US orders diplomats out of Ethiopia as rebels approach capital

Nine rebel groups said they would join forces in an alliance built around the Tigray People’s Liberation Front

by

Anu Warrier

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A woman participates in a protest march to mark a year since Ethiopia Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's administration started fighting against Tigray, in Washington. — AP
A woman participates in a protest march to mark a year since Ethiopia Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's administration started fighting against Tigray, in Washington. — AP

Published: Sat 6 Nov 2021, 8:10 PM

The US said on Saturday it had ordered all of its non-essential diplomats and their families to leave Ethiopia, as Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed urged people to make sacrifices to fend off rebels threatening to advance on the capital.

Nine rebel groups said on Friday they would join forces in an alliance built around the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which has been locked in a year-long war that has killed thousands and pushed many more into famine-like conditions.


Abiy, winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize, sent troops into Tigray in November last year to topple the TPLF, accusing them of attacking military bases.

The US State Department said it had “ordered the departure of non-emergency US government employees and their family members” on Friday, and it was also urging all other US nationals to leave.


Saudi Arabia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and other countries have also urged their people to leave Ethiopia in the past week.

TPLF representative Berhane Gebre-Christos said on Friday the alliance was aiming to “remove the regime” as he signed the nine-party agreement in Washington.

Abiy then tweeted on Saturday that “there are sacrifices to be made, but those sacrifices will salvage Ethiopia”.

“We have seen the tests and obstacles and it made us stronger,” he said.

The government’s communication service said on Twitter: “For us, Ethiopians, dying for our sovereignty, unity and identity, is an honour. There is no Ethiopianism without sacrifice.”

Last weekend, the TPLF said it had taken two strategic cities in Amhara region, where its fighters advanced after retaking their Tigray bastion in June.

It said on Wednesday it had reached the town of Kemissie in Amhara, 325 kilometres northeast of the capital.

The TPLF added it was running “joint operations” with another rebel group, the Oromo Liberation Army, which predicted Addis Ababa could fall in a matter of weeks.

The Ethiopian government, which on Tuesday declared a nationwide emergency, has denied any major rebel advance or threat on the capital, vowing to press on to victory in “an existential war”.

Abiy’s spokeswoman Billene Seyoum on Friday accused the rebels of spinning “an alarmist narrative that is creating much tension among different communities, including the international community”.

“This information warfare and this propaganda that they have been propagating is giving a false sense of insecurity,” she added.

The UN Security Council on Friday called for a ceasefire but neither side has yet responded.

Abiy declared a victory in the conflict shortly after sending in the troops.

But by late June the rebels had retaken most of Tigray and expanded into neighbouring Afar and Amhara.

The conflict has also exacerbated ethnic rivalries, in particular on social media where calls for war and hatred have been rife.

Twitter announced on Saturday that it had temporarily disabled its “trends” section — which groups the most viral tweets on a subject — for Ethiopia.

The social media giant said it was “focused on protecting the safety of the conversation on Twitter,” adding that “inciting violence or dehumanising people is against our rules”.

Facebook’s parent company Meta said on Wednesday that it had deleted a post by Abiy that called for Ethiopians to “bury” the rebels.

Following Tuesday’s declaration of a nationwide emergency, lawyers told AFP thousands of Tigrayans had been detained.

The authorities say they are only targeting TPLF supporters.

But rights watchdog Amnesty International slammed the emergency measures, calling them “a blueprint for escalating human rights violations”.

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