
“The number of malnourished and sick children arriving at our hospital is rising steadily.

Hussein Adem, director of Dubti Hospital in Afar, the largest in the region and serving more than 1 million people, confirmed the children’s deaths to The Associated Press and said that people flooding into the hospital are coming from conflict areas bordering Tigray. The Afar region also saw some of the fiercest fighting in the war that erupted in Ethiopia’s neighboring Tigray region in November 2020. “What scares us most at this point is that we are only beginning to see the very tip of the iceberg, and already it is overwhelming,” said Raphael Veicht, the group's emergency coordinator in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa.Įthiopia is facing one of the worst droughts in the past 40 years following consecutive failed rains in the Horn of Africa. “Thirty-five children have died in the last eight weeks alone and more than two-thirds of those patients died within 48 hours of admission,” Doctors Without Borders said in a statement noting an escalating crisis in the mostly arid region. The announcement Thursday came days after a government minister denied that people have died due to food shortages. The government since June has imposed what the UN calls a “de facto humanitarian blockade” on the region of some six million people.NAIROBI, Kenya - At least 35 children have died in recent weeks due to drought and conflict in Ethiopia’s northeastern Afar region, according to a local hospital and the medical charity Doctors Without Borders. Tigray remains under a communications blackout, making it difficult to verify claims, while areas of fighting in Amhara are largely unreachable, as well. Thousands of people have been killed and more than two million have been forced to flee. War erupted nearly a year ago between federal troops and the TPLF, which governed Ethiopia for three decades at the helm of a multi-ethnic coalition and now controls the northern region.

They have drawn rebukes from Western powers, with the United States last week condemning “the continuing escalation of violence, putting civilians in harm’s way”.Īn air attack on Friday on Mekelle forced a UN flight carrying 11 humanitarian personnel to turn back to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, and the UN subsequently announced it was suspending its twice-weekly flights to the region. The air attacks coincide with ramped-up fighting in the Amhara region, south of Tigray. Since then there have been three more air raids on Mekelle and another targeting what the government described as a weapons cache in the town of Agbe, about 80 kilometres (50 miles) to the west. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government has been locked in a war against the TPLF since last November, though Tigray itself had seen little combat since late June when the rebels seized control of much of Ethiopia’s northernmost region and the military largely withdrew.īut on Monday Ethiopia’s air force launched two strikes on Tigray’s capital Mekelle that the United Nations said killed three children and wounded several other people.

It was not immediately possible to verify the claims of the raids on Mai Tsebri and the town of Adwa, as communications are down throughout most of war-hit Tigray.Īfter the announcement of the first air raid, TPLF spokesperson Getachew Reda told the Reuters news agency he had no information about any air attack on Sunday and would seek to verify the report with his colleagues. “Today the western front of (Mai Tsebri) which was serving as a training and military command post for the terrorist group TPLF has been the target of an air strike,” government spokeswoman Selamawit Kassa said, referring to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). The raids on Sunday would be the seventh and eighth aerial bombardments in the war-hit region in a week. Ethiopia’s military has carried out a second air attack in the northern part of Tigray, according to a statement issued by the government shortly after it said it launched an air raid on a rebel-held facility in Tigray’s west.
