rebel forces and federal authorities agree to establish ‘humanitarian access to all those in need’ in Tigray

This access “with immediate effect” follows the peace agreement signed on November 2, recording a “cessation of hostilities” in the northern region of the country.

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The rebels and the Ethiopian federal authorities accepted on Saturday November 12 the establishment of a “humanitarian access to all those in need” in the Tigray region, which has been plagued by war for two years, they announced at a press conference in Nairobi (Kenya). This agreement “with immediate effect” has been signed by Marshal Berhanu Jula, Chief of Staff of the Ethiopian Armed Forces (ENDF), and General Tadesse Worede, Commander-in-Chief of the Tigray Rebel Forcesdeclared for his part the former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo, special envoy of the African Union.

This announcement follows discussions in the Kenyan capital Nairobi on the implementation œimplementation of the peace agreement signed on November 2 in Pretoria (South Africa), notably through the disarmament of rebel forces, the restoration of federal authority in Tigray and the delivery of aid.

The conflict in Tigray began in November 2020 when Ethiopian Prime Minister Abyi Ahmed sent the federal army there to arrest leaders in the region who had challenged his authority for months and whom he accused of attacking military bases. federal on the spot.

>> Five things to know about the forgotten war in Tigray, northern Ethiopia

Initially defeated, Tigray rebel forces regained control of most of the region during 2021, in a counter-offensive that spilled over into Amhara and Afar and saw them approach Addis Ababa. The rebels then retreated to Tigray, since cut off from the rest of the country, deprived of electricity and telecommunications networks.


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