Thursday, 17 June 2021 21:42

Dimtsi Harnnet Kassel 17.06.2021

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ብመጀመርያ ከመይ ትኾኑ፡ ነኣሽቱ የሕዋተይ፡ ነቲ ንቲ እዛ ሃገር ኢልኩም ሂወትኩም ዝኸፈልኩም ዘለኣለማዊ ዝኽሪ ንዓኹም ይኹን። ሳላ ናትኩምን ከማኹም ዝኣመሰሉ ኤርትራውያን ዝተኸፍለ መስዋእቲ፡ ኤርትራ እትብሃል ሃገር ተፈጢራስ እንሆ ዝሓለፈ ወርሒ ግንቦት 24 መበል 30 ዓመት ነጻነት ክኽበር ቀንዩ።

ኣነ ዓቢ ሓውኹም ንመወዳእታ ግዜ ዝተረኣኤናላ ግዜ መስለኒ ኣብ መፋርቕ 1977 ኣቢሉ ናብ ዓዲ ቢደል ንዓይ ኣብ ገድሊ ምስ ተሓኤ ስለዝነበርኩ ክትርእዩኒ መጺእኩም ምስ ረዘነ ሓውኹም።ንምልላይ ዝኣክል ምስ'ዞም ኤርትራውያን የሕዋትኩምን ኪዳነ ካሕሳይ፣ ዮሴፍ ካሕሳይ ዝተሰዋእኩም ረዘነ ካሕሳይ ድማ ብሂወት ዘሎን ካብቶም ምስ ህዝባዊ ግንባር
ኮይኖም ዓዲ ዝኣተዉ ምዃንኩም የላልየኩም ኣለኹ እሞ ፡ኣይፍለጥን ብዛዕባኹም ዝፈልጡ እንተሃለዉ ደሃይ እንተረኸብኩ እውን ንዓና ጽቡቅ ምኾነ ብማለት እዩ። እቲ ብድሕሬኹም ዝኸደ ምዕብልናታት እውን ኢንተርነት ተማሂዙ። ናይ መራኸኒ ብዙሓን ሰፊኑ ዘሎ እዋን፡ ኣብ ወብሳይት፣ ፈይስ-ቡክ፣ ዋትስ-ኣፕ ወዘተ ኣብ ፈቐዶ ዓለምተዘርጊሖም  ዘለዉ ኤርትራውያን ዝከታተልዎ ስለዝኾኑ እዚ
መልእኽቲ ንእግረ-መንገደይ ኩሎም ከንብብዎ ንማለት ቅሉዕ ምዃኑ እዩ።

ድሕሪ ውሑድ ኣዋርሕ ምርእኣይና ኣብ ዓዲ ቢደል ኣይደንጎየን ሓወኣቦናል፡ ዝነበርኩዎ ቦታ ( ዓዲ ) ስለዝፈለጠ መጺኡ ናታትኩም ምውጻእ ንሜዳ ነጊሩኒ፡ ኣብ'ቲ ግዜ እቲ መንእሰይ ኤርትራ ንኤርትራ ኢሉ ንገድሊ ይውሕዝ ስለዝነበረ ብዙሕ ኣይሰንበድኩን፡ ተቀቢለዮ። ሎሚ ስለምንታይ ኢዩ እዚ ዓቢ ሓውና ደብዳቤ ዝጽሕፈልና ዘሎ፡ ዘይኣኽሎን እቲ ሽምዓ ምውላዕ ትብሉ ትኾኑ እሞ፡ገለ ክልተ ነጥብታት ከልዕል ብዛዕባ እዚ። ከም'ቲ ኣብ ላዕሊ ዝጠቐስክዎ ሰውራ ኤርትራ ንሰላሳ ዓመታት ክወስድ ከሎ፡ ሎሚ ድማ ኤርትራ  ኣብ ክንዲ ብርሃን ጸልማት ዝዘነባ ሃገር ኮይና ኣላ።

