The United Nations has said Ethiopian authorities detained 72 drivers working for the World Food Programme (WFP) in the country’s conflict-torn north.
The
development on Wednesday came a day after the UN reported the arrests of 22 of
its employees in the capital, Addis Ababa, as international alarm grows over
reported widespread arrests of ethnic Tigrayans amid an escalation in the
fighting.
A
UN spokesperson said the latest detentions had occurred in the capital of Afar
province, on the only functional road leading into the Tigray region, where
hundreds of thousands of people live in famine-like conditions, according to
the world body.
“We
confirm that 72 outsourced drivers contracted by WFP have been detained in Semera.
We are liaising with the Government of Ethiopia to understand the reasons
behind their detention,” the spokesperson said.
“We
are advocating with the government to ensure their safety and the full
protection of their legal and human rights.”
The
government last week announced a six-month nationwide emergency amid rising
fears that Tigrayan fighters and allied Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) rebels
could advance on the capital.
Lawyers
say arbitrary detentions of ethnic Tigrayans have surged since then, with the
new measures allowing the authorities to hold anyone suspected of supporting
“terrorist groups” without a warrant. Law enforcement officials describe such
detentions as part of legitimate operations against the Tigray People’s
Liberation Front (TPLF), which has been designated a “terrorist” group by the
government.
Speaking
to Al Jazeera on Wednesday, the head of the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission
said he was concerned about the mass arrests of ethnic Tigrayans.
“There
appears to be ethnic element to these arrests, which worries us, in a sense
that largely ethnic Tigrayans have been targeted for house searches and
arrests,” Daniel Bekele said, adding that the state-appointed commission had
been monitoring the detentions of “hundreds” of people.
“I
do understand that the state of emergency gives powers to police to arrest
people on grounds of reasonable suspicion but we are concerned about the risk
of the state emergency and its directives being applied in a wrong way,” he
added.
But
Ethiopia’s government denied targeting Tigrayans based on their ethnicity.
“There
is no systematic arrest … because of your profile,” Redwan Hussein, state
minister for foreign affairs, told Al Jazeera. “Since the state of emergency
actually set up by the government, people are vigilant so citizens are watching
out in their neighbourhoods and each other for possible attacks. So people
might inform the police if they see something unusual,” he said.
“If
the police do not have adequate reasons to suspect, then the people would be
released.”
Asked
about the detentions of UN personnel, Hussein said they were not “arrested just
because they work for any UN institution”.
“If
they haven’t done anything they will be released, but it’s not because they are
working for humanitarian activities,” he added.
On
Tuesday, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said that 22 Ethiopian staff had been
detained in Addis Ababa. Six were freed while the remaining 16 – all ethnic
Tigrayans – were in custody on Tuesday night, he added, noting that “no
explanation” was given about the detentions.
Information
on the ethnicity of the drivers detained in Semera, capital city of Afar was
not immediately available, though the UN has in the past hired ethnic Tigrayans
to transport food and other aid into Tigray.
Prime
Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops into Tigray last November to topple the TPLF, a
move he said came in response to attacks on army federal camps.
Though
the 2019 Nobel Peace laureate promised a swift victory, by late June the
Tigrayan forces had retaken most of the region including its capital Mekelle.
Since
then Tigray has been under what the UN describes as a de-facto humanitarian
blockade.
Only
15 percent of necessary aid has been able to cross from Semera, capital of Afar
region into Tigray since mid-July, according to the UN.
Foreign
envoys are scrambling to end the war and mitigate further suffering, hoping
that an African Union-led push can bring about a cessation of hostilities
before a new surge in fighting.
The
US said this week there was a “small window” to reach a deal, though it is far
from clear how major divisions will be bridged.
TPLF
spokesman Getachew Reda appeared to dismiss peace initiatives on Wednesday,
saying on Twitter that they seemed “mainly about saving Abiy”.
Efforts
that fail to address our conditions & the tendency to conflate humanitarian
issues with political ones are doomed to fail,” he added.
The
fighting has extracted a huge humanitarian toll, with rights groups on
Wednesday issuing new reports on sexual violence in the war.
Human
Rights Watch (HRW) said the government’s “effective siege” of Tigray – where
Ethiopian and Eritrean soldiers are accused of mass rapes – was preventing
survivors from getting healthcare and other critical services.
Amnesty
International said Tigrayan fighters had raped, robbed and beaten up women
during an attack on a town in Amhara region, south of Tigray.
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