Ethiopia says military won’t cross into Tigray

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Ethiopian troops will stay in two liberated regions and not cross into the war-ravaged northern region of Tigray for now, a government spokesman said on Thursday, a day after humanitarian sources said air strikes hit a key Tigrayan power station.

 

The government, will however, take whatever measures necessary to ensure the party ruling Tigray – the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) – does not present a threat, government spokesman Legesse Tulu said.

 

“As per our current assessment, the enemy has been heavily hit and is no longer capable of executing its wishes,” said Legesse.

 

The TPLF and the federal government and its allies have been at war for over a year. Government forces stayed in Tigray for the first eight months of the war, before withdrawing in June following heavy battlefield casualties.

 

Tigrayan forces then invaded the Amhara and Afar regions in July, saying they wanted to break a humanitarian aid blockade on Tigray but withdrew this month after also suffering heavy battlefield casualties. The government has denied UN allegation of blocking food aid into famine-hit Tigray.

 

Air strikes in Tigray have continued. On Wednesday, an air strike hit a power substation in Mekelle, the Tigrayan capital, regional media and two humanitarian sources there said. One source said colleagues had been in a hospital with injured workers from the substation.

 

The strike jeopardizes power access in the northern region, already scant following 13 months of conflict with the federal government.

 

Power across Mekelle had been off since the strike, the humanitarian sources reported.

 

Access to the national electricity and communications networks was shut down in Tigray after federal forces left the region in late June. Tigray has had extremely limited access to regional power supplies since then.

 

The United Nations has urged the Ethiopian government to restore electricity to the region.

 

The conflict in northern Ethiopia has killed thousands, displaced millions, and pushed 400,000 people in Tigray towards famine. The TPLF and the federal government blame each other for the war.

The TPLF accuses Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed of wanting to centralise power at the expense of the regions, which he denies.

 

The federal government also accuses the TPLF – which used to dominate national politics for nearly three decades – of trying to reclaim power, which it denies.

 

Reuters/Olajumoke Adeleke

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