Eritrea Agrees to Withdraw Troops from Tigray, Ethiopia Says
The announcement comes amid mounting international condemnation of atrocities in Tigray, and days after an…
The announcement comes amid mounting international condemnation of atrocities in Tigray, and days after an…
Accounts of atrocities keep coming in as the wounded flee to the regional capital, Mekelle,…
#masthead-section-label, #masthead-bar-one { display: none }Unrest in EthiopiaRefugees’ StoriesEnemies Now AlliesHarassment of Tigrayan PeopleEthiopia’s LeaderWhy…
Two months after conflict forced humanitarian workers to withdraw from the Tigray region of Ethiopia,…
Advertisement Continue reading the main story Supported by Continue reading the main storyRefugees Come Under…
The first shipment of international aid since fighting began arrived in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region…
Ethiopia says it ‘doesn’t need a babysitter’ as it dismisses calls for independent probes into…
CAIRO, EGYPT – The head of a leading Egyptian human rights group who was held for two weeks on terrorism charges said Saturday he hoped the campaign to secure his release would help others still jailed on similar Allegations.
shareSharenocloseShare pagelinkCopy linkAbout sharingimage copyrightAFPThe BBC has managed to speak to some people inside Mekelle, the capital of the Ethiopia’s conflict-hit region of Tigray, for the first time since Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed declared