Tigrayan forces from Ethiopia's war-torn Tigray on Friday rebuffed US calls to leave neighbouring regions, one day after they seized famed UNESCO heritage site Lalibela, the latest turn in the nine-month conflict.
"Nothing
of the sort is going to happen unless the blockade is lifted," said
Getachew Reda, spokesman for the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF),
referring to restrictions on humanitarian access.
Northern
Ethiopia has been wracked by fighting since last November, when Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed sent troops to topple the TPLF, the then-ruling party of Tigray
which dominated national politics for nearly three decades before Abiy took
office in 2018.
The
move came in response to TPLF attacks on army camps, Abiy said.
But
while Abiy promised victory would be swift, the war took a stunning turn in
June when pro-TPLF forces recaptured the Tigray capital Mekele and the
Ethiopian army largely withdrew.
Since
then the TPLF has pushed east into the neighbouring Afar region and south into
Amhara.
Top
US officials including US aid chief Samantha Power, who visited Ethiopia this
week, have called on the TPLF to withdraw and for all sides to cease
hostilities and focus instead on addressing the humanitarian
"catastrophe" in Tigray.
On
Thursday, TPLF(TDF) fighters entered Lalibela without a fight, as security forces
withdrew ahead of their advance, residents told AFP.
The
move prompted Amhara's government to warn that the TPLF was pressing
"deep" into Amhara territory and to hint at possible retaliation.
Getachew
said the push into Lalibela was part of a bid to secure roads in northern
Amhara and prevent pro-government forces from regrouping.
"You
see, we are under siege. We are under blockage. Anything that Abiy is going to
use to maintain its chokehold on our people, we'll make sure it doesn't pose a
serious problem," he said.
Lalibela
is home to 12th-century rock-hewn churches that in peacetime are a major tourist
draw, as well as an airport.
-
'Hot pursuit' -
On
Friday pro-TPLF forces were in "hot pursuit" of Amhara regional
forces who had headed north from Lalibela to the town of Sekota, Getachew said.
He
reiterated his position that the TPLF does not have designs on holding
territory in Amhara and Afar and is instead focused on facilitating aid access.
It
remains committed, though, to retaking areas of western and southern Tigray
that have been occupied by Amhara forces since the war's early stages, he said.
Amhara
leaders have rejected calls by the US and other world powers to exit those
territories, claiming they historically fall under Amhara control.
The
dispute bodes ill for ceasefire calls that have become more intense in recent
days.
UN
humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths wrapped up a visit to Ethiopia this week by
declaring "we need the war to end".
The
UN says fighting in Tigray has pushed 400,000 people into famine-like
conditions, and estimates that more than 100,000 children could suffer from
life-threatening acute malnutrition in the next 12 months.
The
TPLF accuses Abiy's government of blocking aid to Tigray, and top humanitarian
officials continue to decry bureaucratic and other hurdles hindering access.
The
government says a unilateral ceasefire it announced in late June was intended
to allow aid in, and that the TPLF's subsequent offensive undermines that
effort.
Lawmakers
in May officially designated the TPLF a terrorist organisation.
On
Friday, Abiy's office announced its staff were donating one month's salary to
support the war effort.
-
'Lalibela is our heritage' -
Abiy's
spokeswoman Billene Seyoum said Thursday more than 300,000 people had been
displaced by recent fighting in Amhara and Afar.
Amhara
deputy president Fanta Mandefro told AFP Thursday the rebels were responsible
for abuses including killings and sexual assault.
But
Getachew dismissed those claims.
"We
are in fact working with the people to make sure they go about their lives as
normally as they could," he said.
The
US State Department on Thursday urged the rebels to protect Lalibela but
Getachew said the concerns were misplaced.
"We
know what it means to protect heritage sites," he said. "Lalibela is
our heritage site as well. They shouldn't worry about our forces protecting or
not protecting Lalibela."
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