The US embassy in Ethiopia has authorized the voluntary departure of non-emergency government staff and family members because of armed conflict, it said on its website, as rebel forces from the country’s north make advances.
The decision came after the United States said on Wednesday it was “gravely concerned” about the escalating violence and expansion of hostilities between, repeating a call for a halt to military operations in favor of ceasefire talks.
Travel to Ethiopia is unsafe and further escalation is likely, it said, adding “the government of Ethiopia has previously restricted or shut down the internet, cellular data, and phone services during and after civil unrest”.
Government spokesman Legesse Tulu did not immediately respond to a telephone call seeking comment on the US embassy statement.
It came a year to the day since Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed deployed troops in the northernmost region of Tigray to dislodge forces loyal to the region’s ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Abiy’s government has been locked in a war for the past year with the TPLF, whose forces and their allies are now just a few hundred kilometers from Addis Ababa.
Speaking from the capital, independent journalist Samuel Getachew told Al Jazeera that US-Ethiopian relations have soured in recent weeks as the TPLF has made advances.
“The Ethiopian government continues to accuse the US of siding with the TPLF. This comes in addition to plans to cancel a US-Ethiopia trade agreement that creates thousands of jobs in Ethiopia’s industrial parts,” he said.
State of emergency
Jeffrey Feltman, the US special envoy for the Horn of Africa, is expected to arrive in Addis Ababa on Thursday to press for a halt to military operations and to seek the start of ceasefire talks.
On Wednesday, the United Kingdom urged its citizens to review their need to stay in Ethiopia and consider leaving while commercial options were available.
Abiy, the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize winner, has pledged to bury his government’s enemies “with our blood”. An earlier call to “bury” the enemy in a statement posted on the prime minister’s official Facebook page over the weekend was removed by the platform for violating its policies against inciting and supporting violence, the social media giant said.
Tigrayan forces are in the town of Kemise in Amhara state, 325km (200 miles) from the capital, a spokesman for the TPLF, Getachew Reda, told Reuters news agency late on Wednesday, pledging to minimize casualties in their drive to take Addis Ababa.
Journalist Samuel Getachew said it was difficult to determine whether rumors about TPLF fighters moving on the capital were true due to conflicting reports. Much of northern Ethiopia is under a communications blackout and access for journalists is restricted, making battlefield claims difficult to verify independently.
“The Ethiopian government has not even acknowledged the fall of Dessie and Kombucha to the TPLF. [Meanwhile,] there are news reports that TPLF soldiers are in the suburbs of Addis Ababa,” Getachew said.
A regional analyst in touch with the parties to the war and who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity said the TPLF was likely to hold off on any advance on Addis Ababa until they secured the highway running from neighboring Djibouti to the capital.
That requires seizing the town of Mille. TPLF spokesman Getachew Reda said on Tuesday that Tigrayan forces were closing in on Mille.
Ceasefire calls
Meanwhile, Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni called on Thursday for an East African leaders’ summit on November 16 to discuss the conflict in Ethiopia, according to a Ugandan foreign affairs official.
It came as Uhuru Kenyatta, president of neighboring Kenya, also called for an immediate ceasefire.
The lack of dialogue “has been particularly disturbing”, Kenyatta said in a statement, as the war has killed thousands of people and displaced millions since November last year.
The spokeswoman for Prime Minister Abiy, Billene Seyoum Woldeyes, did not immediately respond on Thursday when asked whether the leader would meet with US special envoy Feltman, who this week insisted that “there are many, many ways to initiate discreet talks”.
But so far, efforts for such discussions have failed.
Last week, a congressional aide told The Associated Press news agency that “there have been talks of talks with officials, but when it gets to the Abiy level and the senior [Tigrayan forces] level, the demands are wide, and Abiy doesn’t want to talk”.
source: Aljazeera