Tigray Rebels 'Always Maintained' Ethiopia Govt Committed Crimes Against Humanity
Tigrayan authorities "have always maintained" that Ethiopia's government was responsible for crimes against humanity in Tigray, a spokesman for the rebels said Monday after UN investigators accused Addis Ababa of war crimes.
"We have always maintained that," Getachew Reda, a spokesman for the Tigray People's Liberation Front, told AFP in response to Monday's announcement by the Commission of Human Rights Experts on Ethiopia that accused Addis Ababa of committing atrocities in the conflict-torn northern region.
The commission said it had found evidence of a wide range of violations in the country by all sides since fighting erupted nearly two years ago between forces loyal to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and the TPLF.
The commission, created by the UN Human Rights Council last year and made up of three independent rights experts, said it had "reasonable grounds to believe that, in several instances, these violations amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity".
The two sides had agreed to a tentative truce in March but fresh clashes last month dashed hopes of possible peace talks, with the commission warned that the resumption of fighting also raised the risk of "further atrocity crimes".
Getachew said the TPLF agreed with "most of" the conclusions reached by the commission but did not elaborate further.
The experts highlighted the horrifying situation in rebel-held Tigray, where access to basic services remains severely limited and restrictions on humanitarian aid have left 90 percent of the population in dire need of assistance.