ቀዳማይ

ከም'ቲ በሽሓት መስዋእቲ ዝተኽፈላ ንሓንቲ ሃገር ንምፍጣር፡ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ሕግን ቅዋምን ዘይብላ፣ ነቶም መቃልስትኹም ዝነበሩ ኣባላት ህዝባዊ ግንባር እትኣስርን እተደስክልን፣ ነቶም ነኣሽቱ ህጻናት ዝነበሩ ደቂ ስውኣት ኣብ ፍቀዶ ውግኣት ኣእትያ መንእሰያት ተጥፍእ ዘላን፡ ኣብ ግዜኹም ብዙሕ ዘይስማዕ ዝነበረ ብጀካ ናብ ኢትዮጵያ ዝስደድ፡ ሕጂ እሞ ኣብ ምሉእ ዓለም ብኤርትራውያን ኣጥለቅሊቑ እዩ ዘሎ። ንእግረ መንገደይ ምስ እዚ ስደት፡ ካብ ገዛና ኣነ ኣብ ካናዳ ምስ ብጸይተይ በዓል ሓዳር ኮይነ ኣቦ ክልተ ኣወዳት ኮይና ኣለና። እተን ምንኣስኩም ዝኾና ሓሙሽተ ኣሓትኩም፡ እተን ክልተ ኣብ ጀርመን ኣደታት ሰለስተን ክልተን ኮይነን፡ እተን ክልተ  ድማ ኣብ ኖርወይ ኮይነን ሓደ ወድን ሓንቲ ጓልን ኣለወን፡ እታ ሓንቲ ድማ ኣደ ሰለስተ ቆልዑ ኮይና ኣብ ካናዳ ኣላ። ኣብ'ዚ ኣብ ልዕሊ እቲ ሽግርኩም፡ እቲ ሕሳስ ልደ ሓውና  ዮናስ ካሕሳይ ኣቦ ክልተ ዝኾነ ኣብ ጀርመን ብ2014 ኣብ ሸዊት ዕድሜኡ ካብ'ዛ ዓለም ብሞት ተፈልዩና ምህላዉ ክትፈልጡ ንማለት እዩ።

እቶም ዝተረፉ ኣብ ዓዲ ኣለዉ፡ እተን ሰልስተ’ኳ ደቂ ደቐን ክርእያ በቂዐን ኣለዋ። ኣብ ስፐይን፣ ኡጋንዳ፣ ዓዲ እንግሊዝ፣ ጃፓን፣ ኣመሪካ፣ ሱዳን፣ ዱባይ፣  ሆላንድ ውዘተ ፋሕ ኢሎም ዘለዉ ቤተ-ሰብ ምስ ስድራ-ቤቶም ሓዊስካ ብዓቢኡ ኣብ ግዳም ዘየለ ሰብ የለን። ወይ ድማ እታ ኤርትራ ጥርሓ ትተርፍ ኣላ ዘብል እዩ ዘለናዮ እዋን።

እታ ኤርትራ ቅዋምን ሕግን ዝሰኣነት ጥራሕ ዘይኮነትስ ዋላ ሕብራ ተደዊኑ  ጽርግያታታ ዝተበላሸወ፡ ወደባታ ጥርሑ ሰብ ዘይብሉ፡ ዝስራሕ ገዛውቲ ዝተኸልከለ፡ መናድቑ ዝዓሰወ ሕብሩ ዝቀየረ ኮታ ብጀካ እተን ዲጋ ሰሪሕና ዝብልወን፡ ማይ ዘይብሉ  ኮይኑ ነገሩ። ምናልባት ከይሰማዕኩም እንተጸንሓኹም እታ ህዝባዊ ግንባር ኣብ ሳሕል ኣሕቂቖም ሓንቲ ግናይ ዝኾነት ህግደፍ መስሪቶም ካብቶም ዝተቃለሱ ዘውደኽድኹ ዝነበሩ ናይ ኣምሰሉ ኣብ በዓላት ባንደራ ኤርትራ ዘለዋ ክራቫታ ዝመልሱ፣ ቆቢዕ ገይሮም ዝስዕስዑ፣ ከምኡውን ተዘሪገን ዘለዋ ድማ ኣይ ከምቲ ናይ ቀደም ደቂ ኣንስትዮና ዙርያ እናተኸደንካ ተወሳኺ ጸጉሪ ወሲኸን ዝዓብዳ ደቀን፡ ኣሕዋተን ተኣሲሮመን እንከለዉ ብፍርሒ  ወይ ንዓይ ይጥዓመኒ ዝብላ ክዳነን፣ ሽልማተን ከርእያ ዝዓበዳ፡ ገለ እውን ግቡእ ሓላፍነተን ዘንጊዐን ኣፍላሕቲ ቡን ኮይነን “ሃማደኤ እየ”  ዝብላ ድማ መሊኤን ኣለዋ። ኣብ'ዚ ዝሓለፈ ሰላሳ ዓመታት እንበኣር ምስ ኩለን ጎረባብትና ሃገራት ውግእ ተኻይዱ ብዙሕ መንእሰይ ጠፊኡ ኣሎ።

