This satellite image provided by
Maxar Technologies claims to show unidentified military forces mobilized in the
town of Sheraro, in the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia Monday, Sept. 26,
2022. |
A
military buildup in Eritrea along the border with Ethiopia's northern Tigray
area is seen in new satellite imagery of one of the world's most secretive
countries, corroborating witness allegations of a new, massive onslaught.
Together
with Ethiopia, Eritrea has fought Tigrayan forces. It denies claims that some
of the worst atrocities in the fight that started in late 2020 were committed
by its forces. This month, witnesses in Eritrea told The Associated Press that
citizens, including students and government workers, are being detained all
around the country and sent to fight in the current offensive.
The
satellite imagery provided by Maxar Technologies shows what Maxar described as
battle tanks, self-propelled howitzers and a M-46 field gun battery in the
Eritrean town of Serha, near the border, on Sept. 19. The town is across the
border from the Tigray town of Zalambessa, one of the first communities overrun
in the war.
Eritreais one of the world’s most closed countries to independent journalists, and
images from there related to the war in Ethiopia are rare.
Last
week, Tigray forces accused Eritrea of launching a full-scale offensive along
the border in what appeared to be an escalation of fighting that renewed in
August after months of relative calm.
Other
satellite imagery captured on Monday and shared by Maxar shows military
mobilization in the Tigray town of Sheraro, which a humanitarian worker this
month described to the AP as being targeted by deadly shelling that caused tens
of thousands of people to flee. The worker, like others, spoke on condition of
anonymity for fear of retaliation.
The
U.S. envoy to the Horn of Africa, who has been pressing the Ethiopian and
Tigray sides to stop fighting and hold peace talks, told reporters last week
that Washington has been tracking Eritrean troop movements across the border.
“They
are extremely concerning, and we condemn it,” Mike Hammer said. “All external
foreign actors should respect Ethiopia’s territorial integrity and avoid
fueling the conflict.”
Eritrean
President Isaias Afwerki, the only leader the country has had since
independence three decades ago, remains a foe of the Tigray authorities despite
Ethiopia and Eritrea restoring ties in 2018 following a bloody border war.
Tigray authorities have bristled at the suggestion made by an African Union
special envoy that Eritrea be part of talks to end the current conflict.
The
war in Tigray is estimated to have killed tens of thousands of people and left
millions in the region without basic services like phone, electricity and
banking for well over a year. Independent journalists and human rights
researchers are barred from the region.
Source:
AP
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