Fighting
in Ethiopia's nearly two-year Tigray war has erupted along a new front near
Sudan, the government said on Wednesday, after a ceasefire collapsed a week
ago.
Medics
also reported fresh air strikes on Mekelle, capital of northern Tigray region,
where local forces have battled Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's national army in a
conflict killing thousands, smashing infrastructure and exacerbating hunger.
According
to a government announcement, the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF),
which governs the area, "started an invasion" toward Wag, Wolqait,
and the Sudanese border, which it claimed to be in the Amhara region.
Both
the Amhara and Tigray regions claim ownership of the bountiful land. Western
Tigray is how the locals refer to it.
Getachew
Reda, a spokesperson for the TPLF, tweeted that the government was "making
up stories so it'd get away scot-free in the eyes of the international
community."
The
party had said last week they were expecting a major attack from that direction
and that skirmishes in the south were a feint.
A
medical worker and an aid worker reported three explosions late on Tuesday in
the city of Mekelle.
One
hit a neighbourhood near Mekelle General Hospital, tweeted Kibrom
Gebreselassie, chief executive of Ayder General Hospital. He said Ayder had
received some casualties.
There was a drone attack in Mekelle City, close to midnight. It has bombed the neighbourhood around Mekelle General Hospital. Casualties are arriving to Ayder Hospital.
— Kibrom Gebreselassie (@kibrom30) August 30, 2022
The
extent of damage and casualties was unclear, although an aid worker said at
least two people had been injured.
Ethiopian
government spokesperson Legesse Tulu, military spokesperson Colonel Getnet
Adane and the prime minister's spokesperson Billene Seyoum did not respond to
requests for comment.
Getachew,
the TPLF spokesperson, said on Twitter that at least three bombs had been
dropped and that the Mekelle General Hospital was among the targets.
Nighttime drone attack in #Mekelle. No conceivable military targets! #MekelleHospital among the targets and at least three bombs dropped. #AbiyAhmed doing what he does best: killing children & innocent civilians.#TigrayWillPrevail!
— Getachew K Reda (@reda_getachew) August 30, 2022
Reuters
was unable to reach other residents of Mekelle for confirmation because the
region has not had phone communication since Ethiopian troops pulled out more
than a year ago.
The
latest strike follows a hit on a children's play area on Friday that killed
seven people, including women and children.
Almost
all of Tigray's 5.5 million people need food aid, but no humanitarian
deliveries have entered for nine days, two United Nations officials said.
On
Tuesday, Getachew said an offensive against the TPLF had been broken and a
counter-attack launched. He underscored the devastation in the region, which
has not had banking, phone or electricity services for more than a year.
Fuel
restrictions have also limited aid distribution, while patients are dying for
lack of medicine and equipment.
Restoring
services is a key demand of the TPLF before peace talks. The government said it
wants talks to begin without conditions. But after a week of fighting hopes for
a peace deal have faded.
On
Saturday, the Ethiopian government communication service said it had pulled its
forces out of the town of Kobo, in the Amhara region bordering Tigray, blaming
the TPLF for sending "human waves" against the town and endangering
civilians.
The
government said Tigrayan forces were attacking in two directions - along the
border with Amhara to the south and along the border with Afar to the east.
The
eruption in the west would mean there has been fighting in all directions except
to the north, along the border with Eritrea.
Eritrea
previously intervened in the conflict to support Ethiopia's military, sending
large numbers of troops into Tigray, where rights investigators said they were
responsible for looting, mass killings of civilians and gang rapes -
allegations Eritrea always denied.
In
Getachew's speech to regional media in Tigray, he said that Ethiopian soldiers
had recently been sent into Eritrea.
Ethiopian
government and military spokespeople as well as Eritrean Information Minister
Yemane Gebremeskel did not respond to requests for comment on that.


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