ካልኣይ

 ኣብ'ዚ ነቲ መስዋእቲ ዝኸፈልኩምሉ ዕላማ ጥራሕ ዘይኮነስ፡ ስለ ንዓኹም ከም ኤርትራውያን ንምዝካር ብዘየገድስ  መን ወሲኑዎ፣ ብኸመይ እቲ ዕለት ተወሲኑ ኣብ'ዚ ወርሒ  20 ሰነ ንስውኣት እንዝክረላ፡ ሽምዓ እንውልዓላ መዓልቲ ምዃና እናሓበርክኹም፡ ንዓና ነቶም ኣሕዋትኩምን ኣሓትኩም ግን ኩሉ ግዜ ኣብ ልብና ከምዘለኹም ነረጋግጸልኩም። እቲ ሓቒ ድማ ንሱ እዩ። ሓደ / ሓንቲ፡ ከመይ ገይሮም ስውኣት ወለዶም ኣሕዋቶም ኣሓቶም ክርስዑ ይኽእሉ እንተ ኢልና፡ ኣይከኣልን።እቲ ሕቶ እንበኣር ነዚ መዓልቲ ብደረጃ መንግስቲ ኮይኑ ዘመሓድር ዘሎ ነዚ ዕለት 20 ሰነ ከዳልዉ ከለዉ ዓመት ዓመት ዝሕተቱ ንሶም እዮም እቲ ሕድሪ ስዉኣት ስለምንታይ ኣብ ተግባር ዘየውዓልዎ ተሓታታይ ንሱ እዩ።

ብኻልኣይ  ደረጃ እቶም ነዚ ህዝቢ ዝጠለም ስርዓት ዝድግፉ ሰባት ድሕሪ እታ ሽምዓ ምውላዕ ንምንታይ እዩ እዚ ንሃገር መስዋእቲ  ዝተከፍለሉ ፍረ ዘይተረኽቦ ዝብል ፈጺሙ ሕቶ ኣብ ኣእምርኦም ዘሎ ኣይመስልን። እቲ ካልእ ደረጃ ካብቶም ነዚ ስርዓት ዝቓወሙ ድማ ብፍላይ እቲ መንእሰይ ወለዶ፡ ዝተበደለ ብምዃኑ፡ ነቲ ዝበደሎ ስርዓትን ነቲ ዝኸፈልኩሞ ዋጋ ሂወትኩምን ፈላልዮም ክርእይዎ ስለ ዘይከኣሉ ነዚ መዓልቲ ስውኣት፣ መዓልቲ ነጻነት ኣብ ምኽሓድ ተጸሚዶም ነቲ ግቡእ ታሪኻዊ ሓላፍነቶም ዝዘንገዑ ውሑዳት ኣይኮኑን።

