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Ethiopia: At least 28 civilian deaths caused by Air Force raid

An Ethiopian Air Force bombing has killed at least 28 civilians in Tigray, the province’s guerrilla movement, the People’s Liberation Front of Tigris (TPLF), said on Thursday.

Another 76 civilians were injured in the raid on a market in the city of Alamata, a local television station reported. Fighter and remote-controlled unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) took part in the raid. TPLF spokesman Getatsu Renta insisted on Twitter that all the victims were civilians.

The federal government in Addis Ababa has not yet commented on the complaint.

Earlier this month, Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused a TPLF force fighting the federal army of executing some 50 civilians in two communities in Amhara between August 9 and 9. . He called for an “independent international investigation into alleged war crimes in Tigray and Amhara provinces.” The TPLF has not reacted to HRW’s allegations, but has in the past denied that its forces are committing atrocities.

In a joint statement yesterday, HRW and Amnesty International also spoke of the escalation of killings, mass arrests and the deportation of Tigris to the Amhara by local armed groups, a charge denied by local authorities.

The war that broke out a year ago threatens to disintegrate the multi-ethnic state of Ethiopia with a population of at least 115 million. The clashes, which continue despite calls from the international community to declare a ceasefire, are believed to have claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people and uprooted millions. Human rights organizations accuse all parties to the conflict of massacring civilians and blatant human rights violations.

Prime Minister Abi Ahmed, who took power in 2018 promising to transform Ethiopia, won the election the TPLF, which has monopolized power for 25 years at the federal level. On November 4, 2020, he ordered the federal army to launch a large-scale operation to overthrow the TPLF’s government in Tigray, which defied its authority and set up polls despite its opposition to holding elections. He accused her of being the first to attack government forces’ camps. Eritrean troops were involved on the side of the Ethiopian army.

The prime minister – and winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize – declared a “victory” for federal troops on November 28, but hostilities continued; the capital Addis Ababa.

Source: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

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Source From: Capital

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