Calls Grow for Ethiopia Peace Effort as Fighting Intensifies

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA — Diplomats are calling on Ethiopia ‘s federal authorities and their rivals in the northern region of Tigray to agree to a cease-fire as heavy fighting raises growing humanitarian fears.

African Union Commission Chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat expressed “grave concern” in a statement Sunday over the fighting and called for an “immediate, unconditional cease-fire and the resumption of humanitarian services.”

AU-led peace talks were due to take place in South Africa earlier this month but were postponed because of logistical and technical issues.

The warring parties had said they were ready to participate in the process, even though fighting persists in Tigray.

“The Chairperson urges the parties to recommit to dialogue as per their agreement to direct talks to be convened in South Africa by a high-level team led by the AU High Representative for the Horn of Africa, and supported by the international community,” Mahamat said in a statement.


The AU statement followed one issued late Saturday by a U.N. representative who said Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “gravely concerned about the escalation of the fighting” and called for an immediate cessation of hostilities.

Fighting resumed between the Tigray forces and the federal troops in August, bringing an end to a cease-fire in place since March that had allowed much-needed aid to enter the region. Fighting has drawn in forces from Eritrea, on the side of Ethiopia’s federal military.

USAID Administrator Samantha Power called on Eritrean forces to withdraw from Tigray and urged the parties to observe a cease-fire, warning in a tweet that up to a 1 million people are “teetering on the edge of famine” in the region.

“The conflict has displaced millions of people, and camps for displaced Ethiopians have also fallen under attack,” said Power, who warned of further bloodshed if Eritrean and Ethiopian federal forces take charge of the camps.

The cease-fire calls came as heavy clashes were reported near the northwestern Tigray town of Shire, where an attack Friday killed an International Rescue Committee worker who was distributing aid supplies.

European Union foreign policy chief Joseph Borrell said he was “horrified by the reports of continuous violence, including the targeting of civilians in Shire.”

Tigray forces said in a statement that they welcomed the AU’s cease-fire call.

“We are ready to abide by an immediate cessation of hostilities,” the statement said. Ethiopia’s federal government has yet to respond.

Aid distributions are being hampered by a lack of fuel and an ongoing communications blackout in Tigray. The Associated Press reported Saturday that a U.N. team found there were “10 starvation-related deaths” at seven camps for internally displaced people in northwestern Tigray, according to an internal document prepared by a humanitarian agency.

Millions of people in northern Ethiopia, including the neighboring regions of Amhara and Afar, have been uprooted from their homes and tens of thousands of people are believed to have been killed since the conflict broke out in November 2020.

 

Source:  Voice of America

Ukraine calls on African countries to condemn Russian invasion

KYIV, Ukraine is rallying African countries to change their stance and start condemning the Russian invasion of its territory, in the latest diplomatic push to seek support from the continent.

 

Dmytro Kuleba, the Ukrainian Foreign Minister, told African journalists he was pleased with the “right direction” taken by some countries from abstaining or voting in favour of a UN resolution to condemn Russia’s referendum to annex Ukrainian territories. He said, however, there was need to show more support against the war.

 

“The world is united in support for Ukraine, including many African countries,” Kuleba said in a digital press briefing from Ukraine. “An overwhelming 143 UN member states voted for the resolution to defend Ukraine’s territorial integrity.”

 

“I was particularly pleased to see that all four countries that I visited in Africa—Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Kenya—supported this resolution. I am deeply grateful for their clear stance.”

 

Kuleba was referring to Wednesday’s vote by the UN General Assembly, its second vote in a year, in which Russia was reprimanded for encroaching on Ukrainian territories after it annexed Donetsk and Luhansk in Ukraine’s east and Kherson and Zaporizhzhia in the country’s south after a ‘referendum’ in which Moscow said locals had “overwhelmingly” voted to join Russia.

 

Russia, Belarus, North Korea, Syria, and Nicaragua voted against the UN resolution but the overall 143-5 tally means the UN had rejected the referenda, with 35 members abstaining.

 

Wednesday’s vote surpassed the one in March in which the Assembly passed a resolution condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February and calling for it to end. At the time, Eritrea was the only country in Africa that voted for Russia. On Wednesday, Asmara abstained from the vote on the annexation of Ukrainian territories.

 

In the region, Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Somalia also voted to support the resolution, while Tanzania, Uganda, Burundi, and Ethiopia abstained.

 

Three African countries: Senegal, Madagascar, and Angola, which abstained in the March 2022 UN vote condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, have since shifted their standpoint and voted in favour of Wednesday’s resolution denouncing Russia’s annexation of four Ukrainian regions.

 

Kuleba maintained that rallying up support for Ukraine’s territorial integrity was not the gist of his visit to Africa, but rather to advance the relationships between his country and the continent.

 

The minister was last week on an official tour of Africa where he visited Senegal, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Kenya, before cutting the trip short after Russia fired missiles into Ukraine on Monday, which escalated the eight-months-long conflict between the two eastern European countries.

 

The tour, Kuleba said, was mainly meant “to build new quality partnerships between Ukraine and African nations,” based on the pillars of mutual respect, support, and benefits, and “not directed against any third country.”

 

He said Ukraine will improve its ties in Africa with a training programme targeting African diplomats, as well as frequent exchanges. The diplomats’ training and exchange programme are one of the several first fruits of Kuleba’s four-day tour to Africa, with the growing support for Ukraine at the United Nations General Assembly.

 

“There are many things that African nations can get from Ukraine,” the minister said, listing a reliable supply of grain, technology, energy, and education through student exchange programmes, once normalcy resumes.

 

“We have signed memorandums according to which Ukraine will provide training to African diplomats in various areas,” Kuleba told African journalists at a press conference after his tour to Africa on Thursday.

 

“Equally, Ukrainian diplomats will be happy to learn from the experience of diplomatic schools of African countries.”

 

In his visit, Mr Kuleba was accompanied by a business delegation that held business forums in each of the four countries he toured and Ukraine’s special advisor for African affairs continues touring the continent in a bid to advance relations.

 

The business relations, especially in the trade of grains, are beneficial to both countries.

 

In the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, many African countries have recorded an exponential surge in food and commodity prices, exacerbated by drought and domestic conflicts.

 

Most countries in the continent are net food importers, with many getting more than 70 percent of their grain from Russia and Ukraine.

 

The successful efforts made in July to ensure Ukrainian grain sailed to hunger-struck African countries has helped keep the prices at bay, but the recent shelling by Russia risks reversing the efforts, Kuleba said.

 

To Kyiv, continuing to trade with African countries will enable it to raise enough funds to mount a strong defense against Moscow.

 

“Winning the war will not be possible for Ukraine if we don’t have enough funds to finance it. We must, therefore, continue trading proactively and find new trading partners to keep our country’s revenue sources open,” Kuleba said.

 

“Each Russian rocket is hitting not only Ukrainians, [but] it also harms the quality of life for Africans. This is why it is so important to support Ukraine so that we can end this war sooner rather than later. This is in everyone’s interest.”

 

Source: Nam News Network