ኣብ'ዚ ናይ ሰላሳ ዓመት ድሕሪ ምምጻእ ናጽነት ኤርትራ እንበኣር ዘይድለ ዕንደራ ሎሚ ድማ እንደገና ሰራዊት ኤርትራ ኣብ ውሽጢ ትግራይ የእትዩ መዓት መንእሰይ ኤርትራ ኣብ ክንዲ ትምህርቲ፡ ውግእ ኮይኑ ኣሎ። ተስፋ ዝህብ ግን ጉዳይ ሃገሩን ህዝቡን እናተረደኦ ብጀካ እቶም ናይ ኣምሰሉ ፡እሱራት ናይ ሕልንኦም ኣብ ውሽጢ ገዘኦም፡ ካልእ ይብሉ ኣብ ግዳም ግን መልሓሶም ዝቅይሩ እቲ መከራ ህዝቢ ክሓጽር እዩ።
ብዝተረፈ ሎሚ ነዛ  መልእኽቲ ብቕሉዕ ምስዞም ኤርትራውያን ከላልየኩም ከለኹ እቲ መስዋእቲ ንሓንቲ ኤርትራን ቅዋማዊ ምሕደራ ንምምስራት ዝተኸፍለ ቁጽሪ ዘይኮነስ ንስኹምን ካልኦት ኤርትራውያን ዝገልጽ ምዃኑ ንምብራህን ዋላ ካልእ ኩነታት እንተተፈጥረ ኣብ መንገድና ወትሩ ካብ ኣእምሮና ከምዘይትፍለዩ፡ ብተወሳኺ እዚ መዓልቲ 20 ሰነ ስለ ሓደ ሰብ፣ ስለ ሓደ ውድብ ወይ መንግስቲ ኢልና ኣይኮናን ንገብሮ’ሞ፡ ናትኩም ለበዋ ይመስለኒ ንዓና ነቲ ዕላማ ዘወደቕናሉ ተግባራዊ ግበርዎ ትብሉና ዘለኹምይመስለኒ፡ኣሎ’ሞ፡ የሕዋተይን ቤተ-ሰበየይንን ድማ ዘለኣለማዊ ዝኽሪ ንዓኹም ይኹን።

ሓውኹም

ተስፋይ ካሕሳይ

20 ሰነ 

JUNE 16, 2021  ETHIOPIANEWSTIGRAY

“The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, is among those warning of another massive Ethiopian famine. “We cannot make the same mistake twice,” she said last week. “We cannot let Ethiopia starve.” Mr. Blinken pledged “further actions from the United States” if “those responsible” for the crisis did not “reverse course.” Though Ethiopia has been a valuable U.S. ally, the Biden administration now has no choice but to take that action.”

Source: Washington Post

Opinion: Starvation has become a weapon of war in Ethiopia. U.S. action is urgent.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed speaks during a question-and-answer session with lawmakers in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in November 2020. (Tiksa Negeri/Reuters)

This humanitarian catastrophe, which U.N. officials say could rival the epic Ethiopian famine of 1984 if not arrested, is a deliberate result of the military campaign waged in Tigray since late last year by the government of Abiy Ahmed and the allied Eritrean regime of Isaias Afwerki. According to U.S. and U.N. officials and press reporting, the forces of the two governments have burned farmers’ fields and stores and slaughtered or stolen livestock. They have also systematically blocked aid deliveries to the parts of Tigray not under government control. Eritrean forces, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator Mark Lowcock said last week, are “trying to deal with the Tigrayan population by starving them.” Food, he told the Reuters news agency, “is definitely being used as a weapon of war.”

Forced starvation of children is only the latest atrocity Ethiopian and Eritrean forces have resorted to in what, so far, has been a failed effort to crush the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which has controlled the region for decades and dominated Ethiopia’s government until Mr. Abiy came to power in 2018. The United Nations has also reported mass rapes of women, massacres of civilians and ethnic cleansing. More than 2 million people have fled their homes, leaving their fields behind. Tigrayan men are being rounded up and summarily executed.

The United States and other Western governments have attempted in vain to stop this scorched-earth assault. Secretary of State Antony Blinken began publicly demanding the withdrawal of Eritrean and Ethiopian militia forces from Tigray soon after taking office; Sen. Christopher A. Coons (D-Del.), a confidant of President Biden, was sent to lobby the Ethiopian ruler. Last month, Mr. Blinken announced visa sanctions against Ethiopian and Eritrean officials involved in abuses or the blocking of food aid. The European Union and United States have suspended hundreds of millions of dollars in aid.

