Nairobi – At least 750 civilians were killed or executed in Ethiopia’s Amhara and Afar regions in the second half of 2021, the country’s rights body said on Friday.
Its report also catalogued widespread abuses, including torture and gang rape and enforced disappearances.
The Ethiopian Human Rights Commission said at least 403 civilians died and 309 were injured in air raids, drone strikes and heavy artillery fire since Tigrayan rebels fighting government forces launched an offensive into the neighbouring regions of northern Ethiopia in July last year.
At least 346 civilians also lost their lives in extra-judicial killings carried out by the warring parties, mainly Tigrayan rebels but also goverment forces and their allies, added the EHRC, a state-affiliated independent body.
It also accused Tigrayan rebels of widespread abuses such as gang rape, torture, looting and destroying public facilities such as hospitals and schools in the two regions bordering Tigray.
Afar and Amhara Regions: Report on Violations of Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law in Afar and Amhara Regions of Ethiopia Published
Read the report: https://t.co/epy3nOcEZ6#HumanRightsForAll
— Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) (@EthioHRC) March 11, 2022
“Tigray Forces committed widespread, cruel, and systematic sexual and gender-based violence including gang rape against women of different ages including girls and elderly women in parts of Afar and Amhara regions under their control,” it said.
“Tigray forces engaged in abductions and enforced disappearances in a manner that may constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity,” the report said, while also accusing federal and local security forces in Amhara and Afar of widespread arbitrary detentions.
More than 2 400 health facilities including hospitals in the two regions had ceased operation “as a result of the destruction, damage and and pillage they sustained”, the report said, while more than 1 000 schools were destroyed and another 3 220 damaged.
The conflict in the north erupted in November 2020 when Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent forces into Tigray to topple the ruling Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), a move he said came in response to the rebel group’s attacks on army camps.
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After initially losing control of Tigray’s cities and towns, the TPLF regrouped and retook the region in June, then launched offensives into Afar and Amhara.
In November 2021 the rebels claimed to be advancing on the capital Addis Ababa, but the government launched a counter-offensive, retaking lost territory in Amhara and Afar.
Although the fighting has eased, the UN on Monday reported that at least 304 civilians had been killed in air strikes in the north, particularly Tigray, since November.
The war in Africa’s second most populous country has killed thousands of people and, according to the UN and the United States, driven hundreds of thousands to the brink of starvation.
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Source: AFP
Picture: Twitter/@EthioHRC
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