A militant leader in Ethiopia says his group has struck a military alliance with the Tigray forces now pressing toward the country’s capital, as the conflict that erupted in the Tigray region on November 3rd spreads into other parts of Africa’s second-most populous country.
“The
only solution now is overthrowing this government militarily, speaking the
language they want to be spoken to,” Oromo Liberation Army leader Kumsa Diriba,
also known as Jaal Marroo, told The Associated Press in an interview on
Wednesday.
The
alliance is a further sign of the broadening of the Tigray conflict that began
in November after a political fallout between Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and the
Tigray leaders who had dominated Ethiopia’s government for nearly three
decades. Thousands have been killed in the nine-month war that has been marked
by widespread allegations by ethnic Tigrayans of gang-rapes, man-made famine
and mass expulsions by Ethiopian and allied forces.
The
OLA leader said the agreement was reached a few weeks ago after the Tigray
forces proposed it. “We have agreed on a level of understanding to cooperate
against the same enemy, especially in military cooperation,” Diriba said. “It
is underway.” They share battlefield information and fight in parallel, he
said, and while they’re not fighting side by side, “there is a possibility it
might happen.”
Talks
are underway on a political alliance as well, he said, and asserted that other
groups in Ethiopia are involved in similar discussions: “There’s going to be a
grand coalition against (Abiy’s) regime.”
The
alliance brings together the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, who had been
front and center in Ethiopia’s repressive government but were sidelined when
Abiy took office in 2018, and the OLA, which last year broke away from the
opposition party Oromo Liberation Front and seeks self-determination for the
Oromo people. The Oromo are Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group.
Ethiopia’s
government earlier this year declared both the TPLF and OLA terrorist
organizations.
There
was no immediate comment from Gen. Tsadkan Gebretensae with the Tigray forces,
nor from the spokeswoman for Abiy’s office.
The
OLA leader spoke a day after the prime minister called on all capable
Ethiopians to join the military and stop the Tigray forces “once and for all”
after they retook much of the Tigray region in recent weeks and crossed into
the neighboring Amhara and Afar regions. Tigray forces spokesman Getachew Reda
has told the AP they are fighting to secure their long-blockaded region but if
Abiy’s government topples, “that’s icing on the cake.”
With access to parts of Ethiopia increasingly restricted and journalists often harassed, it is difficult to tell how citizens will respond to the prime minister’s call, or whether they will join the fight against him. The government has supported large military recruiting rallies in recent weeks.
The
Tigray leaders embittered many Ethiopians during their nearly three decades in
power by putting in place a system of ethnic federalism that led to ethnic
tensions that continue to simmer in the country of 110 million people.
Diriba
acknowledged that agreeing to the Tigray forces’ proposal for an alliance took
some thought. “There were so many atrocities committed” against the Oromo
people during the TPLF’s time in power, he said, and the problems it created
have never been resolved.
But
the OLA decided it was possible to work together, he said, though some doubts
remain. “I hope the TPLF has learned a lesson,” he said. “I don’t think the
TPLF will commit the same mistakes unless they’re out of their mind.” If they
do, there will be chaos in Ethiopia and it could collapse as a state, he said.
It
was not clear how many fighters the OLA would bring to the alliance. “This,
madam, is a military secret,” its leader said.
He
said he hoped the TPLF’s talks with other groups would become public in the
near future. He also warned the international community, which led by the
United Nations and the United States has urged a halt to the Tigray conflict
and negotiations, that the crisis has to be handled carefully “if Ethiopia is
to continue together.”
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