None of it has worked. Mr. Abiy promised in March that Eritrean troops would leave Tigray, but they are still there. So are Amhara militias from a neighboring Ethiopian region that have engaged in ethnic cleansing as well as blocking food. Journalists reporting on the atrocities have been arrested or expelled from the country. Meanwhile, China and Russia have blocked action by the U.N. Security Council, which — to its shame — has yet to publicly meet on the Tigrayan crisis.

The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, is among those warning of another massive Ethiopian famine. “We cannot make the same mistake twice,” she said last week. “We cannot let Ethiopia starve.” Mr. Blinken pledged “further actions from the United States” if “those responsible” for the crisis did not “reverse course.” Though Ethiopia has been a valuable U.S. ally, the Biden administration now has no choice but to take that action.

JUNE 16, 2021  ETHIOPIANEWSTIGRAY

Source: Reuters

Outgoing U.N. aid chief Mark Lowcock told the 15-member council in a private briefing that “no one should be surprised to see a rerun” of a devastating 1984 famine if violence in Tigray does not stop and Eritrean troops do not withdraw.

“Rape is being used systematically to terrorize and brutalize women and girls. Eritrean soldiers are using starvation as a weapon of war. Displaced people are being rounded up, beaten and threatened,” Lowcock told the council, according to diplomats who attended the meeting.

Eritrea’s U.N. mission in New York did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Lowcock’s allegation. Eritrea said in April that it had agreed to start withdrawing its troops from Tigray.

In April, Eritrea’s U.N. ambassador, Sophia Tesfamariam, rejected allegations of sexual violence and starvation by Eritrean troops as false and “outrageous.”

Ethiopia’s U.N. ambassador, Taye Atske Selassie Amde, who took part in the council discussion, said the Eritrean withdrawal “is a matter of sorting out some technical and procedural issues.”

“Our expectation is that they will definitely leave soon,” he told reporters after the council briefing.

Lowcock briefed the Security Council just days after an analysis by U.N. agencies and aid groups found that more than 350,000 people in Tigray are suffering famine conditions – the worst catastrophic food crisis in a decade.

Ethiopia’s government has disputed the analysis. Amde also said Ethiopia’s government had granted unfettered aid access to Tigray and was grateful for international humanitarian help.

The informal council meeting on Tuesday, requested by Ireland, was its sixth private discussion of the crisis since fighting broke out in November between Ethiopia’s federal government troops and Tigray’s former ruling party. Eritrean troops entered the conflict to support the Ethiopian government.

Amde said the situation in Tigray did not warrant the Security Council’s attention.

Western council members have been pitted against Russia and China, which diplomats say also question whether the body, charged with maintaining international peace and security, should be involved in the crisis in Tigray.

The violence in Tigray has killed thousands of civilians and forced more than 2 million from their homes in the mountainous region. In April, the Security Council issued a statement of concern about the humanitarian situation.

“It is not drought or locusts causing this hunger, but the decisions of those in power. That means those in power can also end the suffering,” British U.N. Ambassador Barbara Woodward told reporters after Tuesday’s briefing.

JUNE 16, 2021  ETHIOPIANEWSTIGRAY

Source: Reuters

Outgoing U.N. aid chief Mark Lowcock told the 15-member council in a private briefing that “no one should be surprised to see a rerun” of a devastating 1984 famine if violence in Tigray does not stop and Eritrean troops do not withdraw.

“Rape is being used systematically to terrorize and brutalize women and girls. Eritrean soldiers are using starvation as a weapon of war. Displaced people are being rounded up, beaten and threatened,” Lowcock told the council, according to diplomats who attended the meeting.

Eritrea’s U.N. mission in New York did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Lowcock’s allegation. Eritrea said in April that it had agreed to start withdrawing its troops from Tigray.

In April, Eritrea’s U.N. ambassador, Sophia Tesfamariam, rejected allegations of sexual violence and starvation by Eritrean troops as false and “outrageous.”

Ethiopia’s U.N. ambassador, Taye Atske Selassie Amde, who took part in the council discussion, said the Eritrean withdrawal “is a matter of sorting out some technical and procedural issues.”

