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ConflictsEthiopia

UN deputy chief shaken by stories of Tigray fighting

February 12, 2022

UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed has met with the Ethiopian women facing some of the most horrifying consequences of the Tigray conflict. Their accounts, she said, left her near tears.

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UN Under-Secretary-General Amina Mohammed speaking to reporters in Addis Ababa
Amina Mohammed of the UN described her visit to Ethiopia as 'incredibly emotional'Image: Solomon Muchie/DW

UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said Friday that women had faced "unimaginable" horrors in conflict-torn regions of Ethiopia.

Mohammed became the highest-ranking UN official to visit Ethiopia since the government launched an offensive against the militants in the Tigray region in 2020.

The UN's no. 2 was speaking to reporters in New York a day after returning from the East African nation.

During her five-day trip, she visited the Tigray, Amhara, Afar and Somali regions in Ethiopia. She met with Tigray's leaders and Ethiopia's prime minister and president. 

The former Nigerian minister also talked to local leaders, civil society members and many women.

Mohammed said she was left near tears after listening to the accounts of rape from Ethiopian women.

What did Mohammed say?

"Ethiopian women, writ large, were affected in a way that is unimaginable," Mohammed said. "In your worst nightmares, you cannot imagine what has happened to the women in Ethiopia."

She spoke to women who recalled their trauma, including being raped in front of their children.

Mohammed met a woman in Tigray who had been gang-raped over and over again. That woman had given birth to a son and was cast away from her family and society.

"There is everyone to blame" for the atrocities, Mohammed said, adding that "it's unacceptable that one human being would do that to another."

"Without a shadow of a doubt, justice and accountability have to be had," she said.

She said the warring parties "cannot achieve any lasting peace without reconciling and being held to account for the atrocities across the country."

What's the present situation in Ethiopia?

Ethiopia erupted into war in November 2020 after months of political tension between the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan fighters.

The conflict has claimed thousands of lives and pushed hundreds of thousands into famine.

Rights groups have accused fighters on all sides of widespread sexual violence.

adi/dj (AFP, Reuters)