Fighting
in Ethiopia’s civil war has claimed tens of thousands of lives, while millions
more face hunger and starvation. For almost two years, the Tigray region has
been largely isolated and under a state of siege. Millions of Tigrayans are in
need of food and lack of supplies have pushed health systems to the brink of
collapse. “There is nowhere on earth”, says WHO chief Dr Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus, “where the health of millions of people is more under threat than
in Tigray”.
Ethiopian
authorities have repeatedly denied blocking humanitarian aid to the region,
instead blaming the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. As this investigation
discovers, the human impact of the siege has been devastating.
From
inside Tigray, BBC Africa Eye investigates the human cost of one of Africa’s
deadliest conflicts.
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