“Our expectation is that they will definitely leave soon,” he told reporters after the council briefing.

Lowcock briefed the Security Council just days after an analysis by U.N. agencies and aid groups found that more than 350,000 people in Tigray are suffering famine conditions – the worst catastrophic food crisis in a decade.

Ethiopia’s government has disputed the analysis. Amde also said Ethiopia’s government had granted unfettered aid access to Tigray and was grateful for international humanitarian help.

The informal council meeting on Tuesday, requested by Ireland, was its sixth private discussion of the crisis since fighting broke out in November between Ethiopia’s federal government troops and Tigray’s former ruling party. Eritrean troops entered the conflict to support the Ethiopian government.

Amde said the situation in Tigray did not warrant the Security Council’s attention.

Western council members have been pitted against Russia and China, which diplomats say also question whether the body, charged with maintaining international peace and security, should be involved in the crisis in Tigray.

The violence in Tigray has killed thousands of civilians and forced more than 2 million from their homes in the mountainous region. In April, the Security Council issued a statement of concern about the humanitarian situation.

“It is not drought or locusts causing this hunger, but the decisions of those in power. That means those in power can also end the suffering,” British U.N. Ambassador Barbara Woodward told reporters after Tuesday’s briefing.

JUNE 15, 2021  ETHIOPIANEWSTIGRAY

Source: Dedebit Media, 15/06/21

• Heavy fighting is currently taking place in Asgede Tsimbla, Endaba Guna, Core Tekli, Debre Abay, Zengoraque, Mai Hanse.
• The fighting in Debre Abay has been going on for two days; it started the day before yesterday but intensified yesterday. Mechanized units based in Enkoi Liham, Gedam Neqa and from around Endabaguna have targeted the area for blanket bombardment. Its started to tone down a little today. The number of civilian casualties has not been determined since the residents have fled to the hills.
• Similar bombardment of areas in Core Tekli, Zengoraque and Mai Hanse has also taken place. The bombardment is claimed to deliberately target civilian populated areas regardless of whether or not TDF units are nearby.
• EDF/ENDF are allegedly targeting water infrastructure for destruction to wipe out civilians through thirst more quickly.
• Remaining ENDF units which were based around north western Tigray have withdrawn. Edaga Arbi, Nebelet, Wukromaray, Zana and the whole of Shire (both western and north western part) is currently swarming with Eritrean forces.
• A major invasion is in the process of being carried out, one which the Allied forces labeled “the third offensive/ the final offensive”. They are mobilizing in three directions: Amhara forces from the direction of Mai Tsebri; ENDF contingents from the south (Raya) and EDF from the north.

JUNE 15, 2021  ETHIOPIANEWSTIGRAY

Source: In the Blue

Ethiopia (Tigray): Informal Interactive Dialogue on the Humanitarian Situation

Tomorrow (15 June), Security Council members will hold an in-person informal interactive dialogue (IID) on the humanitarian situation in the Tigray region of Ethiopia. Ireland requested the meeting. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Mark Lowcock and WFP Executive Director David Beasley have been invited to brief. Representatives of the Ethiopian Government may also participate.

Council dynamics on Tigray have been difficult, and the format of meetings on the issue has been a topic of discussion and division among Council members. Thus far, five Council meetings were held on Ethiopia under “any other business” (AOB), a standing agenda item in closed consultations. The AOB format is often used when an issue is not on the Council’s agenda or when members want to have a more discreet discussion of an item already on the agenda.

In recent weeks, several Council members have expressed the wish to raise awareness of the situation in Tigray by discussing it in a formal public meeting. It appears that initially several members wanted to link the briefing to resolution 2417 of 24 May 2018 on conflict-induced food insecurity to address the reported rising level of food insecurity in Tigray. In resolution 2417, the Council requests the Secretary-General to “report swiftly to the Council when the risk of conflict-induced famine and wide-spread food insecurity in armed conflict contexts occurs” and expresses its intention to “give its full attention to such information provided by the Secretary-General when those situations are brought to its attention”. Since the resolution’s adoption, OCHA has alerted the Council to risks of famine in conflict situations through several white papers, including in a September 2020 white paper on the situations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), northeast Nigeria, South Sudan, and Yemen, which led the Council to meet on the issue on 17 September 2020.

