Ethiopia's Somali region says town attacked, amid new local flare ups
2021-07-27 20:16:47 Written by Reuters Published in English Articles Read 1202 timesADDIS ABABA, July 27 (Reuters) - The local government in Ethiopia's Somali region said on Tuesday militia from the neighbouring region of Afar had attacked and looted a town, the latest flare-up in a local boundary dispute that adds to broader tensions in the Horn of Africa nation.
Ali Bedel, spokesperson for the Somali region government, said Afar militia "massacred hundreds of civilians" on Saturday in Gedamaytu, also known as Gabraiisa, a town at the centre of long-running regional boundary dispute in northeast Ethiopia.
Afar's government did not immediately respond to requests for comment. However, an internal U.N. report seen by Reuters said there was fighting in Gedamaytu with an unknown number of injured on both sides.
Ethiopia has been trying to contain a surge in violence as regions and ethnic groups vie for power and resources. The worst violence, unrelated to the latest flare-up, has been around Tigray in the north, where a conflict erupted in late 2020.
Two senior Somali government officials gave similar accounts, with one saying there were hundreds of injured.
The internal U.N. security bulletin said on Monday there was "ongoing fighting" between Afaris and Somalis in Gedamaytu with an "unknown number of injuries" on both sides.
The Somali spokesperson said that after the attack "angry youths" had blocked a main road in the Afar area on Sunday and Monday that connects Addis Ababa, the capital of landlocked Ethiopia, and the sea port in next door Djibouti.
"The government are trying to calm down the situation," he said, without giving further details.
NEW RECRUITS
In Addis Ababa on Tuesday, thousands of new recruits to Ethiopia's federal army paraded before leaving for training camps, after Tigrayan forces advanced over the weekend into Amhara, a northwestern region that lies between Tigray and the capital further south.
In addition, about 3,000 Ethiopians from Amhara crossed into Ethiopia's neighbour Sudan on Monday, Sudan's state-run SUNA news agency reported, saying it was the highest since fighting erupted in November between Tigray's ruling party and Ethiopia's government.
SUNA said those who crossed were from the Kimant, a minority group in the Amhara region.
Kefale Mamo, a representative of the Kimant Committee, which campaigns for Kimant self-determination in the nation made up multiple ethnic groups, told Reuters he had received reports of fighting between Ethiopian forces and Kimant farmers.
A spokesperson for the Amhara region referred queries to the federal government. Ethiopian government officials and the country's military did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.
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Source=Ethiopia's Somali region says town attacked, amid new local flare ups | Reuters