The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Michelle Bachelet on Thursday called for an "objective and independent
investigation" in the Ethiopian region of Tigray, after having
"corroborated serious violations" likely to constitute "war crimes and crimes
against humanity".
In a statement issued in Geneva, Bachelet said her office
"has managed to corroborate information on some incidents that occurred in
November last year, indicating indiscriminate bombings in the towns of Mekele,
Humera and Adigrat in the Tigray region" in the north of the country, the
scene of several months of fighting.
The UN office also verified "reports of serious
violations and abuses including massacres in Aksoum and Dengelat in central
Tigray by Eritrean armed forces," the statement said.
"Serious violations of international law, which may
amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity, may have been
committed."
The forces on the ground include the Ethiopian National
Defence Forces, the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), the Eritrean armed
forces, the Amhara Regional Forces and affiliated militias, the same source
said.
- "General denials" -
"With multiple actors in the conflict, general
denials", there is "a clear need for an objective and independent
assessment," said Ms. Bachelet.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights urged the
Ethiopian government to allow her office and other UN investigators access to
Tigray "to establish the facts and help ensure accountability, regardless
of the origin of the perpetrators".
She stressed that her office continued to receive
information about ongoing fighting in central Tigray.
She deplored "deeply distressing reports of sexual and
gender-based violence, extrajudicial killings, widespread destruction and
looting of public and private property by all parties".
"Without prompt, impartial and transparent
investigations and without holding those responsible accountable, I fear that
(human rights) violations will continue to be committed with impunity and the
situation will remain volatile for a long time to come," she said.
Ms. Bachelet also expressed concern about the detentions
this week in Tigray of journalists and translators working for local and
international media.
As they were released, she highlighted worrying remarks by a
member of the government that representatives of the "misleading
international media" would be held responsible.
"Victims and witnesses of human rights violations and
abuses must not be prevented from sharing their testimony for fear of
reprisals," Ms. Bachelet said.
In late November, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed declared an end
to the military operation in Tigray with the capture of Mekele, but authorities
fleeing the region promised to continue the fight and fighting has been
reported since.
Several massacres have also been documented, some attributed
by survivors to Eritrean troops in Tigray, whose presence continues to be
denied to this day by Addis Ababa and Asmara.
Ethiopian and Eritrean troops responsible for possible
"war crimes" in Tigray (UN).
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