Ethiopia launches airstrike on

(FILES) In this file photo taken on 26 February 2021 A damaged tank stands on a road north of Mekele, the capital of Tigray. The Ethiopian government said it had carried out a new air strike on 20 October 2021. Photo: AFP

Ethiopia launches airstrike on rebel ‘training centre’: government

Last week, Ethiopia’s air force carried out 8 strikes on targets which the government said were military in nature and aiding the TPLF

Ethiopia launches airstrike on

(FILES) In this file photo taken on 26 February 2021 A damaged tank stands on a road north of Mekele, the capital of Tigray. The Ethiopian government said it had carried out a new air strike on 20 October 2021. Photo: AFP

Ethiopia’s military on Tuesday launched another airstrike in war-torn Tigray, hitting what a government official called a rebel training facility just outside the regional capital Mekele. 

Tigray was pounded by near-daily aerial bombardments last week in a sign the military was stepping up its use of airpower in the year-long war against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). 

ETHIOPIA IN FAMINE-LIKE CONDITIONS

The bombings in the northern and western parts of Tigray have drawn international censure, and disrupted UN access to the region where an estimated 400 000 people face famine-like conditions under a de-facto aid blockade. 

The latest strike was in Quiha, a town five kilometres (three miles) east of Mekele, which the TPLF recaptured from government forces in June and has held ever since.

READ: Ethiopia air strikes hit Tigray capital for fourth day this week: official

ETHIOPIA ILLEGALLY RECRUITED MILITARY 

“A special forces training centre for the terrorist group TPLF has been the target of today’s airstrike,” government spokeswoman Selamawit Kassa said. 

“(A) large number of the group’s illegally recruited military personnel were taking military trainings at this center.”

ETHIOPIA’S AIRFORCE 

TPLF-linked Tigrai TV reported that fighter jets bombed farmland in an area 25 km east of Mekele.

“So far, the information we have is that there was no casualties from the airstrike,” the network reported.

Last week, Ethiopia’s air force carried out 8 strikes on targets which the government said were military in nature and aiding the TPLF.

GOVERNMENT DISREGARD 

Most were in and around Mekele. But on Sunday the military confirmed strikes further afield in Adwa to the north of the capital, and another along the ‘western front’ of the war at Mai Tsebri.

The UN said 2 strikes on Mekele on 18 October killed three children and wounded several other people. 

The TPLF said the strikes were evidence of the government’s disregard for civilian lives. 

AID ACCESS

The escalation in aerial assaults coincides with ramped-up fighting in Amhara region, south of Tigray. 

Western powers, including the US, have condemned the strikes as an unacceptable risk to civilians.

STARVATION IN TIGRAY 

A strike Friday on Mekele forced a UN flight carrying 11 humanitarian personnel to turn back to the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, and the UN subsequently announced it was suspending its twice-weekly flights to the region.

The conflict has spurred fears of widespread starvation in Tigray, with the UN and other agencies reporting chronic difficulties getting aid supplies into the stricken region.

DOUBLE THE MALNUTRITION 

The UN said last week that fuel shortages had forced some relief groups to suspend food distribution in a region where 5.2 million need aid.

Earlier in the month, it said the number of young children hospitalised due to severe malnutrition between February and August was double the number recorded during the same period last year. 

TIGRAY STRUGGLING CONFLICT

AFP has documented starvation deaths in multiple parts of Tigray, based on internal documents from aid groups active there. 

Tigray erupted in conflict in November 2020 after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops to topple the TPLF, the region’s former ruling party. 

The 2019 Nobel Peace laureate said the move came in response to TPLF attacks on army camps and promised a swift victory, but by late June the rebels had regrouped and retaken most of the region, including Mekele. 

© Agence France-Presse