On 25 May, OCHA provided Council members with a white paper referencing resolution 2417, which contained updates on food security risks in Tigray. The white paper, which was not made public, apparently estimates that 20 percent of the population in the Tigray region is in a state of emergency food insecurity and establishes a link between the levels of food insecurity and the ongoing hostilities. It notes that Ethiopian authorities estimate that over 90 percent of the harvest for 2020 was lost due to looting, burning or other forms of conflict-related destruction, while some 80 percent of livestock was looted or slaughtered. The paper also lists other drivers of food shortage in the area, such as recent below-average rainfalls, locust infestation, and the adverse economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The white paper apparently also notes that although cooperation with Ethiopia regarding humanitarian access has improved following the shift from an approval to a notification system for humanitarian assistance in March, humanitarian operations continue to face attacks, obstruction, seizure of cargo and delays. Military movements, fighting and non-cooperation of armed elements have also been impeding aid delivery. It seems that the white paper contains several recommendations for member states on possible steps to address the situation, including pressuring parties to the conflict to end violence, pursue a political solution and respect international law. It further suggests that the international community scale up funding and support for humanitarian assistance.

This account is echoed in regular updates by OCHA on the humanitarian situation in the region. An OCHA update from 3 June reported acts of violence against civilians, including incidents of arbitrary arrests, beatings and other forms of ill-treatment and conflict-related sexual violence perpetrated against the Tigray population. It stated that critical civilian infrastructure requires rehabilitation or repair, as many schools and hospitals have been looted, destroyed, or used as shelters or barracks for soldiers. UN officials further report that Eritrean troops remain in Ethiopia, despite the Ethiopian government’s announcement of their withdrawal in April. In a 10 June interview with Reuters, Lowcock reportedly maintained that Eritrean troops are blocking food supplies to more than one million people in areas outside of government control.

While some Council members sought to have an open session on the Tigray region and to connect it to resolution 2417, other members, including the “A3 plus one” (Kenya, Niger, Tunisia, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines), China and Russia apparently prefer less Council involvement on the issue. These Council members emphasise Ethiopia’s efforts to address the situation, especially following the switch from an approval system to a notification system for humanitarian access and the announcement of the withdrawal of Eritrean troops.

It seems that the option of holding a private meeting was also considered. While this would have been a closed meeting, as a formal meeting of the Council it would have placed the issue of Tigray on the Council’s formal agenda, and some members were not comfortable with this option. The “A3 plus one” apparently preferred an informal closed format. It seems that among the suggested options, an IID, which is an informal, closed setting that allows for frank discussion among Council members and the country concerned, was the most acceptable option to the “A3 plus one”, prompting Ireland to eventually call for an IID on 9 June.

One possible option for members who wanted to hold either an open or closed formal meeting would have been to request a meeting on the humanitarian situation in Tigray and to call for a procedural vote if there was opposition to holding the meeting. (Procedural votes require nine members in favour to be adopted and cannot be vetoed by a permanent member.) However, it does not appear that this suggestion was seriously considered.

At tomorrow’s meeting, the European Council members and the US are likely to call for improved humanitarian access and protection of humanitarian workers, the cessation of hostilities, the withdrawal of Eritrean forces in accordance with the Ethiopian government’s April announcement, and investigations into reported violations of international humanitarian and human rights law. Other members, including the “A3 plus one”, China and Russia, may stress the need for increased regional cooperation, and might seek further details on the Ethiopian government’s efforts to address the humanitarian situation. China and Russia are likely to emphasise the importance of state sovereignty in the context of humanitarian aid delivery.

