Ethiopia freezes bank accounts of companies 'financing TPLF'

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ADDIS ABABA - The Ethiopian government on Tuesday froze bank accounts of businesses linked to leaders of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

The Federal Attorney-General issued a statement on Tuesday listing 34 business entities whose bank accounts had been frozen, saying there is evidence that the companies are involved in financing the "Junta” in Tigray and trying to derail the country's constitutional order.

The banned companies are involved in finance, mining, textile, construction, wholesale trade, transport, manufacturing, and other sectors, and have long been said to have close ties to the TPLF.

Among them are Sur Construction, one of the largest construction companies in the country, Guna Trading Enterprise, Almeda Textile Manufacturing, Mesebo Cement Factory, and Trans Ethiopia, which has been involved in transportation and foreign trade.

In addition, the pharmaceutical manufacturer, Addis Pharmaceutical, Mining, Izana Mining, Mesfin Industrial Engineering, Selam Public Transport Association, and Mega Printing Company, a printing company.

The closure of the companies' accounts came two weeks after the government took action against the TPLF-led Tigray Special Forces.

The financial sanctions came as Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced an end to a three-day amnesty granted to leaders of the TPLF to surrender to authorities. The leaders were being sought by the Ethiopian police.

In a message posted on his social media pages, Abiy said some Tigray Special Forces and the militia have peacefully surrendered to save themselves and rescue their people.

While he did not indicate how many had given in, he said those who haven’t will face the full force of the law as his government implements the “final steps” of crushing the TPLF.

Meanwhile, the UK on Tuesday added to the growing voices of those in the international community urging Ethiopia to reduce tensions for civilians’ sake.

“The UK is deeply concerned about reports of increasing violence from Ethiopia,” James Duddridge, the UK Minister for Africa, said in a statement.

“We continue to urge all parties to de-escalate actions in Tigray. Protection of civilians, their human rights, and humanitarian access are of the utmost importance.”

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