The United Nations has ordered the immediate evacuation of family members of international staff in Ethiopia, according to an internal document seen by news agency AFP on Tuesday; this comes as Tigrayan rebels claim to be edging closer to the capital Addis Ababa.
An internal UN security order seen by AFP said that “eligible family members of internationally recruited staff” should be evacuated by November 25. France also became the latest country to urge its citizens to leave Ethiopia as the violent one-year conflict appears to be growing. The country advised its citizens in an email to leave Ethiopia “without delay”, following similar advisories by the US and the UK in recent weeks as the fighting moves closer to Addis Ababa.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Monday also vowed he would head to the front line to lead his soldiers in the battle against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) rebels, declaring: “We are now in the final stages of saving Ethiopia.”
Officials in the capital insisted Tuesday that security forces were working to ensure Addis Ababa’s peace and stability and went ahead to tell the diplomatic community not to worry. But the latest developments cast doubt on hopes of a peaceful solution to the war in Africa’s second most populous country, despite frantic diplomatic efforts led by the African Union to secure a ceasefire.
“The propaganda and terror talk being disseminated by the Western media fully contradicts the peaceful state of the city on the ground, so the diplomatic community shouldn’t feel any worry or fear,” said Kenea Yadeta, head of the Addis Ababa Peace and Security Bureau.
Thousands of people have been killed since the fighting erupted in November 2020, triggering a deep humanitarian crisis that the UN says has left hundreds of thousands on the brink of famine, and also displaced more than two million.
Northern Ethiopia has been wracked by conflict since November 2020 when Abiy sent troops into the northern Tigray region to topple the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) after months of tensions with the party, which dominated national politics for three decades.
Abiy promised a swift victory, but by late June the TPLF had regrouped and retaken most of Tigray including its regional capital Mekele. Since then the TPLF has pushed into the neighboring Afar and Amhara regions and this week claimed control of Shewa Robit, just 220 Kilometres (135 miles) northeast of Addis Ababa by road.
Some TPLF fighters were believed to have reached Debre Sina, roughly 30 kilometres closer to Addis Ababa, diplomats briefed on the security situation said. The African Union’s special envoy for the Horn of Africa, Olusegun Obasanjo, is leading a desperate push to broker a ceasefire, but so far there has been little concrete progress.
The leaders of South Africa and Kenya on Tuesday urged the warring parties to commit to an immediate ceasefire and political dialogue. But Abiy, who won the Nobel Prize in 2019 for forging peace with neighbouring Eritrea, himself cast doubts on the prospects for a peaceful solution in a statement on Monday.
“Starting tomorrow, I will mobilise to the front to lead the defence forces,” he said.
“Those who want to be among the Ethiopian children who will be hailed by history, rise up for your country today. Let’s meet at the front.”
Meanwhile, the United Nations on Tuesday launched a major drive to deliver food aid to two towns in northern Ethiopia despite the looting of warehouses. The UN’s World Food Programme said the “major food assistance operation” would serve more than 450,000 people over the next two weeks in the Amhara towns of Kombolcha and Dessie which lie at a strategic crossroads on the main highway to Addis Ababa.