokeda. Such numbers could be just the tip of the iceberg, aid officials warned.

“Today it could be one, two or three, but you know after a month it means thousands,” Abera Tola, the president of the Ethiopian Red Cross Society, told reporters earlier this month. “After two months it will be tens of thousands.”

The political outrage over Tigray, though, especially among European lawmakers, is being fueled by the growing tide of accounts of human rights abuses.

The Amnesty International report published Friday asserts that Eritrean soldiers conducted house-to-house searches in Axum in November, shooting civilians in the street and conducting extrajudicial executions of men and boys. When the shooting stopped, residents who tried to remove the bodies from the street were fired upon, the report says.

Amnesty said the massacre was likely a crime against humanity. Eritrea’s information minister, Yemane G. Maeskel, rejected the report, calling it “transparently unprofessional.”

Axum, a city of ancient ruins and churches, holds great significance to followers of the Ethiopian Orthodox faith. When the Eritrean soldiers relented and allowed the bodies to be collected, hundreds were piled up in churches, including the Church of St. Mary of Zion, where many Ethiopians believe that the ark of the covenant — said to hold the tablets inscribed with the Ten Commandments — is housed.

Source

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