The divisions among members over Council engagement on Tigray were also reflected in attempts to agree on a Council product on the situation. After failing to agree on a press statement following the Council’s meeting on 3 March, Council members were able to issue a press statement following the Council’s 15 April meeting. In the press statement, which was issued on 22 April, Council members acknowledged the efforts by the Ethiopian government to provide humanitarian assistance and increased access, called for a scaled-up humanitarian response, expressed deep concern about allegations of human rights violations and abuses, and urged full respect for international law. It appears that some members would have preferred stronger language relating to the human rights situation and that a reference to the presence of Eritrean forces was omitted due to opposition from some members.

With the Council divided on how to address the situation in Ethiopia, Council members in favour of strong involvement have explored other options to discuss the situation in Tigray, including outside the UN, to increase pressure on Ethiopia and Eritrea. One example is the US-organised open “US-EU high-level roundtable on the humanitarian emergency in Tigray”, which took place on the eve of the G7 Summit on 10 June. US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield, in her statement during the event, deplored the lack of consensus on a public meeting and called for “meaningful action to address the crisis”.

JUNE 14, 2021  ETHIOPIANEWSTIGRAY

Addressing the faithful gathered in St Peter’s Square for the Sunday Angelus Pope Francis turned his thoughts to the suffering people of Ethiopia’s Tigray region “which is suffering from a serious humanitarian crisis that could expose the poorest to famine”.

Source: Vatican News

A lady is seen at a refugee camp housing Ethiopians fleeing the fighting in the Tigray regionA lady is seen at a refugee camp housing Ethiopians fleeing the fighting in the Tigray region 
Pope Francis prays for the victims of violence in Ethiopia’s Tigray region, as well as for all those who risk their lives crossing the Mediterranean Sea, and for children forced into labour.

By Vatican News staff writer

Addressing the faithful gathered in St Peter’s Square for the Sunday Angelus Pope Francis turned his thoughts to the suffering people of Ethiopia’s Tigray region “which is suffering from a serious humanitarian crisis that could expose the poorest to famine”.

The Pope warned that there is already famine in the region. “Let us pray together that the violence will cease immediately, that food and health care will be guaranteed to all, and that social harmony will be restored as soon as possible”, he said.

The Pope then thanked all those “who work to alleviate the suffering of the people”.

Wold Day Against Child Labour

Pope Francis then went on to note that Saturday marked World Day against Child Labor. “It is not possible to close our eyes to the exploitation of children, deprived of the right to play, to study and to dream”, said the Pope. He said that according to estimates by the International Labour Organization, there are over 150 million children exploited for work today – a tragedy! “150 million: more or less the same as all the inhabitants of Spain, together with France and together with Italy”, he added.  “Let’s renew all together the effort to eliminate this slavery of our times”, concluded the Pope.

The plight of Migrants

The Pope then went on to pray for the numerous tragedies that continue to occur over the Mediterranean Sea. He noted that “this afternoon, a ceremony will take place in Augusta, Sicily, to receive the wreck of the boat that was shipwrecked on 18 April, 2015”. “May this symbol of so many tragedies of the Mediterranean Sea continue to challenge the conscience of all and foster the growth of a more supportive humanity, which breaks down the wall of indifference”, said the Pope. Let’s think about it: the Mediterranean has become the largest cemetery in Europe.

World Blood Donor Day

Concluding his appeals, Pope Francis noted that tomorrow, Monday, is World Blood Donor Day. “I heartily thank the volunteers and I encourage them to continue their work, bearing witness to the values of generosity and gratuitousness”, said the Pope.

JUNE 13, 2021  ETHIOPIANEWSTIGRAY

This statement, released by US President Biden, includes the following paragraph:

“54. We are deeply concerned by the ongoing conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region and reports of an unfolding major humanitarian tragedy, including potentially hundreds of thousands in famine conditions. We condemn ongoing atrocities, including widespread sexual violence, and we welcome the ongoing Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) investigations and call for full accountability for reported human rights violations in Tigray and for the perpetrators to be brought to justice. We call for an immediate cessation of hostilities, unimpeded humanitarian access to all areas and the immediate withdrawal of Eritrean forces. We urge all parties to pursue a credible political process, which is the only solution to the crisis. We further call upon Ethiopia’s leaders to advance a broader inclusive political process to foster national reconciliation and consensus toward a future based on respect for the human and political rights of all Ethiopians.”

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