ADDIS ABABA: Eritrea will pull its troops out of Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said on Friday, a potential breakthrough in a drawn-out conflict that has seen atrocities carried out against civilians.
The announcement comes as Abiy, winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize, faces mounting pressure to end fighting in which both Eritrean and Ethiopian troops stand accused of abuses, including mass killings and rapes.
Abiy sent troops into Tigray on November 4 after accusing the region’s once-dominant ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), of attacks on army camps.
For months both Addis Ababa and Asmara denied Eritrean troops were in Tigray, contradicting accounts from residents, aid workers, diplomats and even some Ethiopian civilian and military officials.
Abiy finally admitted Eritrea’s role in an appearance before lawmakers Tuesday, then flew Thursday to Asmara to meet with Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki.
During that visit “the government of Eritrea has agreed to withdraw its forces out of the Ethiopian border,” Abiy said in a statement posted to his Twitter account Friday.
“The Ethiopian National Defense Force will take over guarding the border areas effective immediately.” Eritrean Information Minister Yemane Gebremeskel did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.
In a statement Friday afternoon, his office made no mention of any deal on a troop withdrawal, saying only that the two sides “agreed to hold follow-up consultative meetings” in Addis Ababa.
But the country’s ambassador to Japan, Estifanos Afeworki, said on Twitter that “as of today” Eritrean forces would “hand over all posts” that were “vacated” by Ethiopian troops when the conflict began.
Massacres
Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a border war beginning in 1998 that left tens of thousands dead and resulted in a two-decade stalemate.
Abiy won his Nobel in large part for initiating a surprise rapprochement with Isaias after taking office in 2018, but Eritrea and the TPLF remained bitter enemies.
In his wide-ranging speech to parliament Tuesday, Abiy said the “Eritrean people and government did a lasting favour to our soldiers” during the conflict in Tigray.
His statement Friday said the TPLF fired rockets on Asmara multiple times, “thereby provoking the Eritrean government to cross Ethiopian borders and prevent further attacks and maintain its national security.” Abiy has only acknowledged Eritrean troops took over areas along the border, including trenches dug during the border war, after they were abandoned by Ethiopian soldiers.
But rights groups and Tigrayan residents have described a much deeper Eritrean presence.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch (HRW) have accused Eritrean troops of massacring hundreds of people in the Tigrayan town of Axum in November.
AFP has separately documented a massacre allegedly carried out by Eritrean troops in the town of Dengolat, also in November.
Eritrean soldiers are also suspected of attacking two camps in Tigray housing tens of thousands of Eritrean refugees.
The UN announced Friday it had managed to reach the camps for the first time since November and confirmed they were “completely destroyed.” During a visit this month to the town of Wukro, just 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of regional capital Mekele, residents told AFP that Eritrean soldiers were still present, sometimes donning Ethiopian uniforms to disguise themselves.
Published in Dawn, March 27th, 2021