Air strikes reported on capital of Ethiopia's Tigray, govt denies

Ethiopia’s military launched deadly air strikes on the Tigrayan capital Mekele on Monday, several sources said, but the government dismissed the reports as an “absolute lie”.

A hospital official in Mekele said three people were killed, including two children, in the first air raids reported over the northern city since the early stages of the almost year-long war in northern Ethiopia.

The bombardments — reported by residents, humanitarian officials and diplomats — came as the government of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed appeared to be pressing a new offensive against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

The United Nations said it was seeking to verify the “alarming” reports and voiced deep concern about the escalation of a conflict that has already caused a deep humanitarian crisis.

The sources told AFP the first raid occurred near a cement factory on the outskirts of Mekele, the city held by the TPLF since it was recaptured from government forces in June.

The second hit the city centre near the Planet Hotel, often used by top officials from the TPLF, the region’s former ruling party and the target of a government military operation since November.

A government spokesman dismissed the reports as lies concocted by the TPLF “to misguide the international community” and apply pressure on Ethiopia.

“There is no reason, or no plan, to strike civilians in Mekele, which is a part of Ethiopia, and home to our own citizens. This is absolute lie,” Legesse Tulu, head of the Government Communication Service, told AFP.

– ‘Crying wolf’ –

Dr Hayelom Kebede, research director at Mekele’s Ayder Referral Hospital, told AFP that “many casualties” were coming to the facility and that three people — including two children — had been killed.

The TPLF said government forces were “losing big” and the aerial assaults were designed to inflict civilian casualties as revenge.

“Monday is market day in Mekelle & the intention is all too palpable,” TPLF spokesman Getachew Reda said on Twitter.

Ethiopia’s foreign ministry accused the TPLF of trying to cover up alleged attacks on civilians in Amhara and Afar, the neighbouring regions of Tigray where the fighting has spread.

“The TPLF has been crying wolf in the past week, calling on the international community to save it from the ‘planned’ government attack against it,” it said in a statement.

– ‘Deeply concerned’ –

The United Nations voiced concern about the reported air assault, with UN chief Antonio Guterres urging all sides to avoid targeting civilians and again calling for a halt to all hostilities.

“The secretary general is deeply concerned over the escalation of the conflict in the northern Ethiopia as illustrated by the air strikes in Mekele today,” his spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters.

Since the fighting first erupted, untold numbers of civilians have been killed, nearly two million displaced, and there have been many reports of atrocities including massacres and mass rape.

The war has also soured relations between Ethiopia and Western powers, including the United States, long a crucial ally.

The latest tit-for-tat accusations between the warring parties came as the TPLF appeared to move south of Tigray toward Dessie, a city in Amhara where tens of thousands have sought refuge from the rebel advance since July.

One resident told AFP that Dessie was “flooded” with displaced civilians arriving from Wuchale, which lies to the north.

Legesse said the TPLF had used heavy weaponry in an assault in recent days on Wuchale, and accused the rebels of killing more than 30 civilians there.

At the weekend, Getachew said rebels had taken Wuchale — a claim denied by a military official in Amhara.

Getachew said the rebels would march all the way to Addis Ababa if necessary.

“If that’s what it takes to break the siege on Tigray, why not?” he told AFP by text message.

The rebels have justified their push into Afar and Amhara as necessary to prevent government forces from regrouping and to break what it describes as a humanitarian siege of Tigray, where the UN estimates that hundreds of thousands of people face famine-like conditions.

The conflict erupted in November after Abiy sent troops to Tigray to topple the TPLF, which dominated national politics before he took office in 2018.

The 2019 Nobel Peace laureate — who was sworn into a new term in office two weeks ago — said the deployment came in response to TPLF attacks on army camps. 

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