Ethiopia's Tigray conflict marked by 'extreme brutality,' possible 'war crimes'
The UN-led report on human rights violations in Ethiopia's Tigray holds all parties — government troops and Tigrayan forces — responsible for committing gross abuses. It even warned of possible "crimes against humanity."
The UN warns 100,000 children in Ethiopia, mainly in Tigray, are at risk of malnutrition in the coming year
A long-awaited report on human rights abuses during the civil conflict in Ethiopia's northern Tigray region has revealed that all sides fighting in the conflict committed violations that may amount to war crimes.
The investigation, led by the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission and published Wednesday morning, is among the first investigations into human rights violations and violence that has killed thousands of people in the country over the past year.
The report comes a day after the Ethiopian government declared a nationwide state of emergency after Tigrayan forces claimed to have seized strategic towns and amid fears they were preparing to march on the federal capital, Addis Ababa.
Fighting broke out between Ethiopian government soldiers and Tigray forces in November 2020.
The genesis of the civil conflict lies in the animosity between the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. TPLF soldiers consider Abiy Ahmed a bitter enemy. Before Abiy became the leader of Ethiopia in 2018, the TPLF dominated national politics for nearly 25 years.
There were concerns on the Tigrayan side about the objectivity of the human rights report because the investigation was jointly conducted by the UN and Ethiopia's government-created human rights commission.
Those fears deepened after Ethiopia expelled seven UN officials last month, including one of the UN rights office's investigators.
Conflict marked by 'extreme brutality'
The 100-page report, which draws upon 269 interviews, found evidence of "serious abuse and violations" by all sides in the conflict.
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michele Bachelet said in a statement that the conflict had been "marked by extreme brutality."
She insisted on the need to bring perpetrators of a vast array of rights abuses to justice.
"The gravity and seriousness of the violations and abuses we have documented underscore the need to hold perpetrators accountable on all sides," Bachelet said.
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