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Captive
Ethiopian soldiers arrive at Mekele Rehabilitation Center in Mekele, Ethiopia,
in July 2021. YASUYOSHI CHIBA, AFP
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According
to a recent report by the nonprofit Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), the
war in Ethiopia, which was the third deadliest in 2021 with over 100,000
fatalities, overtook it as the world's deadliest conflict in 2022 with over
100,000 fatalities, as the year saw the highest number of battle-related deaths
from state-based conflicts since 1984.
According
to the research, which was released on Thursday, more than 204,000 deaths from
fighting were reported in ongoing state-based conflicts globally in 2022, with
the wars in Ethiopia and Ukraine being responsible for 89% of the fatalities.
"Although
the conflict in Ukraine received the majority of media attention, a parallel
conflict between the Ethiopian government and the Tigray People's Liberation
Front (TPLF) proved more deadly.
According
to the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP), the war in Ukraine resulted in
approximately 81,500 battle-related deaths, whereas the war between the
Government of Ethiopia and the TPLF, which was fought concurrently, claimed an
estimated 100,200 battle-related lives, according to the research.
The
report stressed that it has been challenging to document war crimes and deaths
from combat in Ethiopia and that "casualty figures should be understood as
a conservative baseline."
Both
the Ethiopian government and the TPLF have not officially disclosed the total
number of casualties in the two-year conflict, but Olusegun Obasanjo, the
former president of Nigeria and the war's principal mediator, suggested in
January of this year that the death toll could have reached 600,000.
Additionally,
according to PRIO, one of the seven conflicts in the globe that will have
gotten worse in 2022 from the top ten list is the conflict involving the
government of Ethiopia and the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA). 55 conflicts were
noted in 2022, eight of which exceeded the threshold of 1,000 battle-related
deaths and were deemed to be wars, including the conflicts in Ethiopia and
Ukraine.
Whereas
Yemen, Afghanistan, and Syria had previously been the conflicts with the
largest number of battle-related deaths worldwide, the year 2022 saw a major
shift in the conflict landscape, both in terms of location and severity.
The
Government of Afghanistan and the Taliban engaged in the conflict that resulted
in the greatest number of battle-related fatalities in 2021 for the third year
in a row. According to the report, fighting between Yemen's government and
Hadi's forces was the second-deadliest that year.

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